Superelliptic curve
In mathematics, a superelliptic curve is an algebraic curve defined by an equation of the form
where is an integer and f is a polynomial of degree with coefficients in a field ; more precisely, it is the smooth projective curve whose function field defined by this equation. The case and is an elliptic curve, the case and is a hyperelliptic curve, and the case and is an example of a trigonal curve.
Some authors impose additional restrictions, for example, that the integer should not be divisible by the characteristic of , that the polynomial should be square free, that the integers m and d should be coprime, or some combination of these.[1]
The Diophantine problem of finding integer points on a superelliptic curve can be solved by a method similar to one used for the resolution of hyperelliptic equations: a Siegel identity is used to reduce to a Thue equation.
Definition[]
More generally, a superelliptic curve is a cyclic branched covering
of the projective line of degree coprime to the characteristic of the field of definition. The degree of the covering map is also referred to as the degree of the curve. By cyclic covering we mean that the Galois group of the covering (i.e., the corresponding function field extension) is cyclic.
The fundamental theorem of Kummer theory implies[citation needed] that a superelliptic curve of degree defined over a field has an affine model given by an equation
for some polynomial of degree with each root having order , provided that has a point defined over , that is, if the set of -rational points of is not empty. For example, this is always the case when is algebraically closed. In particular, function field extension is a Kummer extension.
Ramification[]
Let be a superelliptic curve defined over an algebraically closed field , and denote the set of roots of in . Define set
For an affine branch point , let denote the order of as a root of . As before, we assume that . Then
For the point at infinity, define integer as follows. If
Curve defined as above is connected precisely when and are relatively prime (not necessarily pairwise), which is assumed to be the case.
Genus[]
By the Riemann-Hurwitz formula, the genus of a superelliptic curve is given by
See also[]
- Hyperelliptic curve
- Branched covering
- Artin-Schreier curve
- Kummer theory
- Superellipse
References[]
- ^ Galbraith, S.D.; Paulhus, S.M.; Smart, N.P. (2002). "Arithmetic on superelliptic curves". Mathematics of Computation. 71: 394–405. doi:10.1090/S0025-5718-00-01297-7. MR 1863009.
- Hindry, Marc; Silverman, Joseph H. (2000). Diophantine Geometry: An Introduction. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. 201. Springer-Verlag. p. 361. ISBN 0-387-98981-1. Zbl 0948.11023.
- Koo, Ja Kyung (1991). "On holomorphic differentials of some algebraic function field of one variable over ". Bull. Austral. Math. Soc. 43 (3): 399–405. doi:10.1017/S0004972700029245.
- Lang, Serge (1978). Elliptic Curves: Diophantine Analysis. Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften. 231. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-08489-4.
- Shorey, T.N.; Tijdeman, R. (1986). Exponential Diophantine equations. Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics. 87. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-26826-5. Zbl 0606.10011.
- Smart, N. P. (1998). The Algorithmic Resolution of Diophantine Equations. London Mathematical Society Student Texts. 41. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-64633-2.
- Algebraic curves