A remark on isolated complex hypersurface singularities
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 09:56 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
For regular homogeneous polynomials of degree m, perturbations of order at least n(m-2)+1 yield germs analytically equivalent to the tangent cone.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
There is an integer D(n,m) = n(m-2) + 1 such that for a regular homogeneous polynomial f of degree m, any g = f + o(d) with d >= D(n,m) defines a germ analytically equivalent to {f=0}.
What carries the argument
The threshold D(n,m) = n(m-2)+1, serving as the minimal order guaranteeing that higher terms cannot change the analytic isomorphism class when the initial form is regular.
If this is right
- If the order of perturbation is high enough, the analytic type of the singularity is completely determined by its tangent cone for regular cones.
- The explicit formula allows verification by checking only finitely many coefficients in the power series expansion.
- The result extends to quasihomogeneous polynomials, broadening the class of singularities where the tangent cone determines the germ.
- Since the bound was previously known as an exercise, this note provides an expository derivation and clarification.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This criterion could be used to simplify computations in the classification of isolated hypersurface singularities by reducing the problem to checking the tangent cone after a certain order.
- One could test the sharpness of the bound by constructing examples where a lower-order perturbation changes the analytic type for a regular f.
- Connections to deformation theory suggest that this stability implies the singularity is rigid in certain directions of the versal deformation space.
- The approach might generalize to other types of singularities beyond hypersurfaces.
Load-bearing premise
The projective hypersurface defined by the homogeneous polynomial f must be smooth.
What would settle it
A counterexample consisting of a smooth projective hypersurface of degree m in P^{n-1} and a power series g agreeing with f to order less than n(m-2) but where the germ of g=0 is not analytically equivalent to f=0.
read the original abstract
This is now an expository note about the following classical problem. Let $(X, \bf 0)$ be the germ of a hypersurface in $(\mathbb C^n,\bf 0)$ with an ordinary singularity of multiplicity $m$ at the origin $\bf 0$. A natural question to ask is whether $X$ and its tangent cone at the origin are analytically isomorphic. The answer is negative in general, in view of a theorem of Kioji Saito. However there is an integer $D(n,m)>m$ such that, given a \emph{regular} homogeneous polynomial $f(x_1,\ldots, x_n)$ of degree $m$ (this means that $\{ f=0\}$ is a smooth hypersurface in $\PP^{n-1}$) then, for all $d\geq D(n,m)$, any convergent power series of the form $g=f+ o(d)$ (here, as usual, $o(d)$ stays for a power series of order at least $d$), defines a germ $\{ g=0\}$ which is analytically equivalent to the germ $\{ f=0\}$. In this note we compute $D(n,m)$ explicitly as $n(m-2)+1$. We also give an extension to the case in which $f$ is a quasihomogeneous polynomial. It was pointed out that the value of $D(n,m)$ was already known by \cite[Exercise 7.31]{D}.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript is an expository note on analytic equivalence of isolated hypersurface germs with ordinary multiplicity-m singularities. It recalls Saito's theorem showing that equivalence to the tangent cone fails in general, then asserts that when the tangent cone is given by a regular (smooth projective) homogeneous polynomial f of degree m, there exists an explicit integer D(n,m) = n(m-2)+1 > m such that any convergent g = f + o(d) with d ≥ D yields a germ analytically equivalent to {f=0}. An extension to quasihomogeneous f is sketched, and a citation to a prior exercise is noted.
Significance. A correct explicit bound D(n,m) would be a useful, computable refinement of the classical theory of ordinary singularities, giving a concrete threshold beyond which higher-order perturbations cannot change the analytic type when the tangent cone is smooth. The attempt to furnish an explicit formula and the quasihomogeneous extension are positive features; the note is short and focused.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract (and the paragraph stating the main result): the claimed explicit value D(n,m) = n(m-2)+1 fails to satisfy the required inequality D(n,m) > m for all integers n ≥ 2, m ≥ 2. When m = 2 one obtains D = 1 < 2; when n = 2 and m = 3 one obtains D = 3 which is not strictly greater than 3. Because analytic equivalence preserves multiplicity, a perturbation of order d = 1 allows g to have multiplicity 1 while {f=0} has multiplicity 2, so equivalence is impossible. This directly contradicts the central claim that the stated D works for all d ≥ D.
