Geography of Landau-Ginzburg models and threefold syzygies
Authors
Yang He, Artan Sheshmani
Abstract
We study the behavior of toric Landau-Ginzburg models under extremal contraction and minimal model program. We also establish a relation between the moduli space of toric Landau-Ginzburg models and the geography of central models. We conjecture that there is a correspondence between extremal contractions and minimal model program on Fano varieties, and degenerations of their associated toric Landau-Ginzburg models written explicitly. We prove the conjectures for smooth toric varieties, as well as general smooth Fano varieties in dimensions 2 and 3. As an application, we compute the elementary syzygies for smooth Fano threefolds.
Concepts
The Big Picture
Imagine cataloging every route between two mountain ranges. Not just the direct paths, but every detour and shortcut that counts as “mathematically equivalent.” That’s the challenge algebraic geometers face with birational maps: transformations between complex geometric shapes that look different on the surface but are, in a precise sense, the same at their core.
For decades, the goal has been to break these maps into their simplest irreducible pieces, the way you factor a large number into primes.
The Minimal Model Program (MMP), developed in the 1980s, gives mathematicians a systematic procedure for simplifying multidimensional shapes. Think of it as repeatedly smoothing wrinkles in fabric until you reach the flattest possible form. One of its key outputs is Mori fibre spaces, the irreducible building blocks.
But knowing the building blocks is only half the story. You also need to understand how those building blocks relate to each other. These higher-order relations are called syzygies. A useful analogy: grammar. Not just vocabulary, but the rules governing how words combine into valid sentences.
A new paper by Yang He and Artan Sheshmani attacks this problem by borrowing tools from theoretical physics. They track how physical theories called Landau-Ginzburg models change when their associated geometric spaces transform, building an explicit mirror dictionary that converts previously intractable computations into concrete calculations.
Key Insight: Extremal contractions in the Minimal Model Program, the fundamental geometric surgeries on Fano varieties, correspond precisely to degenerations of their mirror Landau-Ginzburg models. This turns a hard algebraic problem into a tractable geometric one.
How It Works
The foundation is mirror symmetry, one of the most surprising ideas to emerge from string theory. Every Fano variety (a geometric space with positive curvature, like a sphere generalized to many dimensions) has a mirror partner: a Landau-Ginzburg model defined by a polynomial called a superpotential. The superpotential encodes the energy landscape of the system. These two descriptions look completely different but carry equivalent mathematical information. Physicists discovered this duality; mathematicians have spent decades making it precise.

He and Sheshmani ask a sharper question: what happens to the Landau-Ginzburg model when you transform its corresponding Fano variety? When the MMP performs an extremal contraction, a surgery that collapses certain curves or subspaces, how does the mirror respond? Their answer splits into three cases:
- Divisorial contractions (collapsing a high-dimensional subspace) correspond to straightforward degenerations of the superpotential
- Mori fibre spaces (the MMP’s endpoint) correspond to Tyurin degenerations, where the mirror splits into two distinct pieces
- Flips and flops (birational modifications preserving essential structure) correspond to wall-crossings, where one description of the Landau-Ginzburg model abruptly transitions to another
The authors first prove these correspondences for toric varieties, a class of shapes where all the geometry reduces to combinatorial data: arrays of numbers and geometric grids. Here everything is explicit. You can track exactly how the Newton polytope (a shape whose vertices encode the terms of the superpotential) changes under contraction, and the correspondence becomes checkable by hand.
For general smooth Fano surfaces and threefolds, the proof needs more machinery. The strategy is local-to-global: establish the mirror correspondence locally near each contracted curve or fiber, then patch these local pictures together across the full moduli space of central models. He and Sheshmani prove the correspondence for all smooth toric varieties and all smooth Fano varieties in dimensions 2 and 3.
Why It Matters
The most concrete payoff is a complete computation of the elementary syzygies for all smooth Fano threefolds, organized by Picard number (roughly, the number of independent curve classes). He and Sheshmani enumerate every elementary relation between Sarkisov links, the atomic transformations from which all birational maps between Fano varieties are built. All 105 smooth Fano threefolds have been classified, so computing their syzygies pins down the relational structure of their birational geometry.
The conceptual payoff runs deeper. Prior work showed that the full syzygy hierarchy lives in a contractible CW complex built from central models. This paper adds a physical interpretation: the cells of that complex correspond to Landau-Ginzburg models, and the attaching maps correspond to degenerations under the MMP. Mirror symmetry encodes not just individual variety-theory pairs but the entire hierarchical structure of birational geometry.
For researchers applying machine learning to algebraic geometry, explicit structural results like these syzygies provide useful ground truth: known invariants to train on, geometric patterns to test against, and organizing principles that point toward where exploration is most likely to uncover new structure.
Bottom Line: By proving that mirror symmetry precisely encodes the algebraic relations between birational building blocks, He and Sheshmani complete the syzygy computation for all smooth Fano threefolds, turning an open problem into an explicit, checkable table.
IAIFI Research Highlights
This work connects string-theoretic mirror symmetry with the algebraic geometry of the Minimal Model Program, showing that physical Landau-Ginzburg models encode the relational structure (syzygies) of Fano variety classifications.
The explicit, computable syzygy data for all smooth Fano threefolds provides structured ground truth for machine learning approaches to algebraic geometry and topological invariant computation.
The paper gives a new, explicit form of the mirror symmetry dictionary in dimensions 2 and 3, proving that every move in the Minimal Model Program has a precise physical counterpart in Landau-Ginzburg degeneration theory.
Extensions to singular Fano threefolds and higher dimensions are now within reach using the contractible CW complex framework; the full paper is available at [arXiv:2506.15427](https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.15427).
Original Paper Details
Geography of Landau-Ginzburg models and threefold syzygies
2506.15427
["Yang He", "Artan Sheshmani"]
We study the behavior of toric Landau-Ginzburg models under extremal contraction and minimal model program. We also establish a relation between the moduli space of toric Landau-Ginzburg models and the geography of central models. We conjecture that there is a correspondence between extremal contractions and minimal model program on Fano varieties, and degenerations of their associated toric Landau-Ginzburg models written explicitly. We prove the conjectures for smooth toric varieties, as well as general smooth Fano varieties in dimensions 2 and 3. As an application, we compute the elementary syzygies for smooth Fano threefolds.