Skip to main content

All Questions

6 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers
Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
3 votes
0 answers
121 views

Detecting non-principal Weil divisors on normal varieties using curves

Let $X$ be a normal projective variety over an algebraically closed field $k$. Given any morphism $f:Y\to X$, there is a pullback homomorphism $f^*:\text{Cl}(X)\to\text{Cl}(Y)$, where $\text{Cl}(X)$ ...
Jonathan Love's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
375 views

Linear system on singular plane curve

Let $C \subset \mathbb{P}^2_k$ an irreducible plane curve of degree $d >1$ over algebraically closed field $k$. That is $C=V(f(x,y,z))$ where $f \in k[x,y,z]$ homogeneous of degree $d$. Let $\{...
user267839's user avatar
  • 5,976
1 vote
0 answers
70 views

Prescribed intersection of varieties

Every variety here is complex analytic, or complex algebraic if it solves anything. Given a germ of a (possibly singular, nor necessarily irreducible) hypersurface $(H,0)\subset(\mathbb{C}^{n+1},0)$ ...
MathBug's user avatar
  • 333
1 vote
0 answers
103 views

Degree of an isogeny in the endomorphism ring of the jacobian of a curve and self intersection index in its ring of correspondences

I hope this question is not too basic. Let $C/\bar{k}$ be a nonsingular irreducible curve of genus $g$ and $\mathfrak{C}(C\times C)\cong \text{CH}^1(C\times C)$ be its ring of correspondences. I am ...
Eduardo R. Duarte's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
110 views

How to prove that a specific quadric intersection is complete and irreducible?

Let's borrow the quadric intersection $I$ from another question. More precisely, let $k$ be an algebraically closed field of characteristic $\neq 2$ and $a_1, a_2, \cdots, a_n \in k^*$ be some ...
Dimitri Koshelev's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
97 views

EXACT number of intersection points of two algebraic curves

As the picture shows2(the paper's link is in 1),it seems that I can use tools including Bezout's theorem to solve the EXACT number of intersection between two algebraic curves(F(x,y) is of degree two ...
BobSS's user avatar
  • 1