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In algebraic geometry, the Cayley surface, named after Arthur Cayley, is a cubic nodal surface in 3-dimensional projective space with four conical points. It can be given by the equation
when the four singular points are those with three vanishing coordinates. Changing variables gives several other simple equations defining the Cayley surface.
As a del Pezzo surface of degree 3, the Cayley surface is given by thelinear system of cubics in the projective plane passing through the 6 verticesof the complete quadrilateral. This contracts the 4 sides of the completequadrilateral to the 4 nodes of the Cayley surface, while blowing up its 6vertices to the lines through two of them. The surface is a section through the Segre cubic.
The surface contains nine lines, 11 tritangents and no double-sixes.