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The extremal secant conjecture for curves of arbitrary gonality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2017

Michael Kemeny*
Affiliation:
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Institut für Mathematik, Unter den Linden 6, 10099 Berlin, Germany email michael.kemeny@gmail.com
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Abstract

We prove the Green–Lazarsfeld secant conjecture [Green and Lazarsfeld, On the projective normality of complete linear series on an algebraic curve, Invent. Math. 83 (1986), 73–90; Conjecture (3.4)] for extremal line bundles on curves of arbitrary gonality, subject to explicit genericity assumptions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author 2017 

1 Introduction

Consider a smooth projective curve $C$ of genus $g$ and $L$ a globally generated line bundle of degree $d$ . We define the Koszul group $K_{i,j}(C,L)$ as the middle cohomology of

$$\begin{eqnarray}\bigwedge ^{i+1}H^{0}(L)\otimes H^{0}((j-1)L)\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{i}H^{0}(L)\otimes H^{0}(jL)\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{i-1}H^{0}(L)\otimes H^{0}((j+1)L).\end{eqnarray}$$

As is well known, the Koszul groups give the same data as the modules appearing in the minimal free resolution of the $\text{Sym}\;H^{0}(C,L)$ module $\bigoplus _{q}H^{0}(C,qL)$ . In the case where $L$ is very ample and the associated embedding is projectively normal, $\bigoplus _{q}H^{0}(C,qL)$ is just the homogeneous coordinate ring of the embedded curve $\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{L}:C{\hookrightarrow}\mathbb{P}^{r}$ .

The pair $(C,L)$ is said to satisfy property $(N_{p})$ if we have the vanishings

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{i,j}(C,L)=0\quad \text{for }i\leqslant p,j\geqslant 2.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then $\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{L}:C{\hookrightarrow}\mathbb{P}^{r}$ is projectively normal if and only if $(C,L)$ satisfies $(N_{0})$ , whereas the ideal of $C$ is generated by quadrics if, in addition, it satisfies $(N_{1})$ .

A beautiful conjecture of Green–Lazarsfeld gives a necessary and sufficient criterion for $(C,L)$ to satisfy $(N_{p})$ . To state the conjecture, a line bundle $L$ is called $p$ -very ample if and only if for every effective divisor $D$ of degree $p+1$ the evaluation map

$$\begin{eqnarray}ev:H^{0}(C,L)\rightarrow H^{0}(D,L_{|_{D}})\end{eqnarray}$$

is surjective. Equivalently, $L$ is not $p$ -very ample if and only if $C\subseteq \mathbb{P}^{r}$ admits a $(p+1)$ -secant $(p-1)$ -plane. We then may state [Reference Green and LazarsfeldGL86] the following result.

Conjecture 1.1 (G–L secant conjecture).

Let $L$ be a globally generated line bundle of degree $d$ on a curve $C$ of genus $g$ such that

$$\begin{eqnarray}d\geqslant 2g+p+1-2h^{1}(C,L)-\text{Cliff}(C).\end{eqnarray}$$

Then $(C,L)$ fails property $(N_{p})$ if and only if $L$ is not $(p+1)$ -very ample.

It is rather straightforward to see that if $L$ is not $(p+1)$ -very ample or, equivalently, $L$ admits a $(p+2)$ -secant $p$ -plane, then $K_{p,2}(C,L)$ is nonzero. The difficulty in establishing the above conjecture is thus to go in the other direction, that is, to construct a secant plane out of a syzygy in $K_{p,2}(C,L)$ .

In the case $H^{1}(C,L)\neq 0$ , it is well known that the secant conjecture reduces to Green’s conjecture, which holds for the generic curve in each gonality stratum [Reference VoisinVoi02, Reference VoisinVoi05]. Thus, we will henceforth assume that $H^{1}(C,L)=0$ . If $d\geqslant 2g+p+1$ , then $L$ is automatically $(p+1)$ -very ample and further $L$ satisfies property $(N_{p})$ by [Reference GreenGre84, Theorem 4.a.1]. In particular, we may assume that both $\text{Cliff}(C)\geqslant 1$ and $d\leqslant 2g+p$ . In this case, the line bundle $L$ of degree $d$ fails to be $(p+1)$ -very ample if and only if

$$\begin{eqnarray}L-K_{C}\in C_{p+2}-C_{2g-d+p},\end{eqnarray}$$

where $C_{i}\subseteq \text{Pic}^{i}(C)$ is the image of the $i$ th symmetric product of $C$ under the Abel–Jacobi map (we set $C_{0}:=\emptyset$ ).

In a joint work with Gavril Farkas, we established the secant conjecture for general line bundles on general curves. Moreover, under certain assumptions on the degree, we were able to prove effective versions of the secant conjecture. One of our main results was a proof of the conjecture for odd-genus curves of maximal Clifford index and line bundles of degree $d=2g$ ; this is the so-called ‘divisorial case’ of the conjecture. To be precise, we showed the following result.

