Abstract

INTRODUCTION The gallery of real curves in Chapter 1 presented a wide range of behavior. It was so wide, we were led to ask “Where are the nice theorems” We've already seen how broadening curves' living space to ℙ 2 (ℂ) can lead to more unified results, Bezout's theorem in Chapter 3 being a prime example. But what about those real curves we met in Chapter 1 having more than one connected component? Or ones having mixed dimensions? Does working in ℙ 2 (ℂ) perform its magic for cases like this? Yes. In this chapter we'll see that individual curves in ℙ 2 (ℂ) are generally much nicer and properties more predictable than their real counterparts. For example, we will show that every algebraic curve in ℙ 2 (ℂ) is connected and that every irreducible curve is orientable. These are powerful theorems that help to smooth out the wrinkles in the real setting. Most algebraic curves in ℂ 2 or ℙ 2 (ℂ) are everywhere smooth. We will make this more precise in the next chapter, but any polynomial of a given degree with “randomly chosen” real or complex coefficients defines a real 2-manifold that is locally the graph of a smooth function. Such a curve in ℙ 2 (ℂ) is therefore a closed manifold (a manifold having no boundary) that is orientable and thus has a topological genus.

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