fbpx
Wikipedia

Algebraic variety

Algebraic varieties are the central objects of study in algebraic geometry, a sub-field of mathematics. Classically, an algebraic variety is defined as the set of solutions of a system of polynomial equations over the real or complex numbers. Modern definitions generalize this concept in several different ways, while attempting to preserve the geometric intuition behind the original definition.[1]: 58 

The twisted cubic is a projective algebraic variety.

Conventions regarding the definition of an algebraic variety differ slightly. For example, some definitions require an algebraic variety to be irreducible, which means that it is not the union of two smaller sets that are closed in the Zariski topology. Under this definition, non-irreducible algebraic varieties are called algebraic sets. Other conventions do not require irreducibility.

The fundamental theorem of algebra establishes a link between algebra and geometry by showing that a monic polynomial (an algebraic object) in one variable with complex number coefficients is determined by the set of its roots (a geometric object) in the complex plane. Generalizing this result, Hilbert's Nullstellensatz provides a fundamental correspondence between ideals of polynomial rings and algebraic sets. Using the Nullstellensatz and related results, mathematicians have established a strong correspondence between questions on algebraic sets and questions of ring theory. This correspondence is a defining feature of algebraic geometry.

Many algebraic varieties are differentiable manifolds, but an algebraic variety may have singular points while a differentiable manifold cannot. Algebraic varieties can be characterized by their dimension. Algebraic varieties of dimension one are called algebraic curves and algebraic varieties of dimension two are called algebraic surfaces.

In the context of modern scheme theory, an algebraic variety over a field is an integral (irreducible and reduced) scheme over that field whose structure morphism is separated and of finite type.

Overview and definitions edit

An affine variety over an algebraically closed field is conceptually the easiest type of variety to define, which will be done in this section. Next, one can define projective and quasi-projective varieties in a similar way. The most general definition of a variety is obtained by patching together smaller quasi-projective varieties. It is not obvious that one can construct genuinely new examples of varieties in this way, but Nagata gave an example of such a new variety in the 1950s.

Affine varieties edit

For an algebraically closed field K and a natural number n, let An be an affine n-space over K, identified to   through the choice of an affine coordinate system. The polynomials f in the ring K[x1, ..., xn] can be viewed as K-valued functions on An by evaluating f at the points in An, i.e. by choosing values in K for each xi. For each set S of polynomials in K[x1, ..., xn], define the zero-locus Z(S) to be the set of points in An on which the functions in S simultaneously vanish, that is to say

 

A subset V of An is called an affine algebraic set if V = Z(S) for some S.[1]: 2  A nonempty affine algebraic set V is called irreducible if it cannot be written as the union of two proper algebraic subsets.[1]: 3  An irreducible affine algebraic set is also called an affine variety.[1]: 3  (Some authors use the phrase affine variety to refer to any affine algebraic set, irreducible or not.[note 1])

Affine varieties can be given a natural topology by declaring the closed sets to be precisely the affine algebraic sets. This topology is called the Zariski topology.[1]: 2 

Given a subset V of An, we define I(V) to be the ideal of all polynomial functions vanishing on V:

 

For any affine algebraic set V, the coordinate ring or structure ring of V is the quotient of the polynomial ring by this ideal.[1]: 4 

Projective varieties and quasi-projective varieties edit

Let k be an algebraically closed field and let Pn be the projective n-space over k. Let f in k[x0, ..., xn] be a homogeneous polynomial of degree d. It is not well-defined to evaluate f on points in Pn in homogeneous coordinates. However, because f is homogeneous, meaning that f  (λx0, ..., λxn) = λdf  (x0, ..., xn), it does make sense to ask whether f vanishes at a point [x0 : ... : xn]. For each set S of homogeneous polynomials, define the zero-locus of S to be the set of points in Pn on which the functions in S vanish:

 

A subset V of Pn is called a projective algebraic set if V = Z(S) for some S.[1]: 9  An irreducible projective algebraic set is called a projective variety.[1]: 10 

Projective varieties are also equipped with the Zariski topology by declaring all algebraic sets to be closed.

Given a subset V of Pn, let I(V) be the ideal generated by all homogeneous polynomials vanishing on V. For any projective algebraic set V, the coordinate ring of V is the quotient of the polynomial ring by this ideal.[1]: 10 

A quasi-projective variety is a Zariski open subset of a projective variety. Notice that every affine variety is quasi-projective.[2] Notice also that the complement of an algebraic set in an affine variety is a quasi-projective variety; in the context of affine varieties, such a quasi-projective variety is usually not called a variety but a constructible set.

Abstract varieties edit

In classical algebraic geometry, all varieties were by definition quasi-projective varieties, meaning that they were open subvarieties of closed subvarieties of projective space. For example, in Chapter 1 of Hartshorne a variety over an algebraically closed field is defined to be a quasi-projective variety,[1]: 15  but from Chapter 2 onwards, the term variety (also called an abstract variety) refers to a more general object, which locally is a quasi-projective variety, but when viewed as a whole is not necessarily quasi-projective; i.e. it might not have an embedding into projective space.[1]: 105  So classically the definition of an algebraic variety required an embedding into projective space, and this embedding was used to define the topology on the variety and the regular functions on the variety. The disadvantage of such a definition is that not all varieties come with natural embeddings into projective space. For example, under this definition, the product P1 × P1 is not a variety until it is embedded into a larger projective space; this is usually done by the Segre embedding. Furthermore, any variety that admits one embedding into projective space admits many others, for example by composing the embedding with the Veronese embedding; thus many notions that should be intrinsic, such as that of a regular function, are not obviously so.

The earliest successful attempt to define an algebraic variety abstractly, without an embedding, was made by André Weil. In his Foundations of Algebraic Geometry, using valuations. Claude Chevalley made a definition of a scheme, which served a similar purpose, but was more general. However, Alexander Grothendieck's definition of a scheme is more general still and has received the most widespread acceptance. In Grothendieck's language, an abstract algebraic variety is usually defined to be an integral, separated scheme of finite type over an algebraically closed field,[1]: 104–105  although some authors drop the irreducibility or the reducedness or the separateness condition or allow the underlying field to be not algebraically closed.[note 2] Classical algebraic varieties are the quasiprojective integral separated finite type schemes over an algebraically closed field.

Existence of non-quasiprojective abstract algebraic varieties edit

One of the earliest examples of a non-quasiprojective algebraic variety were given by Nagata.[3] Nagata's example was not complete (the analog of compactness), but soon afterwards he found an algebraic surface that was complete and non-projective.[4][1]: Remark 4.10.2 p.105  Since then other examples have been found: for example, it is straightforward to construct toric varieties that are not quasi-projective but complete.[5]

Examples edit

Subvariety edit

A subvariety is a subset of a variety that is itself a variety (with respect to the topological structure induced by the ambient variety). For example, every open subset of a variety is a variety. See also closed immersion.