Theorem 1.2 [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK].

Let $C$ be a smooth curve of odd genus $g$ and with a line bundle $L\in \text{Pic}^{2g}(C)$ . Then one has the equivalence

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{(g-3)/2,2}(C,L)\neq 0~\Leftrightarrow ~\text{Cliff}(C)<\frac{g-1}{2}\quad \text{or}\quad L-K_{C}\in C_{(g+1)/2}-C_{(g-3)/2}.\end{eqnarray}$$

The latter condition $L-K_{C}\in C_{(g+1)/2}-C_{(g-3)/2}$ is equivalent to $L$ failing to be $((g-1)/2)$ -very ample.

In the case where $C$ is Brill–Noether–Petri general of even genus $g$ , we have a similar statement.

Theorem 1.3 [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK].

The Green–Lazarsfeld (G–L) conjecture holds for a Brill–Noether–Petri general curve $C$ of even genus and every line bundle $L\in \text{Pic}^{2g+1}(C)$ , that is,

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{(g/2)-1,2}(C,L)\neq 0~\Leftrightarrow ~L-K_{C}\in C_{(g/2)+1}-C_{(g/2)-2}.\end{eqnarray}$$

The main result of this paper is an analogue of Theorem 1.2 in the case of curves of arbitrary gonality, satisfying the linear growth condition of Aprodu [Reference AproduApr05]. In this case, $p$ takes on the extremal value $p=g-k$ .

Theorem 1.4. Let $C$ be a smooth curve of genus $g$ and gonality $3\leqslant k<\lfloor g/2\rfloor +2$ . Assume that $C$ satisfies the following linear growth condition:

$$\begin{eqnarray}\dim W_{k+n}^{1}(C)\leqslant n\quad \text{for all }0\leqslant n\leqslant g-2k+2.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then the G–L secant conjecture holds for every line bundle $L\in \text{Pic}^{3g-2k+3}(C)$ , that is, one has the equivalence

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{g-k,2}(C,L)\neq 0~\Leftrightarrow ~L-K_{C}\in C_{g-k+2}-C_{k-3}.\end{eqnarray}$$

The proof is by reducing to the case of Theorem 1.2, using arguments similar to those in [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, § 6] and [Reference AproduApr05]. Note that $h^{1}(L)=0$ is automatic for $L\in \text{Pic}^{3g-2k+3}(C)$ as above. The condition $L-K_{C}\in C_{g-k+2}-C_{k-3}$ is equivalent to the statement that $L$ fails to be $(g-k+1)$ -very ample. Note that for the value $p=g-k$ the set of $L$ which fail to be $(p+1)$ -very ample defines a divisor in the Jacobian; thus this case is of particular interest.

From the main theorem, we easily deduce the following statement giving an effective criterion for the vanishing $K_{p,2}(C,L)=0$ for nonspecial line bundles in the case where the inequality in the secant conjecture is an equality.

Theorem 1.5. Let $C$ be a smooth curve of genus $g$ and gonality $3\leqslant k<\lfloor g/2\rfloor +2$ . Assume that $C$ satisfies the following linear growth condition:

$$\begin{eqnarray}\dim W_{k+n}^{1}(C)\leqslant n\quad \text{for all }0\leqslant n\leqslant g-2k+2.\end{eqnarray}$$

Let $L\in \text{Pic}^{2g+p-k+3}(C)$ be nonspecial. If $p>g-k$ , then $K_{p,2}(C,L)\neq 0$ . On the other hand, assume that $p\leqslant g-k$ and, in addition, that we have the two conditions

(1) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle & & \displaystyle H^{1}(C,2K_{C}-L)=0,\end{eqnarray}$$
(2) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle & & \displaystyle \text{the secant variety }V_{g-p-3}^{g-p-4}(2K_{C}-L)\text{ has expected dimension }g-k-p-1.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then $K_{p,2}(C,L)=0$ .

Notice that, if the condition $H^{1}(C,2K_{C}-L)\neq 0$ holds, then $L-K_{C}$ is effective, which obviously implies that $L$ is not $(p+1)$ -very ample. In this case, we already know that $K_{p,2}(C,L)\neq 0$ , from the easy direction of the G–L secant conjecture. So, the ‘interesting’ assumption is really the second one.Footnote 1

In the case $p\leqslant g-k$ , both the conditions of Theorem 1.5 hold for a general line bundle $L\in \text{Pic}^{2g+p-k+3}(C)$ . In particular we get, when combined with the results of [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK], the following corollary.

Corollary 1.6. Let $C$ be a general curve of genus $g$ and gonality $k\geqslant 3$ and let $L\in \text{Pic}^{2g+p-k+3}(C)$ be a general, nonspecial, line bundle. Then the Green–Lazarsfeld secant conjecture holds for $(C,L)$ , i.e. 

