Algebraic Surface
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In mathematics, an algebraic surface is an
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. ...
of
dimension In physics and mathematics, the dimension of a mathematical space (or object) is informally defined as the minimum number of coordinates needed to specify any point within it. Thus, a line has a dimension of one (1D) because only one coor ...
two. In the case of geometry over the field of
complex number In mathematics, a complex number is an element of a number system that extends the real numbers with a specific element denoted , called the imaginary unit and satisfying the equation i^= -1; every complex number can be expressed in the fo ...
s, an algebraic surface has complex dimension two (as a complex manifold, when it is
non-singular In the mathematical field of algebraic geometry, a singular point of an algebraic variety is a point that is 'special' (so, singular), in the geometric sense that at this point the tangent space at the variety may not be regularly defined. In ca ...
) and so of dimension four as a
smooth manifold In mathematics, a differentiable manifold (also differential manifold) is a type of manifold that is locally similar enough to a vector space to allow one to apply calculus. Any manifold can be described by a collection of charts (atlas). One ma ...
. The theory of algebraic surfaces is much more complicated than that of
algebraic curve In mathematics, an affine algebraic plane curve is the zero set of a polynomial in two variables. A projective algebraic plane curve is the zero set in a projective plane of a homogeneous polynomial in three variables. An affine algebraic plane ...
s (including the
compact Compact as used in politics may refer broadly to a pact or treaty; in more specific cases it may refer to: * Interstate compact * Blood compact, an ancient ritual of the Philippines * Compact government, a type of colonial rule utilized in British ...
Riemann surface In mathematics, particularly in complex analysis, a Riemann surface is a connected one-dimensional complex manifold. These surfaces were first studied by and are named after Bernhard Riemann. Riemann surfaces can be thought of as deformed ver ...
s, which are genuine
surfaces A surface, as the term is most generally used, is the outermost or uppermost layer of a physical object or space. Surface or surfaces may also refer to: Mathematics *Surface (mathematics), a generalization of a plane which needs not be flat * Sur ...
of (real) dimension two). Many results were obtained, however, in the
Italian school of algebraic geometry In relation to the history of mathematics, the Italian school of algebraic geometry refers to mathematicians and their work in birational geometry, particularly on algebraic surfaces, centered around Rome roughly from 1885 to 1935. There were 30 ...
, and are up to 100 years old.


