Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY ACCOUNT OF RATIONAL AND ELLIPTIC CURVES
- CHAPTER II THE ELIMINATION OF THE MULTIPLE POINTS OF A PLANE CURVE
- CHAPTER III THE BRANCHES OF AN ALGEBRAIC CURVE; THE ORDER OF A RATIONAL FUNCTION; ABEL'S THEOREM
- CHAPTER IV THE GENUS OF A CURVE. FUNDAMENTALS OF THE THEORY OF LINEAR SERIES
- CHAPTER V THE PERIODS OF ALGEBRAIC INTEGRALS. LOOPS IN A PLANE. RIEMANN SURFACES
- CHAPTER VI THE VARIOUS KINDS OF ALGEBRAIC INTEGRALS. RELATIONS AMONG PERIODS
- CHAPTER VII THE MODULAR EXPRESSION OF RATIONAL FUNCTIONS AND INTEGRALS
- CHAPTER VIII ENUMERATIVE PROPERTIES OF CURVES
- INDEX
CHAPTER VII - THE MODULAR EXPRESSION OF RATIONAL FUNCTIONS AND INTEGRALS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY ACCOUNT OF RATIONAL AND ELLIPTIC CURVES
- CHAPTER II THE ELIMINATION OF THE MULTIPLE POINTS OF A PLANE CURVE
- CHAPTER III THE BRANCHES OF AN ALGEBRAIC CURVE; THE ORDER OF A RATIONAL FUNCTION; ABEL'S THEOREM
- CHAPTER IV THE GENUS OF A CURVE. FUNDAMENTALS OF THE THEORY OF LINEAR SERIES
- CHAPTER V THE PERIODS OF ALGEBRAIC INTEGRALS. LOOPS IN A PLANE. RIEMANN SURFACES
- CHAPTER VI THE VARIOUS KINDS OF ALGEBRAIC INTEGRALS. RELATIONS AMONG PERIODS
- CHAPTER VII THE MODULAR EXPRESSION OF RATIONAL FUNCTIONS AND INTEGRALS
- CHAPTER VIII ENUMERATIVE PROPERTIES OF CURVES
- INDEX
Summary
The present chapter is concerned with a theory of the rational functions and integrals, associated with an (irreducible) algebraic curve f(x, y) = 0, which began with the arithmetical work of Kronecker and Dedekind for the theory of integer numbers. Developed in detail the theory gives an alternative to much of what has preceded; what is given here however seems a desirable, if not a necessary, accompaniment of what has already been proved.
We have explained what is meant by a rational function belonging to the curve f(x, y) = 0; to fix the ideas we recall certain properties of a general kind for such functions. It was seen that, as a rule, there exists no rational function of the first, nor of the second order; there is thus, in general, a least order for which there exists a rational function, associated with the curve. But we cannot expect to be able to construct a function of this least order with its poles taken arbitrarily on the curve; for instance, when the equation f(x, y) = 0 is of the form y 2 − u = 0, where u is a polynomial in x, though there exists a function, of the form (x – a)−1, with two poles, these must be at places for which x has the same value. There is thus another least number, say k, such that, whatever k places be taken, a rational function exists with poles, all of the first order, at these k places, or at places chosen from these.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Principles of Geometry , pp. 147 - 181Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1933