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{p,2}(C,L)\neq 0~\Leftrightarrow ~p>g-k.\end{eqnarray}$$

2 Proof of the theorem

Let $C$ be a smooth curve of genus $g$ and gonality $3\leqslant k<\lfloor g/2\rfloor +2$ ; this covers all cases other than $C$ hyperelliptic or $g$ odd and $C$ of maximal gonality. Assume in addition that $C$ satisfies the linear growth condition

$$\begin{eqnarray}\dim W_{k+n}^{1}(C)\leqslant n\quad \text{for all }0\leqslant n\leqslant g-2k+2.\end{eqnarray}$$

Pick $g-2k+3$ general pairs of points $(x_{i},y_{i})$ . Let $D$ be the semistable curve obtained by adding $g-2k+3$ smooth, rational components $R_{i}$ to $C$ , each one of which meets $C$ at the pair $(x_{i},y_{i})$ . The curve $D$ is illustrated in Figure 1. It has arithmetic genus $2g-2k+3$ .

Let $L$ be a very ample line bundle on $C$ of degree $3g-2k+3$ . Write

$$\begin{eqnarray}L={\mathcal{O}}_{C}(z_{1}+\cdots +z_{3g-2k+3})\end{eqnarray}$$

for distinct points $z_{1},\ldots ,z_{3g-2k+3}$ which avoid all $(x_{i},y_{i})$ . For each $1\leqslant i\leqslant g-2k+3$ , choose points $w_{i}\in R_{i}$ distinct from $x_{i},y_{i}$ . Let $T$ denote the union of the points $z_{j}$ and $w_{i}$ . Since $T$ avoids all nodes, it makes sense to set $N:={\mathcal{O}}_{D}(T)$ . Notice that $N$ defines a balanced line bundle on the quasi-stable curve $D$ , and that $D$ is $(4g-4k+6)$ -general, in the sense of [Reference CaporasoCap08]. In particular, $N$ defines a (stable) point in Caporaso’s compactified Jacobian $\displaystyle \overline{P}^{4g-4k+6}(X)$ , where $X$ is the stabilisation of $D$ , i.e. the nodal curve obtained from $C$ by identifying $x_{i}$ with $y_{i}$ .

Figure 1. (Colour online) The curve $D$ .

The curve $D$ together with the marking $\{z_{1},\ldots ,z_{3g-2k+3},w_{1},\ldots ,w_{g-2k+3}\}$ defines a point $[D]\in \overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}$ . Let $\overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}$ denote the open locus of marked stable curves $D^{\prime }$ such that the marking defines a very ample line bundle $N^{\prime }$ with $H^{1}(D^{\prime },N^{\prime })=0$ , and set ${\mathcal{M}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}:=\overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}\cap {\mathcal{M}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}$ . In [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, Theorem 1.6], we established the following equality of closed sets:

$$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{\mathfrak{Syz}}=\overline{\mathfrak{Sec}}\cup \overline{\mathfrak{Hur}}.\end{eqnarray}$$

Here $\overline{\mathfrak{Syz}}$ denotes the closure of the locus $\mathfrak{Syz}$ of smooth, marked curves $\mathfrak{Syz}$ such that the marking defines a very ample line bundle with a certain unexpected syzygy

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle \mathfrak{Syz} & := & \displaystyle \{[B,x_{1},\ldots ,x_{2(2g-2k+3)}]\in {\mathcal{M}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}:\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & & \displaystyle \quad K_{g-k,2}(B,{\mathcal{O}}_{B}(x_{1}+\cdots +x_{2(2g-2k+3)}))\neq 0\!\},\nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

whereas $\overline{\mathfrak{Sec}}$ denotes the closure of the locus of smooth, marked curves $\mathfrak{Syz}$ such that the marking defines a line bundle which fails to be $(g-k+1)$ -very ample

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle \mathfrak{Sec} & := & \displaystyle \{[B,x_{1},\ldots ,x_{2(2g-2k+3)}]\in {\mathcal{M}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}:{\mathcal{O}}_{B}(x_{1}+\cdots +x_{2(2g-2k+3)})\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & & \displaystyle \quad \in K_{B}+B_{g-k+2}-B_{g-k}\!\}\nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

and $\overline{\mathfrak{Hur}}$ is the closure of the Hurwitz divisor of curves which are $(g-k+2)$ -gonal. The following result is due to Aprodu.

Proposition 2.1 [Reference AproduApr05].

The marked curve $[D]$ lies outside $\overline{\mathfrak{Hur}}\subseteq \overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}$ .

Proof. Let $X$ be the stabilisation of $D$ as above. By [Reference Hirschowitz and RamananHR98], it suffices to show that

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{g-k+1,1}(X,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{X})=0;\end{eqnarray}$$

see also [Reference AproduApr05, Proposition 7]. This is implied by the linear growth assumption on $C$ and the generality of the points $(x_{i},y_{i})$ ; see the proof of [Reference AproduApr05, Theorem 2].◻

The following lemma is similar to [Reference AproduApr05, Proposition 7].

