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Automorphism groups of pseudoreal Riemann surfaces

A smooth complex projective curve is called pseudoreal if it is isomorphic to its conjugate but is not definable over the reals. Such curves, together with real Riemann surfaces, form the real locus of the moduli space Mg. This paper deals with the classification of pseudoreal curves according to th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of pure and applied algebra 2017-09, Vol.221 (9), p.2383-2407
Main Authors: Artebani, Michela, Quispe, Saúl, Reyes, Cristian
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:A smooth complex projective curve is called pseudoreal if it is isomorphic to its conjugate but is not definable over the reals. Such curves, together with real Riemann surfaces, form the real locus of the moduli space Mg. This paper deals with the classification of pseudoreal curves according to the structure of their automorphism group. We follow two different approaches existing in the literature: one coming from number theory, dealing more generally with fields of moduli of projective curves, and the other from complex geometry, through the theory of NEC groups. Using the first approach, we prove that the conformal automorphism group Aut(X) of a pseudoreal Riemann surface X is abelian if X/Z(Aut(X)) has genus zero, where Z(Aut(X)) is the center of Aut(X). This includes the case of hyperelliptic Riemann surfaces, already known by results of B. Huggins. By means of the second approach and of elementary properties of group extensions, we show that X is not pseudoreal if the center of G=Aut(X) is trivial and either Out(G) contains no involutions or Inn(G) has a group complement in Aut(G). This extends and gives an elementary proof (over C) of a result by P. Dèbes and M. Emsalem. Finally, we provide an algorithm, implemented in MAGMA, which classifies the automorphism groups of pseudoreal Riemann surfaces of genus g≥2, once a list of all groups acting for such genus, with their signature and generating vectors, is given. This program, together with the database provided by J. Paulhus in [33], allowed us to classify pseudoreal Riemann surfaces up to genus 10, extending previous results by E. Bujalance, M. Conder and A. F. Costa.
ISSN:0022-4049
1873-1376
DOI:10.1016/j.jpaa.2016.12.039