On rich points and incidences with restricted sets of lines in 3-space

Abstract

Let L be a set of n lines in R3 that is contained, when represented as points in the four-dimensional Pl\"ucker space of lines in R3, in an irreducible variety T of constant degree which is non-degenerate with respect to L (see below). We show: (1) If T is two-dimensional, the number of r-rich points (points incident to at least r lines of L) is O(n4/3+ε/r2), for r 3 and for any ε>0, and, if at most n1/3 lines of L lie on any common regulus, there are at most O(n4/3+ε) 2-rich points. For r larger than some sufficiently large constant, the number of r-rich points is also O(n/r). As an application, we deduce (with an ε-loss in the exponent) the bound obtained by Pach and de Zeeuw (2107) on the number of distinct distances determined by n points on an irreducible algebraic curve of constant degree in the plane that is not a line nor a circle. (2) If T is two-dimensional, the number of incidences between L and a set of m points in R3 is O(m+n). (3) If T is three-dimensional and nonlinear, the number of incidences between L and a set of m points in R3 is O(m3/5n3/5 + (m11/15n2/5 + m1/3n2/3)s1/3 + m + n ), provided that no plane contains more than s of the points. When s = O(\n3/5/m2/5, m1/2\), the bound becomes O(m3/5n3/5+m+n). As an application, we prove that the number of incidences between m points and n lines in R4 contained in a quadratic hypersurface (which does not contain a hyperplane) is O(m3/5n3/5 + m + n). The proofs use, in addition to various tools from algebraic geometry, recent bounds on the number of incidences between points and algebraic curves in the plane.

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