The practice of algebraic curves : a second course in algebraic geometry / David Eisenbud and Joe Harris.
Material type:
TextSeries: Graduate studies in mathematics ; 249.Publication details: Providence, Rhode Island : American Mathematical Society, 2025.Edition: First editionDescription: xxii, 612 pages : illustrations ; 26 cmISBN: - 9781470479435
- 23 516.352 Ei36
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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| Books | ISI Library, Kolkata | 516.352 Ei36 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 138839 |
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| 516.352 D225 Curious curves | 516.352 Eh33 Cube made interesting | 516.352 Eh33 Cube made interesting | 516.352 Ei36 The practice of algebraic curves : a second course in algebraic geometry / | 516.352 F974 Algebraic curves : an introduction to algebraic geometry | 516.352 G197 Lectures on the theory of plane curves | 516.352 G448 Elementary geometry of algebraic curves: an undergraduate introduction |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Plane algebraic curves -- Divisors and linear systems -- Projective varieties -- Morphisms and rational maps -- Riemann-Roch theorem -- Singularities and normalization -- Intersection theory -- Moduli of curves -- Brill-Noether theory -- Computational methods and examples.
This advanced graduate-level textbook provides a comprehensive introduction to algebraic curves and modern algebraic geometry through a strongly example-driven and computational approach. Building upon foundational ideas in algebra, geometry, and topology, the book develops the theory of plane curves, divisors, linear systems, projective varieties, and morphisms while emphasizing geometric intuition and practical techniques. The authors systematically introduce core concepts such as singularities, normalization, intersection multiplicities, Riemann-Roch theory, moduli spaces, and Brill-Noether theory, illustrating how abstract algebraic methods can be applied to concrete geometric problems. Numerous worked examples, exercises, and computational perspectives help readers understand both the classical and modern aspects of algebraic geometry. Designed for graduate students and researchers, the work serves as a second course in algebraic geometry and an accessible bridge to advanced research literature in algebraic and arithmetic geometry.
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