Home /  Fellowship of the Ring, National Seminar: Cayley-Bacharach theorems and measures of irrationality

Seminar

Fellowship of the Ring, National Seminar: Cayley-Bacharach theorems and measures of irrationality August 13, 2020 (01:30 PM PDT - 03:30 PM PDT)
Parent Program: --
Location: SLMath: Online/Virtual
Speaker(s) Brooke Ullery (Emory University)
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Keywords and Mathematics Subject Classification (MSC)
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Secondary Mathematics Subject Classification No Secondary AMS MSC
Video

Cayley-Bacharach Theorems And Measures Of Irrationality

Abstract/Media

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If Z is a set of points in projective space, we can ask which polynomials of degree d vanish at every point in Z. If P is one point of Z, the vanishing of a polynomial at P imposes one linear condition on the coefficients. Thus, the vanishing of a polynomial on all of Z imposes |Z| linear conditions on the coefficients. A classical question in algebraic geometry, dating back to at least the 4th century, is how many of those linear conditions are independent? For instance, if we look at the space of lines through three collinear points in the plane, the unique line through two of the points is exactly the one through all three; i.e. the conditions imposed by any two of the points imply those of the third. In this talk, I will survey several classical results including the original Cayley-Bacharach Theorem and Castelnuovo’s Lemma about points on rational curves. I’ll then describe some recent results and conjectures about points satisfying the so-called Cayley-Bacharach condition and show how they connect to several seemingly unrelated questions in contemporary algebraic geometry relating to the gonality of curves and measures of irrationality of higher dimensional varieties.

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Cayley-Bacharach Theorems And Measures Of Irrationality

H.264 Video 25107_28569_8436_Cayley-Bacharach_Theorems_and_Measures_of_Irrationality_2.mp4