Complex algebraic variety

From HandWiki
The Riemann sphere is one of the simplest complex algebraic varieties.

In algebraic geometry, a complex algebraic variety is an algebraic variety (in the scheme sense or otherwise) over the field of complex numbers.[1]

Chow's theorem

Chow's theorem states that a projective analytic variety; i.e., a closed analytic subvariety of the complex projective space [math]\displaystyle{ \mathbb{C}\mathbf{P}^n }[/math] is an algebraic variety; it is usually simply referred to as a projective variety.

Hironaka's theorem

Let X be a complex algebraic variety. Then there is a projective resolution of singularities [math]\displaystyle{ X' \to X }[/math].[2]

Relation with similar concepts

Not every complex analytic variety is algebraic, though.

See also

References

  1. Parshin, Alexei N., and Igor Rostislavovich Shafarevich, eds. Algebraic Geometry III: Complex Algebraic Varieties. Algebraic Curves and Their Jacobians. Vol. 3. Springer, 1998. ISBN:3-540-54681-2
  2. (Abramovich 2017)

Bibliography