Tacnode
In classical algebraic geometry, a tacnode (also called a point of osculation or double cusp)[1] is a kind of singular point of a curve. It is defined as a point where two (or more) osculating circles to the curve at that point are tangent. This means that two branches of the curve have ordinary tangency at the double point.[1]
The canonical example is
A tacnode of an arbitrary curve may then be defined from this example, as a point of self-tangency locally diffeomorphic to the point at the origin of this curve. Another example of a tacnode is given by the links curve shown in the figure, with equation
More general background
Consider a smooth real-valued function of two variables, say f(x, y) where x and y are real numbers. So f is a function from the plane to the line. The space of all such smooth functions is acted upon by the group of diffeomorphisms of the plane and the diffeomorphisms of the line, i.e. diffeomorphic changes of coordinate in both the source and the target. This action splits the whole function space up into equivalence classes, i.e. orbits of the group action.
One such family of equivalence classes is denoted by Ak±, where k is a non-negative integer. This notation was introduced by V. I. Arnold. A function f is said to be of type Ak± if it lies in the orbit of x2 ± yk+1, i.e. there exists a diffeomorphic change of coordinate in source and target which takes f into one of these forms. These simple forms x2 ± yk+1 are said to give normal forms for the type Ak±-singularities.
A curve with equation f = 0 will have a tacnode, say at the origin, if and only if f has a type A3−-singularity at the origin.
Notice that a node (x2 − y2 = 0) corresponds to a type A1−-singularity. A tacnode corresponds to a type A3−-singularity. In fact each type A2n+1−-singularity, where n ≥ 0 is an integer, corresponds to a curve with self intersection. As n increases the order of self intersection increases: transverse crossing, ordinary tangency, etc.
The type A2n+1+-singularities are of no interest over the real numbers: they all give an isolated point. Over the complex numbers type A2n+1+-singularities and type A2n+1−-singularities are equivalent: (x,y) → (x, iy) gives the required diffeomorphism of the normal forms.
See also
References
- 1 2 Schwartzman, Steven (1994), The Words of Mathematics: An Etymological Dictionary of Mathematical Terms Used in English, MAA Spectrum, Mathematical Association of America, p. 217, ISBN 9780883855119.