Real hyperelliptic curve

A hyperelliptic curve is a class of algebraic curves. Hyperelliptic curves exist for every genus g \geq 1. The general formula of Hyperelliptic curve over a finite field K is given by

C : y^2 + h(x) y = f(x) \in K[x,y]

where h(x), f(x) \in K satisfy certain conditions. There are two types of hyperelliptic curves: real hyperelliptic curves and imaginary hyperelliptic curves which differ by the number of points at infinity. In this page, we describe more about real hyperelliptic curves, these are curves having two points at infinity while imaginary hyperelliptic curves have one point at infinity.

Definition

A real hyperelliptic curve of genus g over K is defined by an equation of the form C:y^2+h(x)y=f(x) where h(x) \in K has degree not larger than g+1 while f(x) \in K must have degree 2g+1 or 2g+2. This curve is a non singular curve where no point (x,y) in the algebraic closure of K satisfies the curve equation y^2+h(x)y=f(x) and both partial derivative equations: 2y+h(x)=0 and h'(x)y=f'(x). The set of (finite)  K–rational points on C is given by

C(K) = \{ (a,b) \in K^2 | b^2 + h(a) b = f(a) \} \cup  S

Where S is the set of points at infinity. For real hyperelliptic curves, there are two points at infinity, \infty_1 and \infty_2. For any point P(a,b)\in C(K), the opposite point of P is given by \overline{P} = (a, -b-h); it is the other point with x-coordinate a that also lies on the curve.

Example

Let C: y^2=f(x) where

f(x)=x^6+3x^5-5x^4-15x^3+4x^2+12x=x(x-1)(x-2)(x+1)(x+2)(x+3) \,

over R. Since \deg f(x) = 2g+2 and f(x) has degree 6, thus C is a curve of genus g = 2.


The homogeneous version of the curve equation is given by

Y^2Z^4=X^6+3X^5Z-5X^4Z^2-15X^3Z^3+4X^2Z^4+12XZ^5.

It has a single point at infinity given by (0:1:0) but this point is singular. The blowup of C has 2 different points at infinity, which we denote \infty_1 and \infty_2 . Hence this curve is an example of a real hyperelliptic curve.

In general, every curve given by an equation where f has even degee has two points at infinity and is a real hyperelliptic curve while those where f has odd degree have only a single point in the blowup over (0:1:0) and are thus imaginary hyperelliptic curves. In both cases this assumes that the affine part of the curve is nonsingular (see the conditions on the derivatives above)

Arithmetic in a real hyperelliptic curve

In real hyperelliptic curve, addition is no longer defined on points as in elliptic curves but on divisors and the Jacobian. Let C be a hyperelliptic curve of genus g over a finite field K. A divisor D on C is a formal finite sum of points P on C. We write

D = \sum_{P \in C}{n_P P} where n_P \in\Z and n_p=0 for almost all P.

The degree of D= \sum_{P \in C}{n_P P} is defined by

\deg(D) = \sum_{P \in C}{n_P} .

D is said to be defined over K if D^\sigma=\sum_{P \in C}n_P P^\sigma=D for all automorphisms σ of \overline{K} over K . The set Div(K) of divisors of C defined over K forms an additive abelian group under the addition rule

\sum a_PP + \sum b_PP = \sum {(a_P + b_P) P}.

The set Div^0 (K) of all degree zero divisors of C defined over K is a subgroup of Div(K).

We take an example:

Let D_1=6P_1+ 4P_2 and D_2=1P_1+ 5P_2. If we add them then D_1+ D_2=7P_1+ 9P_2. The degree of D_1 is \deg(D_1)=6+4=10 and the degree of D_2 is \deg(D_2)=1+5=6. Then, \deg(D_1+D_2)=deg(D_1)+deg(D_2)=16.

For polynomials G\in K[C], the divisor of G is defined by

\mathrm{div}(G)=\sum_{P\in C} {\mathrm{ord}}_P(G)P. If the function

G has a pole at a point P then -{\mathrm{ord}}_P (G) is the order of vanishing of G at P. Assume G, H are polynomials in K[C]; the divisor of the rational function F=G/H is called a principal divisor and is defined by \mathrm{div}(F)=\mathrm{div}(G)-\mathrm{div}(H). We denote the group of principal divisors by P(K), i.e. P(K)={\mathrm{div}(F)|F \in K(C)}. The Jacobian of C over K is defined by J=Div^0/P. The factor group J is also called the divisor class group of C. The elements which are defined over K form the group J(K). We denote by \overline{D}\in J(K) the class of D in Div^0 (K)/P(K).

