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BPS invariants from p-adic integrals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 May 2024

Francesca Carocci
Affiliation:
Mathematics Department, University of Geneva, Office 6.05, Rue du Conseil-Général 7-9, CH-1204 Geneva, Switzerland [email protected]
Giulio Orecchia
Affiliation:
White Oak Asset Management, Rue du Rhône 17, CH-1204 Geneva, Switzerland [email protected]
Dimitri Wyss
Affiliation:
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Chair of Arithmetic Geometry, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland [email protected]
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Abstract

We define $p$-adic $\mathrm {BPS}$ or $p\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants for moduli spaces $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ of one-dimensional sheaves on del Pezzo and K3 surfaces by means of integration over a non-archimedean local field $F$. Our definition relies on a canonical measure $\mu _{\rm can}$ on the $F$-analytic manifold associated to $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ and the $p\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants are integrals of natural ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbes with respect to $\mu _{\rm can}$. A similar construction can be done for meromorphic and usual Higgs bundles on a curve. Our main theorem is a $\chi$-independence result for these $p\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants. For one-dimensional sheaves on del Pezzo surfaces and meromorphic Higgs bundles, we obtain as a corollary the agreement of $p\mathrm {BPS}$ with usual $\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants through a result of Maulik and Shen [Cohomological $\chi$-independence for moduli of one-dimensional sheaves and moduli of Higgs bundles, Geom. Topol. 27 (2023), 1539–1586].

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2024 The Author(s). The publishing rights in this article are licensed to Foundation Compositio Mathematica under an exclusive licence

1. Introduction

Donaldson–Thomas (DT) invariants, first introduced in [Reference ThomasTho00], count stable sheaves with some fixed Chern character $\gamma \in H^*(X,\mathbb {Z})$ on a smooth Calabi–Yau 3-fold $X$. While with the original machinery the invariants could only be defined for moduli of sheaves where no strictly semi-stables occur, Joyce and Song [Reference Joyce and SongJS12] and Kontsevich and Soibelman [Reference Kontsevich and SoibelmanKS08] independently developed a generalized theory allowing the definition of DT invariants for moduli of objects (in CY3 categories) also in those cases where strictly semi-stables are present. The two approaches have some differences and the resulting generalized numerical invariants, denoted in the above references by $\bar {{\rm DT}}_{\gamma }$ and $\hat {{\rm DT}}_{\gamma }$ or $\Omega (\gamma )$ respectively do not coincide. The relation between the two is however understood and explained for example in [Reference Joyce and SongJS12, § 6.2] or [Reference Davison and MeinhardtDM15, § 6.7].

Both theories admit, at least in some specific geometries, refinements to motivic, cohomological and sheaf theoretic invariants. Let ${\mathbb {M}}_{\gamma }(X)$ denote some moduli stack of semi-stable sheaves on a smooth Calabi–Yau 3-fold; Joyce–Song theory is refined by the cohomology of a certain perverse sheaf $\mathcal {D} T _{\gamma }$ on the moduli stack obtained (given an orientation data) gluing locally defined vanishing cycle sheaves (see [Reference Ben-Bassat, Brav, Bussi and JoyceBBBJ15, Reference Brav, Bussi, Dupont, Joyce and SzendroiBBDJS15]). Kontsevich–Soibelman theory should instead be refined by the cohomology $\text {H}^*(\operatorname {M}_{\gamma }(X),\Phi _{\gamma })$ for $\Phi _{\gamma }$ the so-called BPS sheaf, named after Bogomol’nyi, Prasad and Sommerfield, defined on the moduli space $\operatorname {M}_{\gamma }(X)$ of S-equivalence classes. For $X$ a compact CY3 threefold the existence of the sheaf $\Phi _{\gamma }$ is still conjectural; see [Reference TodaTod23] for a conjectural definition inspired to the case of moduli spaces of quiver representation with potential. In the latter situation, the BPS sheaf $\Phi _{\gamma }$, the sheaf on the moduli stack $\mathcal {D} T _{\gamma }$ as well their relation are understood [Reference Davison and MeinhardtDM20].

Following [Reference Joyce and SongJS12] and [Reference Davison and MeinhardtDM20] in this paper we call the generalized DT invariants of Kontsevich and Soibelman BPS invariants, since as suggested by the authors themselves, their invariants should count BPS states.

Particularly interesting from the perspective of enumerative geometry is the case of one-dimensional sheaves on $X$, i.e. sheaves with Chern character $\gamma =(0,0,\beta,\chi )$. In this case the invariants arising from the moduli spaces of Gieseker semi-stable sheaves are (conjecturally) related to Gopakumar–Vafa invariants [Reference KatzKat08, Reference Maulik and TodaMT18, Reference TodaTod23].

Our main focus is the special case where the CY3-fold is a del Pezzo or a K3 local surface $X=\operatorname {Tot}(S)$. In these cases the BPS sheaf is better understood. For a local del Pezzo case a result of Meinhardt [Reference MeinhardtMei15] states that $\Phi _{\beta,\chi }$ exists and coincides with the intersection complex $IC_{\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }}$ of the moduli space of S-equivalence classes. For a local K3 the situation is more complicated and an explicit description of the BPS sheaf has only recently been given in [Reference Davison, Hennecart and MejiaDHM23].

The main result of the present paper gives a surprising relation between the $\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants of local del Pezzo surfaces and certain non-archimedean (or $p$-adic) integrals. The relation is indirect and relies on results of Maulik and Shen [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23] which we explain next.

1.1 Cohomological $\chi$ independence and trace of Frobenius

Let $S$ be a smooth surface over $\mathbb {C}$ and $\beta$ an ample base point free class. We denote by ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ the moduli stack of Gieseker semi-stable (with respect to some fixed polarization $H$) one-dimensional sheaves, and by $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ the moduli space of S-equivalence classes. When $S$ is del Pezzo, the stack of semi-stables is smooth. Under this hypothesis Maulik and Shen [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23] have recently proved the independence of the intersection cohomology from the Euler characteristic:Footnote 1

\[ \operatorname{IH}^*(\operatorname{M}_{\beta,\chi}(S))\cong \operatorname{IH}^*(\operatorname{M}_{\beta,\chi'}(S))\quad \forall\ \chi,\chi'. \]

In fact, they prove a stronger statement, namely that the pushforward of the intersection complexes along the Hilbert–Chow morphisms $h_{\chi },h_{\chi '}$ are isomorphic. We denote by $h_\chi$ the morphism

\[ h_{\chi}:\operatorname{M}_{\beta,\chi}(S) \rightarrow \mathsf{B} = {\mathbb{P}} H^0(S,{\mathcal{O}}_S(\beta)), \]

associating to a sheaf its Fitting support.

The result proves a refinement of a special case of a more general and long-standing conjecture in the enumerative geometry of smooth CY3-fold, known as the Pandharipande–Thomas strong rationality conjecture [Reference Pandharipande and ThomasPT10] and later reformulated by Toda [Reference TodaTod14] as the multiple cover formula conjecture for generalized DT invariants of moduli spaces of one dimensional sheaves. Translated in the Kontsevich–Soibelmain theory, the conjecture predicts the independence of the BPS invariants from the Euler characteristic.

The conjecture is expected to hold more in general at the refined level.

Now, choosing a spreading out, we can assume that the moduli spaces $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ we are considering are defined over some large finite field $k=\mathbb {F}_q$ and that $\chi$ independence of $\Phi _{\beta,\chi }$ holds over $k$ (see, for example, [Reference Beilinson, Bernstein, Deligne and GabberBBDG18, § 6] for precise definitions and results on spreading out of constructible complexes). We can then look at the function:

\[ \operatorname{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}\colon \operatorname{M}_{\beta,\chi}(k)\to\mathbb{C},\quad x\mapsto q^{-\dim {\mathcal{M}}_{\beta,\chi}} \operatorname{Tr}(\operatorname{Fr},\Phi_{\beta,\chi, x}). \]

We call a pair $(\beta,\chi )$ generic (with respect to $H$), if any Gieseker semi-stable sheaf in ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi }$ is stable. In this case ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi } \to \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ is a ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe and, in particular, $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ is smooth. Then the function $\operatorname {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }$ will have the following two properties:

  1. (i) $\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }\equiv q^{-\dim \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }}$ if $(\beta,\chi )$ is generic;

  2. (ii) for all $\chi,\chi '\in \mathbb {Z}$ and for all $y\in B(k)$ we have

    \[ \sum _{x\in h_{\chi}^{-1}(y)(k)} \operatorname{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}(x)= \sum_{x\in h_{\chi'}^{-1}(y)(k)} \operatorname{BPS}_{\beta,\chi'}(x), \]

the second being a consequence of [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23].

The main content of the paper is the construction of a function $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }$ via non-archimedean integration satisfying these two properties.

1.2 p-adic BPS function and its invariance

Consider $S$ a smooth del Pezzo surface over $\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$, where ${\mathcal {O}}$ denotes the ring of integers of a non-archimedean local field $F$ with residue field $k \cong {\mathbb {F}}_q$.

As recalled previously, the del Pezzo hypothesis ensures that the moduli stack is smooth, which allows us to construct in § 3 a canonical measure $\mu _{\rm can}$ on the $F$-analytic manifold $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(\mathcal {O})^\natural$ associated to $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$.

In fact, the construction of $\mu _{\rm can}$ works more generally for normal, generically stabilizer-free, Artin stacks $\mathcal {M}$ admitting a universally closed morphism $\mathcal {M}\xrightarrow {\pi }\operatorname {M}$ to a quasi-projective variety $\operatorname {M}$ such that $\pi$ is generically an isomorphism. The existence of a canonical measure in this context should be of independent interest.

Importantly, these hypothesis are also satisfied by moduli stacks $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ of semi-stable sheaves on $S\to \mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ a smooth projective K3 over ${\mathcal {O}}$ for many choices of $(\beta,\chi )$ (see § 3.2 for details), as well as by moduli stacks of (usual) Higgs bundles.

Once defined the canonical measure on $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(\mathcal {O})^\natural$, we then define the non-archimedean BPS function $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }$ as follows: for any $x \in \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(k)$ denote by $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }({\mathcal {O}})_x \subset M_{\beta,\chi }({\mathcal {O}})^\natural$ the ball of ${\mathcal {O}}$-rational points specializing to $x$ over $k$. Then

\[ p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}:\operatorname{M}_{\beta,\chi}(k) \rightarrow {\mathbb{C}} \]

is given by

(1.2.1)\begin{equation} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}(x) =q^{-\dim M_{\beta,\chi}} \int_{M_{\beta,\chi}({\mathcal{O}})_x} \varphi_{\beta,\chi}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\rm can}, \end{equation}

where $\varphi _{\beta,\chi }$ is a certain complex-valued function associated with the natural ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe coming from the ${\mathbb {G}}_m$-rigidification of ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi }$ (see § 4 for the precise definition) and $g$ is the arithmetic genus of the curves in the linear system $|\beta |$.

Our main result says that the non-archimedean BPS function enjoys the two properties above.

Theorem 1.2.2 (Theorem 5.0.2)

Let $S \to \mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ be either a smooth projective del Pezzo surface or a K3 surface satisfying Assumption 3.2.1. The function $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }: \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(k) \rightarrow {\mathbb {C}}$ satisfies the following two properties:

  1. (i) $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi } \equiv q^{-\dim \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }}$ if $(\beta,\chi )$ is generic;

  2. (ii) for all $\chi,\chi '\in \mathbb {Z}$ and for all $y\in B(k)$ we have

    \[ \sum _{x\in h_{\chi}^{-1}(y)(k)} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}(x)=\sum _{x\in h_{\chi'}^{-1}(y)(k)} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi'}(x). \]

1.3 Relation to previous works, consequences and final considerations

The original motivation for Theorem 1.2.2 is a degree-independence result for Higgs bundles of rank coprime to the degree [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, Theorem 7.15], which in turn is a special case of a conjecture by Mozgovoy and Schiffmann [Reference Mozgovoy and SchiffmannMS14].Footnote 2 Thus, not surprisingly, the proof of Theorem 1.2.2 also relies on the same idea used in [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20a], which boils down to a Fubini argument along the Hilbert–Chow morphism $h_\chi$ and the fact that up to measure $0$, the fibers of $h_\chi$ over a non-archimedean local field are Picard schemes of smooth curves.

As a corollary of Theorem 1.2.2, we obtain from [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23] (combined with the results in [Reference YuanYua23]) that after pushforward along $h_\chi$, the function $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }$ agrees with the trace of Frobenius on the $\mathrm {BPS}$ sheaf for the case of del Pezzo surfaces. The $\chi$-independence conjecture for $\mathrm {BPS}$ cohomology suggests, that this continues to hold in the K3 case.