Lemma 2.2. Assume that $[D]\in \overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}$ lies outside

$$\begin{eqnarray}\overline{\mathfrak{Syz}}\subseteq \overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then $K_{g-k,2}(D,N)=0$ .

Proof. The only reason why this lemma is not totally obvious is that $\mathfrak{Syz}$ was defined as the closure of smooth, marked curves with extra syzygies. However, the determinantal description from [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, § 6] can be extended verbatim to the open locus $\overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}$ of marked stable curves $D^{\prime }$ such that the marking defines a very ample line bundle $N^{\prime }$ with $H^{1}(D^{\prime },N^{\prime })=0$ ; see also [Reference FarkasFar06, § 2] and [Reference FarkasFar09]. Indeed, the only thing which needs checking is that we continue to have $H^{1}(D^{\prime },\bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{N^{\prime }}\otimes {N^{\prime }}^{2})$ . This follows from the short exact sequence

$$\begin{eqnarray}0\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k+1}M_{N^{\prime }}\otimes N^{\prime }\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k+1}H^{0}(N^{\prime })\otimes N^{\prime }\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{N^{\prime }}\otimes {N^{\prime }}^{2}\rightarrow 0\end{eqnarray}$$

and the assumption $H^{1}(D^{\prime },N^{\prime })=0$ .

Thus, we get a divisor $\mathfrak{Syz}^{va}\subseteq \overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}$ , which coincides with $\mathfrak{Syz}$ on ${\mathcal{M}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}$ . Now the fact that $L$ is very ample implies that $N$ is very ample; indeed, $H^{0}(C,L)\simeq H^{0}(D,N)$ , and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{N}:D\rightarrow \mathbb{P}^{g-2k+3}$ embeds $D$ as the union of the curve $C$ (embedded by $L$ ) together with $g-2k+3$ secant lines $R_{i}$ . So, $[D]\in \overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}^{va}$ . Riemann–Roch now gives $H^{1}(D,N^{\prime })=0$ . The point $[D]$ lies on precisely one boundary component of $\overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}$ , namely the component $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}_{\text{irr}}$ whose general point is an integral curve with one node; see [Reference Arbarello and CornalbaAC99] for details of the boundary of $\overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{g,n}$ .

Thus, it suffices to show that $\mathfrak{Syz}^{va}$ does not contain $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}_{\text{irr}}$ . This follows easily from [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, Theorem 1.8]. Indeed, it suffices to show that there exist integral, singular curves with nodal singularities in the linear system $|L|$ on the K3 surface $Z_{2g-2k+3}$ from [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, § 3].Footnote 2 For this, one can degenerate to the hyperelliptic K3 surface $\hat{Z}_{2g-2k+3}$ as in [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, § 3], and take a general curve $A$ in the base-point-free linear system $|L-E|$ which meets a given elliptic curve $B\in |E|$ transversally. The nodal curve $A+B$ then deforms to an integral nodal curve in $|L|$ .◻

We next compare difference varieties with secant varieties; see [Reference Arbarello, Cornalba, Griffiths and HarrisACGH85, VIII.4] and [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, § 2] for background.

Lemma 2.3. For any $0\leqslant j\leqslant g-2k+3$ , the inclusion

$$\begin{eqnarray}L-C_{2(g-2k+3-j)}-K_{C}\subseteq C_{k-1+j}-C_{g-k-j}\end{eqnarray}$$

of closed subvarieties of $\text{Pic}^{2k+2j-g-1}(C)$ implies that the following dimension estimate holds:

$$\begin{eqnarray}\dim V_{2g-3k-j+5}^{2g-3k-j+4}(L)\geqslant 2g-2j-4k+6.\end{eqnarray}$$

Note that the expected dimension of the secant variety $V_{2g-3k-j+5}^{2g-3k-j+4}(L)$ is $2g-2j-4k+5$ , so the inclusion above implies that the secant variety has dimension higher than expected.

Proof. From the inclusion $L-C_{2(g-2k+3-j)}-K_{C}\subseteq C_{k-1+j}-C_{g-k-j}$ , we have that, for every effective divisor $D$ of degree $2(g-2k+3-j)$ , there exists an effective divisor $E$ of degree $k-1+j$ such that

$$\begin{eqnarray}[L-(D+E)]\in K_{C}-C_{g-k-j}.\end{eqnarray}$$

As $h^{0}(C,K_{C})=g$ , this implies that $L-(D+E)$ has at least $k+j$ sections. This is equivalent to

$$\begin{eqnarray}[D+E]\in V_{2g-3k-j+5}^{2g-3k-j+4}(L).\end{eqnarray}$$

Let $C^{(i)}$ denote the $i$ th symmetric product of $C$ . There are only finitely many possible $D^{\prime }\in C^{(2(g-2k+3-j))}$ such that we have the equality of divisors

$$\begin{eqnarray}[D+E]=[D^{\prime }+E^{\prime }]\in C^{(2g-3k-j+5)}\end{eqnarray}$$

for some effective divisor $E^{\prime }$ of degree $k-1+j$ . Hence, the dimension of $V_{2g-3k-j+5}^{2g-3k-j+4}(L)$ is at least $2(g-2k+3-j)$ .◻

We now apply [Reference Aprodu and SernesiAS15, Remark 4.2] to show that if $L$ as above is $(g-k+1)$ -very ample, then none of the secant loci from the previous lemma can have excess dimension.

