- Hyperelliptic curve
In
algebraic geometry , a hyperelliptic curve (over thecomplex numbers ) is analgebraic curve given by an equation of the form:where "f(x)" is apolynomial of degree with "n" distinct roots. A hyperelliptic function is a function from thefunction field of such a curve; or possibly on theJacobian variety on the curve, these being two concepts that are the same for theelliptic function case, but different in this case.If "f(x)" is a cubic or quartic polynomial, then the resulting curve is an
elliptic curve .The genus of a hyperelliptic curve determines the degree: a polynomial of degree 2"g"+1 or 2"g"+2 gives a curve of genus "g".
While this model is the simplest way to describe hyperelliptic curves, it should be noted that such an equation will have a singular point "at infinity" in the
projective plane , a feature specific to the case "n > 4". Therefore in giving such an equation to specify a non-singular curve, it is almost always assumed that a non-singular model, equivalent in the sense ofbirational geometry , is meant. To be more precise, the equation defines aquadratic extension of C("x"), and it is thatfunction field that is meant. The singular point at infinity can be removed (since this is a curve) by thenormalization (integral closure ) process.In fact geometric shorthand is assumed, with the curve "C" being defined as a ramified double cover of the
projective line , the ramification occurring at the roots of "f", and also for odd "n" at the point at infinity. In this way the cases "n" = "2m − 1" and "2m" can be unified, since we might as well use anautomorphism of the projective line to move anyramification point away from infinity.All curves of genus 2 are hyperelliptic, but for genus ≥ 3 the generic curve is not hyperelliptic. This is shown by a
moduli space dimension check.Hyperelliptic curves can be used in
hyperelliptic curve cryptography incryptosystem s based on thediscrete logarithm problem .Hyperelliptic functions were first published by
Adolph Göpel (1812-1847) in his last paper "Abelsche Transcendenten erster Ordnung" (Abelian transcendents of first order) (in Journal für reine und angewandte Mathematik, vol. 35, 1847). IndependentlyJohann G. Rosenhain worked on that matter and published "Umkehrungen ultraelliptischer Integrale erster Gattung" (in Mémoires des sa vanta etc., vol. 11, 1851).
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