Operations on Étale Sheaves of Sets

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Operations on Étale Sheaves of Sets"

Transcription

1 DEGREE PROJECT IN MATHEMATICS, SECOND CYCLE, 30 CREDITS STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN 2016 Operations on Étale Sheaves of Sets ERIC AHLQVIST KTH ROYAL INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES

2

3 Operations on Étale Sheaves of Sets ERIC AHLQVIST Master s Thesis in Mathematics (30 ECTS credits) Master Programme in Mathematics (120 credits) Royal Institute of Technology year 2016 Supervisor at KTH: David Rydh Examiner: David Rydh TRITA-MAT-E 2016:26 ISRN-KTH/MAT/E--16/26--SE Royal Institute of Technology School of Engineering Sciences KTH SCI SE Stockholm, Sweden URL:

4

5 3 Abstract. Rydh showed in 2011 that any unramified morphism f of algebraic spaces (algebraic stacks) has a canonical and universal factorization through an algebraic space (algebraic stack) called the étale envelope of f, where the first morphism is a closed immersion and the second is étale. We show that when f is étale then the étale envelope can be described by applying the left adjoint of the pullback of f to the constant sheaf defined by a pointed set with two elements. When f is a monomorphism locally of finite type we have a similar construction using the direct image with proper support.

6 4 Sammanfattning. Rydh visade 2011 att varje oramifierad morfi f av algebraiska rum (algebraiska stackar) har en kanonisk och universell faktorisering genom ett algebraiskt rum (algebraisk stack) som han kallar den étala omslutningen av f, där den första morfin är en sluten immersion och den andra är étale. Vi visar att då f är étale så kan den étala omslutningen beskrivas genom att applicera vänsteradjunkten till tillbakadragningen av f på den konstanta kärven som definieras av en punkterad mängd med två element. Då f är en monomorfi, lokalt av ändlig typ så har vi en liknande beskrivning i termer av framtryckning med propert stöd.

7 Acknowledgements I would like to thank my thesis advisor David Rydh for his support and guidance. I am grateful for his commitment and that he always makes time for questions. I think that I still have not been able to ask something that he cannot answer. I would like to thank Gustav Sædén Ståhl for always taking his time to answer my questions. I would also like to thank Oliver Gäfvert and Johan Wärnegård. 5

8

9 Contents Acknowledgements 5 Introduction 9 Preliminaries 10 Chapter 1. Étale morphisms Flat morphisms Unramified morphisms Étale morphisms Local structure of étale morphisms Henselian rings 19 Chapter 2. Representable functors Definitions and examples The Yoneda embedding 22 Chapter 3. Sheaves of sets Grothendieck topologies and sites Sheaves of sets Sieves and elementary topoi Epimorphisms Examples of sheaves Stalks Sheafification of a sheaf Fiber products and pushouts 39 Chapter 4. Operations on sheaves of sets Morphisms of sites Direct and inverse image functors The functor j! of an open immersion The functors f and f! of an object f : T S in C/S Operations on sheaves of abelian group/pointed sets 48 Chapter 5. Algebraic spaces Some descent theory Algebraic spaces Some descent theory for algebraic spaces Étale topology on algebraic spaces The sheaf space (espace étalé) The functors f, f, and f! of a morphism of algebraic spaces The functor f! for sheaves of pointed sets Direct image with proper support Connected fibration of a smooth morphism The functor f! of a non-étale morphism. 68 7

10 8 CONTENTS Chapter 6. The étale envelope E X/Y The sheaf E X/Y The case when f is a monomorphism locally of finite type The case when f is étale Final remark 74 Bibliography 75

