The elliptic curve (smooth degree 3) on the left is an M-curve, as it has the maximum (2) components, while the curve on the right has only 1 component.
The maximum number is one more than the maximum genus of a curve of degree m, attained when the curve is nonsingular. Moreover, any number of components in this range of possible values can be attained.
The Trott curve, shown here with 7 of its bitangents, is a quartic (degree 4) M-curve, attaining the maximum (4) components for a curve of that degree.
A curve which attains the maximum number of real components is called an M-curve (from "maximum") – for example, an elliptic curve with two components, such as or the Trott curve, a quartic with four components, are examples of M-curves.
Dmitrii Andreevich Gudkov, The topology of real projective algebraic varieties, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 29 (1974), 3–79 (Russian), English transl., Russian Math. Surveys 29:4 (1974), 1–79