An
algebraic hypersurface is an
algebraic variety that may be defined by a single implicit equation of the form :p(x_1, \ldots, x_n)=0, where is a
multivariate polynomial. Generally the polynomial is supposed to be
irreducible. When this is not the case, the hypersurface is not an algebraic variety, but only an
algebraic set. It may depend on the authors or the context whether a reducible polynomial defines a hypersurface. For avoiding ambiguity, the term
irreducible hypersurface is often used. As for algebraic varieties, the coefficients of the defining polynomial may belong to any fixed
field , and the points of the hypersurface are the
zeros of in the
affine space K^n, where is an
algebraically closed extension of . A hypersurface may have
singularities, which are the common zeros, if any, of the defining polynomial and its partial derivatives. In particular, a real algebraic hypersurface is not necessarily a manifold.
Properties Hypersurfaces have some specific properties that are not shared with other algebraic varieties. One of the main such properties is
Hilbert's Nullstellensatz, which asserts that a hypersurface contains a given
algebraic set if and only if the defining polynomial of the hypersurface has a power that belongs to the
ideal generated by the defining polynomials of the algebraic set. A corollary of this theorem is that, if two
irreducible polynomials (or more generally two
square-free polynomials) define the same hypersurface, then one is the product of the other by a nonzero constant. Hypersurfaces are exactly the subvarieties of
dimension of an
affine space of dimension of . This is the geometric interpretation of the fact that, in a polynomial ring over a field, the
height of an ideal is 1 if and only if the ideal is a
principal ideal. In the case of possibly reducible hypersurfaces, this result may be restated as follows: hypersurfaces are exactly the algebraic sets whose all irreducible components have dimension .
Real and rational points A
real hypersurface is a hypersurface that is defined by a polynomial with
real coefficients. In this case the algebraically closed field over which the points are defined is generally the field \mathbb C of
complex numbers. The
real points of a real hypersurface are the points that belong to \mathbb R^n \subset \mathbb C^n. The set of the real points of a real hypersurface is the
real part of the hypersurface. Often, it is left to the context whether the term
hypersurface refers to all points or only to the real part. If the coefficients of the defining polynomial belong to a field that is not
algebraically closed (typically the field of
rational numbers, a
finite field or a
number field), one says that the hypersurface is
defined over , and the points that belong to k^n are
rational over (in the case of the field of rational numbers, "over " is generally omitted). For example, the imaginary
-sphere defined by the equation :x_0^2 +\cdots+x_n^2 +1=0 is a real hypersurface without any real point, which is defined over the rational numbers. It has no rational point, but has many points that are rational over the
Gaussian rationals. ==Projective algebraic hypersurface==