Classification by the Kodaira dimension

In the case of dimension one varieties are classified by only the topological genus, but dimension two, the difference between the arithmetic genus p_a and the
geometric genus In algebraic geometry, the geometric genus is a basic birational invariant of algebraic varieties and complex manifolds. Definition The geometric genus can be defined for non-singular complex projective varieties and more generally for complex ...
p_g turns to be important because we cannot distinguish birationally only the topological genus. Then we introduce the irregularity for the classification of them. A summary of the results (in detail, for each kind of surface refers to each redirection), follows: Examples of algebraic surfaces include (κ is the
Kodaira dimension In algebraic geometry, the Kodaira dimension ''κ''(''X'') measures the size of the canonical model of a projective variety ''X''. Igor Shafarevich, in a seminar introduced an important numerical invariant of surfaces with the notation ''κ''. ...
): * κ = −∞: the
projective plane In mathematics, a projective plane is a geometric structure that extends the concept of a plane. In the ordinary Euclidean plane, two lines typically intersect in a single point, but there are some pairs of lines (namely, parallel lines) that d ...
,
quadric In mathematics, a quadric or quadric surface (quadric hypersurface in higher dimensions), is a generalization of conic sections (ellipses, parabolas, and hyperbolas). It is a hypersurface (of dimension ''D'') in a -dimensional space, and it is de ...
s in P3,
cubic surface In mathematics, a cubic surface is a surface in 3-dimensional space defined by one polynomial equation of degree 3. Cubic surfaces are fundamental examples in algebraic geometry. The theory is simplified by working in projective space rather th ...
s,
Veronese surface In mathematics, the Veronese surface is an algebraic surface in five-dimensional projective space, and is realized by the Veronese embedding, the embedding of the projective plane given by the complete linear system of conics. It is named after Giu ...
,
del Pezzo surface In mathematics, a del Pezzo surface or Fano surface is a two-dimensional Fano variety, in other words a non-singular projective algebraic surface with ample anticanonical divisor class. They are in some sense the opposite of surfaces of general ...
s,
ruled surface In geometry, a surface is ruled (also called a scroll) if through every point of there is a straight line that lies on . Examples include the plane, the lateral surface of a cylinder or cone, a conical surface with elliptical directrix, t ...
s * κ = 0 :
K3 surface In mathematics, a complex analytic K3 surface is a compact connected complex manifold of dimension 2 with trivial canonical bundle and irregularity zero. An (algebraic) K3 surface over any field means a smooth proper geometrically connected al ...
s,
abelian surface In mathematics, an abelian surface is a 2-dimensional abelian variety. One-dimensional complex tori are just elliptic curves and are all algebraic, but Riemann discovered that most complex tori of dimension 2 are not algebraic via the Riemann bi ...
s,
Enriques surface In mathematics, Enriques surfaces are algebraic surfaces such that the irregularity ''q'' = 0 and the canonical line bundle ''K'' is non-trivial but has trivial square. Enriques surfaces are all projective (and therefore Kähler over the complex ...
s,
hyperelliptic surface In mathematics, a hyperelliptic surface, or bi-elliptic surface, is a surface whose Albanese morphism is an elliptic fibration. Any such surface can be written as the quotient of a product of two elliptic curves by a finite abelian group. Hyperel ...
s * κ = 1:
elliptic surface In mathematics, an elliptic surface is a surface that has an elliptic fibration, in other words a proper morphism with connected fibers to an algebraic curve such that almost all fibers are smooth curves of genus 1. (Over an algebraically closed fi ...
s * κ = 2:
surfaces of general type In algebraic geometry, a surface of general type is an algebraic surface with Kodaira dimension 2. Because of Chow's theorem any compact complex manifold of dimension 2 and with Kodaira dimension 2 will actually be an algebraic surface, and in ...
. For more examples see the
list of algebraic surfaces This is a list of named algebraic surfaces, compact complex surfaces, and families thereof, sorted according to their Kodaira dimension following Enriques–Kodaira classification. Kodaira dimension −∞ Rational surfaces * Projective plane Qu ...
. The first five examples are in fact
birationally equivalent In mathematics, birational geometry is a field of algebraic geometry in which the goal is to determine when two algebraic varieties are isomorphic outside lower-dimensional subsets. This amounts to studying mappings that are given by rational fu ...
. That is, for example, a cubic surface has a function field isomorphic to that of the
projective plane In mathematics, a projective plane is a geometric structure that extends the concept of a plane. In the ordinary Euclidean plane, two lines typically intersect in a single point, but there are some pairs of lines (namely, parallel lines) that d ...
, being the rational functions in two indeterminates. The Cartesian product of two curves also provides examples.


Birational geometry of surfaces

The
birational geometry In mathematics, birational geometry is a field of algebraic geometry in which the goal is to determine when two algebraic varieties are isomorphic outside lower-dimensional subsets. This amounts to studying mappings that are given by rational ...
of algebraic surfaces is rich, because of
blowing up In mathematics, blowing up or blowup is a type of geometric transformation which replaces a subspace of a given space with all the directions pointing out of that subspace. For example, the blowup of a point in a plane replaces the point with the ...
(also known as a monoidal transformation), under which a point is replaced by the ''curve'' of all limiting tangent directions coming into it (a
projective line In mathematics, a projective line is, roughly speaking, the extension of a usual line by a point called a ''point at infinity''. The statement and the proof of many theorems of geometry are simplified by the resultant elimination of special cases; ...
). Certain curves may also be blown ''down'', but there is a restriction (self-intersection number must be −1).


Castelnuovo's Theorem

One of the fundamental theorems for the birational geometry of surfaces is Castelnuovo's theorem. This states that any birational map between algebraic surfaces is given by a finite sequence of blowups and blowdowns.