11 Introduction There are cases when the Zariski topology is to coarse to work in. For example if we want to mimic results that are true in the Euclidean topology like the implicit function theorem or cohomology. Hence it may be convenient to work in finer topologies like the étale topology which has properties more like the Euclidean topology. The étale topology is an example of a Grothendieck topology and was defined by A. Grothendieck who developed it together with M. Artin and J.-L. Verdier. The aim was to define étale cohomology in order to prove the Weil conjectures [Wei49]. Given a category C we may define a Grothendieck topology on C by assigning a collection of coverings {U i U} for each object U in C. A category with a Grothendieck topology is called a site. An example of a site is the big étale site SÉt on a scheme S, where the underlying category is (Sch/S) and a covering of an S-scheme U is a jointly surjective family {U i U} of étale S-morphisms. Given a site S with underlying category C, we may consider sheaves on S. That is, functors F : C op (Set) satisfying a certain gluing condition for each covering {U i U}. Every S-scheme X is a sheaf on SÉt when identifying X with the contravariant functor h X = Hom (Sch/S) (, X). If R X are étale S-morphisms such that the induced map Hom (Sch/S) (T, R) Hom (Sch/S) (T, X) Hom (Sch/S) (T, X) is injective for every S-scheme T, and gives an equivalence relation on the set Hom (Sch/S) (T, X), then we may form the presheaf quotient T X(T )/. The sheafification of this presheaf is an algebraic space over S and is denoted X/R. This generalizes the concept of schemes. The small site Sét on a scheme (or algebraic space) S has underlying category (ét/s) (or ét(s)), i.e., the category of étale schemes (algebraic spaces) over S, and coverings as in SÉt. Given a sheaf F on Sét we may construct its espace étalé F ét which is an étale algebraic space over S. This gives an equivalence of categories between sheaves on the small étale site Sét and étale algebraic spaces over S. In particular, every sheaf on the small étale site Sét of an algebraic space S is representable by an étale algebraic space over S. The espace étalé has the following analogue in classical topology: given a topological space B and a sheaf of sets G on B, the espace étale of G is a topological space E together with a local homeomorphism π : E B such that G is the sheaf of sections of π (see e.g. [MLM94, Section II.5]). Every morphism f : T S of schemes (algebraic spaces), gives rise to a morphisms Tét Sét of sites. Hence we may consider push-forwards f : Sh(Tét ) Sh(Sét ) and pullbacks f : Sh(Sét ) Sh(Tét ). We have that f F is just the restriction of the fiber product T S F ét to the small étale site. In certain cases f has a left adjoint denoted by f!. For example, in case f : T S is an object in (ét/s) 9

12 10 INTRODUCTION we get that f! F is the sheaf given by U ϕ F(U) for every S-scheme ψ : U S where the disjoint union is over all S-morphisms U T. In case, F is a sheaf of pointed sets, we get that f! F is the sheafification of the presheaf U F(U). ϕ Rydh shows in [Ryd11] that any unramified morphisms X Y of algebraic spaces (algebraic stacks) factors as X E X/Y Y where the first morphism is a closed immersion and the second morphism is étale. We show that in the case when f is a monomorphism, we get that the restriction E X/Y to the small étale site is naturally isomorphic to the sheaf f c {0, 1} X, where {0, 1} X denotes the constant sheaf on the small étale site on X and f c is the direct image with proper support. If f is étale then E X/Y,ét = f! {0, 1} X, where f! is the left adjoint of the pullback. Hence we have the following conjecture: Conjecture. Let X and Y be algebraic spaces and let f : X Y be a morphism locally of finite type. There exists a functor f # : Sh (Xét ) Sh (Yét ) of sheaves of pointed sets such that: (1) if f is unramified, we have E X/Y = f # {0, 1} X ; (2) if f is étale we have f # = f! ; (3) if f is a monomorphism we have f # = f c. Preliminaries By a ring we always mean a commutative ring with unity. All rings are assumed to be Noetherian and all schemes are assumed to be locally Noetherian. A morphism of schemes is called proper if it is of finite type, separated, and universally closed. A morphism f : X Y of schemes is called finite if there is an open covering Y = V i of Y by affine open subschemes V i such that for every i we have f 1 (V i ) is affine and the induced homomorphism O Y (V i ) O X (f 1 (V i )) is finite. Or equivalently (see for example [GW10, 12.9]), for every open affine subscheme V Y, the inverse image f 1 (V ) is affine and O Y (V ) O X (f 1 (V )) finite. In particular, every finite morphism is by definition affine. A morphism is called quasi-finite if it is of finite type and the fiber over each point consists only of finitely many points. Theorem (Zariski s Main Theorem [Mil80, I.1.8]). Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes and assume that Y is quasi-compact. The following are equivalent: (1) f is quasi-finite and separated; (2) f factors as X α X β Y where α is an open immersion and β is finite. Lemma ([GW10, 12.89]). Let f : X Y be a morphism. The following are equivalent: (1) f is finite; (2) f is quasi-finite and proper; (3) f is affine and proper. For locally Noetherian schemes we have the following topological property: Lemma Let X be a locally Noetherian scheme and let V X be a subset. Then the following are equivalent:

