Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T11:56:02.891Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

On the Resolution of Cremona Transformations and particularly those of Genus One in Space of Three Dimensions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2008

D. W. Babbage
Affiliation:
Magdalene College

Extract

In the first section of this paper we illustrate the use that can be made of higher space in dealing with the problem of resolving a given Cremona transformation into the product of simpler Cremona transformations. In the second section we restrict ourselves to a particular large but finite class of Cremona transformations of [3], those of genus one, and show that these can all be built up from the four following simple types:

(1) The bilinear transformation T3,3, determined by three equations bilinear in the coordinates of the two corresponding spaces; in the most general case of this both the direct and the reverse homaloidal systems consist of cubic surfaces passing through a non-degenerate sextic of genus three;

(2) Three transformations Tn, n (n = 2, 3, 4) in which the homaloidal surfaces may in each case be obtained by taking in [4] a primal V of order n which has two (n− l)ple points, and projecting on to a given [3] from one of these points the sections of V by primes through the other; for n = 2 we have the familiar quadroquadric transformation determined by quadrics through a conic and a point.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge Philosophical Society 1935

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

* The genus of a Cremona transformation of [3] is defined as the genus of a general plane section of a general member of the homaloidal system which determines the transformation; the genus is clearly an invariant of the transformation.

Marietta, , Rend. di Palermo, 49 (1925), 252–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

* Segre, , Atti Torino, 21 (1885), 95115.Google Scholar

* Hudson, H. P., Cremona Transformations (Cambridge, 1927), p. 172.Google Scholar

* Enriques, , Math. Annalen, 46 (1895), 192–99CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Scorza, , Annali di Mat. (3), 15 (1908), 217–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

* If we project the surface on to a plane from the osculating [5] at one of its points P, the third neighbourhood of P is represented by a rational cubic Γ with a node O, say. The prime sections of the surface project into a system ∑ of decimics whose base points can be seen without much difficulty to be a sextuple point at O and six triple points on Γ. ∑ is transformable into a system of quartics through six points.

* H. P. Hudson, loc. cit. pp. 382–7.

H. P. Hudson, loc. cit. pp. 447–8.

* Aroldi, , Giornale di Mat. (3), 58 (1922), 175–92.Google Scholar

Berardi, , Giornale di Mat. (3), 61 (1923), 109–22.Google Scholar

Nobile, , Giornale di Mat. (3), 59 (1921), 147–74.Google Scholar

§ This follows from the fact that the plane sections of the surface can be represented on a plane by the most general linear ∞2 system of cubics with four base points; Cayley, , Math. Annalen, 3 (1871), 469–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

* Γ meets C in three points because the plane of C cannot meet a sextic outside C. Therefore the free curve of intersection of a sextic with one of the transforming quadrics is a (3, 3) curve with three double points and hence is elliptic.

* The generators of the tangent cone correspond to the neighbourhoods of the points of the projecting sextic, i.e. they are the projections of the tangent solids to at these points.

* The cubics of ∑′ touch the quadric through Γ′ along l′.

* T 4, 4 is of the type previously described which is obtainable from a quartic primal in [4] with two triple points.

* On φ′ there is a pencil of such conics meeting R in eight points; they arise from the neighbourhoods of O on the different quadric cones through the tangents to the branches of Γ at O.

H. P. Hudson, loc. cit. p. 387.