鳀鱼是什么鱼| 西瓜像什么| 干咳是什么原因| 息肉是什么原因引起的| 喉咙发炎咳嗽吃什么药好得快| 洗脑是什么意思| 雾化是什么| 洗假牙用什么洗最好| 直女是什么意思| 木全读什么| 双侧乳腺小叶增生是什么意思| 手机买什么好| 天仙配是什么剧种| 小鸡啄米什么意思| 清宫和刮宫有什么区别| 感染幽门螺旋杆菌会出现什么症状| 三点水加个及念什么| 燕窝什么人不适合吃| 眩晕看什么科| 气体交换受损与什么有关| b超回声不均匀是什么意思| 爬山是什么意思| 妈妈桑是什么意思| 炖羊汤放什么调料| 什么是可转债| 空心菜又叫什么菜| 牙疼吃什么止疼药| 淋巴细胞百分比高是什么原因| o3是什么| 牛顿三大定律是什么| 孩子喝什么牛奶有助于长高| 乌岽单丛是什么茶| 二十七岁属什么生肖| 周星驰是什么星座| 心电图逆钟向转位是什么意思| 孩子肚子疼挂什么科| 12年是什么年| 低血糖有什么症状| 牛加一笔是什么字| 98年什么命| 乙肝235阳性是什么意思| 518是什么星座| 小舌头学名叫什么| 鸡茸是什么东西| 1218是什么星座| 眼镜框什么材质的好| 建档挂什么科| 腋毛上有白色附着物是什么| 男女身份证号码有什么区分| 软著有什么用| 房颤用什么药| 93什么意思| 荔枝什么季节成熟| 今年88岁属什么生肖| 洋葱不能和什么一起吃| 肢体拘挛是什么意思| 有机磷是什么| 能说会道是什么生肖| 痛风什么原因引起| 什么加什么等于红色| 频繁大便是什么原因| 口水粘稠是什么原因| 吃五谷杂粮有什么好处| 渐入佳境是什么意思| 皮肤过敏不能吃什么| 肌肉痉挛吃什么药| 死精是什么原因造成的| 球蛋白有什么作用和功效| tc是什么| 有缘无份什么意思| 白炽灯属于什么光源| 炮制是什么意思| se是什么| 五指毛桃不能和什么一起吃| otc属于什么药| 放屁不臭是什么原因| 太阳穴凹陷是什么原因| 耳膜穿孔吃什么长得快| 动脉硬化有什么危害| 头痒用什么洗头可以止痒| 晚上吃什么减肥快| 梦见死人是什么意思| 晴雨表是什么意思| 瞎子吃核桃砸了手是什么生肖| 女性下面水少是什么原因| 白塞病是什么病| 土命是什么意思| 情系是什么意思| 有机玻璃是什么| 梦到火是什么意思| 慢性浅表性胃炎吃什么药好得快| 小代表什么生肖| 人丁兴旺是什么意思| 耳朵蝉鸣是什么原因引起的| 覆盖的意思是什么| 什么是焦虑症| 缎面是什么面料| 书记处书记是什么级别| 五月十二号是什么日子| 谝是什么意思| 长辈生日送什么好| 月经和怀孕的症状有什么不同| 动物的尾巴有什么作用| 七月七是什么日子| 6月16是什么星座| 游字五行属什么| 感冒流鼻涕吃什么药好得快| 小钙化灶是什么意思| 张起灵和吴邪什么关系| 花菜炒什么好吃| 上军校需要什么条件| 嗓子不舒服吃什么水果| 连可以组什么词| 什么网名好听| 种牙和假牙有什么区别| 夫妻都是b型血孩子是什么血型| 周岁和虚岁是什么意思| 血热是什么原因引起的| 内伤湿滞什么意思| herry是什么意思| 320是什么意思| 血糖高的人能吃什么水果| 嘴馋是什么意思| 醋酸是什么东西| 对牛弹琴是什么意思| 孩子为什么要躲百天| 喉咙痛喝什么饮料| 儿童受凉咳嗽吃什么药| 处女座是什么星象| 气虚吃什么| 八月20号是什么星座| 79年出生属什么生肖| 天天都需要你爱是什么歌| 脚指甲变白是什么原因| 彩云之南是什么意思| 