Geometric invariants for liaison of space curves (Q1078269)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 13:58, 17 June 2024 by ReferenceBot (talk | contribs) (‎Changed an Item)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Geometric invariants for liaison of space curves
scientific article

    Statements

    Geometric invariants for liaison of space curves (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    1986
    0 references
    For a curve C in \({\mathbb{P}}^ 3\) its Hartshorne-Rao module is \(M(C)=\oplus_{n\in {\mathbb{Z}}}M_ n(C),\quad where\) \(M_ n(C)=H^ 1({\mathbb{P}}^ 1,{\mathcal I}_ C(n))\). Upto duals and shifts, M(C) is known to be a complete liaison invariant of C. The ''degeneracy locus'' of C is a collection \(\{V_ n\}\), where \(V_ n\) is a certain subvariety of the dual projective space \(({\mathbb{P}}^ 3)^*\) defined in terms of the module structure action \(M_ n(C)\to M_{n+1}(C)\) of \(H^ 0({\mathbb{P}}^ 3,{\mathcal O}(1))\). Thus the degeneracy locus is a liaison invariant of C. In this paper the author investigates the relationship between the geometry of C and the degeneracy locus of C. More interesting is the application of his techniques and results to the determination of the liaison classes within a collection of certain types of curves in \({\mathbb{P}}^ 3\), e.g., a union of skew lines or a general smooth rational curve, especially a quintic or a sextic. For a curve C the property of its being arithmetically C-M or Buchsbaum depends only upon M(C). So the techniques developed by the author lead him also to complete the answer to a question of Geramita, Maroscia and Vogel on the C-M and Buchsbaum properties of certain configurations of lines in \({\mathbb{P}}^ 3\).
    0 references
    linkage
    0 references
    Buchsbaum curve
    0 references
    Hartshorne-Rao module
    0 references
    liaison invariant
    0 references
    degeneracy locus
    0 references
    0 references

    Identifiers