13 PRELIMINARIES 11 (1) V is clopen (open and closed) in X; (2) V is a union of connected components of X. Proof. (1) (2): Let V X be a clopen subset intersecting a connected component C of X. Then C V and (C \ V ) are both open. Thus C = (C V ) (C \ V ) and we conclude that C V = C since C is connected. Hence we see that a clopen subset is always a union of connected components. (2) (1): A connected component is always closed since the closure of a connected subset is connected. We will show that every connected component of X is open. Since X is locally Noetherian it is locally connected (see for example [Sta, Tag 04MF]). But X is locally connected if and only if every connected component of X is open [Bou98, I ]. Hence we get that every connected component of X is clopen (open and closed). Now if W is a union of connected components (i.e. clopen subsets) then so is its complement X \ W and hence both W and X \ W are both open, and hence also closed. Thus W is clopen. The following lemma is trivial but will be useful later on. Lemma Suppose that we have a cartesian square T S U pr 1 U T in the category (Sch) of schemes such that there is a morphism s: S U satisfying f s = id S. Then T is the fiber product of s and pr 1. S f

14

15 CHAPTER 1 Étale morphisms An étale morphism is the algebraic analogue of a local homeomorphism. For example, a morphism of nonsingular varieties over an algebraically closed field is étale at a point if and only if it induces an isomorphism of the tangent spaces. The main references to this chapter are [Mil80] and [AK70] Flat morphisms Recall that a ring homomorphism A B is called flat, if B is flat when considered as an A-module, i.e., if the functor A B is exact. It is called faithfully flat if A B is faithful and exact. Proposition Let ϕ: A B be a ring homomorphism. The following are equivalent: (1) ϕ is flat; (2) For every ideal I A, the map I B B; a b ϕ(a)b is injective. Proof. If ϕ is flat then clearly I B B is injective since I A injective implies that I B A B = B is injective. For the converse, see [Mil80, I.2.2]. Proposition Let ϕ: A B be a ring homomorphism. The following are equivalent: (1) ϕ is flat; (2) For every m Spm B, the induced homomorphism A ϕ 1 (m) B m is flat. Definition Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. Then we say that f is flat at x X if the induced map O Y,f(x) O X,x is flat. We say that f is flat if it is flat at every x X. Remark Proposition implies that a morphism is flat if and only if it is flat at all closed points. Remark A flat ring homomorphism induces a flat morphism of spectra. Proposition ([Mil80, I.2.5]). Let A B be a ring homomorphisms that makes B a flat A-algebra. Take b B and suppose that the image of b in B/mB is not a zero-divisor for every maximal ideal m of A. Then B/(b) is a flat A-algebra. Example Let A be a ring and let f A[T 1,..., T n ] be non-zero. Let V Spec A[T 1,..., T n ] be the closed subscheme given by the ideal (f), i.e., V = Spec A[T 1,..., T n ]/(f). Suppose that the image of f in (A/m)[T 1,..., T n ] is non-zero for every maximal ideal m of A, or equivalently, that the ideal generated by the coefficients of f is A. Then the morphism V Spec A induced by the morphism ϕ: A A[T 1,..., T n ]/(f) is 13

16 14 1. ÉTALE MORPHISMS flat by Proposition The converse is also true since if the coefficients of f is contained in a maximal ideal m of A, then the homomorphism m A A[T 1,..., T n ]/(f) A[T 1,..., T n ]/(f) a g ϕ(a)g is not injective. Indeed, f may be written as f = a α T α α N n and the non-zero element α N n a α T α in m A A[T 1,..., T n ]/(f) will be mapped to zero. Hence by Proposition 1.1.1, ϕ is not flat. Proposition ([Mil80, I.2.7], [AK70, V.1.9]). Let ϕ: A B be a ring homomorphism. The following are equivalent: (1) ϕ is faithfully flat; (2) ϕ is injective and B/ϕ(A) is flat over A; (3) a sequence M M M of A-modules is exact if and only if the sequence M A B M A B M A B is exact; (4) ϕ is flat and the induced morphism Spec B Spec A is surjective; (5) ϕ is flat and for every maximal ideal m A, we have ϕ(m)b B. Hence the following definition agrees with the definition for rings. Definition Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. Then we say that f is faithfully flat if it is flat and surjective. Remark Proposition implies that a morphism Spec B Spec A is faithfully flat if and only if the ring homomorphism A B is faithfully flat. Example For a scheme X, the projection X X X is certainly faithfully flat. Lemma Let (A, m A ) and (B, m B ) be local rings. Then any flat local homomorphism ϕ: A B is faithfully flat. Proof. Since ϕ is local we have ϕ(m A ) m B and hence m A B B. Hence the Lemma follows from Proposition Lemma A composition of flat morphisms is flat and a base change of a flat morphism is flat. Proof. Let X f Y g Z be flat morphisms. Take x X and put y = f(x) and z = g(y). Flatness of g f follows from the fact that if M is an O z -module, then (M Oz O y ) Oy O x = M Oz O x. To show that a base change of a flat map is flat, let f : X Y be a flat morphism and let f : Y Y be a morphism. Take any x X and any y Y such that f(x) = f (y ) =: y Y. We must show that the induced homomorphism O y O y Oy O x is flat. But again, this follows trivially since M Oy (O y Oy O x ) = M Oy O x. Here are some topological properties of flat morphisms. Theorem ([Mil80, I.2.12]). Any flat morphism that is locally of finite type is open.