81什么意思| 七月六号是什么星座| 屈打成招是什么意思| 女人梦见龙是什么征兆| 狮子座和什么座最配对| 什么叫做t| 不孕不育有什么症状| 血管为什么会堵塞| 合肥有什么好玩的地方| 德国人是什么人种| 完璧归赵发生在什么时期| 从什么不什么四字词语| olayks是什么牌子| 什么是甲状腺结节病| 吃什么能快速减肥| 尿频尿急吃什么药比较好| cac是什么意思| 吃鹅蛋有什么好处和坏处| 摸头是什么意思| 漏尿是什么原因造成的| 什么是kpi| 末梢神经炎吃什么药| 办理健康证需要什么| 一桌餐是什么意思| 千里马比喻什么人| 喉咙发炎咳嗽吃什么药好得快| 梦到蛇是什么预兆| 菽是什么意思| 吃什么能养肝护肝| 手莫名其妙的肿了因为什么| mi是什么意思| 闪回是什么意思| 独行侠是什么意思| 黄花苗泡水喝有什么作用| 高频听力损失意味什么| 肾活检是什么意思| meshor是什么牌子的手表| 焖是什么意思| 指甲发紫是什么原因| 辛巳五行属什么| 肛门里面痒是什么原因| 纸可以折什么| 什么的雷锋| 肾阴阳两虚吃什么中成药| 世界上最大的山是什么山| 传染病4项是什么| 肛周湿疹用什么药膏效果好| 虐猫是什么意思| 痔疮的克星是什么| 半夜三更是什么生肖| 早上睡不醒是什么原因| 血小板低吃什么食物补得快| 狮子长什么样| 高密度脂蛋白胆固醇偏高是什么意思| 土地出让和划拨有什么区别| 考试前紧张吃什么药最好能缓解| 喜欢一个人是什么感觉| 拉肚子适合吃什么食物| 右胳膊发麻是什么原因| 土耳其浴是什么意思| 知了是什么意思| 耳石症有什么症状| 什么是逻辑思维| 千钧一发是什么生肖| 小猫的尾巴有什么用处| 猫眼石是什么材质| 死而什么什么| 为什么会细菌感染| 一生无虞是什么意思| 12月9号是什么星座| 家是什么结构的字| 肝阴不足吃什么中成药| 白带正常是什么颜色| 口苦吃什么好| 杆菌一个加号什么意思| 肝实质弥漫性回声改变什么意思| 西红柿可以做什么菜| 属兔的和什么属相最配| 血氧饱和度什么意思| 牙肿了吃什么消炎药| 什么的形象| 头晕目眩吃什么药| 副司长是什么级别| 水瓶座后面是什么星座| 开髓引流是什么| 岁月静好浅笑安然什么意思| 貂蝉姓什么| 怀孕前三个月忌吃什么| 外阴炎是什么原因引起的| 除异味用什么效果最好| 木乃伊是什么| 什么是心梗| 结婚20年是什么婚姻| 天乙是什么意思| 乙肝表面抗原阳性是什么意思| 解大便时有鲜血流出是什么原因| 早上9点多是什么时辰| 什么样的人可以通灵| 皮肤软组织感染是什么意思| 樵夫是什么意思| 赤小豆和红豆有什么区别| 避孕套玻尿酸的作用是什么| 长白眉毛是什么征兆| 有时候会感到莫名的难过是什么歌| 什么是作风建设| 预计是什么意思| 阿胶适合什么人吃| 中耳炎吃什么药| 头发老是出油是什么原因| 乙肝表面抗体是什么意思| pvd是什么材料| 肾衰竭五期是什么意思| 铁蛋白是查什么的| 舞象之年是什么意思| 为什么地球是圆的| 恐龙的祖先是什么| 尿道感染吃什么药| 眩晕症是什么原因引起的| 粉瘤是什么东西| 乾隆的名字叫什么| 什么症状吃保心丸| 卡介苗是什么| 阴道菌群失调用什么药| 冷藏和冷冻有什么区别| 一个草字头一个氏念什么| 头疼喝什么药| 来大姨妈吃什么水果好| 特此通知写在什么位置| 妇科清洁度3度用什么药治疗| 百度Jump to content

