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  2. Ruled variety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruled_variety

    A variety X over an uncountable algebraically closed field k is uniruled if and only if there is a rational curve passing through every k-point of X. By contrast, there are varieties over the algebraic closure k of a finite field which are not uniruled but have a rational curve through every k-point.

  3. Rational variety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_variety

    Equivalently, a variety is rationally connected if every two points are connected by a rational curve contained in the variety. [3] This definition differs from that of path connectedness only by the nature of the path, but is very different, as the only algebraic curves which are rationally connected are the rational ones.

  4. Minimal model program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimal_model_program

    Every irreducible complex algebraic curve is birational to a unique smooth projective curve, so the theory for curves is trivial. The case of surfaces was first investigated by the geometers of the Italian school around 1900; the contraction theorem of Guido Castelnuovo essentially describes the process of constructing a minimal model of any smooth projective surface.

  5. Enriques–Kodaira classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enriques–Kodaira...

    Chern numbers of minimal complex surfaces. The Enriques–Kodaira classification of compact complex surfaces states that every nonsingular minimal compact complex surface is of exactly one of the 10 types listed on this page; in other words, it is one of the rational, ruled (genus > 0), type VII, K3, Enriques, Kodaira, toric, hyperelliptic, properly quasi-elliptic, or general type surfaces.

  6. Kodaira dimension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodaira_dimension

    To give some simple examples: the product P 1 × X has Kodaira dimension for any curve X; the product of two curves of genus 1 (an abelian surface) has Kodaira dimension 0; the product of a curve of genus 1 with a curve of genus at least 2 (an elliptic surface) has Kodaira dimension 1; and the product of two curves of genus at least 2 has ...

  7. Convexity (algebraic geometry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convexity_(algebraic_geometry)

    A variety is called convex if the pullback of the tangent bundle to a stable rational curve: has globally generated sections. [2] Geometrically this implies the curve is free to move around infinitesimally without any obstruction. Convexity is generally phrased as the technical condition

  8. Fano variety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fano_variety

    In dimension 3, there are smooth complex Fano varieties which are not rational, for example cubic 3-folds in P 4 (by Clemens - Griffiths) and quartic 3-folds in P 4 (by Iskovskikh - Manin). Iskovskih ( 1977 , 1978 , 1979 ) classified the smooth Fano 3-folds with second Betti number 1 into 17 classes, and Mori & Mukai (1981) classified the ...

  9. Abelian variety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abelian_variety

    Jacobians of curves are naturally equipped with a principal polarisation as soon as one picks an arbitrary rational base point on the curve, and the curve can be reconstructed from its polarised Jacobian when the genus is >. Not all principally polarised abelian varieties are Jacobians of curves; see the Schottky problem.