The results above give a complete description of which complex manifolds are Kobayashi hyperbolic in complex dimension 1. The picture is less clear in higher dimensions. A central open problem is the
Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture: if
X is a complex
projective variety of
general type, then there should be a closed algebraic subset
Y not equal to
X such that every nonconstant holomorphic map
C →
X maps into
Y.
Clemens and
Voisin showed that for
n at least 2, a very general
hypersurface X in
CPn+1 of degree
d at least 2
n+1 has the property that every closed subvariety of
X is of general type. ("Very general" means that the property holds for all hypersurfaces of degree
d outside a
countable union of lower-dimensional algebraic subsets of the projective space of all such hypersurfaces.) As a result, the Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture would imply that a very general hypersurface of degree at least 2
n+1 is Kobayashi hyperbolic. Note that one cannot expect all
smooth hypersurfaces of a given degree to be hyperbolic, for example because some hypersurfaces contain lines (isomorphic to
CP1). Such examples show the need for the subset
Y in the Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture. The conjecture on hyperbolicity is known for hypersurfaces of high enough degree, thanks to a series of advances by
Siu,
Demailly and others, using the technique of
jet differentials. For example, Diverio, Merker and Rousseau showed that a general hypersurface in
CPn+1 of degree at least 2
n5 satisfies the Green-Griffiths-Lang conjecture. ("General" means that this holds for all hypersurfaces of given degree outside a
finite union of lower-dimensional algebraic subsets of the projective space of all such hypersurfaces.) In 2016, Brotbek gave a proof of the Kobayashi conjecture for the hyperbolicity of general hypersurfaces of high degree, based on a use of Wronskian differential equations; explicit degree bounds have then been obtained in arbitrary dimension by Ya Deng and Demailly, e.g. [
(en)2n+2/3] by the latter. Better bounds for the degree are known in low dimensions.
McQuillan proved the Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture for every complex projective surface of general type whose
Chern numbers satisfy
c12 >
c2. For an arbitrary variety
X of general type, Demailly showed that every holomorphic map
C→
X satisfies some (in fact, many)
algebraic differential equations. In the opposite direction, Kobayashi conjectured that the Kobayashi pseudometric is identically zero for
Calabi–Yau manifolds. This is true in the case of
K3 surfaces, using that every projective K3 surface is covered by a family of elliptic curves. More generally, Campana gave a precise conjecture about which complex projective varieties
X have Kobayashi pseudometric equal to zero. Namely, this should be equivalent to
X being
special in the sense that
X has no rational fibration over a positive-dimensional
orbifold of general type. ==Analogy with number theory==