Hilbert's Nullstellensatz says that closed subvarieties of an affine or projective variety are in one-to-one correspondence with the prime ideals or non-irrelevant homogeneous prime ideals of the coordinate ring of the variety.

Affine variety edit

Example 1 edit

Let k = C, and A2 be the two-dimensional affine space over C. Polynomials in the ring C[x, y] can be viewed as complex valued functions on A2 by evaluating at the points in A2. Let subset S of C[x, y] contain a single element f  (x, y):

 

The zero-locus of f  (x, y) is the set of points in A2 on which this function vanishes: it is the set of all pairs of complex numbers (x, y) such that y = 1 − x. This is called a line in the affine plane. (In the classical topology coming from the topology on the complex numbers, a complex line is a real manifold of dimension two.) This is the set Z( f ):

 

Thus the subset V = Z( f ) of A2 is an algebraic set. The set V is not empty. It is irreducible, as it cannot be written as the union of two proper algebraic subsets. Thus it is an affine algebraic variety.

Example 2 edit

Let k = C, and A2 be the two-dimensional affine space over C. Polynomials in the ring C[x, y] can be viewed as complex valued functions on A2 by evaluating at the points in A2. Let subset S of C[x, y] contain a single element g(x, y):

 

The zero-locus of g(x, y) is the set of points in A2 on which this function vanishes, that is the set of points (x,y) such that x2 + y2 = 1. As g(x, y) is an absolutely irreducible polynomial, this is an algebraic variety. The set of its real points (that is the points for which x and y are real numbers), is known as the unit circle; this name is also often given to the whole variety.

Example 3 edit

The following example is neither a hypersurface, nor a linear space, nor a single point. Let A3 be the three-dimensional affine space over C. The set of points (x, x2, x3) for x in C is an algebraic variety, and more precisely an algebraic curve that is not contained in any plane.[note 3] It is the twisted cubic shown in the above figure. It may be defined by the equations

 

The irreducibility of this algebraic set needs a proof. One approach in this case is to check that the projection (x, y, z) → (x, y) is injective on the set of the solutions and that its image is an irreducible plane curve.

For more difficult examples, a similar proof may always be given, but may imply a difficult computation: first a Gröbner basis computation to compute the dimension, followed by a random linear change of variables (not always needed); then a Gröbner basis computation for another monomial ordering to compute the projection and to prove that it is generically injective and that its image is a hypersurface, and finally a polynomial factorization to prove the irreducibility of the image.

General linear group edit

The set of n-by-n matrices over the base field k can be identified with the affine n2-space   with coordinates   such that   is the (i, j)-th entry of the matrix  . The determinant   is then a polynomial in   and thus defines the hypersurface   in  . The complement of   is then an open subset of   that consists of all the invertible n-by-n matrices, the general linear group  . It is an affine variety, since, in general, the complement of a hypersurface in an affine variety is affine. Explicitly, consider   where the affine line is given coordinate t. Then   amounts to the zero-locus in   of the polynomial in  :

 

i.e., the set of matrices A such that   has a solution. This is best seen algebraically: the coordinate ring of   is the localization  , which can be identified with  .

The multiplicative group k* of the base field k is the same as   and thus is an affine variety. A finite product of it   is an algebraic torus, which is again an affine variety.

A general linear group is an example of a linear algebraic group, an affine variety that has a structure of a group in such a way the group operations are morphism of varieties.

Characteristic variety edit

Let A be a not-necessarily-commutative algebra over a field k. Even if A is not commutative, it can still happen that A has a  -filtration so that the associated ring   is commutative, reduced and finitely generated as a k-algebra; i.e.,   is the coordinate ring of an affine (reducible) variety X. For example, if A is the universal enveloping algebra of a finite-dimensional Lie algebra  , then   is a polynomial ring (the PBW theorem); more precisely, the coordinate ring of the dual vector space  .

Let M be a filtered module over A (i.e.,  ). If   is fintiely generated as a  -algebra, then the support of   in X; i.e., the locus where   does not vanish is called the characteristic variety of M.[6] The notion plays an important role in the theory of D-modules.

Projective variety edit

A projective variety is a closed subvariety of a projective space. That is, it is the zero locus of a set of homogeneous polynomials that generate a prime ideal.

Example 1 edit

 
The affine plane curve y2 = x3x. The corresponding projective curve is called an elliptic curve.

A plane projective curve is the zero locus of an irreducible homogeneous polynomial in three indeterminates. The projective line P1 is an example of a projective curve; it can be viewed as the curve in the projective plane P2 = {[x, y, z]} defined by x = 0. For another example, first consider the affine cubic curve

 

in the 2-dimensional affine space (over a field of characteristic not two). It has the associated cubic homogeneous polynomial equation:

 

which defines a curve in P2 called an elliptic curve. The curve has genus one (genus formula); in particular, it is not isomorphic to the projective line P1, which has genus zero. Using genus to distinguish curves is very basic: in fact, the genus is the first invariant one uses to classify curves (see also the construction of moduli of algebraic curves).

Example 2: Grassmannian edit

Let V be a finite-dimensional vector space. The Grassmannian variety Gn(V) is the set of all n-dimensional subspaces of V. It is a projective variety: it is embedded into a projective space via the Plücker embedding:

 

where bi are any set of linearly independent vectors in V,   is the n-th exterior power of V, and the bracket [w] means the line spanned by the nonzero vector w.

The Grassmannian variety comes with a natural vector bundle (or locally free sheaf in other terminology) called the tautological bundle, which is important in the study of characteristic classes such as Chern classes.

Jacobian variety and abelian variety edit

Let C be a smooth complete curve and   the Picard group of it; i.e., the group of isomorphism classes of line bundles on C. Since C is smooth,   can be identified as the divisor class group of C and thus there is the degree homomorphism  . The Jacobian variety   of C is the kernel of this degree map; i.e., the group of the divisor classes on C of degree zero. A Jacobian variety is an example of an abelian variety, a complete variety with a compatible abelian group structure on it (the name "abelian" is however not because it is an abelian group). An abelian variety turns out to be projective (in short, algebraic theta functions give an embedding into a projective space. See equations defining abelian varieties); thus,   is a projective variety. The tangent space to   at the identity element is naturally isomorphic to  [7] hence, the dimension of   is the genus of  .

Fix a point   on  . For each integer  , there is a natural morphism[8]

 

where   is the product of n copies of C. For   (i.e., C is an elliptic curve), the above morphism for   turns out to be an isomorphism;[1]: Ch. IV, Example 1.3.7.  in particular, an elliptic curve is an abelian variety.