- [Main result paragraph] The derivation or citation of the formula (referenced to Exercise 7.31 in [D]): the manuscript must either correct the expression for D(n,m) (e.g., by taking the maximum with m+1 or adding hypotheses on n and m) or prove that the given expression satisfies D > m under the standing assumptions. The current mismatch is load-bearing for the explicit-computation assertion.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abbreviation 'o(d)' is used without an explicit reminder that it denotes a power series of order at least d; a parenthetical clarification would help readers outside singularity theory.
- The reference [D] should appear with full bibliographic details in the bibliography.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and for identifying the inconsistency between the claimed inequality D(n,m) > m and the explicit formula n(m-2)+1. We agree that the stated bound fails to satisfy the inequality in some cases (such as m=2 or n=2, m=3), which is necessary to preserve multiplicity under analytic equivalence. We will revise the manuscript to define D(n,m) as max(n(m-2)+1, m+1), thereby correcting the central claim while retaining the explicit and computable character of the result.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (and the paragraph stating the main result): the claimed explicit value D(n,m) = n(m-2)+1 fails to satisfy the required inequality D(n,m) > m for all integers n ≥ 2, m ≥ 2. When m = 2 one obtains D = 1 < 2; when n = 2 and m = 3 one obtains D = 3 which is not strictly greater than 3. Because analytic equivalence preserves multiplicity, a perturbation of order d = 1 allows g to have multiplicity 1 while {f=0} has multiplicity 2, so equivalence is impossible. This directly contradicts the central claim that the stated D works for all d ≥ D.
Authors: We agree with this assessment. The formula n(m-2)+1 does not guarantee D > m for all admissible n and m, and the multiplicity-preservation argument is correct and fundamental. We will revise the abstract to state that D(n,m) equals the maximum of n(m-2)+1 and m+1. This ensures the inequality holds while keeping the bound explicit and directly tied to the classical theory of ordinary singularities. revision: yes
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Referee: [Main result paragraph] The derivation or citation of the formula (referenced to Exercise 7.31 in [D]): the manuscript must either correct the expression for D(n,m) (e.g., by taking the maximum with m+1 or adding hypotheses on n and m) or prove that the given expression satisfies D > m under the standing assumptions. The current mismatch is load-bearing for the explicit-computation assertion.
Authors: We accept the referee's recommendation and will correct the expression rather than add restrictive hypotheses. The revised manuscript will define D(n,m) := max(n(m-2)+1, m+1) and will clarify that Exercise 7.31 in [D] supplies the base bound n(m-2)+1, which we adjust by the multiplicity requirement m+1. The main result paragraph and the surrounding discussion will be updated accordingly. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; bound derived from external classical reference
full rationale
The paper is an expository note recalling a classical result on analytic equivalence of hypersurface germs with ordinary singularities. It states the existence of an integer D(n,m)>m with the stated property for regular homogeneous f of degree m, then asserts that this D equals n(m-2)+1, noting that the value was already known from an external source (Exercise 7.31 in [D]). No derivation step reduces the claimed bound to a self-definition, a fitted parameter renamed as prediction, or a load-bearing self-citation; the argument rests on prior literature in singularity theory without internal circular reduction. The noted mismatch between the formula and the strict inequality D>m for small m (e.g., m=2) is a potential error in the stated range of applicability, not evidence that any step equates output to input by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Convergent power series rings over C admit well-defined notions of order and analytic isomorphism of germs.
- domain assumption A homogeneous polynomial f is regular when the projective hypersurface it defines in PP^{n-1} is smooth.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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