
TL;DR
This paper discusses the concept of instability within invariant theory, highlighting the original simplicity of Kempf's 1978 work and its significance in understanding geometric invariant theory.
Contribution
It presents the foundational ideas of Kempf's original approach to instability in invariant theory, emphasizing its simplicity and influence.
Findings
Introduction of the original notion of instability
Clarification of the role of S-instability
Historical context and impact on invariant theory
Abstract
Transcriber's note: In the fall of 1976, my advisor, David Mumford, handed me a short preprint by George Kempf to read. It was the first state of what eventually became his influential Annals paper "Instability in Invariant Theory" (Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, Vol. 108, No. 2 (Sep., 1978), pp. 299-316). The introduction to the published version ends with an acknowledgement and a dig: "I want to thank the referee of the first version of this paper for pointing out Corollary 4-5 and conjecturing that the original {0}-instability could be replaced by S-instability. Unfortunately, the inclusion of S-instability has completely destroyed the simplicity of the original version." Over the intervening years, the simplicity and elegance of the first version has continued to create a readership for it, and copies (see Figure 8) continue to circulate informally. I created this LaTeX'ed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Nonlinear Waves and Solitons · Geometry and complex manifolds
