In mathematics, the Veronese surface is an algebraic surface in five-dimensional projective space, and is realized by the Veronese embedding, the embedding of the projective plane given by the complete linear system of conics.
It is named after Giuseppe Veronese (1854–1917).
Its generalization to higher dimension is known as the Veronese variety.
The surface admits an embedding in the four-dimensional projective space defined by the projection from a general point in the five-dimensional space.
Its general projection to three-dimensional projective space is called a Steiner surface.
The Veronese surface is the image of the mapping given by where
denotes homogeneous coordinates.
The Veronese surface arises naturally in the study of conics.
A conic is a degree 2 plane curve, thus defined by an equation: The pairing between coefficients
the condition that a conic contains the point is a linear equation in the coefficients, which formalizes the statement that "passing through a point imposes a linear condition on conics".
The Veronese map or Veronese variety generalizes this idea to mappings of general degree d in n+1 variables.
to all possible monomials of total degree d (of which there are
The second equality shows that for fixed source dimension n, the target dimension is a polynomial in d of degree n and leading coefficient
is the trivial constant map to
One may define the Veronese map in a coordinate-free way, as where V is any vector space of finite dimension, and
are its symmetric powers of degree d. This is homogeneous of degree d under scalar multiplication on V, and therefore passes to a mapping on the underlying projective spaces.
If the vector space V is defined over a field K which does not have characteristic zero, then the definition must be altered to be understood as a mapping to the dual space of polynomials on V. This is because for fields with finite characteristic p, the pth powers of elements of V are not rational normal curves, but are of course a line.
(See, for example additive polynomial for a treatment of polynomials over a field of finite characteristic).
the Veronese variety is known as the rational normal curve, of which the lower-degree examples are familiar.
The image of a variety under the Veronese map is again a variety, rather than simply a constructible set; furthermore, these are isomorphic in the sense that the inverse map exists and is regular – the Veronese map is biregular.