17 1.2. UNRAMIFIED MORPHISMS 15 Corollary ([Mil80, I.3.10]). Any closed immersion which is flat is an open immersion. Proposition ([Gro65, ]). If f : X Y is a flat surjective quasicompact morphism of schemes then Y has the quotient topology induced by f. Theorem Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. Then the set is open in X. Proof. See [AK70, V.5.5] flat(f) = {x X : f is flat at x} 1.2. Unramified morphisms Definition Let k be a field and k its algebraic closure. A k-algebra A is called separable if the Jacobson radical of A k k is zero. Definition Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes which is locally of finite type. Then we say that f is unramified at x X if m x = m y O x and κ(x) is a finite separable field extension of κ(y), where y = f(x). We say that f is unramified if it is unramified at every x X. Definition A geometric point of a scheme X is a morphism x: Spec Ω X where Ω is a separably closed field. If Y X is a morphism then the geometric fiber over a geometric point x is the fiber product Y X Spec Ω. Proposition ([Mil80, I.3.2]). Let f : X Y be a morphism which is locally of finite type. The following are equivalent: (1) f is unramified; (2) for all y Y, the projection X y Spec κ(y) is unramified; (3) for all geometric points ȳ : Spec Ω Y, the projection Xȳ Spec Ω is unramified; (4) for every y Y, there is a covering of X y by spectra of finite separable κ(y)-algebras; (5) for every y Y, we have X y = Spec ki, where the k i are finite separable field extensions of κ(y). Lemma A composition of unramified morphisms is unramified and a base change of an unramified morphism is unramified. Proof. The composition part is trivial. To show the second part, let X Y be unramified and Z Y any morphism. By Proposition it is enough to show that Z Y X Z is unramified after base change to a geometric point. But a geometric point in Z gives a geometric point in Y and Spec Ω Z (Z Y X) = Spec Ω Y X and we already know that Spec Ω Y X Spec Ω is unramified. Proposition ([AK70, VI.3.3], [Mil80, I.3.5]). Let X and Y be schemes, x a point in X, and f : X Y a morphism locally of finite type. Let Ω X/Y denote the sheaf of relative differentials of X over Y. The following are equivalent: (1) f is unramified at x; (2) we have (Ω X/Y ) x = 0; (3) the diagonal X/Y is an open immersion in a neighborhood of x. Note that (Ω X/Y ) x = Ω Ox/O y. Proof. (1) (2): By base change, we may assume that Y = Spec κ(y) and X = X y (see [Har77, II.8.10]). The fact that f is unramified at x implies that {x} is open in f 1 (f(x)) [AK70, VI.2.3], and hence we may assume that X =

18 16 1. ÉTALE MORPHISMS Spec κ(x). Hence we need only show that Ω κ(x)/κ(y) = 0. But this is clear since κ(x) is a finite separable extension of κ(y). (2) (3): The diagonal X/Y : X X Y X is locally closed and hence we may choose an open subscheme U of X Y X, containing X/Y (X), such that X U is a closed immersion. Denote this map i: X U and let J = i O X. By definition we have Ω X/Y = X/Y (J /J 2 ). Hence 0 = (Ω X/Y ) x = (J /J 2 ) i(x) and by Nakayama s lemma we have that J i(x) = 0. Hence there is an open neighborhood V U of i(x) such that J V = 0. Thus, X/Y V = i V is an open immersion. (3) (1): By we may assume that Y = Spec k where k is an algebraically closed field (we may choose Y = Spec κ(y) where y = f(x) and then change base to Spec of the algebraic closure of κ(y)). Since unramified is a local property, we may assume that X = Spec A is affine and that X/Y is an open immersion. Let z X be a closed point. Then Hilbert s nullstellensatz implies that κ(z) = k. Let ϕ: X X Y X be the morphism induced by the identity morphism on X and the constant morphism X X with value z. Since the diagonal is open, so is ϕ 1 ( X/Y (X)) = {z}. Hence every closed point of A is open, i.e., every prime ideal is maximal. Thus, A is Artinian and hence we may assume that A = O X,x with maximal ideal m and κ(x) = k since x is a closed point. Hence we get that A k A has a unique maximal ideal m A+A m and since X/Y : Spec A Spec (A k A) is an open immersion we have that A k A = A. But dim k (A k A) = dim k (A) dim k (A) and hence we conclude that A = k. This implies (1). Corollary Let f : X Y be a morphism. The following are equivalent: (1) f is unramified; (2) we have Ω X/Y = 0; (3) the diagonal X/Y : X X Y X is an open immersion. Corollary Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. Then the set is open in X. unram(f) = {x X : f is unramified at x} Proposition Any section of an unramified morphism is an open immersion. Proof. If f : X Y is unramified then the diagonal : X X Y X is an open immersion. Given a section s : Y X of f, we have that Y is the fiber product of the diagram X X = Y Y X s idx X Y X and the projections Y X both coincide with s. Thus s is obtained by base change from which is an open immersion, and hence s is an open immersion Étale morphisms Definition Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. Then we say that f is étale at x X if it is flat and unramified at x. We say that f is étale if it is étale at every x X. Remark Note that Theorem implies that every étale morphism is open as a map between topological spaces.

