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We show, in this first part, that the maximal number of singular points of a quartic surface $X subset mathbb{P}^3_K$ defined over an algebraically closed field $K$ of characteristic $2$ is at most $18$. We produce examples with $14$ singular points, and show that, under several geometric assumptions ($mathfrak S_4$-symmetry, or behaviour of the Gauss map, or structure of tangent cone at one of the singular points $P$ , separability/inseparability of the projection with centre $P$), we obtain better upper bounds.
In this paper we generalize the definitions of singularities of pairs and multiplier ideal sheaves to pairs on arbitrary normal varieties, without any assumption on the variety being Q-Gorenstein or the pair being log Q-Gorenstein. The main features
We explore the connection between the rank of a polynomial and the singularities of its vanishing locus. We first describe the singularity of generic polynomials of fixed rank. We then focus on cubic surfaces. Cubic surfaces with isolated singulariti
In this paper, we develop a new method to classify abelian automorphism groups of hypersurfaces. We use this method to classify (Theorem 4.2) abelian groups that admit a liftable action on a smooth cubic fourfold. A parallel result (Theorem 5.1) is obtained for quartic surfaces.
Special types of quartic surfaces were much studied objects during the 1860s. Quartics were thus very much in the air when Sophus Lie and Felix Klein first met in Berlin in 1869. As this study shows, such surfaces played a major role in their subsequ
We show that the K-moduli spaces of log Fano pairs $(mathbb{P}^3, cS)$ where $S$ is a quartic surface interpolate between the GIT moduli space of quartic surfaces and the Baily-Borel compactification of moduli of quartic K3 surfaces as $c$ varies in