Moduli varieties edit

Given an integer  , the set of isomorphism classes of smooth complete curves of genus   is called the moduli of curves of genus   and is denoted as  . There are few ways to show this moduli has a structure of a possibly reducible algebraic variety; for example, one way is to use geometric invariant theory which ensures a set of isomorphism classes has a (reducible) quasi-projective variety structure.[9] Moduli such as the moduli of curves of fixed genus is typically not a projective variety; roughly the reason is that a degeneration (limit) of a smooth curve tends to be non-smooth or reducible. This leads to the notion of a stable curve of genus  , a not-necessarily-smooth complete curve with no terribly bad singularities and not-so-large automorphism group. The moduli of stable curves  , the set of isomorphism classes of stable curves of genus  , is then a projective variety which contains   as an open subset. Since   is obtained by adding boundary points to  ,   is colloquially said to be a compactification of  . Historically a paper of Mumford and Deligne[10] introduced the notion of a stable curve to show   is irreducible when  .

The moduli of curves exemplifies a typical situation: a moduli of nice objects tend not to be projective but only quasi-projective. Another case is a moduli of vector bundles on a curve. Here, there are the notions of stable and semistable vector bundles on a smooth complete curve  . The moduli of semistable vector bundles of a given rank   and a given degree   (degree of the determinant of the bundle) is then a projective variety denoted as  , which contains the set   of isomorphism classes of stable vector bundles of rank   and degree   as an open subset.[11] Since a line bundle is stable, such a moduli is a generalization of the Jacobian variety of  .

In general, in contrast to the case of moduli of curves, a compactification of a moduli need not be unique and, in some cases, different non-equivalent compactifications are constructed using different methods and by different authors. An example over   is the problem of compactifying  , the quotient of a bounded symmetric domain   by an action of an arithmetic discrete group  .[12] A basic example of   is when  , Siegel's upper half-space and   commensurable with  ; in that case,   has an interpretation as the moduli   of principally polarized complex abelian varieties of dimension   (a principal polarization identifies an abelian variety with its dual). The theory of toric varieties (or torus embeddings) gives a way to compactify  , a toroidal compactification of it.[13][14] But there are other ways to compactify  ; for example, there is the minimal compactification of   due to Baily and Borel: it is the projective variety associated to the graded ring formed by modular forms (in the Siegel case, Siegel modular forms;[15] see also Siegel modular variety). The non-uniqueness of compactifications is due to the lack of moduli interpretations of those compactifications; i.e., they do not represent (in the category-theory sense) any natural moduli problem or, in the precise language, there is no natural moduli stack that would be an analog of moduli stack of stable curves.

Non-affine and non-projective example edit

An algebraic variety can be neither affine nor projective. To give an example, let X = P1 × A1 and p: XA1 the projection. Here X is an algebraic variety since it is a product of varieties. It is not affine since P1 is a closed subvariety of X (as the zero locus of p), but an affine variety cannot contain a projective variety of positive dimension as a closed subvariety. It is not projective either, since there is a nonconstant regular function on X; namely, p.

Another example of a non-affine non-projective variety is X = A2 − (0, 0) (cf. Morphism of varieties § Examples.)

Non-examples edit

Consider the affine line   over  . The complement of the circle   in   is not an algebraic variety (nor even an algebraic set). Note that   is not a polynomial in   (although it is a polynomial in the real cooridnates  ). On the other hand, the complement of the origin in   is an algebraic (affine) variety, since the origin is the zero-locus of  . This may be explained as follows: the affine line has dimension one and so any subvariety of it other than itself must have strictly less dimension; namely, zero.

For similar reasons, a unitary group (over the complex numbers) is not an algebraic variety, while the special linear group   is a closed subvariety of  , the zero-locus of  . (Over a different base field, a unitary group can however be given a structure of a variety.)

Basic results edit

  • An affine algebraic set V is a variety if and only if I(V) is a prime ideal; equivalently, V is a variety if and only if its coordinate ring is an integral domain.[16]: 52 [1]: 4 
  • Every nonempty affine algebraic set may be written uniquely as a finite union of algebraic varieties (where none of the varieties in the decomposition is a subvariety of any other).[1]: 5 
  • The dimension of a variety may be defined in various equivalent ways. See Dimension of an algebraic variety for details.
  • A product of finitely many algebraic varieties (over an algebraically closed field) is an algebraic variety. A finite product of affine varieties is affine[17] and a finite product of projective varieties is projective.

Isomorphism of algebraic varieties edit

Let V1, V2 be algebraic varieties. We say V1 and V2 are isomorphic, and write V1V2, if there are regular maps φ : V1V2 and ψ : V2V1 such that the compositions ψφ and φψ are the identity maps on V1 and V2 respectively.

Discussion and generalizations edit

The basic definitions and facts above enable one to do classical algebraic geometry. To be able to do more — for example, to deal with varieties over fields that are not algebraically closed — some foundational changes are required. The modern notion of a variety is considerably more abstract than the one above, though equivalent in the case of varieties over algebraically closed fields. An abstract algebraic variety is a particular kind of scheme; the generalization to schemes on the geometric side enables an extension of the correspondence described above to a wider class of rings. A scheme is a locally ringed space such that every point has a neighbourhood that, as a locally ringed space, is isomorphic to a spectrum of a ring. Basically, a variety over k is a scheme whose structure sheaf is a sheaf of k-algebras with the property that the rings R that occur above are all integral domains and are all finitely generated k-algebras, that is to say, they are quotients of polynomial algebras by prime ideals.

This definition works over any field k. It allows you to glue affine varieties (along common open sets) without worrying whether the resulting object can be put into some projective space. This also leads to difficulties since one can introduce somewhat pathological objects, e.g. an affine line with zero doubled. Such objects are usually not considered varieties, and are eliminated by requiring the schemes underlying a variety to be separated. (Strictly speaking, there is also a third condition, namely, that one needs only finitely many affine patches in the definition above.)

Some modern researchers also remove the restriction on a variety having integral domain affine charts, and when speaking of a variety only require that the affine charts have trivial nilradical.

A complete variety is a variety such that any map from an open subset of a nonsingular curve into it can be extended uniquely to the whole curve. Every projective variety is complete, but not vice versa.

These varieties have been called "varieties in the sense of Serre", since Serre's foundational paper FAC[18] on sheaf cohomology was written for them. They remain typical objects to start studying in algebraic geometry, even if more general objects are also used in an auxiliary way.

One way that leads to generalizations is to allow reducible algebraic sets (and fields k that aren't algebraically closed), so the rings R may not be integral domains. A more significant modification is to allow nilpotents in the sheaf of rings, that is, rings which are not reduced. This is one of several generalizations of classical algebraic geometry that are built into Grothendieck's theory of schemes.

