List of mesons

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In mathematics, the rational normal curve is a smooth, rational curve of degree n in projective n-space It is a simple example of a projective variety; formally, it is the Veronese variety when the domain is the projective line. For n=2 it is the flat conic and for n=3 it is the twisted cubic. The term "normal" is an old term meaning that the linear system defining the embedding is complete (and has nothing to do with normal schemes). The intersection of the rational normal curve with an affine space is called the moment curve.

Definition

The rational normal curve may be given parametrically as the image of the map

which assigns to the homogeneous coordinates the value

In the affine coordinates of the chart the map is simply

That is, the rational normal curve is the closure by a single point at infinity of the affine curve .

Equivalently, rational normal curve may be understood to be a projective variety, defined as the common zero locus of the homogeneous polynomials

where are the homogeneous coordinates on . The full set of these polynomials is not needed; it is sufficient to pick n of these to specify the curve.

Alternate parameterization

Let be distinct points in . Then the polynomial

is a homogeneous polynomial of degree with distinct roots. The polynomials

are then a basis for the space of homogeneous polynomials of degree n. The map

or, equivalently, dividing by

is a rational normal curve. That this is a rational normal curve may be understood by noting that the monomials are just one possible basis for the space of degree-n homogeneous polynomials. In fact, any basis will do. This is just an application of the statement that any two projective varieties are projectively equivalent if they are congruent modulo the projective linear group (with K the field over which the projective space is defined).

This rational curve sends the zeros of G to each of the coordinate points of ; that is, all but one of the vanish for a zero of G. Conversely, any rational normal curve passing through the n+1 coordinate points may be written parametrically in this way.

Properties

The rational normal curve has an assortment of nice properties:

There are independent quadrics that generate the ideal of the curve.

The curve is not a complete intersection, for . This means it is not defined by the number of equations equal to its codimension .

The canonical mapping for a hyperelliptic curve has image a rational normal curve, and is 2-to-1.

Every irreducible non-degenerate curve of degree is a rational normal curve.

See also

References

  • Joe Harris, Algebraic Geometry, A First Course, (1992) Springer-Verlag, New York. ISBN 0-387-97716-3