珠海港信2016年净赚117万元 营收同比下滑45%

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
百度 在后来的岁月里,又有很多如雷贯耳的名字加入修订者行列:王力、游国恩、袁家骅、周一良等。

In mathematics, in particular algebraic geometry, a moduli space is a geometric space (usually a scheme or an algebraic stack) whose points represent algebro-geometric objects of some fixed kind, or isomorphism classes of such objects. Such spaces frequently arise as solutions to classification problems: If one can show that a collection of interesting objects (e.g., the smooth algebraic curves of a fixed genus) can be given the structure of a geometric space, then one can parametrize such objects by introducing coordinates on the resulting space. In this context, the term "modulus" is used synonymously with "parameter"; moduli spaces were first understood as spaces of parameters rather than as spaces of objects. A variant of moduli spaces is formal moduli. Bernhard Riemann first used the term "moduli" in 1857.[1]

Motivation

[edit]

Moduli spaces are spaces of solutions of geometric classification problems. That is, the points of a moduli space correspond to solutions of geometric problems. Here different solutions are identified if they are isomorphic (that is, geometrically the same). Moduli spaces can be thought of as giving a universal space of parameters for the problem. For example, consider the problem of finding all circles in the Euclidean plane up to congruence. Any circle can be described uniquely by giving three points, but many different sets of three points give the same circle: the correspondence is many-to-one. However, circles are uniquely parameterized by giving their center and radius: this is two real parameters and one positive real parameter. Since we are only interested in circles "up to congruence", we identify circles having different centers but the same radius, and so the radius alone suffices to parameterize the set of interest. The moduli space is, therefore, the positive real numbers.

Moduli spaces often carry natural geometric and topological structures as well. In the example of circles, for instance, the moduli space is not just an abstract set, but the absolute value of the difference of the radii defines a metric for determining when two circles are "close". The geometric structure of moduli spaces locally tells us when two solutions of a geometric classification problem are "close", but generally moduli spaces also have a complicated global structure as well.

Constructing P1(R) by varying 0 ≤ θ < π or as a quotient space of S1.

For example, consider how to describe the collection of lines in R2 that intersect the origin. We want to assign to each line L of this family a quantity that can uniquely identify it—a modulus. An example of such a quantity is the positive angle θ(L) with 0 ≤ θ < π radians. The set of lines L so parametrized is known as P1(R) and is called the real projective line.

We can also describe the collection of lines in R2 that intersect the origin by means of a topological construction. To wit: consider the unit circle S1 ? R2 and notice that every point sS1 gives a line L(s) in the collection (which joins the origin and s). However, this map is two-to-one, so we want to identify s ~ ?s to yield P1(R) ? S1/~ where the topology on this space is the quotient topology induced by the quotient map S1P1(R).

Thus, when we consider P1(R) as a moduli space of lines that intersect the origin in R2, we capture the ways in which the members (lines in this case) of the family can modulate by continuously varying 0 ≤ θ < π.

Basic examples

[edit]

Projective space and Grassmannians

[edit]

The real projective space Pn is a moduli space that parametrizes the space of lines in Rn+1 which pass through the origin. Similarly, complex projective space is the space of all complex lines in Cn+1 passing through the origin.

