Unicursal curve
A plane curve which may be traversed such that the points of self-intersection are visited only twice. For a curve to be unicursal it is necessary and sufficient that there are at most two points through which there pass an odd number of paths. If
is a plane algebraic curve of order
having the maximum number
of double points (including improper and imaginary ones), then
(where a point of multiplicity
is counted as
double points).
Every integral , where
is the function of
defined by the equation
giving an algebraic unicursal curve and
is a rational function, can be reduced to an integral of a rational function and can be expressed in terms of elementary functions.
Comments
In algebraic geometry, a unicursal curve is a rational curve, i.e. a curve that admits a parametric representation
,
with
and
rational functions. Such a curve is an algebraic curve of effective genus
. For every irreducible curve
there exists a birationally equivalent non-singular curve
. This
is unique up to isomorphism. The genus of
is called the effective genus of
. The unicursal curves are the irreducible algebraic curves of effective genus zero. This (more or less) agrees with the general geometric definition above, in that the parametrization provides a "traversion" .
References
[a1] | R.J. Walker, "Algebraic curves" , Dover, reprint (1950) pp. 149–151 |
[a2] | P.A. Griffiths, J.E. Harris, "Principles of algebraic geometry" , Wiley (Interscience) (1978) pp. 178; 674; 179; 349; 525; 532; 535; 632; 743 |
Unicursal curve. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Unicursal_curve&oldid=12032