A more concrete application of Theorem 1.2.2, via the Weil conjectures, is the $\chi$ independence of the Betti numbers for $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ as long as $\chi$ and $\beta$ are coprime. For $\mathbb {P}^2$ this is also a consequence of a more general result of Bousseau [Reference BousseauBou23, Conjecture 0.4.2, Theorem 0.4.5].

When $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ is smooth, the first part of Theorem 1.2.2 implies

\[ p\mathrm{BPS}(x)=\mathrm{BPS}(x) \]

for all $x\in \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(k)$.

While for more general pairs $(\beta,\chi )$ Definition (1.2.1) has no obvious connection with the definition of the $\mathrm {BPS}$ function as trace of Frobenius of some suitable cohomology, Theorem 1.2.2 suggests that the above equality still holds.

For the case of $S$ del Pezzo, this intriguing identity is the subject of an ongoing project of the third named author with Michael Groechenig and Paul Ziegler.

The refined $\chi$ independence for $\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants of moduli of sheaves on a K3 surface is instead still conjectural (see [Reference Maulik and ThomasMT19] for a proof of the numerical version), so is the identification of $p\mathrm {BPS}$ and $\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants.

We expect that a conceptual proof (not relying on the $\chi$ independence) for the equality between $p\mathrm {BPS}$ and $\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants will be easier to obtain in the Fano case, due to the smoothness of the moduli stacks.

Finally, as in [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23], we can prove the same statements for moduli of (meromorphic or not) Higgs bundles; that is, pairs of a vector bundle $\mathcal {E}$ on a curve $C$ of genus $g(C) \geq 2$ and a morphism $\Theta \colon \mathcal {E}\to \mathcal {E}(D)$ for $D$ a fixed effective divisor of degree $\deg (D)\geq 2g(C)-2$.

In this case, the Hilbert–Chow morphism is replaced by the Hitchin fibration

\[ H\colon \operatorname{M}_{r,\chi}(C)\to\bigoplus_{i=1}^r \operatorname{H}^0(C,\mathcal{O}_C(iD)) \]

associating to $(\mathcal {E},\Theta )$ the characteristic polynomial of $\Theta$. The $\chi$ independence for meromorphic Higgs bundles was also proven combinatorially in [Reference Mozgovoy and O'GormanMO19]. Moreover, during the writing of this article, $\chi$ independence for $\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants of Higgs bundles has been proved in [Reference Kinjo and KosekiKK21]. This indirectly implies that our non-archimedean $p\mathrm {BPS}$ function agrees with the geometric $\mathrm {BPS}$ function beyond the Fano cases.

This is in sharp contrast with the intersection complex on the coarse moduli space, which does depend on the Euler characteristic $\chi$ in the $K3$ and Higgs bundle case, see [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, § 0.4].

2. Moduli spaces of sheaves and Higgs bundles

In this section we recall some properties of moduli spaces of sheaves on smooth surfaces and moduli spaces of (meromorphic or not) Higgs bundles relative to a base scheme $T.$

The case $T=\mathsf {Spec}\, k$ with $k$ algebraically closed of $\operatorname {char}(k)=0$ is classical and all the statements can be found for example in [Reference Huybrechts and LehnHL97, § 4] for moduli of sheaves on surfaces, and in [Reference NitsureNit91] for moduli of Higgs bundles.

For $T$ a field of positive or mixed characteristic, moduli spaces of sheaves were first constructed by Langer in [Reference LangerLan04b, Reference LangerLan04a]. More general moduli stacks and moduli spaces of sheaves and complexes over a smooth projective family $X/T$ were studied in [Reference LieblichLie06] and [Reference Huybrechts and ThomasHT10]. Recently the study of moduli stacks in the relative context has been vastly generalized in [Reference Bayer, Lahoz, Macrì, Nuer, Perry and StellariBLM+21].

We often cite the latter reference, even though the results of Langer, Lieblich and of Huybrechts–Thomas would suffice for our purposes.

2.1 Relative moduli spaces of sheaves on surfaces

Let $S\xrightarrow {r} T$ be a smooth family of projective surfaces, i.e. $r$ is smooth and projective. We are mostly interested in the case where the relative anti-canonical bundle $-K_{S/T}$ is $r$-ample or trivial; we then say that $S$ is del Pezzo, respectively K3, over $T$.

For us $T$ will be either $\mathsf {Spec} (\mathcal {O})$, or $\mathsf {Spec}\,F,$ or $\mathsf {Spec}\,k$ where $F$ is a p-adic field, $\mathcal {O}$ its ring of integers, and $k$ a field, possibly of positive characteristic.

2.1.1 Construction of the moduli spaces

Let us fix $\beta$ on $S$ the class of an $r$-effective divisor, ample and base point free, i.e. $\beta _{t}$ is ample and base point free for each $t \in T$. Given $\mathcal {F}$ a sheaf on $S$, flat over $T$, we say that $\mathcal {F}$ is one-dimensional over $T$ of class $\beta$ if

\[ \operatorname{Supp}(\mathcal{F}):=\operatorname{Fit}_0(\mathcal{F})= C \]

with $C\in \mathbb {P}_T(g_*\mathcal {O}_S(\beta ))$. Since the Fitting support is compatible with pull-back [Sta, Tag 07Z6] this means that $\mathcal {F}_{t}$ is supported on a curve of class $\beta _{t}$ on $S_{t}$ for each $t \in T$.

Let $\mathcal {O}_S(1)$ be a $r$-polarization. Given $\mathcal {F}$ a sheaf on $S$ flat over $T,$ the Hilbert polynomial

\[ P_r(n):=\chi(S_{t}, \mathcal{F}_{t}\otimes\mathcal{O}_{S_t}(n))=(\beta_{t}\cdot H_{t})n +\chi(\mathcal{F}_{t}) \]

for $H_{t}\in |\mathcal {O}_{S_t}(1)|$ is locally constant on $T$ (see, for example, [Reference HartshorneHar77, Theorem 9.9]); in particular, $\chi (\mathcal {F}_{t})$ is locally constant.

We denote by $p_r(n)$ the reduced relative Hilbert polynomial obtained from $P_r(n)$ dividing by the coefficient of the leading term.

Definition 2.1.1 (see [Reference Bayer, Lahoz, Macrì, Nuer, Perry and StellariBLM+21, Definition 21.11])

Let $\beta,\chi$ and $\mathcal {O}_S(1)$ be as above. We denote by

\begin{align*} \mathbb{M}_{\beta,\chi}(S)\colon(\operatorname{Sch}/T)^{{\rm op}}\rightarrow\operatorname{Gpds} \end{align*}

the functor whose value on $W\to T$ consist of sheaves $\mathcal {F}$ on $S\times _T W,$ flat over $W$ such that for all $w\in W$, $\mathcal {F}_w$ is a Gieseker semi-stable one-dimensional sheaf of class $\beta _w$ and Euler characteristic $\chi \in \mathbb {Z}$. We recall that $\mathcal {F}_w$ is said Gieseker semi-stable if for all proper subsheaves $\mathcal {G}\in \mathcal {F}_w$ we have

(2.1.2)\begin{equation} n +\frac{\chi(\mathcal{G})}{[\operatorname{Supp}(\mathcal{F}_w)]\cdot H_{w}} \leq p_r(n), \end{equation}

and Gieseker stable if the inequality is strict. Finally, we say that $\mathcal {F}_w$ is geometrically Gieseker stable if its pull-back $\mathcal {F}_{\overline {w}}$ to the algebraic closure is Gieseker stable.

An object $\mathcal {F}\in \mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)(W)$ is called a family of Gieseker semi-stable sheaves of class $(\beta,\chi )$ over $W$.

Here $\mathbb {M}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is the sub-functor of families of Gieseker geometrically stable objects.

Theorem 2.1.3 [Reference LangerLan04b, Reference LangerLan04a, Reference Bayer, Lahoz, Macrì, Nuer, Perry and StellariBLM+21]

In the notation above:

  1. (i) $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ and $\mathbb {M}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ are algebraic stacks of finite type over $T$; the same statement hold for the $\mathbb {G}_m$-rigidification $\mathcal {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ of $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$;

  2. (ii) there exists a projective $T$-scheme $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ which uniformly represent the set valued functor over $T$-schemes associating to $W$ the set of $\text {S}$-equivalence classes of families of Gieseker semi-stable sheaves on the fibers of $S\times _T W\to W$ with Hilbert polynomial $p_r(n)$;

  3. (iii) $\mathbb {M}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is a $\mathbb {G}_m$ gerbe over its coarse moduli space $\operatorname {M}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$, which is a quasi-projective scheme over $T$ representing isomorphism classes of Gieseker geometrically stable sheaves on the fibers of $S\times _T W\to W$ with Hilbert polynomial $p_r(n)$;

  4. (iv) $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is universally closed over $T$ and, thus, universally closed over $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$.

Proof. (i) A far more general version of this statement is proved in [Reference Bayer, Lahoz, Macrì, Nuer, Perry and StellariBLM+21, Theorem 21.24]. For the benefit of the reader, we recall the key steps of the proof in the special case of Langer [Reference LangerLan04a], which is the only one we need.

Let $E$ be a coherent sheaf on $S$ flat on $T$, and let $\operatorname {Quot}_{T,p_r(n)}(E)\colon (\operatorname {Sch}/T)^{{\rm op}}\rightarrow \operatorname {Sets}$ be the relative Quot functor, whose $W\to T$ valued points are quotients $E_W\to Q\to 0$ with $Q$ a coherent sheaf on $S\times _T W$, flat over $W$, with Hilbert polynomial $p_r(n)$ along the fibers of $S\times _T W\xrightarrow {r_W} W$. As proved for example in [Sta, Tag 09TQ], $\operatorname {Quot}_{T,p_r(n)}(E)$ is represented by an algebraic space over $T$ locally of finite presentation.

By Langer's results [Reference LangerLan04a, § 3], families of Gieseker semi-stable sheaves on the fibers of $S\xrightarrow {r} T$ with fixed Hilbert polynomial $p_r(n)$ are bounded, i.e. any $\mathcal {F}\in \mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is a quotient of $E=\mathcal {O}_S(-N)^{\oplus F(N)}$ for some fixed $N.$

Furthermore, as shown in [Reference LangerLan04a, § 4], the open subsets $\mathcal {R}^{\rm st}\subseteq \mathcal {R}^{{\rm ss}}\subset \operatorname {Quot}_{T,p_r(n)}(E)$ of Gieseker stable/semi-stable sheaves on the fibers of $S\xrightarrow {r} T$, correspond to the opens of stable/semi-stable points with respect to the natural action of the $T$-smooth group $\operatorname {GL}(F(N))$.

It thus follows that $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)\cong [ \mathcal {R}^{{\rm ss}}/ \operatorname {GL}(F(N))]$ and $\mathbb {M}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }(S)\cong [ \mathcal {R}^{\rm st}/ \operatorname {GL}(F(N))]$ as stacks over $\operatorname {Sch}/T$. The statement for the rigidification $\mathcal {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ now follows immediately as the latter is simply given by $[ \mathcal {R}^{{\rm ss}}/ \operatorname {PGL}(F(N))]$.

(ii) The projective $T$-scheme $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is the GIT quotient $\mathcal {R}^{{\rm ss}}/ / \operatorname {GL}(F(N))$ this exists and has the claimed property by [Reference SeshadriSes77, Theorem 4], as also argued by Langer in the proof of [Reference LangerLan04a, Theorem 4.1].

(iii) The statement follows by the construction explained in statement (i).

(iv) The universal closedness over $T$ follows from a relative version of Langton's theorem. The reader can see [Reference LangtonLan75] or [Reference Huybrechts and LehnHL97, Theorem 2.B.1] for the proof over an algebraic closed field, and [Reference Bayer, Lahoz, Macrì, Nuer, Perry and StellariBLM+21, Lemma 21.22] for the general case.

Given the GIT construction of the moduli space recalled above, the universal closedness of $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)\to \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ also follows from [Reference Alper, Halpern-Leistner and HeinlothAHH23, Theorem A.8].