Allowing nilpotent elements in rings is related to keeping track of "multiplicities" in algebraic geometry. For example, the closed subscheme of the affine line defined by x2 = 0 is different from the subscheme defined by x = 0 (the origin). More generally, the fiber of a morphism of schemes XY at a point of Y may be non-reduced, even if X and Y are reduced. Geometrically, this says that fibers of good mappings may have nontrivial "infinitesimal" structure.

There are further generalizations called algebraic spaces and stacks.

Algebraic manifolds edit

An algebraic manifold is an algebraic variety that is also an m-dimensional manifold, and hence every sufficiently small local patch is isomorphic to km. Equivalently, the variety is smooth (free from singular points). When k is the real numbers, R, algebraic manifolds are called Nash manifolds. Algebraic manifolds can be defined as the zero set of a finite collection of analytic algebraic functions. Projective algebraic manifolds are an equivalent definition for projective varieties. The Riemann sphere is one example.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hartshorne, p.xv, Harris, p.3
  2. ^ Liu, Qing. Algebraic Geometry and Arithmetic Curves, p. 55 Definition 2.3.47, and p. 88 Example 3.2.3
  3. ^ Harris, p.9; that it is irreducible is stated as an exercise in Hartshorne p.7

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Hartshorne, Robin (1977). Algebraic Geometry. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-90244-9.
  2. ^ Hartshorne, Exercise I.2.9, p.12
  3. ^ Nagata, Masayoshi (1956). "On the imbedding problem of abstract varieties in projective varieties". Memoirs of the College of Science, University of Kyoto. Series A: Mathematics. 30: 71–82. doi:10.1215/kjm/1250777138. MR 0088035.
  4. ^ Nagata, Masayoshi (1957). "On the imbeddings of abstract surfaces in projective varieties". Memoirs of the College of Science, University of Kyoto. Series A: Mathematics. 30 (3): 231–235. doi:10.1215/kjm/1250777007. MR 0094358. S2CID 118328992.
  5. ^ In page 65 of Fulton, William (1993), Introduction to toric varieties, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-00049-7, a remark describes a complete toric variety that has no non-trivial line bundle; thus, in particular, it has no ample line bundle.
  6. ^ Definition 1.1.12 in Ginzburg, V., 1998. Lectures on D-modules. University of Chicago.
  7. ^ Milne 2008, Proposition 2.1.
  8. ^ Milne 2008, The beginning of § 5.
  9. ^ MFK 1994, Theorem 5.11.
  10. ^ Deligne, Pierre; Mumford, David (1969). "The irreducibility of the space of curves of given genus" (PDF). Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS. 36: 75–109. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.589.288. doi:10.1007/bf02684599. S2CID 16482150.
  11. ^ MFK 1994, Appendix C to Ch. 5.
  12. ^ Mark Goresky. Compactifications and cohomology of modular varieties. In Harmonic analysis, the trace formula, and Shimura varieties, volume 4 of Clay Math. Proc., pages 551–582. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 2005.
  13. ^ Ash, A.; Mumford, David; Rapoport, M.; Tai, Y. (1975), Smooth compactification of locally symmetric varieties (PDF), Brookline, Mass.: Math. Sci. Press, ISBN 978-0-521-73955-9, MR 0457437
  14. ^ Namikawa, Yukihiko (1980). Toroidal Compactification of Siegel Spaces. Lecture Notes in Mathematics. Vol. 812. doi:10.1007/BFb0091051. ISBN 978-3-540-10021-8.
  15. ^ Chai, Ching-Li (1986). "Siegel Moduli Schemes and Their Compactifications over  ". Arithmetic Geometry. pp. 231–251. doi:10.1007/978-1-4613-8655-1_9. ISBN 978-1-4613-8657-5.
  16. ^ Harris, Joe (1992). Algebraic Geometry - A first course. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Vol. 133. Springer-Verlag. doi:10.1007/978-1-4757-2189-8. ISBN 0-387-97716-3.
  17. ^ Algebraic Geometry I. Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences. Vol. 23. 1994. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-57878-6. ISBN 978-3-540-63705-9.
  18. ^ Serre, Jean-Pierre (1955). "Faisceaux Algebriques Coherents" (PDF). Annals of Mathematics. 61 (2): 197–278. doi:10.2307/1969915. JSTOR 1969915.

Sources edit

This article incorporates material from Isomorphism of varieties on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