There are two canonical ways of representing divisor classes for real hyperelliptic curves C which have two points infinity S=\{\infty_1,\infty_2 \}. The first one is to represent a degree zero divisor by  \bar{D}such that D=\sum_{i=1}^r P_i-r\infty_2, where P_i \in C(\bar{\mathbb{F}}_q),P_i\not= \infty_2, and P_i\not=\bar{P_j} if  i\not=j The representative D of \bar{D} is then called semi reduced. If D satisfies the additional condition r \leq g then the representative D is called reduced.[1] Notice that P_i=\infty_1 is allowed for some i. It follows that every degree 0 divisor class contain a unique representative \bar{D} with

D= D_x-deg(D_x ) \infty_2+v_1 (D)(\infty_1-\infty_2),

where D_x is divisor that is coprime with both

\infty_1 and \infty_2, and  0\leq deg(D_x )+v_1(D)\leq g.

The other representation is balanced at infinity. Let D_\infty=\infty_1+\infty_2 , note that this divisor is K-rational even if the points \infty_1 and \infty_2 are not independently so. Write the representative of the class \bar{D} as D=D_1+D_\infty, where D_1 is called the affine part and does not contain \infty_1 and \infty_2, and let d=\deg(D_1). If d is even then

D_\infty= \frac{d}{2}(\infty_1+\infty_2).

If d is odd then

D_\infty= \frac{d+1}{2} \infty_1+\frac{d-1}{2} \infty_2.[2]

For example, let the affine parts of two divisors be given by

D_1=6P_1+ 4P_2 and D_2=1P_1+ 5P_2

then the balanced divisors are

D_1=6P_1+ 4P_2- 5D_{\infty_1} -5D_{\infty_2} and D_2=1P_1+ 5P_2- 3D_{\infty_1} -3D_{\infty_2}

Transformation from real hyperelliptic curve to imaginary hyperelliptic curve

Let C be a real quadratic curve over a field K. If there exists a ramified prime divisor of degree 1 in K then we are able to perform a birational transformation to an imaginary quadratic curve. A (finite or infinite) point is said to be ramified if it is equal to its own opposite. It means that P =(a,b) = \overline{P}=(a, -b-h(a)), i.e. that h(a)+ 2b=0. If P is ramified then D=P-\infty_1 is a ramified prime divisor.[3]

The real hyperelliptic curve C:y^2+h(x)y=f(x) of genus g with a ramified K-rational finite point P=(a,b) is birationally equivalent to an imaginary model C':y'^2+\bar{h}(x')y'=\bar{f}(x') of genus g, i.e. \deg(\bar{f})=2g+1 and the function fields are equal K(C)=K(C').[4] Here:

x'= \frac{1}{x-a} and y'= \frac{y+b}{(x-a)^{g+1}} … (i)

In our example C: y^2=f(x) where f(x)=x^6+3x^5-5x^4-15x^3+4x^2+12x, h(x) is equal to 0. For any point P=(a,b), h(a) is equal to 0 and so the requirement for P to be ramified becomes b=0. Substituting h(a) and b, we obtain f(a)=0, where f(a)=a(a-1)(a-2)(a+1)(a+2)(a+3), i.e. a\in\{0,1,2,-1,-2,-3\}.

From (i), we obtain x= \frac {ax'+1}{x'} and y= \frac{y'}{x'^{g+1}} . For g=2, we have y= \frac{y'}{x'^3}

For example, let a=1 then x= \frac{x'+1}{x'} and y= \frac{y'}{x'^3} , we obtain

\left(\frac{y'}{x'^3 }\right)^2=\frac {x'+1}{x'} \left(\frac {x'+1}{x'}+1\right)\left(\frac {x'+1}{x'}+2\right)\left(\frac {x'+1}{x'}+3\right)\left(\frac {x'+1}{x'}-1\right)\left(\frac {x'+1}{x'}-2\right).

To remove the denominators this expression is multiplied by x^6, then:

 y'^2=(x'+1)(2x'+1)(3x'+1)(4x'+1)(1)(1-x') \,

giving the curve

C' :  y'^2=\bar{f}(x') where  \bar{f}(x')=(x'+1)(2x'+1)(3x'+1)(4x'+1)(1)(1-x')= -24x'^5-26x'^4+15x'^3+25x'^2+9x'+1 .

C' is an imaginary quadratic curve since \bar{f}(x') has degree 2g+1.

References

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