Rational surface: Difference between revisions
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
==Examples of rational surfaces== |
==Examples of rational surfaces== |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
* [[Châtelet surface]]s |
|||
* [[Cubic surface]]s Nonsingular cubic surfaces are isomorphic to the projective plane blown up in 6 points, and are Fano surfaces. Named examples include the Fermat cubic, the Cayley cubic, and the Clebsch cubic. |
* [[Cubic surface]]s Nonsingular cubic surfaces are isomorphic to the projective plane blown up in 6 points, and are Fano surfaces. Named examples include the Fermat cubic, the Cayley cubic, and the Clebsch cubic. |
||
⚫ | |||
* [[Enneper surface]] |
* [[Enneper surface]] |
||
* [[Hirzebruch surface]]s Σ<sub>''n''</sub> |
* [[Hirzebruch surface]]s Σ<sub>''n''</sub> |
||
* ''P''<sup>1</sup>×''P''<sup>1</sup> The product of two projective lines is the Hirzebruch surface Σ<sub>0</sub>. It is the only surface with two different rulings. |
* ''P''<sup>1</sup>×''P''<sup>1</sup> The product of two projective lines is the Hirzebruch surface Σ<sub>0</sub>. It is the only surface with two different rulings. |
||
* The [[projective plane]] |
* The [[projective plane]] |
||
⚫ | |||
* [[Segre surface]] An intersection of two quadrics, isomorphic to the projective plane blown up in 5 points. |
* [[Segre surface]] An intersection of two quadrics, isomorphic to the projective plane blown up in 5 points. |
||
* [[Steiner surface]] A surface in ''P''<sup>4</sup> with singularities which is birational to the projective plane. |
* [[Steiner surface]] A surface in ''P''<sup>4</sup> with singularities which is birational to the projective plane. |
||
*[[White surface]] |
*[[White surface]]s, a generalization of Bordiga surfaces. |
||
* [[Veronese surface]] An embedding of the projective plane into ''P''<sup>5</sup>. |
* [[Veronese surface]] An embedding of the projective plane into ''P''<sup>5</sup>. |
||
Revision as of 17:22, 23 June 2009
In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, a rational surface is a surface birationally equivalent to the projective plane, or in other words a rational variety of dimension two. Rational surfaces are the simplest of the 10 or so classes of surface in the Enriques-Kodaira classification of complex surfaces, and were the first surfaces to be investigated.
Structure
Every non-singular rational surface can be obtained by repeatedly blowing up a minimal rational surface. The minimal rational surfaces are the projective plane and the Hirzebruch surfaces Σn for n = 0 or n ≥ 2.
Invariants: The plurigenera are all 0 and the fundamental group is trivial.
Hodge diamond:
1 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | |||
0 | 1+n | 0 | ||
0 | 0 | |||
1 |
where n is 0 for the projective plane, and 1 for Hirzebruch surfaces and greater than 1 for other rational surfaces.
The Picard group is the odd unimodular lattice I1,n, except for the Hirzebruch surfaces Σ2m when it is the even unimodular lattice II1,1.
Castelnuovo's theorem
Guido Castelnuovo proved that any complex surface such that q and P2 (the irregularity and second plurigenus) both vanish is rational. This is used in the Enriques-Kodaira classification to identify the rational surfaces. Zariski proved that Castelnuovo's theorem also holds over fields of positive characteristic.
Castelnuovo's theorem also implies that any unirational complex surface is rational, because if a complex surface is unirational then its irregularity and plurigenera are bounded by those of a rational surface and are therefore all 0, so the surface is rational. Most unirational complex varieties of dimension 3 or larger are not rational.
This application of Castenuovo's theorem in charactersitic p > 0 is false: Zariski found examples of unirational surfaces (Zariski surfaces) that are not rational.
At one time it was unclear whether a complex surface such that q and P1 both vanish is rational, but a counterexample (an Enriques surface) was found by Federigo Enriques.
- Zariski, Oscar On Castelnuovo's criterion of rationality pa = P2 = 0 of an algebraic surface. Illinois J. Math. 2 1958 303--315.
Examples of rational surfaces
- Bordiga surfaces: A degree 6 embedding of the projective plane into P4 defined by the quartics through 10 points in general position.
- Châtelet surfaces
- Cubic surfaces Nonsingular cubic surfaces are isomorphic to the projective plane blown up in 6 points, and are Fano surfaces. Named examples include the Fermat cubic, the Cayley cubic, and the Clebsch cubic.
- del Pezzo surfaces (Fano surfaces)
- Enneper surface
- Hirzebruch surfaces Σn
- P1×P1 The product of two projective lines is the Hirzebruch surface Σ0. It is the only surface with two different rulings.
- The projective plane
- Segre surface An intersection of two quadrics, isomorphic to the projective plane blown up in 5 points.
- Steiner surface A surface in P4 with singularities which is birational to the projective plane.
- White surfaces, a generalization of Bordiga surfaces.
- Veronese surface An embedding of the projective plane into P5.
See also
References
- Barth, Wolf P.; Hulek, Klaus; Peters, Chris A.M.; Van de Ven, Antonius (2004), Compact Complex Surfaces, Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete. 3. Folge., vol. 4, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, ISBN 978-3-540-00832-3, MR2030225
- Beauville, Arnaud (1996), Complex algebraic surfaces, London Mathematical Society Student Texts, vol. 34 (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-49510-3; 978-0-521-49842-5, MR1406314
{{citation}}
: Check|isbn=
value: invalid character (help)