2.1.2 Deformation theory

Let $S\xrightarrow {r} T$ be as in the previous section, and let $\mathcal {F}$ be a coherent sheaf on $S$ flat over $T$. We denote by $\operatorname {Ext}^i_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$ the $T$ sheaf obtained by taking the $i$th cohomology of the complex $Rr_*\operatorname {R}\mathcal {H}om(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F}),$ i.e.

\[ \operatorname{Ext}^i_S(\mathcal{F},\mathcal{F}):= \text{H}^i(Rr_*\operatorname{R}\mathcal{H}om(\mathcal{F},\mathcal{F})). \]

By [Reference LieblichLie06, § 3] (see also [Reference Huybrechts and ThomasHT10, § 4]) the sheaves $\operatorname {Ext}^i_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$ control the deformation theory of $\mathcal {F}$ over $T$, namely:

  1. (i) there is a natural isomorphism $\operatorname {Ext}^0_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})\cong \operatorname {End}(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$;

  2. (ii) the first-order deformations of $\mathcal {F}$ are given by $\operatorname {Ext}^1_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$;

  3. (iii) the obstruction to deformations are contained in $\operatorname {Ext}^2_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$.

Lemma 2.1.4 Let $S\xrightarrow {r} T$ be a smooth family of del Pezzo surfaces. Then ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is smooth over $T$.

Proof. It suffices to show that the obstruction $\operatorname {Ext}^2_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$ is zero. We argue that $\operatorname {Ext}^2_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})\otimes k(\bar {t})=0$ for any geometric point $\bar {t}\in T$. By [Reference Altman and KleimanAK80, Theorem 1.9], the cohomology and base change property for Ext sheaves implies

\[ \operatorname{Ext}^2_S(\mathcal{F},\mathcal{F})\otimes k(\bar{t})= \operatorname{Ext}^2_{S_{\bar{t}}}(\mathcal{F}_{\bar{t}},\mathcal{F}_{\bar{t}}), \]

where $\mathcal {F}_{\bar {t}}$ is, by definition, a Gieseker semi-stable sheaf of class $\beta _{\bar {t}}$ and Euler characteristic $\chi$ on $S_{\bar {t}}.$ The vanishing of the right-hand side is then classical; see, for example, [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Lemma 2.5].

2.1.3 Singularities in the K3 case

For $S\to T$ a K3 surface, it will never be the case that $\operatorname {Ext}^2_S(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$ vanishes. Nonetheless, the following generalization of a classical result of Mukai [Reference MukaiMuk84] holds.

Theorem 2.1.5 [Reference InabaIna11, Theorem 3.2]

Let $S/ k$ be a smooth projective K3 surface over an algebraically closed field $k$ and let $\mathcal {F}$ be a simple sheaf, i.e. $\operatorname {Hom}_{S}(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})=k$. Then the deformations of $\mathcal {F}$ are unobstructed. In particular, the open sub-stack $\operatorname {Spl}(S/ k)_{(\beta,\chi )}\subseteq \mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ of simple semi-stable sheaves is smooth over $k$.

Corollary 2.1.6 Let $S \to T$ be a smooth projective relative K3 surface and $T$ a smooth base with perfect residue fields. Then the moduli stack $\operatorname {Spl}_{(\beta,\chi )}(S/ T)$ of simple semi-stable sheaves is smooth over $T$.

Proof. By Inaba's result, Theorem 2.1.5, the closed fibers of $\operatorname {Spl}_{(\beta,\chi )}(S/ T)\to T$ are smooth of dimension $\beta _{\bar {t}}^2+2,$ and since $S\to T$ is smooth this number is constant on $T$ (see [Reference FultonFul16, § 20.3]). It then follows from [Reference SchoutensSch10, Theorem 3.3.27] that $\operatorname {Spl}_{(\beta,\chi )}(S/ T)\to T$ is flat and, thus, in fact smooth since all of the closed fibers are.

This immediately implies that $\mathbb {M}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is smooth for $S \to T$ as in Corollary 2.1.6. Furthermore, for $T=\mathbb {C}$, the singularities of the moduli stack $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ have been studied intensively [Reference Arbarello and SaccàAS18, Reference Budur and ZhangBZ19, Reference DavisonDav23, Reference Crawley-BoeveyCra01]. In the following theorem, we state, in a form convenient for our purposes, some consequences of the results obtained in the quoted references.

Theorem 2.1.7 Let $S/ \mathbb {C}$ be a smooth projective K3 surface and $(\beta,\chi )$ a dimension vector such that the locus of $\operatorname {Spl}_{\beta,\chi }^{{\rm ss}}(S)\subseteq \mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ of simple semi-stable sheaves has complement of codimension at least two. Then $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is normal with local complete intersection singularities.

Proof. For a morphism $Y\to X$ he property of being local complete intersection is étale local on source and target [Sta, Tag 06C3]. Thus, it is enough to argue that for any point $q\in \mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ there exist an étale neighborhood $U_q$ with local complete intersection singularities.

By [Reference DavisonDav23, Theorem 5.11], an étale local model for $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)\to \text {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is given by the moduli stack $\mathfrak M_{\mathbf {d}}(\Pi _Q)=[\mu _{\mathbf {d}}^{-1}(0)/\operatorname {GL}_{\mathbf {d}}]$ (see [Reference DavisonDav23, § 3] for notation) of representations of the preprojective algebra of a certain explicit quiver, already considered in [Reference Arbarello and SaccàAS18].

On the other hand, by [Reference Crawley-BoeveyCra01, Theorem 1.2], $\mu _{\mathbf {d}}^{-1}(0)$ is a local complete intersection as soon as there exists a simple representation of the preprojective algebra with given dimension vector.

By our assumptions, $\operatorname {Spl}_{\beta,\chi }^{{\rm ss}}(S)$ is dense in $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$. This ensures the existence of a simple representation in $U_q$ for each $q$. Thus, since étale morphisms preserve the dimension of the automorphism groups and automorphism groups for quiver representations are connected, there exists a simple representation for $\Pi _Q$ for each $Q$ appearing in the local description.

Once we know that $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is local complete intersection, and thus Gorenstein, the normality simply follows from the assumption on the codimension of the locus of simple sheaves and Mukai and Inaba's Theorem 2.1.5.

Remark 2.1.8 We show in § 2.2 that the hypothesis on the codimension of the complement of $\operatorname {Spl}_{\beta,\chi }^{{\rm ss}}(S)$ is satisfied as soon as: $\beta$ is ample and base point free, and the locus $V$ of non-reduced curves in the linear system $|\beta |$ is of codimension at least 2.

For example, let $S$ be the K3 surface obtained as the 2:1 cover of $S\xrightarrow {\tau }\mathbb {P}^2$ branched along a general sextic $Z$. Consider $\beta =\tau ^*[dL]$ for $d\geq 1$. Then a curve $C$ in $|\beta |$ is the 2:1 cover of a curve $D\in |dL|$ branched over $D\cap Z$. Then $C$ can be non-reduced only if, either $D$ itself is non-reduced or there is a component of $D$ contained in $Z,$ i.e. $Z$ is a component of $D$. Both loci have high codimension in $|dL|$.

2.1.4 Hilbert–Chow map

We keep the notation of the previous section. Let us denote by $B_T=\mathbb {P}_T(g_*\mathcal {O}_S(\beta )),$ and by $\mathcal {C}\to B_T$ the universal curve. As for the case $T=\mathsf {Spec}(\mathbb {C})$ there is a morphism

\[ \mathbf{h}_{\chi}\colon \mathbb{M}_{\beta,\chi}(S)\to B_T, \]

which associate to $\mathcal {F}$ its fitting support and factors through the moduli space

\[ h_{\chi}\colon \operatorname{M}_{\beta,\chi}(S)\to B_T. \]

We call $h_{\chi }$ the Hilbert–Chow morphism and $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }$ the stacky Hilbert–Chow morphism. Since both $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ and $B_T$ are projective over $T,$ $h_{\chi }$ is proper over $T$.

For $b\colon T\to B_T$ a section such that $\mathcal {C}_b/T$ is smooth, the fiber $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }^{-1}(b)$ is the Picard stack $\mathfrak {P}ic^{\chi +g-1}_{\mathcal {C}_b/T}$ where $g$ is the genus of the curve, and $h^{-1}_{\chi }(b)$ the Picard space $\operatorname {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{\mathcal {C}_b/T},$ i.e. the $\mathbb {G}_m$-rigidification.

For $b\colon T\to B_T$, such that $\mathcal {C}_b/T$ is integral, the fiber of the stacky Hilbert–Chow morphism is some universally closed stack over $T$ containing $\mathfrak {P}ic^{\chi +g-1}_{\mathcal {C}_b/T}$ as an open sub-stack, and $h^{-1}_{\chi }(b)$ is the corresponding GIT quotient, which is the compactification of the Picard space $\operatorname {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{\mathcal {C}_b/T}$ constructed by Altman and Kleiman [Reference Altman and KleimanAK80].

In general, for $\mathcal {C}_b/T$ non-integral not all line bundles of total degree $\operatorname {totdeg}=\chi +g-1$ are Gieseker semi-stable and one cannot say much about the fiber, except that it is a moduli stack of semi-stable sheaves of pure dimension 1. In the reduced case, moduli stacks and moduli spaces of rank-one semi-stable torsion free sheaves on $\mathcal {C}_b/T$ have been studied, and in the following we recall some known results.

2.2 The open sub-stack of invertible sheaves

We denote by

\[ \mathfrak{U}_{\beta,\chi}\subseteq\mathfrak Pic^{\chi+g-1}_{\mathcal{C}/B_T} \]

the open sub-stack corresponding to line bundles of total degree $\chi +g-1$, which are Gieseker semi-stable on the fibers of $\mathcal {C}/B_T$.

The rigidification $\mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }\subseteq \mathcal {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is stabilizer free, and $\mathfrak {U}_{\beta,\chi }\to \mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }$ is simply a $\mathbb {G}_m$ gerbe. It follows from Theorem 2.1.3, that if we further restrict to geometrically stable line bundles $\mathfrak {U}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }$, the rigidification $\mathcal {U}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }$ is a good moduli space for the moduli stack and it is isomorphic to an open in $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$.

The opens $\mathcal {U}^{\rm st}_{\beta,\chi }\subseteq \mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }$ will play a crucial role in the construction of the canonical measure. To this end, we need to prove the following codimension estimate.

Proposition 2.2.1

  1. (i) Let $S\xrightarrow {r} T$ be a relative del Pezzo surface and $\beta$ a base point free and ample curve class. Then the complement of  $\,\mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }$ in $\mathcal {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$, or equivalently the complement of  $\mathfrak {U}_{\beta,\chi\!}$ in ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$, has codimension at least two.

  2. (ii) Let $T=\operatorname {Spec}(\mathbb {C})$ and $S$ a smooth projective K3 surface. Suppose furthermore that $\beta$ is ample, base point free and the codimension of the non-reduced locus $V\subset B$ is at least 2. Then the complement of $\mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }$ in $\mathcal {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ has codimension at least two.

The proof of this statement is somewhat involved and it will occupy the rest of the section. The reader who wish to get to the core of the paper quickly may skip this in a first reading.

Proof of Proposition 2.2.1 In case (i), by Lemma 2.1.4, ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi }(S)\to T$ is smooth, so it is sufficient to estimate the codimension of the locus of line bundles on each geometric fiber ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta _{\bar {t}},\chi }(S_{\bar {t}})\to \mathsf {Spec}(\bar {k})$. In case (ii) we are already by hypothesis working on an algebraically closed field. This allows us to reduce to the following classical setting.

Setting 2.2.2 The surface $S$ is a smooth del Pezzo or K3 surface over $\bar {k}$ an algebraically closed field; $H$ is a polarization on $S$, $\beta$ is a base point free and ample curve class and $B=|\beta |$ the linear system of curves in class $\beta.$

Working on $T=\mathsf {Spec}(\bar {k})$ allows us to appeal to the results of [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Reference YuanYua23]. It is proved in [Reference YuanYua23], with techniques inspired by [Reference SchiffmannSch16], that for smooth projective surfaces $S$ over an algebraically closed field $\bar {k}$ with canonical $K_S\leq 0$ the stacky Hilbert–Chow morphism $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }$ (and, thus, also $h_{\chi }$) is equidimensional.

Theorem 2.2.3 [Reference YuanYua23, Theorem 1.2, Corollary 1.3]

Let $S$ be a smooth projective surface and $\beta =\sum _{i=1}^n m_i\beta _i$ an ample effective curve class with $\beta _i$ pairwise distinct. If $K_S\cdot \beta _i\leq 0$ for all $i$, then

\[ \dim(\mathbf{h}^{-1}_{\chi}(b))\leq g-1 \]

for any $b\in |\beta |$, where $g=\frac {1}{2} \beta \cdot (\beta +K_S)+1$.

Using the dimension estimate, Maulik and Shen proved the following.

Corollary 2.2.4 [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Theorem 2.3]

For $S$ del Pezzo, Hilbert–Chow morphisms $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }$ and $h_{\chi }$ are equidimensional. In particular, $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is irreducible.