algebraic, variety, this, article, about, algebraic, varieties, term, variety, algebras, variety, universal, algebra, algebraic, varieties, central, objects, study, algebraic, geometry, field, mathematics, classically, algebraic, variety, defined, solutions, s. This article is about algebraic varieties For the term variety of algebras see Variety universal algebra Algebraic varieties are the central objects of study in algebraic geometry a sub field of mathematics Classically an algebraic variety is defined as the set of solutions of a system of polynomial equations over the real or complex numbers Modern definitions generalize this concept in several different ways while attempting to preserve the geometric intuition behind the original definition 1 58 The twisted cubic is a projective algebraic variety Conventions regarding the definition of an algebraic variety differ slightly For example some definitions require an algebraic variety to be irreducible which means that it is not the union of two smaller sets that are closed in the Zariski topology Under this definition non irreducible algebraic varieties are called algebraic sets Other conventions do not require irreducibility The fundamental theorem of algebra establishes a link between algebra and geometry by showing that a monic polynomial an algebraic object in one variable with complex number coefficients is determined by the set of its roots a geometric object in the complex plane Generalizing this result Hilbert s Nullstellensatz provides a fundamental correspondence between ideals of polynomial rings and algebraic sets Using the Nullstellensatz and related results mathematicians have established a strong correspondence between questions on algebraic sets and questions of ring theory This correspondence is a defining feature of algebraic geometry Many algebraic varieties are differentiable manifolds but an algebraic variety may have singular points while a differentiable manifold cannot Algebraic varieties can be characterized by their dimension Algebraic varieties of dimension one are called algebraic curves and algebraic varieties of dimension two are called algebraic surfaces In the context of modern scheme theory an algebraic variety over a field is an integral irreducible and reduced scheme over that field whose structure morphism is separated and of finite type Contents 1 Overview and definitions 1 1 Affine varieties 1 2 Projective varieties and quasi projective varieties 1 3 Abstract varieties 1 3 1 Existence of non quasiprojective abstract algebraic varieties 2 Examples 2 1 Subvariety 2 2 Affine variety 2 2 1 Example 1 2 2 2 Example 2 2 2 3 Example 3 2 2 4 General linear group 2 2 5 Characteristic variety 2 3 Projective variety 2 3 1 Example 1 2 3 2 Example 2 Grassmannian 2 3 3 Jacobian variety and abelian variety 2 3 4 Moduli varieties 2 4 Non affine and non projective example 2 5 Non examples 3 Basic results 4 Isomorphism of algebraic varieties 5 Discussion and generalizations 6 Algebraic manifolds 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 SourcesOverview and definitions editAn affine variety over an algebraically closed field is conceptually the easiest type of variety to define which will be done in this section Next one can define projective and quasi projective varieties in a similar way The most general definition of a variety is obtained by patching together smaller quasi projective varieties It is not obvious that one can construct genuinely new examples of varieties in this way but Nagata gave an example of such a new variety in the 1950s Affine varieties edit Main article Affine variety For an algebraically closed field K and a natural number n let An be an affine n space over K identified to K n displaystyle K n nbsp through the choice of an affine coordinate system The polynomials f in the ring K x1 xn can be viewed as K valued functions on An by evaluating f at the points in An i e by choosing values in K for each xi For each set S of polynomials in K x1 xn define the zero locus Z S to be the set of points in An on which the functions in S simultaneously vanish that is to say Z S x A n f x 0 for all f S displaystyle Z S left x in mathbf A n mid f x 0 text for all f in S right nbsp A subset V of An is called an affine algebraic set if V Z S for some S 1 2 A nonempty affine algebraic set V is called irreducible if it cannot be written as the union of two proper algebraic subsets 1 3 An irreducible affine algebraic set is also called an affine variety 1 3 Some authors use the phrase affine variety to refer to any affine algebraic set irreducible or not note 1 Affine varieties can be given a natural topology by declaring the closed sets to be precisely the affine algebraic sets This topology is called the Zariski topology 1 2 Given a subset V of An we define I V to be the ideal of all polynomial functions vanishing on V I V f K x 1 x n f x 0 for all x V displaystyle I V left f in K x 1 ldots x n mid f x 0 text for all x in V right nbsp For any affine algebraic set V the coordinate ring or structure ring of V is the quotient of the polynomial ring by this ideal 1 4 Projective varieties and quasi projective varieties edit Main articles Projective variety and Quasi projective variety Let k be an algebraically closed field and let Pn be the projective n space over k Let f in k x0 xn be a homogeneous polynomial of degree d It is not well defined to evaluate f on points in Pn in homogeneous coordinates However because f is homogeneous meaning that f lx0 lxn ld f x0 xn it does make sense to ask whether f vanishes at a point x0 xn For each set S of homogeneous polynomials define the zero locus of S to be the set of points in Pn on which the functions in S vanish Z S x P n f x 0 for all f S displaystyle Z S x in mathbf P n mid f x 0 text for all f in S nbsp A subset V of Pn is called a projective algebraic set if V Z S for some S 1 9 An irreducible projective algebraic set is called a projective variety 1 10 Projective varieties are also equipped with the Zariski topology by declaring all algebraic sets to be closed Given a subset V of Pn let I V be the ideal generated by all homogeneous polynomials vanishing on V For any projective algebraic set V the coordinate ring of V is the quotient of the polynomial ring by this ideal 1 10 A quasi projective variety is a Zariski open subset of a projective variety Notice that every affine variety is quasi projective 2 Notice also that the complement of an algebraic set in an affine variety is a quasi projective variety in the context of affine varieties such a quasi projective variety is usually not called a variety but a constructible set Abstract varieties edit In classical algebraic geometry all varieties were by definition quasi projective varieties meaning that they were open subvarieties of closed subvarieties of projective space For example in Chapter 1 of Hartshorne a variety over an algebraically closed field is defined to be a quasi projective variety 1 15 but from Chapter 2 onwards the term variety also called an abstract variety refers to a more general object which locally is a quasi projective variety but when viewed as a whole is not necessarily quasi projective i e it might not have an embedding into projective space 1 105 So classically the definition of an algebraic variety required an embedding into projective space and this embedding was used to define the topology on the variety and the regular functions on the variety The disadvantage of such a definition is that not all varieties come with natural embeddings into projective space For example under this definition the product P1 P1 is not a variety until it is embedded into a larger projective space this is usually done by the Segre embedding Furthermore any variety that admits one embedding into projective space admits many others for example by composing the embedding with the Veronese embedding thus many notions that should be intrinsic such as that of a regular function are not obviously so The earliest successful attempt to define an algebraic variety abstractly without an embedding was made by Andre Weil In his Foundations of Algebraic Geometry using valuations Claude Chevalley made a definition of a scheme which served a similar purpose but was more general However Alexander Grothendieck s definition of a scheme is more general still and has received the most widespread acceptance In Grothendieck s language an abstract algebraic variety is usually defined to be an integral separated scheme of finite type over an algebraically closed field 1 104 105 although some authors drop the irreducibility or the reducedness or the separateness condition