The book was easy to understand, with many examples. The exercises were well chosen, and served to give further examples and developments of the theory. --William Goldman, University of Maryland In this book, Miranda takes the approach that algebraic curves are best encountered for the first time over the complex numbers, where the reader's classical intuition about surfaces, integration, and other concepts can be brought into play. Therefore, many examples of algebraic curves are presented in the first chapters. In this way, the book begins as a primer on Riemann surfaces, with complex charts and meromorphic functions taking center stage. But the main examples come from projective curves, and slowly but surely the text moves toward the algebraic category. Proofs of the Riemann-Roch and Serre Duality Theorems are presented in an algebraic manner, via an adaptation of the adelic proof, expressed completely in terms of solving a Mittag-Leffler problem. Sheaves and cohomology are introduced as a unifying device in the latter chapters, so that their utility and naturalness are immediately obvious. Requiring a background of one semester of complex variable theory and a year of abstract algebra, this is an excellent graduate textbook for a second-semester course in complex variables or a year-long course in algebraic geometry.
Author(s): Rick Miranda
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Year: 1995
Language: English
Pages: 390
Contents
Preface
Chapter I. Riemann Surfaces: Basic Definitions
Chapter II. Functions and Maps
Chapter III. More Examples of Riemann Surfaces
Chapter IV. Integration on Riemann Surfaces
Chapter V. Divisors and Meromorphic Functions
Chapter VI. Algebraic Curves and the Riemann-Roch Theorem
Chapter VII. Applications of Riemann-Roch
Chapter VIII. Abel's Theorem
Chapter IX. Sheaves and Cech Cohomology
Chapter X. Algebraic Sheaves
Chapter XI. Invertible Sheaves, Line Bundles, and H1
References
Index of Notation
Index of Terminology