Corollary 2.2.5 For $S$ a K3 over an algebraically closed field, Hilbert–Chow morphisms $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }$ and $h_{\chi }$ are equidimensional. In particular, $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is irreducible.

Proof. This is a word-by-word repetition of the argument in [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Theorem 2.3] given the dimension estimate in Theorem 2.2.3.

Remark 2.2.6 The dimension estimate $\dim (\mathbf {h}^{-1}_{\chi }(b))\leq g-1$ had previously been proved in [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Proposition 2.6] under the additional hypothesis that $S$ is a toric del Pezzo, by reducing the estimate to curves with underlying support a union of possibly non-reduced toric divisors, for which the results of [Reference Chaudouard and LaumonCL16] apply.

We use the equidimensionality of the (stacky) Hilbert–Chow as follows. First, by Bertini's theorem, since $\beta$ is ample and base point free, there is a dense open $B^{sm}\subset B$ such that for $b\in B^{sm}$ the curve ${\mathcal {C}}_b$ is a non-singular, integral curve of genus $g=\frac {1}{2} \beta \cdot (\beta +K_S)+1$. In this case, $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }^{-1}(b)\cong \mathfrak Pic^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b},$ which is simply a $\mathbb {G}_m$ gerbe over the degree $\chi +g-1$ component of the Picard group.

In particular, $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }^{-1}(B^{sm})$ is contained in the open sub-stack of (stable) line bundles. Note, furthermore, that since the number of connected components is lower semi-continuous in a proper flat family (see, for example, [Reference Deligne and MumfordDM69, Theorem 4.17]) all the curves in the linear system are connected.

To prove the codimension estimate, we now look at the fibers of the Hilbert–Chow morphism over the locus of singular curves.

The complement of $B^{sm}$ in $B$ has codimension 1, and by equidimensionality of $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }$ so does $\mathbf {h}^{-1}_{\chi }(B\setminus B^{sm})$.

Let us denote by $V\subseteq B\setminus B^{sm}$ the locus of non-reduced curves. We prove in § 2.2.1 that this has always codimension at least 2 in $B$ for $S$ del Pezzo, provided $\beta$ is a base point free ample class. For $S$ a K3, the codimension of $V$ is at least two by assumption; see Remark 2.1.8 for examples where the assumption is verified. Then $\mathbf {h}^{-1}_{\chi }(V)$ has codimension at least two, and it can be discarded for the purposes of estimating the codimension of the complement of $\mathfrak {U}_{\beta,\chi }$.

Finally, we study the fibers over $(B\setminus B^{sm})\setminus V$ in § 2.2.2 and prove that the locus of line bundles in $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }^{-1}(b)$ is dense for all $b\in (B\setminus B^{sm})\setminus V$.

In conclusion, the complement of $\mathfrak {U}_{\beta,\chi }$ is contained in the union of $\mathbf {h}^{-1}_{\chi }(V)$ and a divisor $\mathfrak {D}\subset \mathbf {h}^{-1}_{\chi }(B\setminus B^{sm})$. These have both codimension at least two, which allows us to conclude.

2.2.1 Excluding the non-reduced locus

Consider the stratification of $B$ given by

\[ B=\bigsqcup_{\underline{\beta}} B_{\underline{\beta}}, \]

where $\underline {\beta }=\{m_1\beta _1,\ldots,m_s\beta _s\}$ with $s\geq 1$, $m_i\geq 1$, and $\beta _i$ are distinct curve classes such that there exists an integral curve in $|\beta _i|$ for each $i$; $B_{\underline {\beta }}$ is the locally closed strata in $B$ of curves of type $\underline {\beta }$, i.e.

\begin{align*} B_{\underline{\beta}}=\bigg\{C=\sum_i m_i C_i\in |\beta|,\ C_i\in |\beta_i|\bigg\}, \end{align*}

with $C_i$ integral.

Let $Z$ be an irreducible component in $\overline {B}_{\underline {\beta }}$; we denote by $\delta _Z$ the dimension of the affine part of the Jacobian of $\mathcal {C}_b$ for $b\in Z^{\circ }\subseteq \overline {B}_{\underline {\beta }}$ generic, i.e.

\[ \delta_Z=\dim(\operatorname{Pic}^0(\mathcal{C}_b))^{{\rm Aff}}. \]

Lemma 2.2.7 Let $\beta$ be a base point free ample class on a smooth del Pezzo surface. The locus $V\subset B$ of non-reduced curves has codimension at least two.

Proof. The locus $V$ of non-reduced curves is the union of closed strata $\overline {B}_{\underline {\beta }}$ with $\underline {\beta }$ having at least one $m_i\geq 2$. We want to show that the codimension of any irreducible component $Z$ of such a stratum $\overline {B}_{\underline {\beta }}$ is at least two in $B$. The proof follows from the following inequality which is proved in [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Proposition 4.3]:

(2.2.8)\begin{equation} \operatorname{codim}(Z)\geq -K_S\cdot \bigg(\sum_i(m_i-1)\beta_i\bigg)+\delta_Z\geq 1+\delta_Z, \end{equation}

where the second inequality holds since $-K_S$ is ample, $m_i-1\geq 0$ for each $i$ and $m_i-1\geq 1$ for at least one $i$ and, thus,

\[ -K_S\cdot \bigg(\sum_i(m_i-1)\beta_i\bigg)\geq 1; \]

since $-K_S$ is ample, the equality can hold only if all but one $m_i$ are equal to $1$.

If the latter inequality is strict, we are done; otherwise we can assume that $m_1=2$ and $m_i=1$ for any other $i$. Again, if $\delta _Z\geq 1$ we are done.

To complete the proof we only need to look the cases where $m_1=2$, $m_i=1$ for any other $i$, and $\delta _Z=0$.

Let us denote by $C:=\mathcal {C}_b$ for $b\in B_{\{2\beta _1,\beta _2,\ldots,\beta _s\}}$ a generic point in this stratum, by $C'\subseteq C$ the reduced subcurve, and by $\beta '=\beta -\beta _1$ its class.

We have two short exact sequences:

\begin{align*} & 0\to \mathcal{O}_{C_1}(-\beta'\cdot\beta_1)\to \mathcal{O}_{C}\to\mathcal{O}_{C'}\to 0\\ & 0\to O_{C'}\to \oplus\bigoplus_{i=1}^s\mathcal{O}_{\widetilde{C}_i}\to \bigoplus_{p\in C^{\prime{\rm sing}}} \mathcal{O}_p^{\delta(p)}\to 0. \end{align*}

The latter is simply the normalization sequence for $\widetilde {C'}=\sqcup _{i=1}^s\widetilde {C}_i\to C'$ (see [Reference LiuLiu06, § 7.5]). We denoted by

\begin{align*} \delta(p)=\operatorname{length}_k(\mathcal{O}_{\widetilde{C'},p}/\mathcal{O}_{C'}) \end{align*}

the so-called delta invariant of the singularity.

By [Reference LiuLiu06, Lemma 5.11], there is a surjective morphism of abelian groups

\[ \operatorname{Pic}^0(C)\to \operatorname{Pic}^0(C')\to 0 \]

with kernel an affine unipotent group of dimension $\operatorname {dim}\operatorname {H}^1(C_1,\mathcal {O}_{C_1}(-\beta '\cdot \beta _1))$. Moreover, by [Reference LiuLiu06, Theorem 5.19], $\operatorname {Pic}^0(C)$ is an extension of $\times \operatorname {Pic}^0(\widetilde {C}_i)$ by an affine group of dimension

(2.2.9)\begin{equation} \bigg(\sum_{p\in C^{\prime{\rm sing}}} \delta (p)\bigg) -s+1, \end{equation}

and, thus,

\[ \delta_Z= \bigg(\sum_{p\in C^{\prime{\rm sing}}}{\delta (p)}\bigg) -s+1+ \operatorname{dim}\operatorname{H}^1(C_1,\mathcal{O}_{C_1}(-\beta'\cdot\beta_1)). \]

One can prove by induction on the number $s$ of irreducible components that $\sum _{p\in C^{\prime{\rm sing}}} \delta (p) -s+1\geq 0$ with equality holding only if the only singularities are nodes and $C'$ is of compact type, namely its dual graph is a tree. For the induction step look at the partial normalization of $C'$ given by $R\sqcup \overline {C'\setminus R}$ for $R$ an irreducible component.

Let us also analyze the degree of $\mathcal {O}_{C_1}(-\beta '\cdot \beta _1)$. We can write $\beta '=\beta ''+\beta _1$ with $\beta ''$ and effective curve class, and we can assume that $\beta ''\cdot \beta _1>0$ otherwise $C'$ is not connected and we can estimate $\delta _Z$ separately on each connected component. From $0\leq g(\beta _1)=\frac {1}{2} K_S\cdot \beta _1+ \frac {1}{2} \beta ^2_1+1$ and the fact that $K_S$ is anti-ample, it follows that $\beta ^2_1\geq -1$. In particular, $-\beta '\cdot \beta _1=- \beta ''\cdot \beta _1- \beta ^2_1\leq 0$ with equality holding only in the case $\beta _1^2=-1$, and $\beta ''\cdot \beta _1=1$. However, if the equality is verified, then $\beta \cdot \beta _1 <0$, contradicting the ampleness of $\beta$.

We can thus assume that $\mathcal {O}_{C_1}(-\beta '\cdot \beta _1)$ has strictly negative degree $d.$ By Riemann–Roch,

\[ \operatorname{dim}\operatorname{H}^1(C_1,\mathcal{O}_{C_1}(-\beta'\cdot\beta_1))=g(C_1)-d-1, \]

which is always positive unless $g(C_1)=0$ and $d=-1$. In particular, in this case we must have: $\beta ''\cdot \beta _1=1$, $\beta _1^2=0$ and $K_S\cdot \beta _1=-2$. We can thus give a better estimate of the codimension of the component $Z$ in $B$ corresponding to such curves. By [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Lemma 2.1], given $\gamma$ an effective curve class, the dimension of the linear system $|\gamma |$ is $\frac {1}{2}\gamma \cdot (\gamma -K_S)$. Thus, $\dim B=\frac {1}{2}\beta \cdot (\beta -K_S)$, whereas the dimension of $Z$ is $\frac {1}{2}\beta '\cdot (\beta '-K_S)$. We compute

\begin{align*} \operatorname{codim}(Z)&=\tfrac{1}{2}\beta\cdot(\beta-K_S)-\tfrac{1}{2}\beta'\cdot(\beta-K_S)\\ &=\tfrac{1}{2}[(\beta'+\beta_1)^2 -K_S\cdot\beta-\beta'^2+K_S\cdot\beta')\\ &=\tfrac{1}{2}[2\beta'\cdot\beta_1-K_S\cdot\beta_1]=2. \end{align*}

The assumption in case (ii) and Lemma 2.2.7 in case (i) of Proposition 2.2.1 allows us to disregard completely the locus $V$ of non-reduced curve.

2.2.2 Reduced curves

If ${\mathcal {C}}_b$ is integral, then any rank-one torsion free sheaf $\mathcal {F}$ is strictly stable, independently from the choice of polarization. This is easily seen noting that for any proper sub-sheaf $\mathcal {G}\hookrightarrow \mathcal {F}$, the cokernel is supported on a dimension $0$ sub-scheme, which imply the strict inequality in (2.1.2). In particular, $\mathbf {h}_{\chi }^{-1}(b)$ is a $\mathbb {G}_m$ gerbe over the compactification $\overline {\mathrm {Pic}}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$of $\mathrm {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$ of Altman and Kleiman [Reference Altman and KleimanAK80]. It was proved in [Reference RegoReg80, Theorem A] that for an integral curve with only planar singularities $\overline {\mathrm {Pic}}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$ is irreducible and, thus, the open of line bundles is dense.

We are left to study the fiber $\mathbf {h}^{-1}_\chi (b)$ for $b \in |\beta |$ a reduced but possibly reducible curve.

Proposition 2.2.10 Let $C$ be a reduced curve with planar singularities and polarization $H_C$. Let ${\mathbb {M}}_{\chi }(C)$ be the moduli stack of Gieseker semi-stable rank-one torsion free sheaves on $C$. Then the open substack $\mathfrak {U}_{\chi }$ of semi-stable invertible sheaves is dense in ${\mathbb {M}}_{\chi }(C)$.

