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GEOMETRY OF CRITICAL LOCI

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2001

LÊ DŨNG TRÁNG
Affiliation:
Centre de Mathématiques et d'Informatique, Université de Provence, 39 rue F. Joliot-Curie, 13 453 Marseille Cedex 13, France; [email protected], [email protected]
HÉLÈNE MAUGENDRE
Affiliation:
Centre de Mathématiques et d'Informatique, Université de Provence, 39 rue F. Joliot-Curie, 13 453 Marseille Cedex 13, France; [email protected], [email protected]
CLAUDE WEBER
Affiliation:
Section de Mathématiques, 2–4 rue du Lièvre, Case Postale 240, CH-1211 Genève 24, Switzerland; [email protected]
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Abstract

Let

(formula here)

be the germ of a finite (that is, proper with finite fibres) complex analytic morphism from a complex analytic normal surface onto an open neighbourhood U of the origin 0 in the complex plane C2. Let u and v be coordinates of C2 defined on U. We shall call the triple (π, u, v) the initial data.

Let Δ stand for the discriminant locus of the germ π, that is, the image by π of the critical locus Γ of π.

Let (Δα)α∈A be the branches of the discriminant locus Δ at O which are not the coordinate axes.

For each α ∈ A, we define a rational number dα by

(formula here)

where I(–, –) denotes the intersection number at 0 of complex analytic curves in C2. The set of rational numbers dα, for α ∈ A, is a finite subset D of the set of rational numbers Q. We shall call D the set of discriminantal ratios of the initial data (π, u, v). The interesting situation is when one of the two coordinates (u, v) is tangent to some branch of Δ, otherwise D = {1}. The definition of D depends not only on the choice of the two coordinates, but also on their ordering.

In this paper we prove that the set D is a topological invariant of the initial data (π, u, v) (in a sense that we shall define below) and we give several ways to compute it. These results are first steps in the understanding of the geometry of the discriminant locus. We shall also see the relation with the geometry of the critical locus.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
The London Mathematical Society 2001

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Footnotes

The paper was written with the help of the Fonds National Suisse pour la Recherche Scientifique and the French CNRS.