Rational Parametrizations of Rational Plane Curves
In this section, $C$ will denote a complex projective plane curve, defined by an absolutely irreducible, homogeneous polynomial in three variables, with coefficients in $\mathbb Q$. Moreover, we will write $n = \deg C$.
Recall that the curve $C$ is rational if it is birationally equivalent to the projective line $\mathbb P^1(\mathbb C)$. In other words, there exists a rational parametrization of $C$, that is, a birational map $\mathbb P^1(\mathbb C)\dashrightarrow C$. Note that such a parametrization is given by three homogeneous polynomials of the same degree in the homogeneous coordinates on $\mathbb P^1(\mathbb C)$.
The curve $C$ is rational iff its geometric genus is zero.
Based on work of Max Noether on adjoint curves, Hilbert und Hurwitz showed that if $C$ is rational, then there is a birational map $C \dashrightarrow D$ defined over $\mathbb Q$ such that $D = \mathbb P^1(\mathbb C)$ if $n$ is odd, and $D\subset\mathbb P^2(\mathbb C)$ is a conic if $n$ is even.
If a conic $D$ contains a rational point, then there exists a parametrization of $D$ defined over $\mathbb Q$; otherwise, there exists a parametrization of $D$ defined over a quadratic field extension of $\mathbb Q$.
The approach of Hilbert und Hurwitz is constructive and allows one, in principle, to find rational parametrizations. The resulting algorithm is not very practical, however, as the approach asks to compute adjoint curves repeatedly, at each of a number of reduction steps.
The algorithm implemented in OSCAR relies on reduction steps of a different type and requires the computation of adjoint curves only once. Its individual steps are interesting in their own right:
- Assure that the curve $C$ is rational by checking that its geometric genus is zero;
- compute a basis of the adjoint curves of $C$ of degree ${n-2}$; each such basis defines a birational map $C \dashrightarrow C_{n-2},$ where $C_{n-2}$ is a rational normal curve in $\mathbb P^{n-2}(\mathbb C)$;
- the anticanonical linear system on $C_{n-2}$ defines a birational map $C_{n-2}\dashrightarrow C_{n-4}$, where $C_{n-4}$ is a rational normal curve in in $\mathbb P^{n-4}(\mathbb C)$;
- iterate the previous step to obtain a birational map $C_{n-2} \dashrightarrow \dots \dashrightarrow D$, where $D = \mathbb P^1(\mathbb C)$ if $n$ is odd, and $D\subset\mathbb P^2(\mathbb C)$ is a conic if $n$ is even;
- invert the birational map $C \dashrightarrow C_{n-2} \dashrightarrow \dots \dashrightarrow D$;
- if $n$ is even, compute a parametrization of the conic $D$ and compose it with the inverted map above.
The defining property of an adjoint curve is that it passes with “sufficiently high” multiplicity through the singularities of $C$. There are several concepts of making this precise. For each such concept, there is a corresponding adjoint ideal of $C$, namely the homogeneous ideal formed by the defining polynomials of the adjoint curves. In OSCAR, we follow the concept of Gorenstein which leads to the largest possible adjoint ideal.
See Janko Böhm (1999) and Janko Böhm, Wolfram Decker, Santiago Laplagne, Gerhard Pfister (2017) for details and further references.
Creating Projective Plane Curves
The data structures for algebraic curves in OSCAR are still under development and subject to change. Here is the current constructor for projective plane curves:
ProjPlaneCurve
— MethodProjPlaneCurve(f::MPolyRingElem{T}) where {T <: FieldElem}
Given a homogeneous polynomial f
in three variables with coefficients in a field, create the projective plane curve defined by f
.
Examples
julia> R, (x,y,z) = graded_polynomial_ring(QQ, ["x", "y", "z"])
(Graded multivariate polynomial ring in 3 variables over QQ, MPolyDecRingElem{QQFieldElem, QQMPolyRingElem}[x, y, z])
julia> C = ProjPlaneCurve(z*x^2-y^3)
Projective plane curve defined by x^2*z - y^3
The Genus of a Plane Curve
geometric_genus
— Methodgeometric_genus(C::ProjectivePlaneCurve{T}) where T <: FieldElem
Return the geometric genus of C
.
Examples
julia> R, (x,y,z) = graded_polynomial_ring(QQ, ["x", "y", "z"]);
julia> C = ProjPlaneCurve(z*x^2-y^3)
Projective plane curve defined by x^2*z - y^3
julia> geometric_genus(C)
0
Adjoint Ideals of Plane Curves
adjoint_ideal
— Methodadjoint_ideal(C::ProjPlaneCurve{QQFieldElem})
Return the Gorenstein adjoint ideal of C
.
Examples
julia> R, (x,y,z) = graded_polynomial_ring(QQ, ["x", "y", "z"]);
julia> C = ProjPlaneCurve(y^4-2*x^3*z+3*x^2*z^2-2*y^2*z^2)
Projective plane curve defined by -2*x^3*z + 3*x^2*z^2 + y^4 - 2*y^2*z^2
julia> I = adjoint_ideal(C)
ideal(-x*z + y^2, x*y - y*z, x^2 - x*z)
Rational Points on Conics
rational_point_conic
— Methodrational_point_conic(D::ProjPlaneCurve{QQFieldElem})
If the conic D
contains a rational point, return the homogeneous coordinates of such a point. If no such point exists, return a point on D
defined over a quadratic field extension of $\mathbb Q$.
Examples
julia> R, (x,y,z) = graded_polynomial_ring(QQ, ["x", "y", "z"]);
julia> D = ProjPlaneCurve(x^2 + 2*y^2 + 5*z^2 - 4*x*y + 3*x*z + 17*y*z);
julia> P = rational_point_conic(D)
3-element Vector{AbstractAlgebra.Generic.MPoly{nf_elem}}:
-1//4*a
-1//4*a + 1//4
0
julia> S = parent(P[1])
Multivariate polynomial ring in 3 variables x, y, z
over number field of degree 2 over QQ
julia> NF = base_ring(S)
Number field with defining polynomial t^2 - 2
over rational field
julia> a = gen(NF)
a
julia> minpoly(a)
t^2 - 2
Parametrizing Rational Plane Curves
parametrization_plane_curve
— Methodparametrization_plane_curve(C::ProjPlaneCurve{QQFieldElem})
Return a rational parametrization of C
.
Examples
julia> R, (x,y,z) = graded_polynomial_ring(QQ, ["x", "y", "z"]);
julia> C = ProjPlaneCurve(y^4-2*x^3*z+3*x^2*z^2-2*y^2*z^2)
Projective plane curve defined by -2*x^3*z + 3*x^2*z^2 + y^4 - 2*y^2*z^2
julia> parametrization_plane_curve(C)
3-element Vector{QQMPolyRingElem}:
12*s^4 - 8*s^2*t^2 + t^4
-12*s^3*t + 2*s*t^3
8*s^4
Contact
Please direct questions about this part of OSCAR to the following people:
You can ask questions in the OSCAR Slack.
Alternatively, you can raise an issue on github.