or allow the underlying field to be not algebraically closed note 2 Classical algebraic varieties are the quasiprojective integral separated finite type schemes over an algebraically closed field Existence of non quasiprojective abstract algebraic varieties edit One of the earliest examples of a non quasiprojective algebraic variety were given by Nagata 3 Nagata s example was not complete the analog of compactness but soon afterwards he found an algebraic surface that was complete and non projective 4 1 Remark 4 10 2 p 105 Since then other examples have been found for example it is straightforward to construct toric varieties that are not quasi projective but complete 5 Examples editSubvariety edit A subvariety is a subset of a variety that is itself a variety with respect to the topological structure induced by the ambient variety For example every open subset of a variety is a variety See also closed immersion Hilbert s Nullstellensatz says that closed subvarieties of an affine or projective variety are in one to one correspondence with the prime ideals or non irrelevant homogeneous prime ideals of the coordinate ring of the variety Affine variety edit Example 1 edit Let k C and A2 be the two dimensional affine space over C Polynomials in the ring C x y can be viewed as complex valued functions on A2 by evaluating at the points in A2 Let subset S of C x y contain a single element f x y f x y x y 1 displaystyle f x y x y 1 nbsp The zero locus of f x y is the set of points in A2 on which this function vanishes it is the set of all pairs of complex numbers x y such that y 1 x This is called a line in the affine plane In the classical topology coming from the topology on the complex numbers a complex line is a real manifold of dimension two This is the set Z f Z f x 1 x C 2 displaystyle Z f x 1 x in mathbf C 2 nbsp Thus the subset V Z f of A2 is an algebraic set The set V is not empty It is irreducible as it cannot be written as the union of two proper algebraic subsets Thus it is an affine algebraic variety Example 2 edit Let k C and A2 be the two dimensional affine space over C Polynomials in the ring C x y can be viewed as complex valued functions on A2 by evaluating at the points in A2 Let subset S of C x y contain a single element g x y g x y x 2 y 2 1 displaystyle g x y x 2 y 2 1 nbsp The zero locus of g x y is the set of points in A2 on which this function vanishes that is the set of points x y such that x2 y2 1 As g x y is an absolutely irreducible polynomial this is an algebraic variety The set of its real points that is the points for which x and y are real numbers is known as the unit circle this name is also often given to the whole variety Example 3 edit The following example is neither a hypersurface nor a linear space nor a single point Let A3 be the three dimensional affine space over C The set of points x x2 x3 for x in C is an algebraic variety and more precisely an algebraic curve that is not contained in any plane note 3 It is the twisted cubic shown in the above figure It may be defined by the equations y x 2 0 z x 3 0 displaystyle begin aligned y x 2 amp 0 z x 3 amp 0 end aligned nbsp The irreducibility of this algebraic set needs a proof One approach in this case is to check that the projection x y z x y is injective on the set of the solutions and that its image is an irreducible plane curve For more difficult examples a similar proof may always be given but may imply a difficult computation first a Grobner basis computation to compute the dimension followed by a random linear change of variables not always needed then a Grobner basis computation for another monomial ordering to compute the projection and to prove that it is generically injective and that its image is a hypersurface and finally a polynomial factorization to prove the irreducibility of the image General linear group edit The set of n by n matrices over the base field k can be identified with the affine n2 space A n 2 displaystyle mathbb A n 2 nbsp with coordinates x i j displaystyle x ij nbsp such that x i j A displaystyle x ij A nbsp is the i j th entry of the matrix A displaystyle A nbsp The determinant det displaystyle det nbsp is then a polynomial in x i j displaystyle x ij nbsp and thus defines the hypersurface H V det displaystyle H V det nbsp in A n 2 displaystyle mathbb A n 2 nbsp The complement of H displaystyle H nbsp is then an open subset of A n 2 displaystyle mathbb A n 2 nbsp that consists of all the invertible n by n matrices the general linear group GL n k displaystyle operatorname GL n k nbsp It is an affine variety since in general the complement of a hypersurface in an affine variety is affine Explicitly consider A n 2 A 1 displaystyle mathbb A n 2 times mathbb A 1 nbsp where the affine line is given coordinate t Then GL n k displaystyle operatorname GL n k nbsp amounts to the zero locus in A n 2 A 1 displaystyle mathbb A n 2 times mathbb A 1 nbsp of the polynomial in x i j t displaystyle x ij t nbsp t det x i j 1 displaystyle t cdot det x ij 1 nbsp i e the set of matrices A such that t det A 1 displaystyle t det A 1 nbsp has a solution This is best seen algebraically the coordinate ring of GL n k displaystyle operatorname GL n k nbsp is the localization k x i j 0 i j n det 1 displaystyle k x ij mid 0 leq i j leq n det 1 nbsp which can be identified with k x i j t 0 i j n t det 1 displaystyle k x ij t mid 0 leq i j leq n t det 1 nbsp The multiplicative group k of the base field k is the same as GL 1 k displaystyle operatorname GL 1 k nbsp and thus is an affine variety A finite product of it k r displaystyle k r nbsp is an algebraic torus which is again an affine variety A general linear group is an example of a linear algebraic group an affine variety that has a structure of a group in such a way the group operations are morphism of varieties Characteristic variety edit Main article Characteristic variety Let A be a not necessarily commutative algebra over a field k Even if A is not commutative it can still happen that A has a Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp filtration so that the associated ring gr A i A i A i 1 displaystyle operatorname gr A bigoplus i infty infty A i A i 1 nbsp is commutative reduced and finitely generated as a k algebra i e gr A displaystyle operatorname gr A nbsp is the coordinate ring of an affine reducible variety X For example if A is the universal enveloping algebra of a finite dimensional Lie algebra g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp then gr A displaystyle operatorname gr A nbsp is a polynomial ring the PBW theorem more precisely the coordinate ring of the dual vector space g displaystyle mathfrak g nbsp Let M be a filtered module over A i e A i M j M i j displaystyle A i M j subset M i j nbsp If gr M displaystyle operatorname gr M nbsp is fintiely generated as a gr A displaystyle operatorname gr A nbsp algebra then the support of gr M displaystyle operatorname gr M nbsp in X i e the locus where gr M displaystyle operatorname gr M nbsp does not vanish is called the characteristic variety of M 6 The notion plays an important role in the theory of D modules Projective variety edit A projective variety is a closed subvariety of a projective space That is it is the zero locus of a set of homogeneous polynomials that generate a prime ideal Example 1 edit nbsp The affine plane curve y2 x3 x The corresponding projective curve is called an elliptic curve A plane projective curve is the zero locus of an irreducible homogeneous polynomial in three indeterminates The projective line P1 is an example of a projective curve it can be viewed as the curve in the projective plane P2 x y z defined by x 0 For another example first consider the affine cubic curve y 2 x 3 x displaystyle y 2 x 3 x nbsp in the 2 dimensional affine space over a field of characteristic not two It has the associated cubic homogeneous polynomial equation y 2 z x 3 x z 2 displaystyle y 2 z x 3 xz 2 nbsp which defines a curve in P2 called an elliptic curve The curve has genus one genus formula in particular it is not isomorphic to the projective line P1 which has genus zero Using genus to distinguish curves is very basic in fact the genus is the first invariant one uses to classify curves see also the construction of moduli of algebraic curves Example 2 Grassmannian edit Let V be a finite dimensional vector space The Grassmannian variety Gn V is the set of all n dimensional subspaces of V It is a projective variety it is embedded into a projective space via the Plucker embedding G n V P n V b 1 b n b 1 b n displaystyle begin cases G n V hookrightarrow mathbf P left wedge n V right langle b 1 ldots b n rangle