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
4 - Virtual multiplicities
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
Let O be a point on a smooth surface S. As in the preceding chapter, denote by O = OS, O the local ring of S at O and by M its maximal ideal. We say that a family of conditions imposed on germs of curve at O is linear if and only if the germs satisfying these conditions describe a linear system, that is (section 2.7) if and only if their equations describe the set of non-zero elements of an ideal of O. Given any positive integer ν, it is clear that the condition of having multiplicity at least v at O is a linear one, the corresponding ideal of O being just Mν. One may ask the germs to go through given infinitely near points with prescribed multiplicities: if K is a cluster with origin at O and for each p ∈ K there is given an integer νp, we may consider the family of conditions on ξ,
In general such a family is not linear. Indeed, for an easy example, take O and the point p in its first neighbourhood on the x-axis as the points of K; then it is clear that all germs ξλ: x2 − y2 + λy = 0, λ ≠ 0, have at both O and p multiplicity non-less than (in fact equal to) one. Nevertheless, the germ ∈0 does not go through p. In this chapter we introduce families of linear conditions that, although weaker, are to a certain extent similar to the conditions of going through the points of a cluster with prescribed multiplicities.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Singularities of Plane Curves , pp. 119 - 158Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000