Hilbert’s Nullstellensatz (German for “theorem of zeros”) establishes a fundamental correspondence between geometry and algebra. It states that for an algebraically closed field \(k\), if a polynomial \(p\) vanishes on the zero-set of an ideal \(I\), then some power of \(p\) must belong to \(I\). Formally, \(I(V(I)) = \sqrt{I}\), the radical of \(I\).
