Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 0 Preliminaries
- 1 Newton–Puiseux algorithm
- 2 First local properties of plane curves
- 3 Infinitely near points
- 4 Virtual multiplicities
- 5 Analysis of branches
- 6 Polar germs and related invariants
- 7 Linear families of germs
- 8 Valuations and complete ideals
- Applications to affine Geometry
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - Linear families of germs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 0 Preliminaries
- 1 Newton–Puiseux algorithm
- 2 First local properties of plane curves
- 3 Infinitely near points
- 4 Virtual multiplicities
- 5 Analysis of branches
- 6 Polar germs and related invariants
- 7 Linear families of germs
- 8 Valuations and complete ideals
- Applications to affine Geometry
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter is devoted to studying pencils and linear systems of germs of curve. We introduce their clusters of base points and prove that all but finitely many germs in a pencil and generic germs in a linear system go sharply through the corresponding clusters of base points. This allows us to prove restricted versions (for pencils and linear systems) of the µ-constant theorem. Linear systems are then used for determining which monomials in the equation of a reduced germ ξ are irrelevant to either the equisingularity type (E-sufficiency) or the analytic type (A-sufficiency) of the germ.
Linear series on a projective line
In this section we recall some elementary facts about linear series on a complex projective line. They will be applied to the linear series cut out by pencils and linear systems on exceptional divisors.
Let ℙ1 be a one-dimensional complex projective space, and assume that X0, X1 are projective coordinates on ℙ1. An effective divisor or group of points of ℙ1 is a formal sum of finitely many points in ℙ1 or, equivalently, an almost zero map from ℙ1 into the set of the non-negative integers. A group of points D is thus uniquely written
where the coefficients np are non-negative integers, all but finitely many equal to zero. The integer np is usually called the multiplicity of p in D. Points of positive multiplicity are said to belong to D. Points p with np = 1 (resp. np > 1) are called simple (resp. multiple) points of D and ∑pnp is the degree or the number of points of D.
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- Singularities of Plane Curves , pp. 249 - 284Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000