Number of singular points of an annulus in \(\mathbb C^{2}\) (Q407797): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 15:52, 19 March 2024
scientific article
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English | Number of singular points of an annulus in \(\mathbb C^{2}\) |
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Number of singular points of an annulus in \(\mathbb C^{2}\) (English)
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28 March 2012
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The authors prove a particular case of the following Lin and Zaidenberg conjecture which states that any algebraic curve \(V\) in \(\mathbb{C}^{2}\) with the first Betti number equal to \(r\) can have at most \(2r+1\) singular points. They prove that if \(V\) is homeomorphic to \(\mathbb{C}^{\ast }\) (in this case its first Betti number is equal to \(1\)), given in parametric form \[ \begin{aligned} x =& t^{p}+a_{1}t^{p-1}+\cdots +a_{p+r}t^{-r}, \\ y =&t^{q}+b_{1}t^{q-1}+\cdots +b_{q+s}t^{-s},\end{aligned} \] \(a_{p+r}b_{q+s},\) \(p,s>0,\) then \(V\) has at most three singular points.
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algebraic curve
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annulus
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singularity
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Milnor number
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