In mathematics, a polynomial lemniscate or polynomial level curve is a plane algebraic curve of degree 2n, constructed from a polynomial p with complex coefficients of degree n.
For any such polynomial p and positive real number c, we may define a set of complex numbers by
|p(z)|=c.
p(z)\barp(\barz)
When p is a polynomial of degree 1 then the resulting curve is simply a circle whose center is the zero of p. When p is a polynomial of degree 2 then the curve is a Cassini oval.
A conjecture of Erdős which has attracted considerable interest concerns the maximum length of a polynomial lemniscate ƒ(x, y) = 1 of degree 2n when p is monic, which Erdős conjectured was attained when p(z) = zn - 1.This is still not proved but Fryntov and Nazarov proved that p gives alocal maximum.[1] In the case when n = 2, the Erdős lemniscate is the Lemniscate of Bernoulli
(x2+y2)2=2(x2-y2)
and it has been proven that this is indeed the maximal length in degree four. The Erdős lemniscate has three ordinary n-fold points, one of which is at the origin, and a genus of (n - 1)(n - 2)/2. By inverting the Erdős lemniscate in the unit circle, one obtains a nonsingular curve of degree n.
In general, a polynomial lemniscate will not touch at the origin, and will have only two ordinary n-fold singularities, and hence a genus of (n - 1)2. As a real curve, it can have a number of disconnected components. Hence, it will not look like a lemniscate, making the name something of a misnomer.
An interesting example of such polynomial lemniscates are the Mandelbrot curves.If we set p0 = z, and pn = pn-12 + z, then the corresponding polynomial lemniscates Mn defined by |pn(z)| = 2 converge to the boundary of the Mandelbrot set.[2] The Mandelbrot curves are of degree 2n+1.[3]