Cayley–Bacharach theorem


In mathematics, the Cayley–Bacharach theorem is a statement about cubic curves in the projective plane. The original form states:
A more intrinsic form of the Cayley–Bacharach theorem reads as follows:
A related result on conics was first proved by the French geometer Michel Chasles and later generalized to cubics by Arthur Cayley and.

Details

If seven of the points lie on a conic, then the ninth point can be chosen on that conic, since will always contain the whole conic on account of Bézout's theorem. In other cases, we have the following.
In that case, every cubic through also passes through the intersection of any two different cubics through, which has at least nine points on account of Bézout's theorem. These points cannot be covered by only, which gives us.
Since degenerate conics are a union of at most two lines, there are always four out of seven points on a degenerate conic that are collinear. Consequently:
On the other hand, assume are collinear and no seven points out of are co-conic. Then no five points of and no three points of are collinear. Since will always contain the whole line through on account of Bézout's theorem, the vector space of cubic homogeneous polynomials that vanish on is isomorphic to the vector space of quadratic homogeneous polynomials that vanish , which has dimension two.
Although the sets of conditions for both dimension two results are different, they are both strictly weaker than full general positions: three points are allowed to be collinear, and six points are allowed to lie on a conic. For the Cayley-Bacharach theorem, it is necessary to have a family of cubics passing through the nine points, rather than a single one.
According to Bézout's theorem, two different cubic curves over an algebraically closed field which have no common irreducible component meet in exactly nine points. The Cayley-Bacharach theorem thus asserts that the last point of intersection of any two members in the family of curves does not move if eight intersection points are already prescribed.

Applications

A special case is Pascal's theorem, in which case the two cubics in question are all degenerate: given six points on a conic, consider the lines obtained by extending opposite sides – this yields two cubics of three lines each, which intersect in 9 points – the 6 points on the conic, and 3 others. These 3 additional points lie on a line, as the conic plus the line through any two of the points is a cubic passing through 8 of the points.
A second application is Pappus's hexagon theorem, similar to the above, but the six points are on two lines instead of on a conic.
Finally, a third case is found on the associativity of the group of elliptic curves. Let a first cubic contain the three lines BC, O and A; and a second cubic containing the three lines AB, O and C. The following eight points are common to both cubics: A, B, C, A+B, -A-B, B+C, -B-C, O. Hence their ninth points must be the same -A-=--C, giving the associativity.

Dimension counting

One can understand the Cayley–Bacharach theorem, and why it arises for degree 3, by dimension counting. Simply stated, nine points determine a cubic, but in general define a unique cubic. Thus if the nine points lie on more than one cubic, equivalently on the intersection of two cubics, they are not in general position – they are overdetermined by one dimension – and thus cubics passing through them satisfying one additional constraint, as reflected in the "eight implies nine" property. The general phenomenon is called superabundance; see Riemann–Roch theorem for surfaces.

Details

Formally, first recall that given two curves of degree, they define a pencil of degree curves by taking projective linear combinations of the defining equations; this corresponds to two points determining a projective line in the parameter space of curves, which is simply projective space.
The Cayley–Bacharach theorem arises for high degree because the number of intersection points of two curves of degree, namely , grows faster than the number of points needed to define a curve of degree, which is given by
These first agree for, which is why the Cayley–Bacharach theorem occurs for cubics, and for higher degree is greater, hence the higher degree generalizations.
In detail, the number of points required to determine a curve of degree is the number of monomials of degree, minus 1 from projectivization. For the first few these yield:
Thus these first agree for 3, and the number of intersections is larger when.
The meaning of this is that the 9 points of intersection of two cubics are in special position with respect to cubics, a fortiori for higher degree, but unlike for lower degree: two lines intersect in a point, which is trivially in general linear position, and two quadratics intersect in four points, which are in general quadratic position because five points determine a quadratic, and any four points have a pencil of quadratics through them, since the system is underdetermined. For cubics, nine points determine a cubic, but in general they determine a unique cubic – thus having two different cubics pass through them is special – the solution space is one dimension higher than expected, and thus the solutions satisfy an additional constraint, namely the "8 implies 9" property.
More concretely, because the vector space of homogeneous polynomials of degree three in three variables has dimension, the system of cubic curves passing through eight points is parametrized by a vector space of dimension . It can be shown that the dimension is exactly two if no four of the points are collinear and no seven points lie on a conic. The Cayley-Bacharach theorem can be deduced from this fact.