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Chapter III - Classification Theories of Projective Varieties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2010

Takao Fujita
Affiliation:
Tokyo Institute of Technology
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Summary

In this chapter we are mainly concerned with the cases in which L is very ample and char(ℝ) = O. We will survey the theories due to Castelnuovo, Ionescu, Sommese, et al.

Castelnuovo bounds

For any curve C in P ≃ ℙN which is not contained in any hyperplane, Castelnuovo has found an upper bound for the genus of C in terms of the degree. Here we provide a higher dimensional version of Castelnuovo bound using the hyperplane section method.

(16.1) Given positive integers C and d, we set øC,d(µ) = (dC − 1)µ − Cµ (µ − 1)/2 and γ(C, d) = øC,d(q) where q is the largest integer such that Cqd − 1. Then we have the following.

Fact (Castelnuovo bound). Let C be an irreducible reduced curve of degree d inNsuch that h0 (C, O(1)) = N + 1. Then h1 (C, Oc) ≤ γ(N−1, d) unless C is strange.

For a proof, see [GH;p.252] and [Rat]. Here, a curve C is said to be strange if all the tangent lines at smooth points of C pass through a common point. If char(ℝ) = O, no curve is strange except lines. Even if char(ℝ) > O, smooth curves are not strange except conic curves in case char(ℝ) = 2 (cf. [Ha4;p.312]).

(16.2) Remark.

1) γ(C, µC + 1) = Cµ(µ − 1)/2 and γ(C, d) is linear in d in the interval µC + 1 ≤ d ≤ (µ + 1)C + 1.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1990

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