Segre embedding

In mathematics, the Segre embedding is used in projective geometry to consider the cartesian product (of sets) of two projective spaces as a projective variety. It is named after Corrado Segre.

Definition

The Segre map may be defined as the map

σ : P n × P m P ( n + 1 ) ( m + 1 ) 1   {\displaystyle \sigma :P^{n}\times P^{m}\to P^{(n+1)(m+1)-1}\ }

taking a pair of points ( [ X ] , [ Y ] ) P n × P m {\displaystyle ([X],[Y])\in P^{n}\times P^{m}} to their product

σ : ( [ X 0 : X 1 : : X n ] , [ Y 0 : Y 1 : : Y m ] ) [ X 0 Y 0 : X 0 Y 1 : : X i Y j : : X n Y m ]   {\displaystyle \sigma :([X_{0}:X_{1}:\cdots :X_{n}],[Y_{0}:Y_{1}:\cdots :Y_{m}])\mapsto [X_{0}Y_{0}:X_{0}Y_{1}:\cdots :X_{i}Y_{j}:\cdots :X_{n}Y_{m}]\ }

(the XiYj are taken in lexicographical order).

Here, P n {\displaystyle P^{n}} and P m {\displaystyle P^{m}} are projective vector spaces over some arbitrary field, and the notation

[ X 0 : X 1 : : X n ]   {\displaystyle [X_{0}:X_{1}:\cdots :X_{n}]\ }

is that of homogeneous coordinates on the space. The image of the map is a variety, called a Segre variety. It is sometimes written as Σ n , m {\displaystyle \Sigma _{n,m}} .

Discussion

In the language of linear algebra, for given vector spaces U and V over the same field K, there is a natural way to map their cartesian product to their tensor product.

φ : U × V U V .   {\displaystyle \varphi :U\times V\to U\otimes V.\ }

In general, this need not be injective because, for u U {\displaystyle u\in U} , v V {\displaystyle v\in V} and any nonzero c K {\displaystyle c\in K} ,

φ ( u , v ) = u v = c u c 1 v = φ ( c u , c 1 v ) .   {\displaystyle \varphi (u,v)=u\otimes v=cu\otimes c^{-1}v=\varphi (cu,c^{-1}v).\ }

Considering the underlying projective spaces P(U) and P(V), this mapping becomes a morphism of varieties

σ : P ( U ) × P ( V ) P ( U V ) .   {\displaystyle \sigma :P(U)\times P(V)\to P(U\otimes V).\ }

This is not only injective in the set-theoretic sense: it is a closed immersion in the sense of algebraic geometry. That is, one can give a set of equations for the image. Except for notational trouble, it is easy to say what such equations are: they express two ways of factoring products of coordinates from the tensor product, obtained in two different ways as something from U times something from V.

This mapping or morphism σ is the Segre embedding. Counting dimensions, it shows how the product of projective spaces of dimensions m and n embeds in dimension

( m + 1 ) ( n + 1 ) 1 = m n + m + n .   {\displaystyle (m+1)(n+1)-1=mn+m+n.\ }

Classical terminology calls the coordinates on the product multihomogeneous, and the product generalised to k factors k-way projective space.

Properties

The Segre variety is an example of a determinantal variety; it is the zero locus of the 2×2 minors of the matrix ( Z i , j ) {\displaystyle (Z_{i,j})} . That is, the Segre variety is the common zero locus of the quadratic polynomials

Z i , j Z k , l Z i , l Z k , j .   {\displaystyle Z_{i,j}Z_{k,l}-Z_{i,l}Z_{k,j}.\ }

Here, Z i , j {\displaystyle Z_{i,j}} is understood to be the natural coordinate on the image of the Segre map.