Lemma 2.4. Assume that $L$ as above is $(g-k+1)$ -very ample. Then

$$\begin{eqnarray}\dim V_{2g-3k-j+5}^{2g-3k-j+4}(L)=2g-2j-4k+5\end{eqnarray}$$

for all $0\leqslant j<g-2k+3$ , whereas $V_{g-k+2}^{g-k+1}(L)=\emptyset$ .

Proof. Firstly note that, if $0\leqslant j<g-2k+3$ , then all secant loci $V_{2g-3k-j+5}^{2g-3k-j+4}(L)$ are nonempty by [Reference Arbarello, Cornalba, Griffiths and HarrisACGH85, p. 356]. For $j=g-2k+3$ , the secant locus $V_{g-k+2}^{g-k+1}(L)=\emptyset$ , by the assumption that $L$ is $(g-k+1)$ -very ample. Suppose that there exists $0\leqslant j<g-2k+3$ with $\dim V_{2g-3k-j+5}^{2g-3k-j+4}(L)>2g-2j-4k+5$ . By [Reference Aprodu and SernesiAS15, Remark 4.2], $\dim V_{g-k+3}^{g-k+2}(L)\geqslant 2$ .

Consider the Abel–Jacobi map $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}:V_{g-k+3}^{g-k+2}(L)\rightarrow \text{Pic}^{g-k+3}(C)$ . We claim that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}$ is finite. Indeed, otherwise we would have a one-dimensional family of $[D_{t}]\in V_{g-k+3}^{g-k+2}(L)$ with ${\mathcal{O}}_{C}(D_{t})$ constant. Then the line bundle $K_{C}-L+D_{t}$ is independent of $t$ , and furthermore it is effective, since $[D_{t}]\in V_{g-k+3}^{g-k+2}(L)$ . Let $Z\in |K_{C}-L+D_{t}|$ and $s\in \text{Supp}(Z)$ ; the assumption that $k\geqslant 3$ ensures that $\deg (K_{C}-L+D_{t})\geqslant 1$ . There exists some $t^{\prime }$ such that $s\in \text{Supp}(D_{t^{\prime }})$ ; let $D^{\prime }:=D_{t^{\prime }}-s$ . Then $Z-s\in |K_{C}-L+D^{\prime }|$ , so $K_{C}-L+D^{\prime }$ is effective, and $D^{\prime }\in V_{g-k+2}^{g-k+1}(L)$ , contradicting that $V_{g-k+2}^{g-k+1}(L)=\emptyset$ . Thus, we have that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70B}$ is finite.

We will now apply [Reference Fulton, Harris and LazarsfeldFHL84] to see that $V_{g-k+2}^{g-k+1}(L)\neq \emptyset$ (cf. [Reference Aprodu and SernesiAS15, Remark 4.4] and the proof of [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, Theorem 1.5]). This contradiction will finish the proof. Indeed, for any point $p\in C$ , we can find an irreducible, closed curve $S\subseteq V_{g-k+3}^{g-k+2}(L)$ such that, for all $s\in S$ , the corresponding divisor $[D_{s}]\in V_{g-k+3}^{g-k+2}(L)$ passes through $p$ , so that $D_{s}^{\prime }:=D_{s}-p$ is an effective divisor. Now consider the Abel–Jacobi map

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle p:V_{g-k+3}^{g-k+2}(L) & \rightarrow & \displaystyle \text{Pic}^{k-2}(C)\nonumber\\ \displaystyle [D] & \mapsto & \displaystyle K_{C}-L+D.\nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

This image $p(S)$ is a closed curve, each point of which parametrises an effective line bundle. By [Reference Fulton, Harris and LazarsfeldFHL84], there exists an $s\in S$ with $K_{C}-L+D_{s}-p=K_{C}-L+D_{s}^{\prime }$ effective. But this is the same as saying that $D_{s}^{\prime }\in V_{g-k+2}^{g-k+1}(L)$ .◻

We now record a lemma which we will need for the proof of the main theorem.

