AbstractBertini’s theorem on variable singular points may fail in positive characteristic, as was discovered by Zariski in 1944. In fact, he found fibrations by nonsmooth curves. In this work we continue to classify this phenomenon in characteristic three by constructing a two-dimensional algebraic fibration by nonsmooth plane projective quartic curves, that is universal in the sense that the data about some fibrations by nonsmooth plane projective quartics are condensed in it. Our approach has been motivated by the close relation between it and the theory of regular but nonsmooth curves, or equivalently, nonconservative function fields in one variable. Actually, it also provides an understanding of the interesting effect of the relative Fr...
In this dissertation we explore the birational geometry of higher-dimensional algebraic varieties i...
We construct three new families of fibrations π : S → B where S is an algebraic complex surface and...
The thesis consists of four chapters. First chapter is introductory. In Chapter 2, we recall some b...
AbstractBertini’s theorem on variable singular points may fail in positive characteristic, as was di...
AbstractBertini's theorem on variable singular points may fail in positive characteristic. We constr...
In 1944 Zariski discovered that Bertini’s theorem on variable singular points is no longer true when...
Over any algebraically closed field of positive characteristic, we con- struct examples of fibration...
AbstractLet k be a finite field of even characteristic. We obtain in this paper a complete classific...
Working over imperfect fields, we give a comprehensive classification of genus-one curves that are r...
AbstractWe investigate local structure of a three dimensional variety X defined over an algebraicall...
We prove that if f : X -> P¹ is a non-isotrivial, semistable, genus 5 fibration defined on a general...
We study curves of genus 3 over algebraically closed fields of characteristic 2 with the canonical t...
AbstractIn this paper we study the relative canonical sheaf of a relatively minimal fibration of cur...
This dissertation explores the interplay between the Frobenius morphism and the geometry of algebrai...
We study relative Fourier-Mukai transforms on genus one fibrations with section, allowing explicitl...
In this dissertation we explore the birational geometry of higher-dimensional algebraic varieties i...
We construct three new families of fibrations π : S → B where S is an algebraic complex surface and...
The thesis consists of four chapters. First chapter is introductory. In Chapter 2, we recall some b...
AbstractBertini’s theorem on variable singular points may fail in positive characteristic, as was di...
AbstractBertini's theorem on variable singular points may fail in positive characteristic. We constr...
In 1944 Zariski discovered that Bertini’s theorem on variable singular points is no longer true when...
Over any algebraically closed field of positive characteristic, we con- struct examples of fibration...
AbstractLet k be a finite field of even characteristic. We obtain in this paper a complete classific...
Working over imperfect fields, we give a comprehensive classification of genus-one curves that are r...
AbstractWe investigate local structure of a three dimensional variety X defined over an algebraicall...
We prove that if f : X -> P¹ is a non-isotrivial, semistable, genus 5 fibration defined on a general...
We study curves of genus 3 over algebraically closed fields of characteristic 2 with the canonical t...
AbstractIn this paper we study the relative canonical sheaf of a relatively minimal fibration of cur...
This dissertation explores the interplay between the Frobenius morphism and the geometry of algebrai...
We study relative Fourier-Mukai transforms on genus one fibrations with section, allowing explicitl...
In this dissertation we explore the birational geometry of higher-dimensional algebraic varieties i...
We construct three new families of fibrations π : S → B where S is an algebraic complex surface and...
The thesis consists of four chapters. First chapter is introductory. In Chapter 2, we recall some b...