Abstract

When studying a graded module $M$ over the Cox ring of a smooth projective toric variety $X$, there are two standard types of resolutions commonly used to glean information: free resolutions of $M$ and vector bundle resolutions of its sheafification. Each approach comes with its own challenges. There is geometric information that free resolutions fail to encode, while vector bundle resolutions can resist study using algebraic and combinatorial techniques. Recently, Berkesch, Erman, and Smith introduced virtual resolutions, which capture desirable geometric information and are also amenable to algebraic and combinatorial study. The theory of virtual resolutions includes a notion of a virtually Cohen--Macaulay property, though tools for assessing which modules are virtually Cohen--Macaulay have only recently started to be developed. In this paper, we continue this research program in two related ways. The first is that, when $X$ is a product of projective spaces, we produce a large new class of virtually Cohen--Macaulay Stanley--Reisner rings, which we show to be virtually Cohen--Macaulay via explicit constructions of appropriate virtual resolutions reflecting the underlying combinatorial structure. The second is that, for an arbitrary smooth projective toric variety $X$, we develop homological tools for assessing the virtual Cohen--Macaulay property. Some of these tools give exclusionary criteria, and others are constructive methods for producing suitably short virtual resolutions. We also use these tools to establish relationships among the arithmetically, geometrically, and virtually Cohen--Macaulay properties.

Highlights

  • Let X be a smooth projective toric variety over an algebraically closed field k with Cox ring S and irrelevant ideal B

  • The first is that, when X is a product of projective spaces, we produce a large new class of virtually Cohen–Macaulay Stanley–Reisner rings, which we show to be virtually Cohen–Macaulay via explicit constructions of appropriate virtual resolutions reflecting the underlying combinatorial structure

  • There is a precise description in the literature for when complexes are virtual resolutions, little is known about how to assess the virtual dimension of a module or how to construct virtual resolutions of minimal length, even when that minimal length is known

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Let X be a smooth projective toric variety over an algebraically closed field k with Cox ring S and irrelevant ideal B (see [CLS11, §5.2]). The results on this class are hard won through the careful application of Hochster’s formula, interpreted in a virtual setting, together with an analysis of the spectral sequence associated to a certain nerve complex. This provides us with a new source of examples of virtually Cohen–Macaulay modules as we work to develop the theory, and, given the difficulty of studying even Stanley–Reisner rings in this context, highlights the need for the advent of more virtual homological tools

BACKGROUND
VIRTUALLY COHEN–MACAULAY STANLEY–REISNER RINGS
NEW VIRTUAL RESOLUTIONS FROM OLD
A mapping cone construction
The quotient by a virtually regular element
DERIVED FUNCTORS VIA VIRTUAL RESOLUTIONS
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