Lemma 2.5. Let $N$ be the balanced line bundle of degree $4g-4k+6$ as above and assume that

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{g-k,2}(D,N)=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Then

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{g-k,2}(C,L)=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Proof. Assume that $K_{g-k,2}(C,L)\neq 0.$ Then $K_{g-k+2,0}(C,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C};L)\neq 0$ , by Koszul duality [Reference GreenGre84]. Likewise, $K_{g-k,2}(D,N)=0$ if and only if $K_{g-k+2,0}(D,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{D};N)$ . Note that $H^{0}(D,N)\simeq H^{0}(C,L)$ , and the proof of Koszul duality using kernel bundles goes through unchanged in our case, even though $D$ is nodal; see [Reference Aprodu and NagelAN10, Theorem 2.24]. Restriction induces natural inclusions

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle H^{0}(D,N) & {\hookrightarrow} & \displaystyle H^{0}(C,L),\nonumber\\ \displaystyle H^{0}(D,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{D}) & {\hookrightarrow} & \displaystyle H^{0}\biggl(C,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C}\biggl(\mathop{\sum }_{i=1}^{g-2k+3}x_{i}+y_{i}\biggr)\biggr),\nonumber\\ \displaystyle H^{0}(D,N\otimes \unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{D}) & {\hookrightarrow} & \displaystyle H^{0}\biggl(C,L\otimes \unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C}\biggl(\mathop{\sum }_{i=1}^{g-2k+3}x_{i}+y_{i}\biggr)\biggr).\nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

We thus get the following commutative diagram, where both vertical arrows are injective:

We have an isomorphism $H^{0}(D,N)\simeq H^{0}(C,L)$ , and $H^{1}(C,L)=0$ , so Riemann–Roch implies that $H^{1}(D,N)=0$ .

The image of the restriction map $H^{0}(D,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{D}){\hookrightarrow}H^{0}(C,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C}(\sum _{i}x_{i}+y_{i}))$ includes $H^{0}(C,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C})\subseteq H^{0}(C,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C}(\sum _{i}x_{i}+y_{i}))$ . We have a natural commutative diagram, where the vertical arrows are injective:

Thus, if $K_{g-k+2,0}(C,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C};L)\neq 0$ , then there exists a nonzero element of $\text{Ker}(\tilde{d}_{g-k+2,0})$ which lies in the image of

$$\begin{eqnarray}\bigwedge ^{g-k+2}H^{0}(D,N)\otimes H^{0}(D,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{D})\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k+2}H^{0}(C,L)\otimes H^{0}\biggl(C,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{C}\biggl(\mathop{\sum }_{i}x_{i}+y_{i}\biggr)\biggr)\end{eqnarray}$$

and thus $d_{g-k+2,0}$ is noninjective, so $K_{g-k+2,0}(D,\unicode[STIX]{x1D714}_{D};N)\neq 0$ .◻

We are now in a position to prove the main theorem.

Proof of Theorem 1.4.

Assume that

$$\begin{eqnarray}L-K_{C}\notin C_{g-k+2}-C_{k-3}.\end{eqnarray}$$

We need to show that $K_{g-k,2}(C,L)=0$ . From Lemma 2.5, it suffices to prove that $K_{g-k,2}(D,N)=0$ . From Lemma 2.2 and Proposition 2.1, it suffices to show that the marked curve $[D]\in \overline{{\mathcal{M}}}_{2g-2k+3,2(2g-2k+3)}$ lies outside $\overline{\mathfrak{Sec}}$ . For this, it is sufficient to show that

$$\begin{eqnarray}H^{0}\biggl(D,\bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D}}(2K_{D}-N)\biggr)=0,\end{eqnarray}$$

by [Reference Farkas, Mustaţă and PopaFMP03, Proposition 3.6]. Here $M_{K_{D}}$ is the kernel bundle, defined by the exact sequence

$$\begin{eqnarray}0\rightarrow M_{K_{D}}\rightarrow H^{0}(D,K_{D})\otimes {\mathcal{O}}_{D}\rightarrow K_{D}\rightarrow 0.\end{eqnarray}$$

Equivalently, if $\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{K_{D}}:D\rightarrow \mathbb{P}^{2g-2k+2}$ is the canonical morphism, then $M_{K_{D}}\simeq \unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{K_{D}}^{\ast }\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FA}_{\mathbb{P}^{2g-2k+2}}(1)$ . Note that $\unicode[STIX]{x1D719}_{K_{D}}$ is not an embedding; indeed, each component $R_{i}$ is contracted to a point.

We define subcurves of $D$ as such: for $1\leqslant k<g-2k+3$ , let

$$\begin{eqnarray}D_{k}:=C\cup R_{k+1}\cup \cdots R_{g-2k+3}\end{eqnarray}$$

and set $D_{g-2k+3}=C$ . Define $N_{i}:=N_{|_{D_{i}}}$ . The Mayer–Vietoris sequence gives

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle 0 & \rightarrow & \displaystyle \bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D}}\otimes (2K_{D}-N)\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}(x_{1}+y_{1})}(2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1}+2x_{1}+2y_{1})\oplus {\mathcal{O}}_{R_{1}}(-1)^{\binom{2g-2k+2}{g-k}}\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & \rightarrow & \displaystyle \bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D}}\otimes (2K_{D}-N)_{|_{x_{1},y_{1}}}\rightarrow 0,\nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

using that $M_{{K_{D}}_{|_{D_{1}}}}\simeq M_{K_{D_{1}}(x_{1}+y_{1})}$ (note that restriction induces an isomorphism $H^{0}(D,K_{D})\simeq H^{0}(D_{1},K_{D_{1}}(x_{1}+y_{1}))$ ).

