
TL;DR
This paper extends the study of singularities in algebraic varieties to demi-normal varieties lacking a $Q$-Cartier canonical class, broadening the scope of the minimal model program.
Contribution
It generalizes the concept of boundary divisors to demi-normal varieties without $Q$-Cartier canonical classes, expanding the framework for analyzing singularities.
Findings
Extended the construction of boundary divisors to demi-normal varieties.
Showed that singularity types can be characterized without $Q$-Cartier assumption.
Broadened the applicability of the minimal model program to more general varieties.
Abstract
The birational classification of varieties inevitably leads to the study of singularities. The types of singularities that occur in this context have been studied by Mori, Koll\'ar, Reid, and others, beginning in the 1980s with the introduction of the minimal model program. Normal singularities that are terminal, canonical, log terminal, and log canonical, and their non-normal counterparts, are typically studied using a resolution of singularities (or a semiresolution) and finding numerical conditions that relate the canonical class of the variety to that of its resolution. In order to do this, it has been assumed that a variety has a -Cartier canonical class: some multiple of the canonical class is Cartier. In particular, this divisor can be pulled back under a resolution by pulling back its local sections. Then one has a relation $K_Y \sim…
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