More generally, the Grassmannian G(k, V) of a vector space V over a field F is the moduli space of all k-dimensional linear subspaces of V.

Projective space as moduli of very ample line bundles generated by global sections

[edit]

Whenever there is an embedding of a scheme into the universal projective space ,[2][3] the embedding is given by a line bundle and sections which all don't vanish at the same time. This means, given a point

there is an associated point

given by the compositions

Then, two line bundles with sections are equivalent

iff there is an isomorphism such that . This means the associated moduli functor

sends a scheme to the set

Showing this is true can be done by running through a series of tautologies: any projective embedding gives the globally generated sheaf with sections . Conversely, given an ample line bundle globally generated by sections gives an embedding as above.

Chow variety

[edit]

The Chow variety Chow(d,P3) is a projective algebraic variety which parametrizes degree d curves in P3. It is constructed as follows. Let C be a curve of degree d in P3, then consider all the lines in P3 that intersect the curve C. This is a degree d divisor DC in G(2, 4), the Grassmannian of lines in P3. When C varies, by associating C to DC, we obtain a parameter space of degree d curves as a subset of the space of degree d divisors of the Grassmannian: Chow(d,P3).

Hilbert scheme

[edit]

The Hilbert scheme Hilb(X) is a moduli scheme. Every closed point of Hilb(X) corresponds to a closed subscheme of a fixed scheme X, and every closed subscheme is represented by such a point. A simple example of a Hilbert scheme is the Hilbert scheme parameterizing degree hypersurfaces of projective space . This is given by the projective bundle

with universal family given by

where is the associated projective scheme for the degree homogeneous polynomial .

Definitions

[edit]

There are several related notions of things we could call moduli spaces. Each of these definitions formalizes a different notion of what it means for the points of space M to represent geometric objects.

Fine moduli space

[edit]

This is the standard concept. Heuristically, if we have a space M for which each point m ? M corresponds to an algebro-geometric object Um, then we can assemble these objects into a tautological family U over M. (For example, the Grassmannian G(k, V) carries a rank k bundle whose fiber at any point [L] ? G(k, V) is simply the linear subspace L ? V.) M is called a base space of the family U. We say that such a family is universal if any family of algebro-geometric objects T over any base space B is the pullback of U along a unique map BM. A fine moduli space is a space M which is the base of a universal family.

More precisely, suppose that we have a functor F from schemes to sets, which assigns to a scheme B the set of all suitable families of objects with base B. A space M is a fine moduli space for the functor F if M represents F, i.e., there is a natural isomorphism τ : FHom(?, M), where Hom(?, M) is the functor of points. This implies that M carries a universal family; this family is the family on M corresponding to the identity map 1M ? Hom(M, M).

Coarse moduli space

[edit]

Fine moduli spaces are desirable, but they do not always exist and are frequently difficult to construct, so mathematicians sometimes use a weaker notion, the idea of a coarse moduli space. A space M is a coarse moduli space for the functor F if there exists a natural transformation τ : FHom(?, M) and τ is universal among such natural transformations. More concretely, M is a coarse moduli space for F if any family T over a base B gives rise to a map φT : BM and any two objects V and W (regarded as families over a point) correspond to the same point of M if and only if V and W are isomorphic. Thus, M is a space which has a point for every object that could appear in a family, and whose geometry reflects the ways objects can vary in families. Note, however, that a coarse moduli space does not necessarily carry any family of appropriate objects, let alone a universal one.

In other words, a fine moduli space includes both a base space M and universal family UM, while a coarse moduli space only has the base space M.

Moduli stack

[edit]

It is frequently the case that interesting geometric objects come equipped with many natural automorphisms. This in particular makes the existence of a fine moduli space impossible (intuitively, the idea is that if L is some geometric object, the trivial family L × [0,1] can be made into a twisted family on the circle S1 by identifying L × {0} with L × {1} via a nontrivial automorphism. Now if a fine moduli space X existed, the map S1X should not be constant, but would have to be constant on any proper open set by triviality), one can still sometimes obtain a coarse moduli space. However, this approach is not ideal, as such spaces are not guaranteed to exist, they are frequently singular when they do exist, and miss details about some non-trivial families of objects they classify.

