Algebraic Geometry (book) explained

Algebraic Geometry
Border:yes
Author:Robin Hartshorne
Language:English
Subject:Algebraic geometry
Genre:Textbook
Published:1977

Algebraic Geometry is an algebraic geometry textbook written by Robin Hartshorne and published by Springer-Verlag in 1977.[1]

Importance

It was the first extended treatment of scheme theory written as a text intended to be accessible to graduate students.

Contents

The first chapter, titled "Varieties", deals with the classical algebraic geometry of varieties over algebraically closed fields. This chapter uses many classical results in commutative algebra, including Hilbert's Nullstellensatz, with the books by Atiyah - Macdonald, Matsumura, and Zariski - Samuel as usual references. The second and the third chapters, "Schemes" and "Cohomology", form the technical heart of the book. The last two chapters, "Curves" and "Surfaces", respectively explore the geometry of 1- and 2-dimensional objects, using the tools developed in the chapters 2 and 3.

References

Notes and References

  1. [MathSciNet]