I have two questions: 1. Can a irreducible rational curve have infinitely self intersections? 2.

Thomas Hubbard

Thomas Hubbard

Answered question

2022-05-21

I have two questions:
1. Can a irreducible rational curve have infinitely self intersections?
2. If f has rational coefficients and the solutions for 0 = f ( x , y ) k [ x , y ] are parametrized by rational functions with rational coefficients of some parameter t, then the image of this parametrization over the rationals miss only finitely many rational points.
It is not clear to me why only finitely many points were missed. My first guess is some what related to rational points are dense. Can someone elaborate a bit geometric intuition on 2 and how to prove it(I think hint will suffice)?

Answer & Explanation

Miriam Payne

Miriam Payne

Beginner2022-05-22Added 10 answers

I think it not possible for any plane algebraic curve C to have infinitely many self-intersections. If p is a self-intersection then locally around p curve looks like f = f 1 f 2 = 0, thus d f | p = 0. So, infinitely many points of self-intersection give us infinitely many points where d f = 0 or infinitely many zeroes of the system of equations f = 0, f x = 0 and f y = 0. But if two polynomials of two variables have infinitely many common zeroes they have a common irreducible component. Therefore, f x = 0 and f y = 0 along C a and any point of C is singular. That is not possible because singular points form a closed subset of a variety.
2. If you get such parametrization you curve is necessarily rational. This is because existence of rational map from P 1 to the curve tell us that the curve is unirational. On the other hand Luroth's theorem tells us that any unirational curve is rational.

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