So, it suffices to show that the evaluation map

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle & & \displaystyle H^{0}\biggl(D_{1},\bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}(x_{1}+y_{1})}(2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1}+2x_{1}+2y_{1})\biggr)\nonumber\\ \displaystyle & & \displaystyle \quad \rightarrow H^{0}\biggl(D,\bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}(x_{1}+y_{1})}(2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1}+2x_{1}+2y_{1})_{|_{x_{1},y_{1}}}\biggr)\nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

is injective or

$$\begin{eqnarray}H^{0}\biggl(D_{1},\bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}(x_{1}+y_{1})}(2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1}+x_{1}+y_{1})\biggr)=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

We have a short exact sequence

$$\begin{eqnarray}0\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}}\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}(x_{1}+y_{1})}\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{g-k-1}M_{K_{D_{1}}}(-x_{1}-y_{1})\rightarrow 0;\end{eqnarray}$$

see for instance [Reference BeauvilleBea03, Remark on p. 345]. So, it is enough to show the following two vanishings:

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle H^{0}\biggl(D_{1},\bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}}(2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1}+x_{1}+y_{1})\biggr) & = & \displaystyle 0,\nonumber\\ \displaystyle H^{0}\biggl(D_{1},\bigwedge ^{g-k-1}M_{K_{D_{1}}}(2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1})\biggr) & = & \displaystyle 0.\nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

For any semistable curve $Y$ and vector bundle $E$ on $Y$ , we define $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{E}$ as the set of line bundles $M$ with

$$\begin{eqnarray}H^{0}(Y,E\otimes M)\neq 0.\end{eqnarray}$$

We define $C^{\text{sm},i}$ as the intersection of $C$ with the smooth locus of $D_{i}$ . As $x_{1},y_{1}$ are general, it is enough to satisfy the following two conditions:

(3) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle \displaystyle 2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1}+C_{2}^{\text{sm},1} & \nsubseteq & \displaystyle \unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{\bigwedge ^{g-k}M_{K_{D_{1}}}},\end{eqnarray}$$
(4) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle 2K_{D_{1}}-N_{1} & \nsubseteq & \displaystyle \unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{\bigwedge ^{g-k-1}M_{K_{D_{1}}}},\end{eqnarray}$$

where the notation $C_{d}^{\text{sm},i}$ refers to the $d$ th symmetric product of $C^{\text{sm},i}$ .

Using the Mayer–Vietoris sequence

$$\begin{eqnarray}0\rightarrow {\mathcal{O}}_{D_{i-1}}\rightarrow {\mathcal{O}}_{D_{i}}\oplus {\mathcal{O}}_{R_{i}}\rightarrow {\mathcal{O}}_{x_{i},y_{i}}\rightarrow 0\end{eqnarray}$$

together with

$$\begin{eqnarray}0\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{p}M_{K_{D_{i}}}\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{p}M_{K_{D_{i}}(x_{i}+y_{i})}\rightarrow \bigwedge ^{p-1}M_{K_{D_{i}}}(-x_{i}-y_{i})\rightarrow 0,\end{eqnarray}$$

and the generality of $x_{1},y_{1},\ldots ,x_{2(2g-2k+3)},y_{2(2g-2k+3)}$ , we see that, in order to verify the conditions

(5) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle 2K_{D_{i}}-N_{i}+C_{2(i-j)}^{\text{sm},i}\nsubseteq \unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{\bigwedge ^{g-k-j}M_{K_{D_{i}}}},\quad 0\leqslant j\leqslant i, & & \displaystyle\end{eqnarray}$$

it is enough to verify that

(6) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle 2K_{D_{i+1}}-N_{i+1}+C_{2(i+1-j)}^{\text{sm},i+1}\nsubseteq \unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{\bigwedge ^{g-k-j}M_{K_{D_{i+1}}}},\quad 0\leqslant j\leqslant i+1. & & \displaystyle\end{eqnarray}$$

Hence, it is enough to verify that

(7) $$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle 2K_{C}-L+C_{2(g-2k+3-j)}\nsubseteq \unicode[STIX]{x1D6E9}_{\bigwedge ^{g-k-j}M_{K_{C}}},\quad 0\leqslant j\leqslant g-2k+3 & & \displaystyle\end{eqnarray}$$

or

$$\begin{eqnarray}\displaystyle L-C_{2(g-2k+3-j)}-K_{C}\nsubseteq C_{k+j-1}-C_{g-k-j},\quad 0\leqslant j\leqslant g-2k+3, & & \displaystyle \nonumber\end{eqnarray}$$

by Serre duality and [Reference Farkas, Mustaţă and PopaFMP03, Proposition 3.6]. This follows from Lemmas 2.3 and 2.4. ◻

Theorem 1.5 now follows easily from Theorem 1.4.