A more sophisticated approach is to enrich the classification by remembering the isomorphisms. More precisely, on any base B one can consider the category of families on B with only isomorphisms between families taken as morphisms. One then considers the fibred category which assigns to any space B the groupoid of families over B. The use of these categories fibred in groupoids to describe a moduli problem goes back to Grothendieck (1960/61). In general, they cannot be represented by schemes or even algebraic spaces, but in many cases, they have a natural structure of an algebraic stack.

Algebraic stacks and their use to analyze moduli problems appeared in Deligne-Mumford (1969) as a tool to prove the irreducibility of the (coarse) moduli space of curves of a given genus. The language of algebraic stacks essentially provides a systematic way to view the fibred category that constitutes the moduli problem as a "space", and the moduli stack of many moduli problems is better-behaved (such as smooth) than the corresponding coarse moduli space.

Further examples

[edit]

Moduli of curves

[edit]

The moduli stack classifies families of smooth projective curves of genus g, together with their isomorphisms. When g > 1, this stack may be compactified by adding new "boundary" points which correspond to stable nodal curves (together with their isomorphisms). A curve is stable if it has only a finite group of automorphisms. The resulting stack is denoted . Both moduli stacks carry universal families of curves. One can also define coarse moduli spaces representing isomorphism classes of smooth or stable curves. These coarse moduli spaces were actually studied before the notion of moduli stack was invented. In fact, the idea of a moduli stack was invented by Deligne and Mumford in an attempt to prove the projectivity of the coarse moduli spaces. In recent years, it has become apparent that the stack of curves is actually the more fundamental object.

Both stacks above have dimension 3g?3; hence a stable nodal curve can be completely specified by choosing the values of 3g?3 parameters, when g > 1. In lower genus, one must account for the presence of smooth families of automorphisms, by subtracting their number. There is exactly one complex curve of genus zero, the Riemann sphere, and its group of isomorphisms is PGL(2). Hence, the dimension of is

dim(space of genus zero curves) ? dim(group of automorphisms) = 0 ? dim(PGL(2)) = ?3.

Likewise, in genus 1, there is a one-dimensional space of curves, but every such curve has a one-dimensional group of automorphisms. Hence, the stack has dimension 0. The coarse moduli spaces have dimension 3g?3 as the stacks when g > 1 because the curves with genus g > 1 have only a finite group as its automorphism i.e. dim(a group of automorphisms) = 0. Eventually, in genus zero, the coarse moduli space has dimension zero, and in genus one, it has dimension one.

One can also enrich the problem by considering the moduli stack of genus g nodal curves with n marked points. Such marked curves are said to be stable if the subgroup of curve automorphisms which fix the marked points is finite. The resulting moduli stacks of smooth (or stable) genus g curves with n-marked points are denoted (or ), and have dimension 3g ? 3 + n.

A case of particular interest is the moduli stack of genus 1 curves with one marked point. This is the stack of elliptic curves, and is the natural home of the much studied modular forms, which are meromorphic sections of bundles on this stack.

Moduli of varieties

[edit]

In higher dimensions, moduli of algebraic varieties are more difficult to construct and study. For instance, the higher-dimensional analogue of the moduli space of elliptic curves discussed above is the moduli space of abelian varieties, such as the Siegel modular variety. This is the problem underlying Siegel modular form theory. See also Shimura variety.

Using techniques arising out of the minimal model program, moduli spaces of varieties of general type were constructed by János Kollár and Nicholas Shepherd-Barron, now known as KSB moduli spaces.[4]

Using techniques arising out of differential geometry and birational geometry simultaneously, the construction of moduli spaces of Fano varieties has been achieved by restricting to a special class of K-stable varieties. In this setting important results about boundedness of Fano varieties proven by Caucher Birkar are used, for which he was awarded the 2018 Fields medal.

