In mathematics, an
algebraic variety ''V'' in
projective space is a complete intersection if the ideal of ''V'' is generated by exactly ''codim V'' elements. That is, if ''V'' has
dimension ''m'' and lies in projective space ''P''
''n'', there should exist ''n'' − ''m'' homogeneous polynomials:
:
in the
homogeneous coordinates ''X''
''j'', which generate all other homogeneous polynomials that vanish on ''V''.
Geometrically, each ''F''
''i'' defines a
hypersurface; the intersection of these hypersurfaces should be ''V''. The intersection of hypersurfaces will always have dimension at least ''m'', assuming that the field of scalars is an
algebraically closed field such as the
complex numbers. The question is essentially, can we get the dimension down to ''m'', with no extra points in the intersection? This condition is fairly hard to check as soon as the codimension . When then ''V'' is automatically a hypersurface and there is nothing to prove.
Examples
Easy examples of complete intersections are given by hypersurfaces which are defined by the vanishing locus of a single polynomial. For example,
:
gives an example of a quintic threefold. It can be difficult to find explicit examples of complete intersections of higher dimensional varieties using two or more explicit examples (bestiary), but, there is an explicit example of a 3-fold of type
given by
:
Non-examples
Twisted cubic
One method for constructing local complete intersections is to take a projective complete intersection variety and embed it into a higher dimensional projective space. A classic example of this is the
twisted cubic in
: it is a smooth local complete intersection meaning in any chart it can be expressed as the vanishing locus of two polynomials, but globally it is expressed by the vanishing locus of more than two polynomials. We can construct it using the very ample line bundle
over
giving the embedding
:
by