mapsto b 1 wedge cdots wedge b n end cases nbsp where bi are any set of linearly independent vectors in V n V displaystyle wedge n V nbsp is the n th exterior power of V and the bracket w means the line spanned by the nonzero vector w The Grassmannian variety comes with a natural vector bundle or locally free sheaf in other terminology called the tautological bundle which is important in the study of characteristic classes such as Chern classes Jacobian variety and abelian variety edit Let C be a smooth complete curve and Pic C displaystyle operatorname Pic C nbsp the Picard group of it i e the group of isomorphism classes of line bundles on C Since C is smooth Pic C displaystyle operatorname Pic C nbsp can be identified as the divisor class group of C and thus there is the degree homomorphism deg Pic C Z displaystyle operatorname deg operatorname Pic C to mathbb Z nbsp The Jacobian variety Jac C displaystyle operatorname Jac C nbsp of C is the kernel of this degree map i e the group of the divisor classes on C of degree zero A Jacobian variety is an example of an abelian variety a complete variety with a compatible abelian group structure on it the name abelian is however not because it is an abelian group An abelian variety turns out to be projective in short algebraic theta functions give an embedding into a projective space See equations defining abelian varieties thus Jac C displaystyle operatorname Jac C nbsp is a projective variety The tangent space to Jac C displaystyle operatorname Jac C nbsp at the identity element is naturally isomorphic to H 1 C O C displaystyle operatorname H 1 C mathcal O C nbsp 7 hence the dimension of Jac C displaystyle operatorname Jac C nbsp is the genus of C displaystyle C nbsp Fix a point P 0 displaystyle P 0 nbsp on C displaystyle C nbsp For each integer n gt 0 displaystyle n gt 0 nbsp there is a natural morphism 8 C n Jac C P 1 P r P 1 P n n P 0 displaystyle C n to operatorname Jac C P 1 dots P r mapsto P 1 cdots P n nP 0 nbsp where C n displaystyle C n nbsp is the product of n copies of C For g 1 displaystyle g 1 nbsp i e C is an elliptic curve the above morphism for n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp turns out to be an isomorphism 1 Ch IV Example 1 3 7 in particular an elliptic curve is an abelian variety Moduli varieties edit Given an integer g 0 displaystyle g geq 0 nbsp the set of isomorphism classes of smooth complete curves of genus g displaystyle g nbsp is called the moduli of curves of genus g displaystyle g nbsp and is denoted as M g displaystyle mathfrak M g nbsp There are few ways to show this moduli has a structure of a possibly reducible algebraic variety for example one way is to use geometric invariant theory which ensures a set of isomorphism classes has a reducible quasi projective variety structure 9 Moduli such as the moduli of curves of fixed genus is typically not a projective variety roughly the reason is that a degeneration limit of a smooth curve tends to be non smooth or reducible This leads to the notion of a stable curve of genus g 2 displaystyle g geq 2 nbsp a not necessarily smooth complete curve with no terribly bad singularities and not so large automorphism group The moduli of stable curves M g displaystyle overline mathfrak M g nbsp the set of isomorphism classes of stable curves of genus g 2 displaystyle g geq 2 nbsp is then a projective variety which contains M g displaystyle mathfrak M g nbsp as an open subset Since M g displaystyle overline mathfrak M g nbsp is obtained by adding boundary points to M g displaystyle mathfrak M g nbsp M g displaystyle overline mathfrak M g nbsp is colloquially said to be a compactification of M g displaystyle mathfrak M g nbsp Historically a paper of Mumford and Deligne 10 introduced the notion of a stable curve to show M g displaystyle mathfrak M g nbsp is irreducible when g 2 displaystyle g geq 2 nbsp The moduli of curves exemplifies a typical situation a moduli of nice objects tend not to be projective but only quasi projective Another case is a moduli of vector bundles on a curve Here there are the notions of stable and semistable vector bundles on a smooth complete curve C displaystyle C nbsp The moduli of semistable vector bundles of a given rank n displaystyle n nbsp and a given degree d displaystyle d nbsp degree of the determinant of the bundle is then a projective variety denoted as S U C n d displaystyle SU C n d nbsp which contains the set U C n d displaystyle U C n d nbsp of isomorphism classes of stable vector bundles of rank n displaystyle n nbsp and degree d displaystyle d nbsp as an open subset 11 Since a line bundle is stable such a moduli is a generalization of the Jacobian variety of C displaystyle C nbsp In general in contrast to the case of moduli of curves a compactification of a moduli need not be unique and in some cases different non equivalent compactifications are constructed using different methods and by different authors An example over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp is the problem of compactifying D G displaystyle D Gamma nbsp the quotient of a bounded symmetric domain D displaystyle D nbsp by an action of an arithmetic discrete group G displaystyle Gamma nbsp 12 A basic example of D G displaystyle D Gamma nbsp is when D H g displaystyle D mathfrak H g nbsp Siegel s upper half space and G displaystyle Gamma nbsp commensurable with Sp 2 g Z displaystyle operatorname Sp 2g mathbb Z nbsp in that case D G displaystyle D Gamma nbsp has an interpretation as the moduli A g displaystyle mathfrak A g nbsp of principally polarized complex abelian varieties of dimension g displaystyle g nbsp a principal polarization identifies an abelian variety with its dual The theory of toric varieties or torus embeddings gives a way to compactify D G displaystyle D Gamma nbsp a toroidal compactification of it 13 14 But there are other ways to compactify D G displaystyle D Gamma nbsp for example there is the minimal compactification of D G displaystyle D Gamma nbsp due to Baily and Borel it is the projective variety associated to the graded ring formed by modular forms in the Siegel case Siegel modular forms 15 see also Siegel modular variety The non uniqueness of compactifications is due to the lack of moduli interpretations of those compactifications i e they do not represent in the category theory sense any natural moduli problem or in the precise language there is no natural moduli stack that would be an analog of moduli stack of stable curves Non affine and non projective example edit An algebraic variety can be neither affine nor projective To give an example let X P1 A1 and p X A1 the projection Here X is an algebraic variety since it is a product of varieties It is not affine since P1 is a closed subvariety of X as the zero locus of p but an affine variety cannot contain a projective variety of positive dimension as a closed subvariety It is not projective either since there is a nonconstant regular function on X namely p Another example of a non affine non projective variety is X A2 0 0 cf Morphism of varieties Examples Non examples edit Consider the affine line A 1 displaystyle mathbb A 1 nbsp over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp The complement of the circle z C with z 2 1 displaystyle z in mathbb C text with z 2 1 nbsp in A 1 C displaystyle mathbb A 1 mathbb C nbsp is not an algebraic variety nor even an algebraic set Note that z 2 1 displaystyle z 2 1 nbsp is not a polynomial in z displaystyle z nbsp although it is a polynomial in the real cooridnates x y displaystyle x y nbsp On the other hand the complement of the origin in A 1 C displaystyle mathbb A 1 mathbb C nbsp is an algebraic affine variety since the origin is the zero locus of z displaystyle z nbsp This may be explained as follows the affine line has dimension one and so any subvariety of it other than itself must have strictly less dimension namely zero For similar reasons a unitary group over the complex numbers is not an algebraic variety while the special linear group SL n C displaystyle operatorname SL n mathbb C nbsp is a closed subvariety of GL n C displaystyle operatorname GL n mathbb C nbsp the zero locus of det 1 displaystyle det 1 nbsp Over a different base field a unitary group can however be given a structure of a variety Basic results editAn affine algebraic set V is a variety if and only if I V is a prime ideal equivalently V is a variety if and only if its coordinate ring is an integral domain 16 52 1 4 Every nonempty affine algebraic set may be written uniquely as a finite union of algebraic varieties where none of the varieties in the decomposition is a subvariety of any