The construction of moduli spaces of Calabi-Yau varieties is an important open problem, and only special cases such as moduli spaces of K3 surfaces or Abelian varieties are understood.[5]

Moduli of vector bundles

[edit]

Another important moduli problem is to understand the geometry of (various substacks of) the moduli stack Vectn(X) of rank n vector bundles on a fixed algebraic variety X.[6] This stack has been most studied when X is one-dimensional, and especially when n equals one. In this case, the coarse moduli space is the Picard scheme, which like the moduli space of curves, was studied before stacks were invented. When the bundles have rank 1 and degree zero, the study of coarse moduli space is the study of the Jacobian variety.

In applications to physics, the number of moduli of vector bundles and the closely related problem of the number of moduli of principal G-bundles has been found to be significant in gauge theory.[citation needed]

Volume of the moduli space

[edit]

Simple geodesics and Weil-Petersson volumes of moduli spaces of bordered Riemann surfaces.

Methods for constructing moduli spaces

[edit]

The modern formulation of moduli problems and definition of moduli spaces in terms of the moduli functors (or more generally the categories fibred in groupoids), and spaces (almost) representing them, dates back to Grothendieck (1960/61), in which he described the general framework, approaches, and main problems using Teichmüller spaces in complex analytical geometry as an example. The talks, in particular, describe the general method of constructing moduli spaces by first rigidifying the moduli problem under consideration.

More precisely, the existence of non-trivial automorphisms of the objects being classified makes it impossible to have a fine moduli space. However, it is often possible to consider a modified moduli problem of classifying the original objects together with additional data, chosen in such a way that the identity is the only automorphism respecting also the additional data. With a suitable choice of the rigidifying data, the modified moduli problem will have a (fine) moduli space T, often described as a subscheme of a suitable Hilbert scheme or Quot scheme. The rigidifying data is moreover chosen so that it corresponds to a principal bundle with an algebraic structure group G. Thus one can move back from the rigidified problem to the original by taking quotient by the action of G, and the problem of constructing the moduli space becomes that of finding a scheme (or more general space) that is (in a suitably strong sense) the quotient T/G of T by the action of G. The last problem, in general, does not admit a solution; however, it is addressed by the groundbreaking geometric invariant theory (GIT), developed by David Mumford in 1965, which shows that under suitable conditions the quotient indeed exists.

To see how this might work, consider the problem of parametrizing smooth curves of the genus g > 2. A smooth curve together with a complete linear system of degree d > 2g is equivalent to a closed one dimensional subscheme of the projective space Pd?g. Consequently, the moduli space of smooth curves and linear systems (satisfying certain criteria) may be embedded in the Hilbert scheme of a sufficiently high-dimensional projective space. This locus H in the Hilbert scheme has an action of PGL(n) which mixes the elements of the linear system; consequently, the moduli space of smooth curves is then recovered as the quotient of H by the projective general linear group.

Another general approach is primarily associated with Michael Artin. Here the idea is to start with an object of the kind to be classified and study its deformation theory. This means first constructing infinitesimal deformations, then appealing to prorepresentability theorems to put these together into an object over a formal base. Next, an appeal to Grothendieck's formal existence theorem provides an object of the desired kind over a base which is a complete local ring. This object can be approximated via Artin's approximation theorem by an object defined over a finitely generated ring. The spectrum of this latter ring can then be viewed as giving a kind of coordinate chart on the desired moduli space. By gluing together enough of these charts, we can cover the space, but the map from our union of spectra to the moduli space will, in general, be many to one. We, therefore, define an equivalence relation on the former; essentially, two points are equivalent if the objects over each are isomorphic. This gives a scheme and an equivalence relation, which is enough to define an algebraic space (actually an algebraic stack if we are being careful) if not always a scheme.

