- Birational geometry
In
mathematics , birational geometry is a part of the subject ofalgebraic geometry , that deals with the geometry of analgebraic variety that is dependent only on its function field. In the case of dimension two, the birational geometry of algebraic surfaces was largely worked out by theItalian school of algebraic geometry in the years 1890–1910. From about 1970 advances have been made in higher dimensions, giving a good theory of birational geometry for dimension three.Birational geometry is largely a geometry of transformations, but it doesn't fit exactly with the
Erlangen programme . One reason is that its nature is to deal with transformations that are only defined on an open, dense subset of an algebraic variety. Such transformations, given byrational function s in the co-ordinates, can be undefined not just at isolated points on curves, but on entire curves on a surface, and so on.A formal definition of birational mapping from one algebraic variety "V" to another is that it is a
rational mapping with a rational inverse mapping. This has to be understood in the extended sense that the composition, in either order, is only in fact defined on a non-empty Zariski open subset.One of the first results in the subject is the
birational isomorphism of theprojective plane , and a non-singularquadric "Q" in projective 3-space. Already in this example one can see whole sets where the mappings are ill-defined: taking a point "P" on "Q" as origin, we can use lines through "P", intersecting "Q" at one other point, to project to a plane — but this definition breaks down with all linestangent to "Q" at "P", which in a certain sense 'blow up' "P" into the intersection of the tangent plane with the plane to which we project.That is, quite generally, we can expect birational "mappings" to act like relations, with graphs containing parts that are not functional. On an open dense set they do behave like functions, but the
Zariski closure s of their graphs are more complex correspondences on the product showing 'blowing up' and 'blowing down'. Quite detailed descriptions of those, in terms of projective spaces associated to tangent spaces can be given and justified by the theory.An example is the
Cremona group of birationalautomorphism s of the projective plane. In purely algebraic terms, for a given field "K", this is the automorphism group over "K" of the field "K"("X", "Y") of rational functions in two variables. Its structure has been analysed since the nineteenth century, but it is 'large' (while the corresponding group for the projective line consists only ofMöbius transformation s determined by three parameters). It is still the subject of research.ee also
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Birational invariant
*Blowing up
*Algebraic curve
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