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Encyclopedia > Singular point of an algebraic variety

In mathematics, a singular point of an algebraic variety V is a point P that is 'special' (so, singular), in the geometric sense that V is not locally flat there. In the case of an algebraic curve, a plane curve that has a double point, such as the cubic curve

y2 = x2(x + 1)

exhibits at (0, 0), cannot simply be parametrized near the origin.


The reason for that algebraically is that both sides of the equation show powers higher than 1 of the variables x and y. In terms of differential calculus, if

F(x,y) = y2x2(x + 1)

so that the curve has equation

F(x,y) = 0,

then the partial derivatives of F with respect to both x and y vanish at (0,0). This means that if we try to use the implicit function theorem to express y as a function of x near y = 0, we shall fail; and indeed no linear combination of x and y is a function of another essentially different one, so that this is a geometric condition not tied to any choice of coordinate axes.


In general for a hypersurface

F(x, y, z, ...) = 0

the singular points are those at which all the partial derivatives simultaneously vanish. A general algebraic variety V being defined by several polynomials, or in algebraic terms an ideal of polynomials, the condition on a point P to be a singular point of V is that none of those polynomials have a non-zero linear (degree 1) term, when written in terms of variables

XiPi

that make P the origin of coordinates. See Zariski tangent space for geometric and algebraic interpretation.


Points of V that are not singular are non-singular. Apart from some technical questions that can be caused by non-zero characteristic, it is always true that most points are non-singular.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Singular point of an algebraic variety - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (462 words)
In mathematics, a singular point of an algebraic variety V is a point P that is 'special' (so, singular), in the geometric sense that V is not locally flat there.
A general algebraic variety V being defined by several polynomials, or in algebraic terms an ideal of polynomials, the condition on a point P to be a singular point of V is that none of those polynomials have a non-zero linear (degree 1) term, when written in terms of variables
Points of V that are not singular are non-singular.
Algebraic variety - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1098 words)
Algebraic varieties are one of the central objects of study in classical (and to some extent, modern) algebraic geometry.
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.
Basically, a variety is a scheme whose structure sheaf is a sheaf of K-algebras with the property that the rings R that occur above are all domains and are all finitely generated K-algebras, i.e., quotients of polynomial algebras by prime ideals.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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