I am a beginner.
This is an exercise from Hartshorne Chapter 1, 4.5. By his hint, it seems this can be argued that there are two curves in image of Segre embedding that do not intersect with each other while in $P^2$ any two curves intersect.
I feel this solution is very special. I would like to know more. Is there any invariant to detect whether two birational equivalent varieties are iso or not?
Thanks!
One way to see it is to note that $\mathbb{P}^1\times\mathbb{P}^1$ maps onto $\mathbb{P}^1$ (by projection to its first factor) while $\mathbb{P}^2$ does not. In fact, any map $\mathbb{P}^2\to\mathbb{P}^1$ is constant.
[Edit: Based on Georges's comment, I think I should explain why all maps $\mathbb{P}^2\to\mathbb{P}^1$ are constant. If $f:\mathbb{P}^2\to\mathbb{P}^1$ is any non-constant map, then its image is irreducible and has $\dim>0$, hence, it must be dense in $\mathbb{P}^1$. Now in $\mathbb{P}^1$, we can take two points $a\neq b$, and pull them back along $f$. This gives (for most choices of $a$ and $b$) two closed, dimension 1 subvarieties (or curves) in $\mathbb{P}^2$ that do not intersect. This is not possible by Bezout's theorem. You can generalize this argument to show that all maps $\mathbb{P}^n\to X$ with $X$ any variety of dimension $<n$ are constant.]