Proof of Theorem 1.5.

In the case $p>g-k$ , then each line bundle $L\in \text{Pic}^{2g+p-k+3}(C)$ fails to be $(p+1)$ -very ample [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK]. Thus, by the known direction of the secant conjecture, $K_{p,2}(C,L)\neq 0$ . So, assume that $p\leqslant g-k$ , $H^{1}(C,2K_{C}-L)=0$ , $H^{1}(C,L)=0$ and that $V_{g-p-3}^{g-p-4}(2K_{C}-L)$ has the expected dimension $g-k-p-1$ . Note that this implies that $L$ is $(p+1)$ -very ample. Indeed, otherwise

$$\begin{eqnarray}L-K_{C}\in C_{p+2}-C_{k-3},\end{eqnarray}$$

which implies that

$$\begin{eqnarray}2K_{C}-L-C_{g-k-p}\subseteq K_{C}+C_{k-3}-C_{g-k+2},\end{eqnarray}$$

which gives $\dim V_{g-p-3}^{g-p-4}(2K_{C}-L)\geqslant g-k-p,$ using the assumption that $H^{1}(C,2K_{C}-L)=0$ . In fact, this last inclusion is equivalent to $\dim V_{g-p-3}^{g-p-4}(2K_{C}-L)\geqslant g-k-p$ ; use that a one-dimensional family of divisors must pass through any given point. In particular, the previous discussion shows that $L$ is base-point free. For a general, effective divisor $D$ of degree $g-k-p$ , the argument above gives $L(D)-K_{C}\notin C_{g-k+2}-C_{k-3}$ . By Theorem 1.4, we have

$$\begin{eqnarray}K_{g-k,2}(C,L(D))=0.\end{eqnarray}$$

By [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, Proposition 2.1], this implies that $K_{p,2}(C,L)=0$ .◻

Proof of Corollary 1.6.

As we are assuming that $k\geqslant 3$ , the inequality $p\leqslant g-k$ implies that $\deg (L-K_{C})\leqslant g-1$ , so we have $H^{1}(C,2K_{C}-L)=0$ for a general $L\in \text{Pic}^{2g+p-k+3}(C)$ . To show that the condition ‘ $V_{g-p-3}^{g-p-4}(2K_{C}-L)$ has the expected dimension $g-k-p-1$ ’ holds, for $C$ a general $k$ -gonal curve and $L$ general with $H^{1}(C,L)=H^{1}(C,2K_{C}-L)=0$ , we need to show that

$$\begin{eqnarray}2K_{C}-L-C_{g-k-p}\nsubseteq K_{C}+C_{k-3}-C_{g-k+2};\end{eqnarray}$$

see [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK]. This is equivalent to showing that

$$\begin{eqnarray}L-K_{C}+C_{g-k-p}\nsubseteq C_{g-k+2}-C_{k-3}.\end{eqnarray}$$

For this, we may specialise $C$ to a hyperelliptic curve, as the $k$ -gonality stratum in ${\mathcal{M}}_{g}$ contains the locus of hyperelliptic curves. In this case, the condition

$$\begin{eqnarray}L-K_{C}+C_{g-k-p}\subseteq C_{g-k+2}-C_{k-3}\end{eqnarray}$$

implies that

$$\begin{eqnarray}L-K_{C}\in C_{p+2}-C_{k-3},\end{eqnarray}$$

by [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, Proposition 2.7]. Under the assumption that $p\leqslant g-k$ , if $L$ is a general line bundle of degree $2g+p-k+3$ , then $L-K_{C}$ does not lie in $C_{p+2}-C_{k-3}$ . This completes the proof. ◻

Acknowledgements

I thank Holger Brenner for an interesting discussion in Osnabrück, which led to this work. I thank Gavril Farkas for sharing many ideas on these topics with me. This work was supported by the DFG Priority Program 1489 Algorithmische Methoden in Algebra, Geometrie und Zahlentheorie.

Footnotes

1 In [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, Theorem 1.7], we forgot to explicitly state the assumption that $L-K_{C}$ is not effective. When $L-K_{C}$ is effective, then the expected dimension of $V_{g-p-3}^{g-p-4}(2K_{C}-L)$ is strictly less than $g-k-p-1$ , so this assumption was actually implicit in Theorem 1.7. As explained above, the case $L-K_{C}$ effective is of no interest, as then $L$ trivially fails to be $(p+1)$ -very ample.

2 There is a typo in the statement of [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, Theorem 1.8], namely we should have $(C)^{2}=4i$ . This typo is not repeated in [Reference Farkas and KemenyFK, § 3].

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Figure 0

Figure 1. (Colour online) The curve $D$.