other 1 5 The dimension of a variety may be defined in various equivalent ways See Dimension of an algebraic variety for details A product of finitely many algebraic varieties over an algebraically closed field is an algebraic variety A finite product of affine varieties is affine 17 and a finite product of projective varieties is projective Isomorphism of algebraic varieties editSee also Morphism of varieties Let V1 V2 be algebraic varieties We say V1 and V2 are isomorphic and write V1 V2 if there are regular maps f V1 V2 and ps V2 V1 such that the compositions ps f and f ps are the identity maps on V1 and V2 respectively Discussion and generalizations editThis section includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this section by introducing more precise citations March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message The basic definitions and facts above enable one to do classical algebraic geometry To be able to do more for example to deal with varieties over fields that are not algebraically closed some foundational changes are required The modern notion of a variety is considerably more abstract than the one above though equivalent in the case of varieties over algebraically closed fields An abstract algebraic variety is a particular kind of scheme the generalization to schemes on the geometric side enables an extension of the correspondence described above to a wider class of rings A scheme is a locally ringed space such that every point has a neighbourhood that as a locally ringed space is isomorphic to a spectrum of a ring Basically a variety over k is a scheme whose structure sheaf is a sheaf of k algebras with the property that the rings R that occur above are all integral domains and are all finitely generated k algebras that is to say they are quotients of polynomial algebras by prime ideals This definition works over any field k It allows you to glue affine varieties along common open sets without worrying whether the resulting object can be put into some projective space This also leads to difficulties since one can introduce somewhat pathological objects e g an affine line with zero doubled Such objects are usually not considered varieties and are eliminated by requiring the schemes underlying a variety to be separated Strictly speaking there is also a third condition namely that one needs only finitely many affine patches in the definition above Some modern researchers also remove the restriction on a variety having integral domain affine charts and when speaking of a variety only require that the affine charts have trivial nilradical A complete variety is a variety such that any map from an open subset of a nonsingular curve into it can be extended uniquely to the whole curve Every projective variety is complete but not vice versa These varieties have been called varieties in the sense of Serre since Serre s foundational paper FAC 18 on sheaf cohomology was written for them They remain typical objects to start studying in algebraic geometry even if more general objects are also used in an auxiliary way One way that leads to generalizations is to allow reducible algebraic sets and fields k that aren t algebraically closed so the rings R may not be integral domains A more significant modification is to allow nilpotents in the sheaf of rings that is rings which are not reduced This is one of several generalizations of classical algebraic geometry that are built into Grothendieck s theory of schemes Allowing nilpotent elements in rings is related to keeping track of multiplicities in algebraic geometry For example the closed subscheme of the affine line defined by x2 0 is different from the subscheme defined by x 0 the origin More generally the fiber of a morphism of schemes X Y at a point of Y may be non reduced even if X and Y are reduced Geometrically this says that fibers of good mappings may have nontrivial infinitesimal structure There are further generalizations called algebraic spaces and stacks Algebraic manifolds editMain article Algebraic manifold An algebraic manifold is an algebraic variety that is also an m dimensional manifold and hence every sufficiently small local patch is isomorphic to km Equivalently the variety is smooth free from singular points When k is the real numbers R algebraic manifolds are called Nash manifolds Algebraic manifolds can be defined as the zero set of a finite collection of analytic algebraic functions Projective algebraic manifolds are an equivalent definition for projective varieties The Riemann sphere is one example See also editVariety disambiguation listing also several mathematical meanings Function field of an algebraic variety Birational geometry Motive algebraic geometry Analytic variety Zariski Riemann space Semi algebraic set Fano variety Mnev s universality theoremNotes edit Hartshorne p xv Harris p 3 Liu Qing Algebraic Geometry and Arithmetic Curves p 55 Definition 2 3 47 and p 88 Example 3 2 3 Harris p 9 that it is irreducible is stated as an exercise in Hartshorne p 7References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Hartshorne Robin 1977 Algebraic Geometry Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 90244 9 Hartshorne Exercise I 2 9 p 12 Nagata Masayoshi 1956 On the imbedding problem of abstract varieties in projective varieties Memoirs of the College of Science University of Kyoto Series A Mathematics 30 71 82 doi 10 1215 kjm 1250777138 MR 0088035 Nagata Masayoshi 1957 On the imbeddings of abstract surfaces in projective varieties Memoirs of the College of Science University of Kyoto Series A Mathematics 30 3 231 235 doi 10 1215 kjm 1250777007 MR 0094358 S2CID 118328992 In page 65 of Fulton William 1993 Introduction to toric varieties Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00049 7 a remark describes a complete toric variety that has no non trivial line bundle thus in particular it has no ample line bundle Definition 1 1 12 in Ginzburg V 1998 Lectures on D modules University of Chicago Milne 2008 Proposition 2 1 Milne 2008 The beginning of 5 MFK 1994 Theorem 5 11 Deligne Pierre Mumford David 1969 The irreducibility of the space of curves of given genus PDF Publications Mathematiques de l IHES 36 75 109 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 589 288 doi 10 1007 bf02684599 S2CID 16482150 MFK 1994 Appendix C to Ch 5 Mark Goresky Compactifications and cohomology of modular varieties In Harmonic analysis the trace formula and Shimura varieties volume 4 of Clay Math Proc pages 551 582 Amer Math Soc Providence RI 2005 Ash A Mumford David Rapoport M Tai Y 1975 Smooth compactification of locally symmetric varieties PDF Brookline Mass Math Sci Press ISBN 978 0 521 73955 9 MR 0457437 Namikawa Yukihiko 1980 Toroidal Compactification of Siegel Spaces Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 812 doi 10 1007 BFb0091051 ISBN 978 3 540 10021 8 Chai Ching Li 1986 Siegel Moduli Schemes and Their Compactifications over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp Arithmetic Geometry pp 231 251 doi 10 1007 978 1 4613 8655 1 9 ISBN 978 1 4613 8657 5 Harris Joe 1992 Algebraic Geometry A first course Graduate Texts in Mathematics Vol 133 Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 2189 8 ISBN 0 387 97716 3 Algebraic Geometry I Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences Vol 23 1994 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 57878 6 ISBN 978 3 540 63705 9 Serre Jean Pierre 1955 Faisceaux Algebriques Coherents PDF Annals of Mathematics 61 2 197 278 doi 10 2307 1969915 JSTOR 1969915 Sources edit Cox David John Little Don O Shea 1997 Ideals Varieties and Algorithms second ed Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 94680 2 Eisenbud David 1999 Commutative Algebra with a View Toward Algebraic Geometry Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 94269 6 Milne James S 2008 Algebraic Geometry Retrieved 2009 09 01 Milne J Jacobian Varieties published as Chapter VII of Arithmetic geometry Storrs Conn 1984 167 212 Springer New York 1986 Mumford David Fogarty John Kirwan Frances 1994 Geometric invariant theory Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete 2 Results in Mathematics and Related Areas 2 Vol 34 3rd ed Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 3 540 56963 3 MR 1304906 Algebraic geometry and arithmetic curves Oxford science publications Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 978 0 19 154780 5 This article incorporates material from Isomorphism of varieties on PlanetMath which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Algebraic variety amp oldid 1216561043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.