The combinatorics of plane curve singularities. How Newton polygons blossom into lotuses
Evelia R. Garc\'ia Barroso, Pedro D. Gonz\'alez P\'erez, Patrick, Popescu-Pampu

TL;DR
This survey explores how toric and tropical geometry, through Newton polygons and lotus structures, provides a unified geometric framework for understanding plane curve singularities and their combinatorial types.
Contribution
It introduces the lotus as a geometric tool that unifies various combinatorial encodings of plane curve singularities derived from Newton polygons.
Findings
The lotus embeds Eggers-Wall trees, Enriques diagrams, and dual graphs.
Newton polygons from toric resolutions form the basis of the lotus.
The approach offers a geometric perspective on combinatorial types.
Abstract
This survey may be seen as an introduction to the use of toric and tropical geometry in the analysis of plane curve singularities, which are germs of complex analytic curves contained in a smooth complex analytic surface . The embedded topological type of such a pair is usually defined to be that of the oriented link obtained by intersecting with a sufficiently small oriented Euclidean sphere centered at the point , defined once a system of local coordinates was chosen on the germ . If one works more generally over an arbitrary algebraically closed field of characteristic zero, one speaks instead of the combinatorial type of . One may define it by looking either at the Newton-Puiseux series associated to relative to a generic local coordinate system , or at the set of infinitely near points which have to be blown up in order…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolynomial and algebraic computation · Commutative Algebra and Its Applications · Algebraic Geometry and Number Theory
