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Residue Balancing on Singular Curves

This paper investigates residue maps and their spanning properties for singular algebraic curves, with particular emphasis on three interconnected themes: the \emph{scheme--theoretic residue span}, the \emph{residue--balancing principle}, and \emph{residue balancing in the presence of arbitrary singularities}. Starting from the theory of dualizing sheaves on nodal curves, we reinterpret canonical and higher--order differentials as meromorphic objects on the normalization whose local principal parts are constrained by explicit residue conditions. A key result is the scheme--theoretic residue span theorem, which asserts that % for nodal curves of geometric genus $g$ with $δ$ nodes, when $δ\ge g$ the residue functionals at the nodes span $H^0(C,ω_C)^\vee$, so canonical differentials are completely determined by their residue data. This provides a concrete, linear description of $H^0(C,ω_C)$ and yields powerful applications to deformation theory, Severi varieties, and moduli problems. \vspace{0.1cm} We then develop the residue--balancing principle, showing that global residue conditions on each irreducible component of a singular curve are equivalent to local balancing conditions at the singular points. This equivalence clarifies the local--to--global structure of dualizing sheaves and extends naturally to $k$--differentials. Finally, we address the case of arbitrary singularities, where nodes no longer suffice to describe local geometry. Using normalization and the conductor ideal, we formulate a refined balancing principle that replaces simple residue cancellation by higher--order and conductor--level constraints. Together, these results provide a unified framework for understanding how local singular behavior governs global differentials and their deformations.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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