@DanielFischer Hi!!! I want to show that $I(V(y-x^2,z-x^3)) \subseteq <y-x^2,z-x^3>$.
Let $f(x,y,z) \in I(V(y-x^2,z-x^3))$. Then, $f(x,y,z) \in \mathbb{C}[x,y,z]$ such that $f(t,t^2,t^3)=0$.
Then, we apply the euclidean division of f with y-x^2.
$$f(x,y,z)=f_1(x,y,z)(y-x^2)+f_2(x,y,z)$$
If we have a(x)=b(x)q(x)+r(x), then it is: $deg(r(x))< deg(b(x))$
How is it now where we have a multivariable polynomial? How can we find $deg(f_2(x,y,z))$?