Definition A
complex torus of dimension
g is a
torus of real dimension 2
g that carries the structure of a
complex manifold. It can always be obtained as the
quotient of a
g-dimensional complex
vector space by a
lattice of rank 2
g. A complex abelian variety of dimension
g is a complex torus of dimension
g that is also a projective
algebraic variety over the field of complex numbers. By invoking the
Kodaira embedding theorem and
Chow's theorem, one may equivalently define a complex abelian variety of dimension
g to be a complex torus of dimension
g that admits a positive line bundle. Since they are complex tori, abelian varieties carry the structure of a
group. A
morphism of abelian varieties is a morphism of the underlying algebraic varieties that preserves the
identity element for the group structure. An
isogeny is a finite-to-one morphism. When a complex torus carries the structure of an algebraic variety, this structure is necessarily unique. In the case g = 1, the notion of abelian variety is the same as that of
elliptic curve, and every complex torus gives rise to such a curve; for g > 1 it has been known since
Riemann that the algebraic variety condition imposes extra constraints on a complex torus.
Riemann conditions The following criterion by Riemann decides whether or not a given
complex torus is an abelian variety, i.e., whether or not it can be holomorphically embedded into a projective space. Let
X be a
g-dimensional torus given as X = V/L where
V is a complex vector space of dimension
g and
L is a lattice in
V. Then
X is an abelian variety if and only if there exists a
positive definite hermitian form on
V whose
imaginary part takes
integral values on L \times L. Such a form on
X is usually called a (non-degenerate)
Riemann form. Choosing a basis for
V and
L, one can make this condition more explicit. There are several equivalent formulations of this; all of them are known as the Riemann conditions.
The Jacobian of an algebraic curve Every algebraic curve
C of
genus g \ge 1 is associated with an abelian variety
J of dimension
g, by means of an analytic map of
C into
J. As a torus,
J carries a commutative
group structure, and the image of
C generates
J as a group. More accurately,
J is covered by C^g: any point in
J comes from a
g-tuple of points in
C. The study of differential forms on
C, which give rise to the
abelian integrals with which the theory started, can be derived from the simpler, translation-invariant theory of differentials on
J. The abelian variety
J is called the
Jacobian variety of
C, for any non-singular curve
C over the complex numbers. From the point of view of
birational geometry, its
function field is the fixed field of the
symmetric group on
g letters acting on the function field of C^g.
Abelian functions An
abelian function is a
meromorphic function on an abelian variety, which may be regarded therefore as a periodic function of
n complex variables, having 2
n independent periods; equivalently, it is a function in the function field of an abelian variety. For example, in the nineteenth century there was much interest in
hyperelliptic integrals that may be expressed in terms of elliptic integrals. This comes down to asking that
J is a product of elliptic curves,
up to an isogeny.
Important theorems One important structure theorem of abelian varieties is '''Matsusaka's theorem'''. It states that over an algebraically closed field every abelian variety A is the quotient of the Jacobian of some curve; that is, there is some surjection of abelian varieties J \to A where J is a Jacobian. This theorem remains true if the ground field is infinite. == Algebraic definition ==