Linear pencils encoded in the Newton polygon
Abstract
Let C be an algebraic curve defined by a sufficiently generic bivariate Laurent polynomial with given Newton polygon . It is classical that the geometric genus of C equals the number of lattice points in the interior of . In this paper we give similar combinatorial interpretations for the gonality, the Clifford index and the Clifford dimension, by removing a technical assumption from a recent result of Kawaguchi. More generally, the method shows that apart from certain well-understood exceptions, every base-point free pencil whose degree equals or slightly exceeds the gonality is 'combinatorial', in the sense that it corresponds to projecting C along a lattice direction. We then give an interpretation for the scrollar invariants associated to a combinatorial pencil, and show how one can tell whether the pencil is complete or not. Among the applications, we find that every smooth projective curve admits at most one Weierstrass semi-group of embedding dimension 2, and that if a non-hyperelliptic smooth projective curve C of genus g ≥ 2 can be embedded in the nth Hirzebruch surface Hn, then n is actually an invariant of C.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.