A
contraction of a
normal projective variety
X over a field
k is a surjective morphism f\colon X\to Y with
Y a normal projective variety over
k such that f_*\mathcal{O}_X=\mathcal{O}_Y. (The latter condition implies that
f has
connected fibers, and it is equivalent to
f having connected fibers if
k has
characteristic zero.) A contraction is called a
fibration if dim(
Y) f^*(N^1(Y))\subset N^1(X). Conversely, given the variety
X, the face
F of the nef cone determines the contraction f\colon X\to Y up to isomorphism. Indeed, there is a semi-ample line bundle
L on
X whose class in N^1(X) is in the interior of
F (for example, take
L to be the pullback to
X of any ample line bundle on
Y). Any such line bundle determines
Y by the
Proj construction: :Y=\text{Proj }\bigoplus_{a\geq 0}H^0(X,L^{\otimes a}). To describe
Y in geometric terms: a curve
C in
X maps to a point in
Y if and only if
L has degree zero on
C. As a result, there is a one-to-one correspondence between the contractions of
X and some of the faces of the nef cone of
X. (This correspondence can also be formulated dually, in terms of faces of the cone of curves.) Knowing which nef line bundles are semi-ample would determine which faces correspond to contractions. The
cone theorem describes a significant class of faces that do correspond to contractions, and the
abundance conjecture would give more. Example: Let
X be the blow-up of the complex projective plane \mathbb{P}^2 at a point
p. Let
H be the pullback to
X of a line on \mathbb{P}^2, and let
E be the exceptional curve of the blow-up \pi\colon X\to\mathbb{P}^2. Then
X has Picard number 2, meaning that the real vector space N^1(X) has dimension 2. By the geometry of convex cones of dimension 2, the nef cone must be spanned by two rays; explicitly, these are the rays spanned by
H and
H −
E. In this example, both rays correspond to contractions of
X:
H gives the birational morphism X\to\mathbb{P}^2, and
H −
E gives a fibration X\to\mathbb{P}^1 with fibers isomorphic to \mathbb{P}^1 (corresponding to the lines in \mathbb{P}^2 through the point
p). Since the nef cone of
X has no other nontrivial faces, these are the only nontrivial contractions of
X; that would be harder to see without the relation to convex cones. ==Notes==