Quadric (projective geometry)

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In mathematics, in the area of projective geometry, a quadric in a projective space is the set of points represented by vectors on which a certain non-trivial quadratic form becomes zero.

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[edit] Definition

Let K be a field and V a (n+1)-dimensional space (n\geq 1) over K. Let F be a non-trivial quadratic form on V. If the point p in PG(n,K) is represented by v \in V (p=<v>), p is in the quadric Q defined by F if and only if F(v) = 0. Quadrics are well-defined in this way, because all vectors representing a specific point are non-zero multiples of each other and F(kv) = k2F(v) due to the definition of a quadratic form.

When n=2, the quadric is also called a conic. When n=3, the quadric is also called a quadratic surface.

[edit] Basis representation and formula

Choosing any basis of V, quadratic forms are exactly those maps from V to K expressible in this way :

F(v)=\sum_{0\leq i\leq j\leq n}a_{ij}X_{i}X_{j}

where (X0,...,Xn) are the coordinates of v with respect to the basis. Our restriction that F cannot be trivial comes down to demanding that not all aij are 0.

An important formula is that for the quadratic form, for all v=(x_{0},...x_{n}),w=(y_{0},...,y_{n}) \in V, a,b \in K :

F(a v +b w)=a^2 F(v)+b^2 F(w) +a b (x_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(w)+\cdots+ x_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(w))

Here \frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(w) stands for the formal derivative :

\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(w)=a_{0i}y_{0}+\cdots+2 a_{ii}y_{i}+\cdots+a_{in}y_{n}

Plugging in a=b=1 and w=v gives us :

2 F(v)=x_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(v)+\cdots+ x_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(v)

[edit] Intersection of lines with quadrics

Examples exist of lines that have no common point with a quadric (as even empty quadrics exists). Let us assume the L contains the point p=<v> \in Q. Let q = < w > be another point on L. All other points on L can be represented for a unique t\in K by tv + w. Searching for other points on L and Q comes down roughly to a linear equation :

F(t v+w)=0\Longleftrightarrow 0=t^2 0+t (x_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(w)+\cdots+ x_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(w))+F(w)

If

x_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(w)+\cdots+ x_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(w)=0

we either have no other solutions (if F(w)\neq 0) or L\subset Q (if F(w) = 0). If

x_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(w)+\cdots+ x_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(w)\neq 0

we have exactly one more common point.

[edit] Tangent space and singularity

Let p = < v > be a point on the quadric Q. We say that q = < w > is in the tangent space of Q at p if q=p or if the line pq = L satisfies :

L\cap Q=L or p

One denotes the tangent space of Q at p by Tp(Q).

Checking whether q, when different from p, is in the tangent space, comes to down checking if L has no unique other common point with Q, and due to the latter, this means :

x_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(w)+\ldots+ x_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(w)=y_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(v)+\ldots+ y_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(v)=0

As 2 F(v)=0, it is obvious that also p itself satisfies this linear equation.

When not all partial derivatives are zero, the equation defines a hyperplane, the tangent hyperplane of Q at p.

When all partial derivatives are zero, the tangent space is the entire space. These points are the singular points of the quadric. A quadric is by definition singular when it has at least one singular point. Singular points can thus be found by solving the equations :

\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(v)=\ldots=\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(v)=0 and F((x_{0},\ldots,x_{n})=0

When the characteristic of the field K is not 2, the last equation is unnecessary as

2 F(v)=x_{0}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{0}}(v)+\cdots+ x_{n}\frac{\partial F}{\partial X_{n}}(v).

As it turns out, quadrics are much trickier when the characteristic is 2.

From these conditions, one easily derives that if the quadric is singular, the singular points on the quadric form a subspace.