Available in electronic format
Available in print format
Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society
Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society
ISSN 1088-9485(e) ISSN 0273-0979(p)
     

Cayley-Bacharach theorems and conjectures

Author(s): David Eisenbud; Mark Green; Joe Harris
Journal: Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 33 (1996), 295-324.
MSC (1991): Primary 14N05, 14H05, 14-02; Secondary 13-03, 13H10
Retrieve article in: PDF DVI PostScript

Abstract | Similar articles | Additional information

Abstract: A theorem of Pappus of Alexandria, proved in the fourth century A.D., began a long development in algebraic geometry. In its changing expressions one can see reflected the changing concerns of the field, from synthetic geometry to projective plane curves to Riemann surfaces to the modern development of schemes and duality. We survey this development historically and use it to motivate a brief treatment of a part of duality theory. We then explain one of the modern developments arising from it, a series of conjectures about the linear conditions imposed by a set of points in projective space on the forms that vanish on them. We give a proof of the conjectures in a new special case.


Similar Articles:

Retrieve articles in Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society with MSC (1991): 14N05, 14H05, 14-02, 13-03, 13H10

Retrieve articles in all Journals with MSC (1991): 14N05, 14H05, 14-02, 13-03, 13H10


Additional Information:

David Eisenbud
Affiliation: Department of Mathematics, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts 02254-9110
Email: eisenbud@math.brandeis.edu

Mark Green
Affiliation: Department of Mathematics, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095-1555
Email: mlg@math.ucla.edu

Joe Harris
Affiliation: Department of Mathematics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138-2901
Email: harris@abel.math.harvard.edu

DOI: 10.1090/S0273-0979-96-00666-0
PII: S 0273-0979(96)00666-0
Received by editor(s): March 24, 1995,
Received by editor(s) in revised form: November 3, 1995
Copyright of article: Copyright 1996, American Mathematical Society


  AMS Website Logo Small Comments: webmaster@ams.org
© Copyright 2008, American Mathematical Society
Privacy Statement
Search the AMSPowered by Google