Proof. To show that $\mathfrak {U}_{\chi }\subseteq {\mathbb {M}}_{\chi }(C)$ is dense, we need to show that any point $F$ in ${\mathbb {M}}_{\chi }(C)$ is the limit of a family of line bundles on $C$ in a one-parameter family. This now follows from the deformation theory of rank-one sheaves on planar curves. Let $q_1,\ldots q_k$ be the points (necessarily) in the singular locus $C^{{\rm sing}}$ where $F$ fails to be a line bundle. We look at the forgetful morphism

\[ \operatorname{Def}_{F}\xrightarrow{l}\prod_{i=1,\dots k} \operatorname{Def}_{F_{q_i}}, \]

where $F_{q_i}$ is the stalk of $F$ at $q_i$. Since we are looking at curves with planar singularities, the forgetful morphism is smooth [Reference Fantechi, Goettsche and Van SratenFGV99]. Thus, it is sufficient to show that the generic element in each local deformation space $R_{F_{q_i}}$ corresponds to a invertible module. However, this follows from the analogous statement for compactified Jacobians of integral planar curves [Reference RegoReg80]. More explicitly: in order to describe $R_{F_{q_i}}$, consider an integral curve $C_{q_i}$ with $q_i$ as unique singular point. By [Reference RegoReg80] the Picard is dense in the compactified Jacobian, which in particular implies that the generic point in $R_{F_{q_i}}$ parametrizes a line bundle.

This concludes the proof of Proposition 2.2.1.

Remark 2.2.11 When there are no strictly semi-stables, and thus ${\mathbb {M}}_{\chi }(C)$ is a $\mathbb {G}_m$ gerbe on $h_{\chi }^{-1}(C)=\operatorname {M}_{\chi }(C)$, it is stated in [Reference Melo, Rapagnetta and VivianiMRV17, Corollary 2.20] or also in [Reference López-MartínLop05, Theorem 4.5] that stable line bundles are dense in the moduli space.

When there are strictly semi-stables (which is the most interesting case for us) the density statement at the level of moduli spaces $\operatorname {M}_{\chi }(C)$ is false; the description of the moduli space in [Reference López-MartínLop05, Theorem 4.5] explains this fact.

2.3 Moduli of Higgs bundles

Let $C\to T$ be a smooth projective curve. As for the case of sheaves on surfaces, there is an adaptation of theory of moduli stack and moduli spaces of Higgs bundles relative to a base $T$. The case where $T$ is a field of positive characteristic is already considered in [Reference NgôNgô06].

We refer to [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, § 7.1] and references therein for the adaptation of the classical theory to the case of smooth curves over $T=\mathsf {Spec} (O_F),\mathsf {Spec}(F)$.

We denote by ${\mathbb {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ and $\operatorname {M}_{r,\chi }(C)$ the moduli stack and moduli space of semi-stable Higgs bundles $(\mathcal {E}, \Theta \colon \mathcal {E}\to \mathcal {E}\otimes \mathcal {O}_C(D))$ of rank $r$ and Euler characteristic $\chi$ on the fibers of $C\to T$. Here $D$ is a relative effective divisor of degree $d=\text {deg}(D) \geq 2g-2$ on the fibers of $C\to T$. If equality holds, we assume that $D$ is the canonical divisor and $g \geq 2$.

The stability is the (fiber-wise) Gieseker stability for sub-bundles preserved by the Higgs field, i.e. $(\mathcal {E},\Theta )$ is semi-stable if for any $\mathcal {F}\subseteq \mathcal {E}$ such that $\Theta \rvert _{\mathcal {F}}\colon \mathcal {F}\to \mathcal {F}\otimes \mathcal {O}_C(D)$

\[ \frac{\chi}{r(\mathcal{F})}\leq\frac{\chi}{r}. \]

The Hitchin fibration is the morphism:

\[ H\colon \operatorname{M}_{r,\chi}(C)\to B_T:=\bigoplus_{i=1}^r H^0(C,\mathcal{O}_C(id)) \]

associating to $(\mathcal {E},\Theta )$ the coefficients of its characteristic polynomial.

Via the spectral correspondence [Reference HitchinHit87], ${\mathbb {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ can be interpreted as a moduli stack of one-dimensional sheaves $\mathcal {F}$ on the non-compact surface

\[ S_C:=\operatorname{Tot}(\mathcal{O}_C(D))\xrightarrow{\pi} C \]

with $[\operatorname {Supp}(\mathcal {F})]=r[C]$. The hypothesis on the degree of $D$ implies that $S_C$ is del Pezzo, which, in turn, guarantees the smoothness of the moduli stack ${\mathbb {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ and its ${\mathbb {G}}_m$-rigidification ${\mathcal {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ for each $(r,\chi )$ similar to Lemma 2.1.4.

Moreover, via the correspondence we can identify the fibers of the Hitchin fibration $H$ with the Simpson compactified Jacobians of the spectral curve $C_{P(t)}\subseteq S_C$ cut out by the polynomial $\text {det}(\pi ^*\Theta -t\text {Id})$.

In the following theorem we collect the analogous statements of Theorem 2.1.3 and Proposition 2.2.1 for the moduli stack of meromorphic Higgs bundles. Since the proof is essentially the same as in the previous section we do not repeat it here.

Theorem 2.3.1

  1. (i) The moduli stack ${\mathbb {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ and its $\mathbb {G}_m$-rigidification ${\mathcal {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ are algebraic stacks of finite type over $T$.

  2. (ii) If $\operatorname {deg}(D) >2g-2$, then ${\mathbb {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ is smooth over $T$.

  3. (iii) If $D=K_C$ and $T=\operatorname {Spec}(\mathbb {C})$, then ${\mathbb {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ is normal.

  4. (iv) There exists a quasi-projective $T$-scheme $\operatorname {M}_{r,\chi }(C)$, proper over $B_T$ which uniformly represent the moduli functor of S-equivalence classes of Higgs bundles.

  5. (v) We have that ${\mathbb {M}}^{st}_{r,\chi }(C)$ is a ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe over the moduli space $\operatorname {M}^{st}_{r,\chi }(C)$

  6. (vi) We have that ${\mathbb {M}}^{st}_{r,\chi }(C)$ is universally closed over $T$ and thus over $\operatorname {M}^{st}_{r,\chi }(C)$

  7. (vii) The open $\mathcal {U}_{r,\chi }\subseteq {\mathcal {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$ of Higgs bundles whose associated spectral sheaf is a line bundle is dense and its complement has codimension at least two in ${\mathcal {M}}_{r,\chi }(C)$.

Remark 2.3.2 In the case of Higgs bundle, no extra assumption is necessary to show normality of the moduli stack. We can understand that from at least two points of view: in the language of [Reference Davison, Hennecart and MejiaDHM22], the moduli stack of Higgs bundles satisfies the totally negative CY2 property [Reference Davison, Hennecart and MejiaDHM22, § 7]; under this additional property the normality follows from the results of [Reference VernetVer22].

Otherwise, we note that the locus $V$ corresponding to non-reduced spectral curves in the Hitchin base $V$ has always codimension at least two and, thus, as in Proposition 2.2.1, the locus of Higgs bundle whose corresponding spectral sheaf is a line bundle has codimension at least two in the stack, which allows us to argue as in Theorem 2.1.7.

The estimate on the codimension on $V$ can be given by an explicit calculation:

By Riemann–Roch the base $B$ of the Hitchin fibration has dimension

\[ \dim B=d\frac{r(r+1)}{2}+r(1-g), \]

where $r$ is the fixed rank and $d=\text {deg}\mathcal {O}_C(D)\geq 2g-2$. The non-reduced locus is the (closure of) the strata $V_{kr_1,r_2} \subseteq B$ whose points correspond to polynomials in $t$ admitting a factorization of the form

(2.3.3)\begin{align} P(t)=P_1(t)^kP_2(t),\quad \text{deg}(P_1(t))=r_1\geq 1,\enspace k\geq 2,\quad \text{deg}(P_2(t))=r_2\geq 0,\enspace kr_1+r_2=r. \end{align}

Thus, the codimension of the non-reduced locus is the minimum of the codimension of the strata $V_{kr_1,r_2}$. Now, the dimension of the strata is

\[ \dim V_{kr_1,r_2}=d\frac{r_1(r_1+1)}{2}+r_1(1-g)+d\frac{r_2(r_2+1)}{2}+r_2(1-g), \]

and it is easy to see by direct computation that

\begin{align*} \dim B-\dim \dim V_{kr_1,r_2}\geq \frac{4g+1}{2}, \end{align*}

for $d\geq 2g-1$ and

\begin{align*} \dim B-\dim \dim V_{kr_1,r_2}= 3(g-1), \end{align*}

for $d=2g-2$.

3. $p$-adic integration

Let $F$ be a non-archimedean local field $F$ with ring of integers ${\mathcal {O}}$ and residue field $k \cong {\mathbb {F}}_q$. We consider the normalized Haar measure $\mu$ on the locally compact group $(F,+)$ so that $\mu ({\mathcal {O}}) = 1$.

Since $F$ is a completely valued field there is a basic theory of differential geometry available. In particular, one can define analytic manifolds and differential forms as over the reals, see [Reference IgusaIgu00, Reference Chambert-Loir, Nicaise and SebagCNS18] for details. Given an $n$-dimensional analytic manifold $M$ and a non-vanishing $n$-form $\omega$ on $M$, one defines a Borel measure $\mu _\omega$ on $M$ by writing in a local chart $U \subset F^n$ of $M$

\[ \omega_{|U} = f \cdot {\rm d}x_1\wedge \cdots \wedge {\rm d} x_n, \]

and integrating $|f|$ against the Haar measure on $F^n$.

We are interested in analytic manifolds that arise from algebraic geometry. Concretely, given a smooth, separated and finite-type $F$-scheme, or more generally $F$-algebraic space $X$, its set of $F$-points $X(F)$ carries naturally the structure of an analytic manifold by the inverse function theorem.

3.1 The measure on the moduli spaces

Let ${\mathcal {M}}$ be a normal algebraic stack with a finite-type morphism to $\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ of dimension $n$. We assume that there exists a (quasi-)projective variety $\operatorname {M}$ and a morphism $\pi :{\mathcal {M}} \rightarrow M$ satisfying the following conditions: there exists a dense open substack $U' \subset {\mathcal {M}}$, smooth over ${\mathcal {O}}$, that is stabilizer free, i.e. an algebraic space, and that the complement of $U'$ has codimension at least $2$ in ${\mathcal {M}}$; there exists a second dense open $U \subset U'$ such that $\pi$ restricted to $U$ induces an isomorphism onto its image in $M$ which we also denote by $U$.

The goal of this section is to construct a canonical measure on the analytic manifold

\[ M^\natural = M({\mathcal{O}}) \cap U(F). \]

For this we need the following extra assumption.

Assumption 3.1.1 For any $x \in M^\natural = M({\mathcal {O}}) \cap U(F)$ there exists a finite extension $L/F$ with ring of integers ${\mathcal {O}}_L$ such that the base change $x_L:\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}}_L) \to M_L = M \times _{{\mathcal {O}}} {\mathcal {O}}_L$ admits a lift $x'_L:\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}}_L) \to {\mathcal {M}}_L$.

Note that Assumption 3.1.1 is, in particular, satisfied if ${\mathcal {M}} \to M$ is universally closed [Sta, 01KA].

We fix a Zariski-open cover $U'= \bigcup _{i\in I} U'_i$ such that on each $U'_i$ the relative canonical bundle $\Omega _{U'/{\mathcal {O}}}^{n}$ is trivial and pick a trivializing (i.e. non-vanishing) $n$-form $\omega _i$ on $U'_i$. Let $U_i = U \cap U'_i$. We have a decomposition

\begin{align*} M^\natural = \bigcup_i M_i^\natural, \end{align*}

with $M_i^\natural = M({\mathcal {O}}) \cap U_i(F)$ and we claim that the measures $\mu _{\omega _i}$ on $M_i^\natural$ glue to a measure on $M^\natural$ that is independent of the choice of $(\omega _i)_i$.

Proposition 3.1.2 (The canonical measure on $M^\natural$)

For all $i,j \in I$ and any measurable subset $A \subset M_i^\natural \cap M_j^\natural$ we have

\[ \mu_{\omega_i}(A) = \mu_{\omega_j}(A). \]

In particular, the family $(\mu _{\omega _i})_{i\in I}$ glues to a Borel measure $\mu _{{\rm can},{\mathcal {M}}}$ on $M^\natural$. Furthermore, $\mu _{{\rm can},{\mathcal {M}}}$ is independent of the choice of $(\omega _i)_{i\in I}$.

