%% Write basic article template \documentclass[12pt]{article} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsthm} \usepackage{graphicx} \usepackage{hyperref} \usepackage{color} \usepackage{sagetex} \newcommand{\QQ}{\mathbb{Q}} \newcommand{\ZZ}{\mathbb{Z}} \newcommand{\RR}{\mathbb{R}} \newcommand{\chern}{\operatorname{ch}} \newcommand{\lcm}{\operatorname{lcm}} \newcommand{\firsttilt}[1]{\mathcal{B}^{#1}} \newcommand{\bddderived}{\mathcal{D}^{b}} \newcommand{\centralcharge}{\mathcal{Z}} \begin{document} \title{Explicit Formulae for Bounds on the Ranks of Tilt Destabilizers and Practical Methods for Finding Pseudowalls} \author{Luke Naylor} \maketitle \section{Introduction} [ref] shows that for any rational $\beta_0$, the vertical line $\{\sigma_{\alpha,\beta_0} \colon \alpha \in \RR_{>0}\}$ only intersects finitely many walls. A consequence of this is that if $\beta_{-}$ is rational, then there can only be finitely many circular walls to the left of the vertical wall $\beta = \mu$. On the other hand, when $\beta_{-}$ is not rational, [ref] showed that there are infinitely many walls. This dichotomy does not only hold for real walls, realised by actual objects in $\bddderived(X)$, but also for pseudowalls. Here pseudowalls are defined as `potential' walls, induced by hypothetical Chern characters of destabilizers which satisfy certain numerical conditions which would be satisfied by any real destabilizer, regardless of whether they are realised by actual elements of $\bddderived(X)$. Since real walls are a subset of pseudowalls, the irrational $\beta_{-}$ case follows immediately from the corresponding case for real walls. However, the rational $\beta_{-}$ case involves showing that the following conditions only admit finitely many solutions (despite the fact that the same conditions admit infinitely many solutions when $\beta_{-}$ is irrational). For a destabilizing sequence $E \hookrightarrow F \twoheadrightarrow G$ in $\mathcal{B}^\beta$ we have the following conditions. There are some Bogomolov-Gieseker type inequalities: $0 \leq \Delta(E), \Delta(G)$ and $\Delta(E) + \Delta(G) \leq \Delta(F)$. We also have a condition relating to the tilt category $\firsttilt\beta$: $0 \leq \chern^\beta_1(E) \leq \chern^\beta_1(F)$. Finally, there's a condition ensuring that the radius of the circular wall is strictly positive: $\chern^\beta_2(E) > 0$. For any fixed $\chern_0(E)$, the inequality $0 \leq \chern^{\beta_{-}}_1(E) \leq \chern^{\beta_{-}}_1(F)$, allows us to bound $\chern_1(E)$. Then, the other inequalities allow us to bound $\chern_2(E)$. The final part to showing the finiteness of pseudowalls would be bounding $\chern_0(E)$. This has been hinted at in [ref] and done explicitly by Benjamin Schmidt within a computer program which computes pseudowalls. Here we discuss these bounds in more detail, along with the methods used, followed by refinements on them which give explicit formulae for tighter bounds on $\chern_0(E)$ of potential destabilizers $E$ of $F$. \section{Characteristic Curves of Stability Conditions Associated to Chern Characters} \section{Twisted Chern Characters of Pseudo Destabilizers} For a given $\beta$, we can define a twisted Chern character $\chern^\beta(E) = \chern(E) \cdot \exp(-\beta \ell)$: \begin{align*} \chern^\beta_0(E) &= \chern_0(E) \\ \chern^\beta_1(E) &= \chern_1(E) - \beta \chern_0(E) \\ \chern^\beta_2(E) &= \chern_2(E) - \beta \chern_1(E) + \frac{\beta^2}{2} \chern_0(E) \end{align*} % TODO I think this^ needs adjusting for general Surface with $\ell$ $\chern^\beta_1(E)$ is the imaginary component of the central charge $\centralcharge_{\alpha,\beta}(E)$ and any element of $\firsttilt\beta$ satisfies $\chern^\beta_1 \geq 0$. This, along with additivity gives us, for any destabilizing sequence [ref]: \begin{equation} \label{eqn-tilt-cat-cond} 0 \leq \chern^\beta_1(E) \leq \chern^\beta_1(F) \end{equation} When finding Chern characters of potential destabilizers $E$ for some fixed Chern character $\chern(F)$, this bounds $\chern_1(E)$. The Bogomolov form applied to the twisted Chern character is the same as the normal one. So $0 \leq \Delta(E)$ yields: \begin{equation} \label{eqn-bgmlv-on-E} 2\chern^\beta_0(E) \chern^\beta_2(E) \leq \left(\chern^\beta_1(E)\right)^2 \end{equation} The restrictions on $\chern^\beta_0(E)$ and $\chern^\beta_2(E)$ is best seen with the following graph: % TODO: hyperbola restriction graph (shaded) This is where the $\beta_{-}$ criterion comes in. If $\beta_{-} = \frac{*}{n}$ for some $*,n \in \ZZ$. Then $\chern^\beta_2(E) \in \frac{1}{\lcm(m,2n^2)}\ZZ$ where $m$ is the integer which guarantees $\chern_2(E) \in \frac{1}{m}\ZZ$ (determined by the variety). In particular, since $\chern_2(E) > 0$ we must also have $\chern^\beta_2(E) \geq \frac{1}{\lcm(m,2n^2)}$, which then in turn gives a bound for the rank of $E$: \begin{align} \chern_0(E) &= \chern^\beta_0(E) \\ &\leq \frac{\lcm(m,2n^2) \chern^\beta_1(E)^2}{2} \\ &\leq \frac{mn^2 \chern^\beta_1(F)^2}{\gcd(m,2n^2)} \end{align} \section{B.Schmidt's Method} \section{Limitations} \section{Refinement} To get tighter bounds on the rank of destabilizers $E$ of some $F$ with some fixed Chern character, we will need to consider each of the values which $\chern_1^{\beta_{-}}(E)$ can take. Doing this will allow us to eliminate possible values of $\chern_0(E)$ for which each $\chern_1^{\beta_{-}}(E)$ leads to the failure of at least one of the inequalities. As opposed to only eliminating possible values of $\chern_0(E)$ for which all corresponding $\chern_1^{\beta_{-}}(E)$ fail one of the inequalities (which is what was implicitly happening before). First, let's fix a Chern character for $F$, $\chern(F) = (R,C,D)$, and consider the possible Chern characters $\chern(E) = (r,c,d)$ of some semistabilizer $E$. \begin{sagesilent} from pseudowalls import * v = Chern_Char(*var("R C D", domain="real")) u = Chern_Char(*var("r c d", domain="real")) ts = stability.Tilt beta_min = min(map(lambda sol: sol.rhs(), solve(ts(alpha=0).degree(v), ts().beta) )) \end{sagesilent} Here, we have $\beta_{-} = \sage{beta_min}$. Recall [ref] that $\chern_1^{\beta_{-}}$ has fixed bounds in terms of $\chern(F)$, and so we can write: \begin{equation} \chern_1(E) = r\beta_{-} + m \qquad 0 \leq m \leq \chern_1^{\beta_{-}}(F) \end{equation} Furthermore, $\chern_1 \in \ZZ$ so we only need to consider $m \in \frac{1}{n} \ZZ \cap [0, \chern_1^{\beta_{-}}(F)]$. For the next subsections, we consider $m$ to be fixed with one of these values, and we shall be varying $\chern_0(E) = r$ to see when certain inequalities fail. \begin{sagesilent} c_lower_bound = -(ts(beta=beta_min).rank(u)/ts().alpha).expand() + c var("m", domain="real") c_val = c_lower_bound + m \end{sagesilent} \section{Conclusion} \end{document}