K3 surface
From Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium
In complex geometry and in algebraic geometry K3 surfaces are the 2-dimensional analog of elliptic curves. The complex and algebro-geometric definitions are slightly different, and coincide in the case where the surface is an algebraic K3 surface over the complex numbers.
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The algebro-geometric definition
In algebraic geometry a surface S is a K3 surface if it is smooth, projective, with trivial canonical bundle, and such that h1(OS) = 0. In this case one automatically gets: h2(OS) = 1.
Examples
- If
is a smooth curve of degree 6 and
is the double cover of
branched along C, then S K3 surface; indeed in the Picard group of S we have
. A similar claim hods even if the curve C is singular; the modification is that now one has to consider the normalization of the branch double cover. Specifically if the curve C is a six lines tangent to a conic, then on recovers for the double cover model of a Kummer surface.
- A quartic surface in
- A complete intersection of a quadric and a cubic hyper-surfaces in
- A complete intersection of three quadric hypersurfaces in
In the last three examples one may verify that the canonical bundle is trivial using adjunction formula
Polarization
Complex definition
In complex geometry a surface is complete smooth simply connected surface with trivial canonical class.