Proof. Since $\omega _i$ and $\omega _j$ are both non-vanishing sections of the same invertible sheaf over $U'$ we have $\omega _{j|U'_i \cap U'_j} = f \cdot \omega _{i|U'_i \cap U'_j}$ with $f \in H^0(U'_i\cap U'_j, {\mathcal {O}}^*_{U'_i \cap U'_j})$. We claim that for every $x \in M_i^\natural \cap M_j^\natural \subset (U_i \cap U_j)(F)$ we have that $f(x) \in {\mathcal {O}}_F^*$. This implies the first part of the proposition, since $\mu _{\omega _i}$ and $\mu _{\omega _j}$ are given by locally integrating the absolute value of $\omega _i$ and $\omega _j$.

To prove the claim, let $L/F$ be a finite extension such that $x_L$ lifts to an ${\mathcal {O}}_L$-point $x'_L$ of ${\mathcal {M}}_L$ as in Assumption 3.1.1. Let $p: X \to {\mathcal {M}}$ be a smooth atlas. By passing to an even bigger finite extension of $F$ if necessary, we may further assume that the closed point $\mathsf {Spec}(k_L) \to {\mathcal {M}}_{k_L}$ lifts to the atlas $X_{k_L}$. Since $X_L \to {\mathcal {M}}_L$ is smooth we can then lift the whole $x'_L$ to a morphism $\tilde {x}_L: \mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}}_L) \to X_L$ by Hensel's lemma. Since $F^* \cap {\mathcal {O}}_L = {\mathcal {O}}^*$ it is enough to show that $f(x_L) = f \circ \pi \circ p (\tilde {x}_L) \in {\mathcal {O}}_L^*$.

Write $V_i = p^{-1}(U'_i)$. The point is now that $f \circ p_{|V_i \cap V_j}$ is a regular non-vanishing function on $V_i \cap V_j$ and the complement of $V_i\cap V_j$ in $X$ has codimension at least $2$ by assumption. Since $X$ is normal, Hartogs’ theorem applies and $f$ thus extends to a regular function on $X$ which is still non-vanishing, as the $0$-locus would have codimension $1$. Therefore,

\[ f(x_L) = f \circ p (\tilde{x}_L) \in {\mathcal{O}}_L^*, \]

as claimed.

The proof of the independence of $\mu _{{\rm can},{\mathcal {M}}}$ from $(\omega _i)_{i\in I}$ is essentially the same.

If the stack ${\mathcal {M}}$ is clear from the context we often write $\mu _{\rm can}$ instead of $\mu _{{\rm can},{\mathcal {M}}}$.

Example 3.1.3 Consider the quotient stack ${\mathcal {M}} = [{\mathbb {A}}^2/{\mathbb {G}}_m]$ where ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ acts linearly on ${\mathbb {A}}^2$ with weights $(1,-1)$. In the above notation we have

\[ U' = [({\mathbb{A}}^2 \setminus \{0\}) /{\mathbb{G}}_m],\quad U = [({\mathbb{A}}^2 \setminus \{xy=0\}) / {\mathbb{G}}_m] \cong {\mathbb{G}}_m,\quad M \cong {\mathbb{A}}^1. \]

Then $U'$ is isomorphic to the affine line with doubled origin, which admits an open cover by two copies of ${\mathbb {A}}^1$. The standard $1$-forms on these ${\mathbb {A}}^1$ glue to a global non-vanishing $1$-form on $U'$ and $\mu _{\rm can}$ is given by integrating ${{\rm d}x}$ (i.e. the standard Haar measure) on $M^\natural = {\mathcal {O}} \cap F^* = {\mathcal {O}} \setminus \{0\}$.

Remark 3.1.4 If ${\mathcal {M}} = M$ is stabilizer-free we have $M^\natural = M({\mathcal {O}})$ and the construction of $\mu _{\rm can}$ goes back to Weil [Reference WeilWei12]. The volume is related to the number of $k$-rational points by the formula [Reference WeilWei12, Theorem 2.2.5]

\[ \int_{M({\mathcal{O}})} \mu_{\rm can} = \frac{|M(k)|}{q^n}. \]

Remark 3.1.5 If ${\mathcal {M}}$ is a Deligne–Mumford stack, then $\pi :{\mathcal {M}} \to M$ is proper [Reference Keel and MoriKM97] and, thus, Assumption 3.1.1 is automatically satisfied. In this case $\mu _{\rm can}$ agrees with the orbifold measure constructed in [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20a, § 2.3], although in [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20a, § 2.3] there is no assumption on the codimension of the complement of $U \subset {\mathcal {M}}$. If ${\mathcal {M}}$ is tame, the total volume of $M^\natural$ can be expressed as a weighted point count of the twisted inertia stack of ${\mathcal {M}}$ (see [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20a, Theorem 2.21]).

Remark 3.1.6 Groechenig pointed out to us the following alternative construction: let ${\mathcal {M}}/{\mathcal {O}}$ be any finite-type Artin stack of relative dimension $n$ with a morphism $\pi :{\mathcal {M}} \to M$ to a scheme $M$. Assume, furthermore, that there exists a smooth stabilizer-free open $U \subset {\mathcal {M}}$ such that $\pi _{|U}$ is an isomorphism onto its image and that Assumption 3.1.1 is satisfied. Finally, suppose that there exists a line bundle $\widetilde {\mathcal {K}}$ on ${\mathcal {M}}$ which restricts to a power of the canonical line bundle $\mathcal {K}_{U/{\mathcal {O}}}$ on $U$. Then as in [Reference YasudaYas17, § 4.1], integrating a suitable root of the absolute value of local sections of $\widetilde {\mathcal {K}}$ against the Haar measure defines a measure $\mu ^{vir}$ on $M^\natural$ by an argument as in Proposition 3.1.2. By construction, if both $\mu ^{vir}$ and $\mu _{\rm can}$ are defined they coincide.

Interestingly, in the context of moduli spaces ${\mathbb {M}}$ of sheaves on a surface $S$, such a line bundle $\widetilde {\mathcal {K}}$ arises from the deformation theory as the determinant of $\bf {R}\mathcal {H}om_{{\mathbb {M}}}(\mathcal {F},\mathcal {F})$, where $\mathcal {F}$ is the universal sheaf on $S\times {\mathbb {M}}$ (see [Reference Ben-Bassat, Brav, Bussi and JoyceBBBJ15] for the definition in the strictly semi-stable case, or [Reference Huybrechts and LehnHL97, § 8.3] for a simpler explanation on the locus of stables).

3.2 The canonical measure on moduli spaces of sheaves

Let $S$ be a smooth projective relative surface over $\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ and ${\mathcal {M}}_{\beta,\chi }$ the ${\mathbb {G}}_m$-rigidified moduli stack of semi-stable one-dimensional sheaves on $S$ with moduli space $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ as in § 2.

We take the open substacks $\mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }^{st}\subset \mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }\subset {\mathcal {M}}_{\beta,\chi }$ of geometrically stable line bundles and of line bundles, respectively, as substacks $U\subset U'$ in the notation of § 3.1. From now on we always assume that $S \to \mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ is either a smooth projective del Pezzo surface or a K3 surface satisfying Assumption 3.2.1.

Assumption 3.2.1 Let $S \to \mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ be a smooth projective K3 surface and $(\beta,\chi )$ a dimension vector such that the following hold.

  1. (i) The locus of $\mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi } \subseteq \mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ of line bundles has complement of codimension at least two and $\mathcal {U}_{\beta,\chi }^{st}$ is non-empty.

  2. (ii) The moduli stack $\mathbb {M}_{\beta,\chi }(S)$ is normal.

Remark 3.2.2 We have already commented on the restriction that Assumption 3.2.1(i) imposes in Remark 2.1.8. Over ${\mathbb {C}}$, it follows from Theorem 2.1.7 that Assumption 3.2.1(i) implies Assumption 3.2.1(ii), but we do not know of a proof over more general bases. However, by choosing a suitable spreading out $S \to \mathsf {Spec}(B)$ of a complex K3 surface, satisfying Assumption 3.2.1(i), over the spectrum of a finitely generated ${\mathbb {Z}}$-algebra $B$ we obtain finite-type moduli stacks $\phi : {\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi } \to \mathsf {Spec}(B)$ by Theorem 2.1.3. Then Theorem 2.1.7 implies that the generic fiber of $\phi$ is geometrically normal and, thus, by [Reference GrothendieckGro66, Theorem 12.1.6, Corollary 9.5.2], the fibers of $\phi$ are normal on a non-empty open $V \subset \mathsf {Spec}(B)$. Thus, by pulling back $S$ along regular points $\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}}) \to V$, with ${\mathcal {O}}$ the ring of integers of a non-archimedean local field, we obtain many examples of relative K3 surfaces over $\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ where Assumption 3.2.1 holds [Reference GrothendieckGro65, Proposition 6.14.1].

By Theorem 2.1.3, Lemma 2.1.4 and Proposition 2.2.1 all the assumptions for Proposition 3.1.2 to hold are satisfied and we obtain a canonical measure $\mu _{\rm can}$ on $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }^\natural$.

Also, the smooth base $B$ of the Hilbert–Chow morphism $h_\chi :\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi } \to B$ admits a canonical measure $\mu _{{\rm can},B}$ and it will be useful later to have an explicit description of the relative measure $\mu _{\rm can}/\mu _{{\rm can},B}$ on smooth fibers of $h_\chi$, as in [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, § 6.3].

Lemma 3.2.3 Let $b \in B({\mathcal {O}})$ be such that the pullback of the universal curve ${\mathcal {C}}_b \to \mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ is generically smooth. Then under the identification of $h_\chi ^{-1}(b)(F)$ with $\mathrm {Pic}^{d}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$, for $d = \chi + g-1$, the relative measure $\mu _{\rm can}/\mu _{{\rm can},B}$ on $h_\chi ^{-1}(b)(F)$ is given by integrating the absolute valued of a translation-invariant gauge form $\omega _b$ on the $\mathrm {Pic}^{0}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$-torsor $\mathrm {Pic}^{d}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$.

Proof. Let $\pi : \operatorname {Pic}^{{\rm totdeg}=0}_{\mathcal {C} /B}\to B$ be the smooth group scheme of total degree-zero line bundles on a flat family $\mathcal {C}\rightarrow B$ of curves. By [Reference Bosch, Lütkebohmert and RaynaudBLR12, § 4.2] it admits, up to replacing $B$ with a neighborhood of $b\in B$, a global, translation-invariant, trivializing section $\omega _{{\rm rel}}$ of $\Omega ^g_{\operatorname {Pic}^{{\rm totdeg}=0}/B}$. In particular, $\operatorname {Pic}^{{\rm totdeg}=0}_{\mathcal {C} /B}/\mathcal {O}_F$ has a volume form $\omega =\pi ^*\omega _B\wedge \omega _{{\rm rel}}$, where $\omega _B$ is a volume form in a neighborhood of $b\in B$ inducing $\mu _{{\rm can},B}$.

By [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, Lemma 6.13], since $\operatorname {Pic}^{{\rm totdeg}=d}_{\mathcal {C} /B}$ is a torsor under the group scheme of total degree-zero line bundles, the relative form $\omega _{{\rm rel}}$ induces a section $\widetilde {\omega }_{{\rm rel}}$ of $\Omega ^g_{\operatorname {Pic}^{{\rm totdeg}=d}/B };$ we thus have a volume form $\omega _d=\pi ^*\omega _B\wedge \widetilde {\omega }_{{\rm rel}}$ on $\operatorname {Pic}^{{\rm totdeg}=d}_{\mathcal {C} /B}$.

Since ${\mathcal {U}}_{\beta,\chi }$ has complement of codimension at least two in ${\mathcal {M}}_{\beta,\chi }$ by Proposition 2.2.1, integrating the absolute value of $\omega _d$ computes $\mu _{\rm can}$. Therefore, on $h_\chi ^{-1}(b)(F)$ the relative measure $\mu _{\rm can}/\mu _{{\rm can},B}$ is given by integrating the absolute value of $\omega _b = \widetilde {\omega }_{{\rm rel},b}$.

An analogous construction can be done for moduli spaces of Higgs bundles using Theorem 2.3.1.

4. Gerbes and Tate duality

4.1 ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbes

Let $X\to V$ be a stack for the fppf-topology. Then $X$ is said to be a gerbe if:

  1. (i) for every scheme $T$ over $V$ and objects $x,y \in X(T)$, there exists some fppf-cover $f\colon U \to T$ and an isomorphism $x_{|U}\cong y_{|U}$;

  2. (ii) there exists an fppf-cover $U\to V$ such that the groupoid $X(U)$ is non-empty.

