Mathematical Research Data Initiative
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Create a new Item
Create a new Property
Create a new EntitySchema
Merge two items
In other projects
Discussion
View source
View history
Purge
English
Log in

Kodaira dimension is not necessarily lower semi-continuous under degenerations of surfaces

From MaRDI portal
Publication:1170580
Jump to:navigation, search

DOI10.1007/BF01457139zbMath0497.14014OpenAlexW2070096688MaRDI QIDQ1170580

Kenji Nishiguchi

Publication date: 1983

Published in: Mathematische Annalen (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://eudml.org/doc/163755


zbMATH Keywords

degeneration of compact complex analytic surfacesnon continuity of Kodaira dimensionnon-Kaehler surfaces


Mathematics Subject Classification ID

Étale and other Grothendieck topologies and (co)homologies (14F20) Families, moduli, classification: algebraic theory (14J10) Special surfaces (14J25) Formal methods and deformations in algebraic geometry (14D15)


Related Items (1)

Degneration of surfaces with trivial canonical bundles



Cites Work

  • Global smoothings of varieties with normal crossings
  • Degneration of surfaces with trivial canonical bundles
  • Smoothing cusp singularities of small length
  • On compact analytic surfaces. II
  • DEFORMATIONS OF COMPLEX SPACES
  • On degenerations of algebraic surfaces
  • DEGENERATIONS OFK3 SURFACES AND ENRIQUES SURFACES
  • On the Structure of Compact Complex Analytic Surfaces, I
  • On a Theorem of Lefschetz and the Lemma of Enriques-Severi-Zariski


This page was built for publication: Kodaira dimension is not necessarily lower semi-continuous under degenerations of surfaces

Retrieved from "https://portal.mardi4nfdi.de/w/index.php?title=Publication:1170580&oldid=13237471"
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Printable version
Permanent link
Page information
MaRDI portal item
This page was last edited on 31 January 2024, at 05:04.
Privacy policy
About MaRDI portal
Disclaimers
Imprint
Powered by MediaWiki