Abstract
Let $Y$ be a complex projective variety of dimension $n$ with isolated singularities, $\pi:X\to Y$ a resolution of singularities, $G:=\pi^{-1}{\rm{Sing}}(Y)$ the exceptional locus. From Decomposition Theorem one knows that the map $H^{k-1}(G)\to H^k(Y,Y\backslash {\rm{Sing}}(Y))$ vanishes for $k>n$. Assuming this vanishing, we give a short proof of Decomposition Theorem for $\pi$. A consequence is a short proof of the Decomposition Theorem for $\pi$ in all cases where one can prove the vanishing directly. This happens when either $Y$ is a normal surface, or when $\pi$ is the blowing-up of $Y$ along ${\rm{Sing}}(Y)$ with smooth and connected fibres, or when $\pi$ admits a natural Gysin morphism. We prove that this last condition is equivalent to say that the map $H^{k-1}(G)\to H^k(Y,Y\backslash {\rm{Sing}}(Y))$ vanishes for any $k$, and that the pull-back $\pi^*_k:H^k(Y)\to H^k(X)$ is injective. This provides a relationship between Decomposition Theorem and Bivariant Theory.
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