For every $T\to V$ and isomorphism $\phi \colon x \to y$ in $X(T)$, conjugation by $\phi$ induces an isomorphism $\mathsf {Aut}_T(x)\to \mathsf {Aut}_T(y)$. Suppose that every object of $X$ has abelian automorphism group in its fiber category; in this case we say that the gerbe $X\to V$ is abelian. Then for every $T\to V$ and objects $x,y \in X(T)$, there is a canonical isomorphism $\mathsf {Aut}_T(x)\cong \mathsf {Aut}_T(y)$. These isomorphisms determine a sheaf of groups $Band(X/V)$ over $V$.

We say that an abelian gerbe $X \rightarrow V$ is a ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe if there is an isomorphism ${\mathbb {G}}_{m,V}\to Band(X/V)$.

By [Reference GiraudGir20] equivalence classes of ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbes on $V$ are in bijection with the group $H^2(V_{fppf},{\mathbb {G}}_m)$, the Brauer group of $V$. A gerbe $X/V$ is trivial if it is equivalent to $[X/{\mathbb {G}}_{m,V}]$, where ${\mathbb {G}}_{m,V}$ acts trivially on $X$.

We recall that for $F$ a local field, the Brauer group $H^2(F_{fppf},{\mathbb {G}}_m)$ is isomorphic to $\mathbb {Q}/\mathbb {Z}$ by mean of the Hasse invariant; see, for example, [Reference SerreSer68, Proposition XIII.6].

Given $X/V$ a ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe, for any point $F\xrightarrow {s} V$ we get a ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe $s^*X/F$ by pullback. This defines a complex valued function:

(4.1.1)\begin{equation} \varphi_V\colon V(F)\to H^2(F_{fppf},{\mathbb{G}}_m)\cong\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}\xrightarrow{e^{2\pi i} }\mathbb{C} \end{equation}

4.2 Picard stacks/schemes of curves

Let $V$ be a scheme and $c\colon X\to V$ a smooth proper curveFootnote 3 with fibers of genus $g\geq 0$.

We denote by $\mathfrak {Pic}_{X/V}$ the Picard stack of $X/V$; in other words, for an $V$-scheme $T$, $\mathfrak {Pic}_{X/V}(T)$ is the groupoid of invertible sheaves on $X\times _VT$. The group of isomorphism classes of objects of $\mathfrak {Pic}_{X/V}(T)$ is therefore the classical Picard group $\mathrm {Pic}(X\times _VT)$. For each integer $d$, we denote by $\mathfrak {Pic}^d_{X/V}$ the substack of line bundles of degree $d$.

We denote by $\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}$ the sheaf $R^1_{fppf}c_*{\mathbb {G}}_m$ on $V$; it can be equivalently defined as the sheafification of the presheaf $T \mapsto \mathrm {Pic}(X\times _VT)$. The natural morphism

(4.2.1)\begin{equation} \alpha \colon \mathfrak{Pic}_{X/V} \to \mathrm{Pic}_{X/V} \end{equation}

is a gerbe [Sta, 0DME] banded by ${\mathbb {G}}_m$.

The degree-map factors through $\alpha$ and we denote by $\mathrm {Pic}^d_{X/V}$ the corresponding component of degree $d$ line bundles. The degree-zero part $\mathrm {Pic}^0_{X/V}$ is represented by an abelian scheme of relative dimension $g$, the relative Jacobian, and each $\mathrm {Pic}^d_{X/V}$ is an $V$-torsor under it.

In general, a $T$-point of $\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}$ need not correspond to a line bundle on $X\times _VT$; this property gets lost when the sheafification of $T\mapsto \mathrm {Pic}(X\times _VT)$ is taken.

Lemma 4.2.2 [Reference Bosch, Lütkebohmert and RaynaudBLR12, Proposition 8.4]

For every $V$-scheme $T$, there is a canonical exact sequence of abelian groups, functorial in $T$,

\[ 0\to \mathrm{Pic}(T) \to \mathrm{Pic}(X\times_VT) \to \mathrm{Pic}_{X/V}(T) \to H^2(T,{\mathbb{G}}_m) \to H^2(X\times_VT,{\mathbb{G}}_m). \]

Since in our case $\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}$ is a $V$-scheme, we may look at the particular case $T=\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}$. Then the identity in $\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}(\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V})$ gets mapped to the element of $H^2(\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V},{\mathbb {G}}_m)$ corresponding to the ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe $\alpha$ of (4.2.1). By Lemma 4.2.2, $\alpha$ is trivial if and only if there is a universal Poincaré bundle $\mathcal {L}$ on $X\times _V\mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}$. For example, this is the case when $X\to V$ has a section, since then the map

\[ H^2(\mathrm{Pic}_{X/V},{\mathbb{G}}_m) \to H^2(X\times_V\mathrm{Pic}_{X/V},{\mathbb{G}}_m) \]

is injective.

More generally, for an $V$-scheme $T$, the map $c_T\colon \mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}(T) \to H^2(T,{\mathbb {G}}_m)$ sends $x\colon T\to \mathrm {Pic}_{X/V}$ to the equivalence class of the ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe on $T$ obtained by pulling back $\alpha$ along $x$. Such a gerbe is trivial if and only if $x$ comes from a line bundle on $X\times _VT$ (that is, is in the essential image of $\alpha$).

4.3 Tate duality

We consider now the special case where the base $V$ is the spectrum of a non-archimedean local field $F$. As recalled above, the Brauer group $H^2(F,{\mathbb {G}}_m)$ is identified with ${\mathbb {Q}}/{\mathbb {Z}}$ via the Hasse invariant. We denote by $f\colon \mathrm {Pic}_{X/F}(F)\to {\mathbb {Q}}/{\mathbb {Z}}$ the group homomorphism of Lemma 4.2.2, and for each integer $d\in {\mathbb {Z}}$, we call $f_d\colon \mathrm {Pic}^d_{X/F}(F)\to {\mathbb {Q}}/{\mathbb {Z}}$ the restriction of $f$.

Note that any $x \in \mathrm {Pic}^d_{X/F}(F)$ gives rise to an isomorphism $s_x: \mathrm {Pic}^0_{X/F} \to \mathrm {Pic}^d_{X/F}$ and since $f$ is a group homomorphism we have

(4.3.1)\begin{equation} f_d \circ s_x = f_d(x) + f_0. \end{equation}

The following proposition gives some control over $f_0$ in terms of torsor instead of gerbes.

Proposition 4.3.2 The image of $f_0$ is $(({1}/{d_0}){\mathbb {Z}})/{\mathbb {Z}}$, where $d_0$ is the smallest positive integer for which $\mathrm {Pic}^{d_0}_{X/F}(F)$ is non-empty.

In particular, $f_0$ is constant if and only if $\mathrm {Pic}^{1}_{X/F}(F)$ is non-empty.

Similar statements have been used crucially in [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20a] and the following discussion is essentially taken from there.

The proof of Proposition 4.3.2 relies on Tate duality over local fields. Let $A$ be an abelian variety over $F$ and $A^t$ its dual.

Theorem 4.3.3 [Reference MilneMil86, Theorem 3.7.8]

There is a canonical perfect pairing

\[ A(F)\otimes H^{1}(F,A^t) \to H^2(F,{\mathbb{G}}_m)={\mathbb{Q}}/{\mathbb{Z}}. \]

The pairing admits the following geometric description, see [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, Remark 3.11]. First from [Reference MilneMil86, Lemma 3.1] we have an isomorphism

(4.3.4)\begin{equation} H^{1}(F,A^t) \cong \mathsf{Ext}^2(A,{\mathbb{G}}_m). \end{equation}

Now, working in the category of commutative group stacks considered in [Reference BrochardBro21], elements of $\mathsf {Ext}^2(A,{\mathbb {G}}_m)$ can be represented by ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbes on $A$ with a group structure.

Given $x \in \mathsf {A}(F)$, $\tau \in H^{1}(F,A^t)$ and $\alpha _\tau \in \mathsf {Ext}^2(A,{\mathbb {G}}_m)$ the image of $\tau$ under (4.3.4), the paring of $x$ with $\tau$ from Theorem 4.3.3 equals the class of the ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe $x^*\alpha _\tau$ on $\mathsf {Spec}(F)$ under the Hasse invariant isomorphism $H^2(F,{\mathbb {G}}_m) \cong {\mathbb {Q}}/{\mathbb {Z}}$.

Thus, for $A= \mathrm {Pic}^0_{X/F} = A^t$ the homomorphism $f_0$ is simply the Tate-duality pairing with the ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe $\alpha _0: \mathfrak {Pic}^0_{X/F} \rightarrow \mathrm {Pic}^0_{X/F}$.

Proof of Proposition 4.3.2 To simplify the notation we drop the subscript $X/F$. By the previous discussion and Theorem 4.3.3 we see that $d_0\cdot f_0 \equiv 0$ if and only if $\alpha _0^{d_0}$ is equivalent to the trivial ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe on $\mathrm {Pic}^0$. We thus need to show that the latter holds if and only if $\mathrm {Pic}^{d_0}(F)$ is non-empty.

We consider the category of dualizable commutative group stacks $\mathrm {DCGS}_F$ over $\mathsf {Spec}(F)$; see, for example, [Reference BrochardBro21] for a detailed account. The internal hom-functor $D(\cdot ) = \mathcal {H}om(\cdot,B\mathbb {G}_m)$ induces an anti-equivalence on $\mathrm {DCGS}_F$ satisfying $D\circ D = Id$ and extending the usual duality functor on abelian varieties. Furthermore, there is an auto-equivalence $D(\mathfrak {Pic}) \cong \mathfrak {Pic}$ (see [Reference TravkinTra16, § 3.2]). Thus, applying $D$ to the short exact sequence

\[ 0 \to B\mathbb{G}_m \to \mathfrak{Pic} \to \mathrm{Pic} \to 0, \]

we get the sequence

\[ 0 \to D(\mathrm{Pic}) \to \mathfrak{Pic} \xrightarrow{\beta} {\mathbb{Z}} \to 0. \]

Here exactness on the right follows from [Reference BrochardBro21, Proposition 3.18] and the fact that $\mathcal {E}xt^2(\mathrm {Pic})=0$ (see [Reference BrochardBro21, Corollary 11.5]). Since $\beta$ is an epimorphism with kernel $\mathfrak {Pic}^0$ we get an equivalence $D(\mathrm {Pic}) \cong \mathfrak {Pic}^0$. From this we deduce that the sequences

(4.3.5)\begin{align} 0 \to \mathrm{Pic}^0 \to \mathrm{Pic} \to {\mathbb{Z}} \to 0 \end{align}
(4.3.6)\begin{align} 0 \to B{\mathbb{G}}_m \to \mathfrak{Pic}^0 \to \mathrm{Pic}^0 \to 0 \end{align}

are exchanged by duality.

Now (4.3.5) is the extension of ${\mathbb {Z}}$ by $\mathrm {Pic}^0$ corresponding to the $\mathrm {Pic}^0$-torsor $\mathrm {Pic}^1$ under the equivalence [Reference BrochardBro21, Proposition 5.8]. In particular, $\mathrm {Pic}^1$ has a rational point if and only (4.3.5) splits. Dually (4.3.6) is the $B{\mathbb {G}}_m$-torsor on $\mathrm {Pic}^0$ corresponding to $\alpha _0$ under the equivalence [Reference BrochardBro21, Proposition 5.11] and splits if and only if $\alpha _0$ is trivial. Since $D(\cdot )$ is an anti-equivalence, we have thus shown that $\mathrm {Pic}^1$ has a rational point if and only if $\alpha _0$ is trivial.

To extend this to $\mathrm {Pic}^{d_0}$ and $\alpha _0^{d_0}$, we note that their associated short exact sequences are given by the $d_0$-fold Baer sum [Sta, 010I] of (4.3.5) and (4.3.6), respectively. By definition, $D(\cdot )$ commutes with direct sums and exchanges the addition map with the diagonal, i.e. for every $G \in \mathrm {DCGS}_F$

\[ D(G \oplus G \xrightarrow{+} G) \cong D(G) \xrightarrow{\Delta} D(G) \oplus D(G), \]

and, hence, also commutes with Baer sums. We thus deduce that $\mathrm {Pic}^{d_0}$ has a rational point if and only if $\alpha _0^{d_0}$ is trivial, which proves the proposition.

5. Main theorem

We are now ready to state and prove our main theorem. Let $S \to \mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}})$ be either a smooth projective del Pezzo surface or a K3 surface satisfying Assumption 3.2.1 and consider the analytic manifold $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }^\natural$ together with its canonical measure $\mu =\mu _{\rm can}$ as constructed in § 3.2.

