Proposition 3.3.2
Fulvio Gesmundo,
Jonathan Hauenstein,
Christian Ikenmeyer, and
JM Landsberg.
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Directions
Before you begin, you will need to have a working binary (called "M2") of
Macaulay2 on your machine.
- Save the file S15.m2 to your computer.
- Execute the command
      $   M2 < S15.m2
- Here is the output displayed to the screen. Perusing it, we see that Macaulay2 computed that polynomial of degree 9 that defines the hypersurface.
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