Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4666391 Advances in Mathematics 2012 27 Pages PDF
Abstract

Cataneseʼs rigidity results for surfaces isogenous to a product of curves indicate that Beauville surfaces should provide a fertile source of examples of Galois conjugate varieties that are not homeomorphic, a phenomenon discovered by J.P. Serre in the sixties.In this paper, we construct Beauville surfaces S=(C1×C2)/G with group G=PSL(2,p) for p⩾7, and curves C1, C2 such that the orbit of S under the action of the absolute Galois group contains non-homeomorphic conjugate surfaces. When p=7 the orbit consists exactly of two surfaces that have non-isomorphic fundamental groups, and the curves C1, C2 have genera 8 and 49, which is shown to be the minimum for which there is a pair of non-homeomorphic Galois conjugate Beauville surfaces. As p grows the orbits contain an arbitrarily large number of non-homeomorphic surfaces.Along the way we prove a metric rigidity theorem for Beauville surfaces which provides an elementary proof of the part of Cataneseʼs theory needed to prove our results.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Mathematics (General)