Nodal surface
In algebraic geometry, a nodal surface is a surface in (usually complex) projective space whose only singularities are nodes. A major problem about them is to find the maximum number of nodes of a nodal surface of given degree.
The following table gives some known upper and lower bounds for the maximal number of nodes on a complex surface of given degree. In degree 7, 9, 11, and 13, the upper bound is given by Varchenko (1983), which is better than the one by Miyaoka (1984).
| Degree | Lower bound | Surface achieving lower bound | Upper bound | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0 | Plane | 0 | 
| 2 | 1 | Conical surface | 1 | 
| 3 | 4 | Cayley's nodal cubic surface | 4 | 
| 4 | 16 | Kummer surface | 16 | 
| 5 | 31 | Togliatti surface | 31 (Beauville) | 
| 6 | 65 | Barth sextic | 65 (Jaffe and Ruberman) | 
| 7 | 99 | Labs septic | 104 | 
| 8 | 168 | Endraß surface | 174 | 
| 9 | 226 | Labs | 246 | 
| 10 | 345 | Barth decic | 360 | 
| 11 | 425 | Chmutov | 480 | 
| 12 | 600 | Sarti surface | 645 | 
| 13 | 732 | Chmutov | 829 | 
| d | (Miyaoka 1984) | ||
| d ≡ 0 (mod 3) | Escudero | ||
| d ≡ ±1 (mod 6) | Chmutov | ||
| d ≡ ±2 (mod 6) | Chmutov |