The restriction of the natural ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe $\alpha \colon {\mathbb {M}}^{st}_{\beta,\chi } \to {\mathcal {M}}^{st}_{\beta,\chi }\cong \operatorname {M}^{st}_{\beta,\chi }$ induces a function

\[ \varphi_{\beta,\chi}: \operatorname{M}^{\natural}_{\beta,\chi}(F) \rightarrow H^2(F,{\mathbb{G}}_m) \cong {\mathbb{Q}}/{\mathbb{Z}} \xrightarrow{e^{2\pi i \cdot}} {\mathbb{C}}, \]

by pullback to the generic fiber as defined in (4.1.1).

Now for any $x \in \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(k)$ denote by $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }({\mathcal {O}})_x \subset \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }({\mathcal {O}})^\natural$ the ball of ${\mathcal {O}}$-rational points specializing to $x$ over $k$. Then define the non-archimedean BPS function $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }:\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(k) \rightarrow {\mathbb {C}}$ to be

(5.0.1)\begin{equation} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}(x) =q^{-\dim M_{\beta,\chi}} \int_{M_{\beta,\chi}({\mathcal{O}})_x} \varphi_{\beta,\chi}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\rm can}. \end{equation}

Theorem 5.0.2 The function $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi }: \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }(k) \rightarrow {\mathbb {C}}$ satisfies the following two properties:

  1. (i) $p\mathrm {BPS}_{\beta,\chi } \equiv q^{-\dim \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }}$ if $(\beta,\chi )$ is generic;Footnote 4

  2. (ii) for all $\chi,\chi '\in \mathbb {Z}$ and for all $y\in B(k)$ we have

    \[ \sum _{x\in h_{\chi}^{-1}(y)(k)} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}(x)=\sum _{x\in h_{\chi'}^{-1}(y)(k)} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi'}(x). \]

Note that, by definition,

\[ \sum _{x\in h_{\chi}^{-1}(y)(k)} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}(x)=\int_{h_\chi^{-1}(B({\mathcal{O}})_y)} \varphi_{\beta,\chi}^g \, {\rm d}\mu. \]

To prove Theorem 5.0.2 we want to split up the integral using Fubini's theorem.

First let $B^{sm} \subset B$ be the open subscheme, where the universal curve ${\mathcal {C}} \rightarrow B$ is smooth. Then $h_\chi ^{-1}( B({\mathcal {O}})_y\cap B^{sm}(F))$ is contained in $h_\chi ^{-1}(B({\mathcal {O}})_y)$ and its complement has measure $0$, since it is contained in $h_\chi ^{-1}((B\setminus B^{sm})(F))$, that is, the $F$-points of a closed subscheme of $\operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ (see [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, Proposition 4.4]).

Since $h_\chi$ is proper, we can identify the fiber over a point $b \in B({\mathcal {O}}) \cap B^{sm}(F)$ with $h_\chi ^{-1}(b)(F)$ where we write $h_\chi ^{-1}(b)$ for the $F$-scheme $h_\chi ^{-1}(b)_F$. As in [Reference Groechenig, Wyss and ZieglerGWZ20b, § 6.3] we therefore have an equality:

(5.0.3)\begin{align} \sum _{x\in h_{\chi}^{-1}(y)(k)} p\mathrm{BPS}_{\beta,\chi}(x)=\int_{h_\chi^{-1}(B({\mathcal{O}})_y)} \varphi_{\beta,\chi}^g \,{\rm d}\mu = \int_{b\in B({\mathcal{O}})_y\cap B^{sm}(F)}\bigg(\int_{h_\chi^{-1}(b)(F)} \varphi_{\beta,\chi}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b}\bigg)\,{\rm d}\mu_{{\rm can},B}. \end{align}

Here $\omega _b$ is the gauge form on the $\mathrm {Pic}^0_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$-torsor $h_\chi ^{-1}(b) = \mathrm {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$ from Lemma 3.2.3. As the outer integral in (5.0.3) is independent of $\chi$ we only need to analyze the fiber integral $\int _{h_\chi ^{-1}(b)(F)}\varphi _{\beta,\chi }^g \,{\rm d}\mu _{\omega _b}$.

First we note that the gerbe $\alpha \colon {\mathbb {M}}^{st}_{\beta,\chi } \rightarrow {\mathcal {M}}^{st}_{\beta,\chi }$ restricted to the fiber over $b$ gets identified with $\mathfrak {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b} \rightarrow \mathrm {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$. Therefore, the associated function $\varphi _{\beta,\chi }$ gets identified with

\[ \varphi_{\chi+g-1} = e^{2\pi i f_{\chi+g-1}}, \]

where $f_{\chi +g-1}$ is the degree $d=\chi +g-1$ component of the function $f$ introduced in § 4.3. We may rewrite the innermost integral in (5.0.3) as

(5.0.4)\begin{equation} \int_{h_\chi^{-1}(b)(F)}\varphi_{\beta,\chi}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b} = \int_{\mathrm{Pic}^{\chi+g-1}_{{\mathcal{C}}_b}(F)} \varphi_{\chi+g-1}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b}. \end{equation}

Now if $\mathrm {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F) = \emptyset$ this integral vanishes as we integrate over the empty manifold. Otherwise any $x \in \mathrm {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$ gives an isomorphism $\mathrm {Pic}^{0}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b} \xrightarrow {\sim } \mathrm {Pic}^{\chi +g-1}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}$ and by (4.3.1) we have

(5.0.5)\begin{equation} \int_{h^{-1}(b)(F)}\varphi_{\beta,\chi}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b} = \varphi_{\chi+g-1}^g(x) \int_{\mathrm{Pic}^0_{{\mathcal{C}}_b}(F)}\varphi_{0}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b} \end{equation}

To complete the proof we need to further study the function $f_0: \mathrm {Pic}^0_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F) \rightarrow {\mathbb {Q}}/{\mathbb {Z}}$.

Lemma 5.0.6 The following are equivalent:

  1. (i) $f_0 \equiv 0$;

  2. (ii) $\mathrm {Pic}^1_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$ is non-empty;

  3. (iii) $\mathrm {Pic}^g_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$ is non-empty.

In this case the image of $f: \mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F) \rightarrow {\mathbb {Q}}/{\mathbb {Z}}$ is contained in $(({1}/{g}) {\mathbb {Z}})/{\mathbb {Z}}$.

Proof. The equivalence $\rm (i) \iff (ii)$ follows from Proposition 4.3.2. Clearly part (ii) implies part (iii) so we only need to prove that part (iii) implies part (i). Suppose then that $\mathrm {Pic}^g_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$ is non-empty. We claim that $f(\mathrm {Pic}^g_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F))=0$, where

\[ f:\mathrm{Pic}_{{\mathcal{C}}_b}(F) \rightarrow {\mathbb{Q}}/{\mathbb{Z}} \]

is as in § 4.3. Consider the moduli stack ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,1}$ of semi-stable sheaves with Euler characteristic $\chi =1$. For this choice of $\chi$ there are no strictly semi-stable sheaves; hence every semi-stable sheaf is geometrically stable and, in particular, simple. It follows that the coarse space $M_{\beta,1}$ coincides with the ${\mathbb {G}}_m$-rigidification ${\mathcal {M}}_{\beta,1}$, hence the coarse moduli map ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,1}\to \operatorname {M}_{\beta,1}$ gives a ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe $\alpha$ over $\mathsf {Spec} \mathcal {O}$. For every $x\in \operatorname {M}_{\beta,1}(\mathcal {O})$, the pullback $x^*\alpha$ is a trivial gerbe, since $Br(\mathcal {O})=0$. In particular, the map

\[ f_{\beta,1}: \operatorname{M}_{\beta,1}(\mathcal{O})\to {\mathbb{Q}}/{\mathbb{Z}} \]

vanishes. Now note that line bundles of degree $g$ have Euler characteristic $1$, i.e. $\mathrm {Pic}^g_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)\subset \operatorname {M}_{\beta,1}({\mathcal {O}})$. This proves the claim. To conclude the proof, let $x\in \mathrm {Pic}^g_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$. For every $y\in Pic^0_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$, $f(y)=f(x)+f(y)=f(x+y)\in f(\mathrm {Pic}^g(F))=0$. Hence, $f_0$ is zero.

The statement about the image of $f$ follows from the observation $f(\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^g(F))=0$.

Remark 5.0.7 The equivalence of parts (ii) and (iii) in Lemma 5.0.6 is true more generally. In fact, for any geometrically integral, smooth projective curve $C$ of genus $g$ over a local field $\mathrm {Pic}_C^{g-1}$ has a rational point by [Reference LichtenbaumLic69] and [Reference Poonen and StollPS99, Corollary 4].

Proof of Theorem 5.0.2 By the previous discussion, in particular (5.0.3) and (5.0.4), $\chi$ independence amounts to show for all $d,d' \in {\mathbb {Z}}$ and $b \in B({\mathcal {O}}) \cap B^{sm}(F)$ the equality

\[ \int_{\mathrm{Pic}^{d}_{{\mathcal{C}}_b}(F)}\varphi_{d}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b} = \int_{\mathrm{Pic}^{d'}_{{\mathcal{C}}_b}(F)} \varphi_{d'}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b}. \]

For simplicity take $d' = g$. Consider first the case where $\mathrm {Pic}^g_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)=\emptyset$. Then the right-hand side is zero. If $\mathrm {Pic}^d_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}(F)$ is also empty, we are done. Otherwise, let $x\in \mathrm {Pic}^d(F)$. Then as in (5.0.5)

(5.0.8)\begin{equation} \int_{\mathrm{Pic}^{d}_{{\mathcal{C}}_b}(F)}\varphi_{d}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b} = \varphi_{d}^g(x) \int_{\mathrm{Pic}^0_{{\mathcal{C}}_b}(F)}\varphi_{0}^g \,{\rm d}\mu_{\omega_b}. \end{equation}

As $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^g(F)$ is empty, so is $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^1(F)$ by Lemma 5.0.6, hence $f_0$ is a non-trivial character, i.e. a surjective homomorphism $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^0(F)\to {\mathbb {Z}}/d_0{\mathbb {Z}}$ for some $d_0\geq 2$ by Lemma 4.3.2. Furthermore, $d_0$ is the smallest integer such that $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^{d_0}(F)\neq \emptyset$, hence $d_0$ does not divide $g$. The function $\varphi _0^g$ is therefore non-zero and by a character-sum argument the right-hand side of (5.0.8) vanishes, as required.

Next we consider the case $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^g(F)\neq \emptyset$. Then by Lemma 5.0.6 also $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^1(F)\neq \emptyset$ and, thus, also $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^d(F)\neq \emptyset$. Furthermore, the image of $f$ is $g$-torsion and, thus, $\varphi _d^g=\varphi _g^g \equiv 1$. Since $\mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^d(F) \cong \mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^0(F) \cong \mathrm {Pic}_{{\mathcal {C}}_b}^g(F)$ we are done with the proof of part (ii).

The proof of part (i) follows from the fact that for $(\beta,\chi )$ generic, the stable locus is everything, thus the morphism ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi } \to \operatorname {M}_{\beta,\chi }$ is a ${\mathbb {G}}_m$ gerbe. In this case $f_{\beta,\chi } \equiv 0$, since the gerbe $x^*\alpha \in H^2(F,{\mathbb {G}}_m)$ is pulled back from $H^2(\mathsf {Spec}({\mathcal {O}}),{\mathbb {G}}_m) = 0$ and, thus, trivial.

Remark 5.0.9 It is straightforward to extend the definition of the $p\mathrm {BPS}$-function and the proof of Theorem 5.0.2 to the case of usual and meromorphic Higgs bundles using Theorem 2.3.1.

Acknowledgements

We warmly thank Michael Groechenig and Paul Ziegler for numerous discussions, which were at the origin of many ideas in this paper. We also would like to thank Ben Davison, Pierrick Bousseau, Sven Meinhardt and Tanguy Vernet for interesting conversations around $\mathrm {BPS}$ invariants. We also thank the anonymous referee, whose comments greatly improved the exposition. This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation [No. 196960].

Conflicts of Interest

None.

Footnotes

1 Strictly speaking in [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23] $S$ is assumed to be toric, but with the recent results of [Reference YuanYua23] this assumption can be dropped, see [Reference Maulik and ShenMS23, Remark 0.2] and Corollary 2.2.4.

2 There is an alternative proof by Yu [Reference YuYu23] and proofs of the complete conjecture by Mellit [Reference MellitMel20] and Kinjo and Koseki [Reference Kinjo and KosekiKK21].

3 That is, a smooth proper morphism flat and of finite presentation whose fibers are one-dimensional and connected.

4 Recall that a pair $(\beta,\chi )$ generic (with respect to $H$), if any Gieseker semi-stable sheaf in ${\mathbb {M}}_{\beta,\chi }$ is stable.

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