Asymptotics of a vanishing period : General existence theorem and basic properties of frescos
Daniel Barlet (IECN, IUF)

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of 'fresco' as a fundamental geometric (a,b)-module, explores its structure, semi-simplicity, and invariants, and establishes existence and uniqueness theorems related to its Jordan-Hölder sequences and Bernstein polynomial roots.
Contribution
It defines and analyzes 'fresco' modules, proves the existence of a unique principal Jordan-Hölder sequence, and introduces the ta-invariant for classifying and constructing sub-quotients.
Findings
Existence of a unique principal Jordan-Hölder sequence for any fresco.
Characterization of semi-simplicity via root orderability in the Bernstein polynomial.
Introduction of the ta-invariant as an inductive tool for fresco analysis.
Abstract
In this paper we introduce the word "fresco" to denote a \ primitive monogenic geometric (a,b)-module. The study of this "basic object" (generalized Brieskorn module with one generator) which corresponds to the minimal filtered (regular) differential equation satisfied by a relative de Rham cohomology class, began in [B.09] where the first structure theorems are proved. Then in [B.10] we introduced the notion of theme which corresponds in the \ primitive case to frescos having a unique Jordan-H{\"o}lder sequence. Themes correspond to asymptotic expansion of a given vanishing period, so to the image of a fresco in the module of asymptotic expansions. For a fixed relative de Rham cohomology class (for instance given by a smooth differential form closed and closed) each choice of a vanishing cycle in the spectral eigenspace of the monodromy for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Topics in Algebra · Algebraic and Geometric Analysis · Algebraic structures and combinatorial models