The Segre variety Σ n , m {\displaystyle \Sigma _{n,m}} is the categorical product of P n   {\displaystyle P^{n}\ } and P m {\displaystyle P^{m}} .[1] The projection

π X : Σ n , m P n   {\displaystyle \pi _{X}:\Sigma _{n,m}\to P^{n}\ }

to the first factor can be specified by m+1 maps on open subsets covering the Segre variety, which agree on intersections of the subsets. For fixed j 0 {\displaystyle j_{0}} , the map is given by sending [ Z i , j ] {\displaystyle [Z_{i,j}]} to [ Z i , j 0 ] {\displaystyle [Z_{i,j_{0}}]} . The equations Z i , j Z k , l = Z i , l Z k , j   {\displaystyle Z_{i,j}Z_{k,l}=Z_{i,l}Z_{k,j}\ } ensure that these maps agree with each other, because if Z i 0 , j 0 0 {\displaystyle Z_{i_{0},j_{0}}\neq 0} we have [ Z i , j 1 ] = [ Z i 0 , j 0 Z i , j 1 ] = [ Z i 0 , j 1 Z i , j 0 ] = [ Z i , j 0 ] {\displaystyle [Z_{i,j_{1}}]=[Z_{i_{0},j_{0}}Z_{i,j_{1}}]=[Z_{i_{0},j_{1}}Z_{i,j_{0}}]=[Z_{i,j_{0}}]} .

The fibers of the product are linear subspaces. That is, let

π X : Σ n , m P n   {\displaystyle \pi _{X}:\Sigma _{n,m}\to P^{n}\ }

be the projection to the first factor; and likewise π Y {\displaystyle \pi _{Y}} for the second factor. Then the image of the map

σ ( π X ( ) , π Y ( p ) ) : Σ n , m P ( n + 1 ) ( m + 1 ) 1   {\displaystyle \sigma (\pi _{X}(\cdot ),\pi _{Y}(p)):\Sigma _{n,m}\to P^{(n+1)(m+1)-1}\ }

for a fixed point p is a linear subspace of the codomain.

Examples

Quadric

For example with m = n = 1 we get an embedding of the product of the projective line with itself in P3. The image is a quadric, and is easily seen to contain two one-parameter families of lines. Over the complex numbers this is a quite general non-singular quadric. Letting

[ Z 0 : Z 1 : Z 2 : Z 3 ]   {\displaystyle [Z_{0}:Z_{1}:Z_{2}:Z_{3}]\ }

be the homogeneous coordinates on P3, this quadric is given as the zero locus of the quadratic polynomial given by the determinant

det ( Z 0 Z 1 Z 2 Z 3 ) = Z 0 Z 3 Z 1 Z 2 .   {\displaystyle \det \left({\begin{matrix}Z_{0}&Z_{1}\\Z_{2}&Z_{3}\end{matrix}}\right)=Z_{0}Z_{3}-Z_{1}Z_{2}.\ }

Segre threefold

The map

σ : P 2 × P 1 P 5 {\displaystyle \sigma :P^{2}\times P^{1}\to P^{5}}

is known as the Segre threefold. It is an example of a rational normal scroll. The intersection of the Segre threefold and a three-plane P 3 {\displaystyle P^{3}} is a twisted cubic curve.

Veronese variety

The image of the diagonal Δ P n × P n {\displaystyle \Delta \subset P^{n}\times P^{n}} under the Segre map is the Veronese variety of degree two

ν 2 : P n P n 2 + 2 n .   {\displaystyle \nu _{2}:P^{n}\to P^{n^{2}+2n}.\ }

Applications

Because the Segre map is to the categorical product of projective spaces, it is a natural mapping for describing non-entangled states in quantum mechanics and quantum information theory. More precisely, the Segre map describes how to take products of projective Hilbert spaces.[2]

In algebraic statistics, Segre varieties correspond to independence models.

The Segre embedding of P2×P2 in P8 is the only Severi variety of dimension 4.

References

  1. ^ McKernan, James (2010). "Algebraic Geometry Course, Lecture 6: Products and fibre products" (PDF). online course material. Retrieved 11 April 2014.
  2. ^ Gharahi, Masoud; Mancini, Stefano; Ottaviani, Giorgio (2020-10-01). "Fine-structure classification of multiqubit entanglement by algebraic geometry". Physical Review Research. 2 (4): 043003. doi:10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.043003. hdl:2158/1210686.
  • Harris, Joe (1995), Algebraic Geometry: A First Course, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag, ISBN 978-0-387-97716-4
  • Hassett, Brendan (2007), Introduction to Algebraic Geometry, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 154, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511755224, ISBN 978-0-521-69141-3, MR 2324354