Invariant Rings of Ga -Representations are not always Finitely Generated in Positive Characteristic
Abstract
Hilbert's 14th Problem asks the following question. Given a linear representation β: G GL(V) of a linear algebraic group over a field k is the ring Sk(V) a finitely generated k -algebra? For reductive groups the answer is yes. However, in general the answer is no. Nagata provided one of the earliest counterexamples to this claim and his counterexample was extended by Shigeru Mukai. However, if G is equal to Ga and the characteristic of k is equal to zero, then the answer to Hilbert's 14th problem is yes. Roland Weitzenb\"ock first proved this result in 1932 in an article in Acta Mathematica. Seshadri gave a more accessible proof. While Roland Weitzenb\"ock did not conjecture this claim, the question of whether the theorem that bears his name still holds if the characteristic of the base field k is p>0 is known as ``the Weitzenb\"ock conjecture''. We aim to use Mukai's strategy to give a counterexample to the Weitzenb\"ock conjecture. Namely, we construct a six dimensional representation over a field of positive characteristic such that the invariant ring is isomorphic to the Cox ring of the blow-up of a toric surface at the identity of the torus. We use the geometry of the underlying toric variety to show that this Cox ring is not finitely generated.
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