In physics

[edit]

The term moduli space is sometimes used in physics to refer specifically to the moduli space of vacuum expectation values of a set of scalar fields, or to the moduli space of possible string backgrounds.

Moduli spaces also appear in physics in topological field theory, where one can use Feynman path integrals to compute the intersection numbers of various algebraic moduli spaces.

See also

[edit]

Construction tools

[edit]

Moduli spaces

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Chan, Melody. "Moduli Spaces of Curves: Classical and Tropical" (PDF). AMS.
  2. ^ "Lemma 27.13.1 (01NE)—The Stacks project". stacks.math.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2025-08-05.
  3. ^ "algebraic geometry - What does projective space classify?". Mathematics Stack Exchange. Retrieved 2025-08-05.
  4. ^ J. Kollar. Moduli of varieties of general type, Handbook of moduli. Vol. II, 2013, pp. 131–157.
  5. ^ Huybrechts, D., 2016. Lectures on K3 surfaces (Vol. 158). Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ "Algebraic Stacks and Moduli of Vector Bundles" (PDF).

Notes

[edit]

Research articles

[edit]

Fundamental papers

[edit]

Early applications

[edit]

Other references

[edit]
  • Papadopoulos, Athanase, ed. (2007), Handbook of Teichmüller theory. Vol. I, IRMA Lectures in Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, 11, European Mathematical Society (EMS), Zürich, doi:10.4171/029, ISBN 978-3-03719-029-6, MR 2284826
  • Papadopoulos, Athanase, ed. (2009), Handbook of Teichmüller theory. Vol. II, IRMA Lectures in Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, 13, European Mathematical Society (EMS), Zürich, doi:10.4171/055, ISBN 978-3-03719-055-5, MR 2524085
  • Papadopoulos, Athanase, ed. (2012), Handbook of Teichmüller theory. Vol. III, IRMA Lectures in Mathematics and Theoretical Physics, 17, European Mathematical Society (EMS), Zürich, doi:10.4171/103, ISBN 978-3-03719-103-3.
[edit]
[edit]
腺病毒吃什么药 谌读什么 腮腺炎是什么引起的 骨折吃什么水果 6月27号是什么星座
经常晕倒是什么原因引起的 随波逐流什么意思 鱼生是什么 女性尿路感染吃什么药效果好 五月初七是什么星座
大腿外侧麻木是什么原因 焗油和染发有什么区别 甘肃属于什么地区 6月29什么星座 15点是什么时辰
怀孕第一个月最怕什么 人为什么会缺钾 面筋是什么 重阳节是什么生肖 双克是什么药
嗓子疼咳嗽是什么原因hcv8jop2ns1r.cn 胎心停了是什么原因引起的hcv9jop1ns6r.cn 肝胆胰脾挂什么科hcv8jop2ns8r.cn 喜爱的反义词是什么hcv7jop7ns4r.cn 弧度是什么意思hcv8jop8ns2r.cn
胎儿头位是什么意思hcv8jop7ns6r.cn 三个力念什么bjhyzcsm.com 粗茶淡饭下一句是什么hcv8jop1ns6r.cn 吃梨有什么好处hcv8jop5ns5r.cn 糖尿病人喝什么茶最好xinjiangjialails.com
什么冰箱好hcv9jop3ns2r.cn 什么叫钙化hcv7jop4ns8r.cn 肠胃炎吃什么药好hcv8jop6ns6r.cn 夏天为什么不能喝红茶hcv9jop5ns1r.cn 房颤吃什么药最好hcv9jop5ns5r.cn
生活的意义是什么hcv8jop9ns8r.cn 小孩坐飞机需要什么证件hcv9jop4ns8r.cn 咳嗽有白痰吃什么药最好xinjiangjialails.com no是什么气体hcv9jop4ns0r.cn 口苦是什么病hcv7jop5ns0r.cn
百度