Complex geometry is concerned with the study of
complex manifolds, and
complex algebraic and
complex analytic varieties. In this section, these types of spaces are defined and the relationships between them presented. A
complex manifold is a
topological space X such that: • X is
Hausdorff and
second countable. • X is locally
homeomorphic to an open subset of \mathbb{C}^n for some n. That is, for every point p\in X, there is an
open neighbourhood U of p and a homeomorphism \varphi: U \to V to an open subset V\subseteq \mathbb{C}^n. Such open sets are called
charts. • If (U_1,\varphi) and (U_2,\psi) are any two overlapping charts which map onto open sets V_1, V_2 of \mathbb{C}^n respectively, then the
transition function \psi \circ \varphi^{-1}:\varphi(U_1\cap U_2) \to \psi(U_1\cap U_2) is a
biholomorphism. Notice that since every biholomorphism is a
diffeomorphism, and \mathbb{C}^n is isomorphism as a
real vector space to \mathbb{R}^{2n}, every complex manifold of dimension n is in particular a smooth manifold of dimension 2n, which is always an even number. In contrast to complex manifolds which are always smooth, complex geometry is also concerned with possibly singular spaces. An
affine complex analytic variety is a subset X\subseteq \mathbb{C}^n such that about each point p\in X, there is an open neighbourhood U of p and a collection of finitely many holomorphic functions f_1, \dots, f_k: U \to \mathbb{C} such that X\cap U = \{z\in U \mid f_1(z) = \cdots = f_k(z) = 0\} = Z(f_1,\dots,f_k). By convention we also require the set X to be
irreducible. A point p\in X is
singular if the
Jacobian matrix of the vector of holomorphic functions (f_1,\dots,f_k) does not have full rank at p, and
non-singular otherwise. A
projective complex analytic variety is a subset X\subseteq \mathbb{CP}^n of
complex projective space that is, in the same way, locally given by the zeroes of a finite collection of holomorphic functions on open subsets of \mathbb{CP}^n. One may similarly define an
affine complex algebraic variety to be a subset X\subseteq \mathbb{C}^n which is locally given as the zero set of finitely many polynomials in n complex variables. To define a
projective complex algebraic variety, one requires the subset X\subseteq \mathbb{CP}^n to locally be given by the zero set of finitely many
homogeneous polynomials. In order to define a general complex algebraic or complex analytic variety, one requires the notion of a
locally ringed space. A
complex algebraic/analytic variety is a locally ringed space (X,\mathcal{O}_X) which is locally isomorphic as a locally ringed space to an affine complex algebraic/analytic variety. In the analytic case, one typically allows X to have a topology that is locally equivalent to the subspace topology due to the identification with open subsets of \mathbb{C}^n, whereas in the algebraic case X is often equipped with a
Zariski topology. Again we also by convention require this locally ringed space to be irreducible. Since the definition of a singular point is local, the definition given for an affine analytic/algebraic variety applies to the points of any complex analytic or algebraic variety. The set of points of a variety X which are singular is called the
singular locus, denoted X^{sing}, and the complement is the
non-singular or
smooth locus, denoted X^{nonsing}. We say a complex variety is
smooth or
non-singular if it's singular locus is empty. That is, if it is equal to its non-singular locus. By the
implicit function theorem for holomorphic functions, every complex manifold is in particular a non-singular complex analytic variety, but is not in general affine or projective. By Serre's GAGA theorem, every projective complex analytic variety is actually a projective complex algebraic variety. When a complex variety is non-singular, it is a complex manifold. More generally, the non-singular locus of
any complex variety is a complex manifold. == Types of complex spaces ==