The
base locus of a linear system of divisors on a
variety refers to the subvariety of points 'common' to all divisors in the linear system. Geometrically, this corresponds to the common intersection of the varieties. Linear systems may or may not have a base locus – for example, the pencil of affine lines x=a has no common intersection, but given two (nondegenerate) conics in the complex projective plane, they intersect in four points (counting with multiplicity) and thus the pencil they define has these points as base locus. More precisely, suppose that |D| is a complete linear system of divisors on some variety X. Consider the intersection : \operatorname{Bl}(|D|) := \bigcap_{D_\text{eff} \in |D|} \operatorname{Supp} D_\text{eff} \ where \operatorname{Supp} denotes the support of a divisor, and the intersection is taken over all effective divisors D_\text{eff} in the linear system. This is the
base locus of |D| (as a set, at least: there may be more subtle
scheme-theoretic considerations as to what the
structure sheaf of \operatorname{Bl} should be). One application of the notion of base locus is to
nefness of a Cartier divisor class (i.e. complete linear system). Suppose |D| is such a class on a variety X, and C an irreducible curve on X. If C is not contained in the base locus of |D|, then there exists some divisor \tilde D in the class which does not contain C, and so intersects it properly. Basic facts from
intersection theory then tell us that we must have |D| \cdot C \geq 0. The conclusion is that to check nefness of a divisor class, it suffices to compute the intersection number with curves contained in the base locus of the class. So, roughly speaking, the 'smaller' the base locus, the 'more likely' it is that the class is nef. In the modern formulation of algebraic geometry, a complete linear system |D| of (Cartier) divisors on a variety X is viewed as a line bundle \mathcal{O}(D) on X. From this viewpoint, the base locus \operatorname{Bl}(|D|) is the set of common zeroes of all sections of \mathcal{O}(D). A simple consequence is that the bundle is
globally generated if and only if the base locus is empty. The notion of the base locus still makes sense for a non-complete linear system as well: the base locus of it is still the intersection of the supports of all the effective divisors in the system.
Example Consider the
Lefschetz pencil p:\mathfrak{X} \to \mathbb{P}^1 given by two generic sections f,g \in \Gamma(\mathbb{P}^n,\mathcal{O}(d)), so \mathfrak{X} given by the scheme\mathfrak{X} =\text{Proj}\left( \frac{k[s,t][x_0,\ldots,x_n]}{(sf + tg)} \right)This has an associated linear system of divisors since each polynomial, s_0f + t_0g for a fixed [s_0:t_0] \in \mathbb{P}^1 is a divisor in \mathbb{P}^n. Then, the base locus of this system of divisors is the scheme given by the vanishing locus of f,g, so\text{Bl}(\mathfrak{X}) = \text{Proj}\left( \frac{ k[s,t][x_0,\ldots,x_n] }{ (f,g) } \right) == A map determined by a linear system ==