Properties

The Nakai criterion says that: :A Divisor ''D'' on a surface ''S'' is ample if and only if ''D2 > 0'' and for all irreducible curve ''C'' on ''S'' ''D•C > 0. Ample divisors have a nice property such as it is the pullback of some hyperplane bundle of projective space, whose properties are very well known. Let \mathcal(S) be the abelian group consisting of all the divisors on ''S''. Then due to the intersection theorem :\mathcal(S)\times\mathcal(S)\rightarrow\mathbb:(X,Y)\mapsto X\cdot Y is viewed as a quadratic form. Let :\mathcal_0(S):=\ then \mathcal/\mathcal_0(S):=Num(S) becomes to be a numerical equivalent class group of ''S'' and :Num(S)\times Num(S)\mapsto\mathbb=(\bar,\bar)\mapsto D\cdot E also becomes to be a quadratic form on Num(S), where \bar is the image of a divisor ''D'' on ''S''. (In the below the image \bar is abbreviated with ''D''.) For an ample line bundle ''H'' on ''S'', the definition :\^\perp:=\. is used in the surface version of the Hodge index theorem: :for D\in\, D\cdot D < 0, i.e. the restriction of the intersection form to \^\perp is a negative definite quadratic form. This theorem is proven using the Nakai criterion and the Riemann-Roch theorem for surfaces. The Hodge index theorem is used in Deligne's proof of the Weil conjecture. Basic results on algebraic surfaces include the
Hodge index theorem In mathematics, the Hodge index theorem for an algebraic surface ''V'' determines the signature of the intersection pairing on the algebraic curves ''C'' on ''V''. It says, roughly speaking, that the space spanned by such curves (up to linear equ ...
, and the division into five groups of birational equivalence classes called the classification of algebraic surfaces. The ''general type'' class, of
Kodaira dimension In algebraic geometry, the Kodaira dimension ''κ''(''X'') measures the size of the canonical model of a projective variety ''X''. Igor Shafarevich, in a seminar introduced an important numerical invariant of surfaces with the notation ''κ''. ...
2, is very large (degree 5 or larger for a non-singular surface in P3 lies in it, for example). There are essential three Hodge number invariants of a surface. Of those, ''h''1,0 was classically called the irregularity and denoted by ''q''; and ''h''2,0 was called the geometric genus ''p''''g''. The third, ''h''1,1, is not a
birational invariant In algebraic geometry, a birational invariant is a property that is preserved under birational equivalence. Formal definition A birational invariant is a quantity or object that is well-defined on a birational equivalence class of algebraic variet ...
, because
blowing up In mathematics, blowing up or blowup is a type of geometric transformation which replaces a subspace of a given space with all the directions pointing out of that subspace. For example, the blowup of a point in a plane replaces the point with the ...
can add whole curves, with classes in ''H''1,1. It is known that Hodge cycles are algebraic, and that
algebraic equivalence In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, an adequate equivalence relation is an equivalence relation on algebraic cycles of smooth projective varieties used to obtain a well-working theory of such cycles, and in particular, well-defined inte ...
coincides with
homological equivalence Homology may refer to: Sciences Biology *Homology (biology), any characteristic of biological organisms that is derived from a common ancestor *Sequence homology, biological homology between DNA, RNA, or protein sequences *Homologous chromo ...
, so that ''h''1,1 is an upper bound for ρ, the rank of the Néron-Severi group. The arithmetic genus ''p''''a'' is the difference :geometric genus − irregularity. In fact this explains why the irregularity got its name, as a kind of 'error term'.


Riemann-Roch theorem for surfaces

The Riemann-Roch theorem for surfaces was first formulated by
Max Noether Max Noether (24 September 1844 – 13 December 1921) was a German mathematician who worked on algebraic geometry and the theory of algebraic functions. He has been called "one of the finest mathematicians of the nineteenth century". He was the f ...
. The families of curves on surfaces can be classified, in a sense, and give rise to much of their interesting geometry.


References

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External links


Free program SURFER
to visualize algebraic surfaces in real-time, including a user gallery.

an interactive 3D viewer for algebraic surfaces.


Overview and thoughts on designing Algebraic surfaces
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