[Math] plane hyperelliptic curves

ag.algebraic-geometry

I'm aware that h/w problems are frowned upon (understandably) here. However – this really is just inspired by some h/w related confusion, so hopefully that's ok.
Anyway, can one have a smooth projective plane curve be hyperelliptic (i.e admitting a double cover of the projective line and of genus greater than 1)? It is easy enough to get affine curves that double cover the affine line but upon taking the closure in the projective plane I always encounter singularities. It is my understanding that there is a way to resolve such singularities but I imagine that this needn't result in something isomorphic to a plane curve (merely something birationally equivalent to one.)
Thanks in advance for any help given.

Best Answer

I don't know how to answer this question at homework level. If you have a plane curve of degree $d$, it has lots of maps to $P^1$ of degree $d-1$ by projecting from points. If the curve is also hyperelliptic, it has a map of degree two to $P^1$. For at least one of the maps of degree $d-1$, the conditions of the Castelnuovo genus bound (you'll have to look that up) is satisfied and we get that the genus satisfies $g \le d-2$. Now, if your plane curve is smooth (which I had not previously assumed) then $g = (d-1)(d-2)/2$, which combined with the previous bound gives, not surprisingly, $d \le 3$.