19 1.3. ÉTALE MORPHISMS 17 Lemma Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. Then the set is open in X. étale(f) = {x X : f is étale at x} Proof. This follows from Proposition and Theorem Example Let X and Y be nonsingular varieties over an algebraically closed field k, and let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. Then f is étale at x X if and only if it induces an isomorphism T f : T X,x T Y,f(x) of the tangent spaces. Proof. Indeed, let x X be a closed point and put y = f(x). Then κ(y) = κ(x) = k. Suppose that f is étale and put O x = O X,x and O y = O Y,y. We have homomorphisms k O x κ(x) and k O y κ(y), which yield exact sequences and m x /m 2 x Ω Ox/k Ox κ(x) Ω κ(x)/k = 0, m y /m 2 y Ω Oy/k Oy κ(y) Ω κ(y)/k = 0 [Mat86, 25.2]. The first map in each of the sequences is an isomorphism [Har77, 8.7]. We also have homomorphisms k O y O x, where the last one is faithfully flat since it is a local homomorphism and f is flat. We get an exact sequence Ω Oy/k Oy O x Ω Ox/k Ω Ox/O y 0 [Mat86, 25.1], where the first map is an isomorphism by [AK70, VI.4.9]. These may all be viewed as O x -modules. If we tensor with κ(x) we get that and hence Ω Oy/k Oy κ(x) = Ω Ox/k Ox κ(x), m y /m 2 y = m x /m 2 x. Since the cotangent spaces are isomorphic and so are the duals. Conversely, if T f : T X,x T Y,y is an isomorphism, then so is the induced map m y /m 2 y m x /m 2 x. Let d = dim(m y /m 2 y). Then m y can be generated by d elements, t 1,..., t d [AM69, 11.22]. The ring O x /(t 1,..., t d ) is flat over O y /(t 1,..., t d ) = κ(y) = k and by [Har77, 10.3.A], O x /(t 1,..., t i ) is flat over O y /(t 1,..., t i ) for each i = d, d 1,..., 0. Hence O x is flat over O y. Since m y /m 2 y m x /m 2 x is an isomorphism we get from the exact sequence Ω Oy/k Oy κ(y) Ω Ox/k Ox κ(x) Ω Ox/O y Ox κ(x) 0, that Ω Ox/O y /m x Ω Ox/O y = ΩOx/O y Ox κ(x) = 0. Hence, by Nakayama s lemma, we conclude that (Ω X/Y ) x = Ω Ox/O y = 0, and by Proposition 1.2.6, f is unramified at x. Lemma A composition of étale morphisms is étale and a base change of an étale morphism is étale. Proof. Follows from Lemma and Lemma Definition A morphism of schemes is called smooth if it is flat, locally of finite presentation, and if the geometric fibers are regular. Remark A morphism is étale if and only if it is smooth and quasi-finite.

20 18 1. ÉTALE MORPHISMS 1.4. Local structure of étale morphisms Let A be a ring and p(t ) A[T ] a monic polynomial. Then A[T ]/(p) is a finitely generated free A-module, and hence flat. Suppose that b A[T ]/(p) is such that the formal derivative p (T ) is invertible in (A[T ]/(p)) b. Definition The morphism of spectra Spec (A[T ]/(p)) b Spec A induced by the canonical homomorphism ϕ: A (A[T ]/(p)) b is called standard étale. A standard étale morphism is étale. Indeed, it is flat since A[T ]/(p) is a free A-module and (A[T ]/(p)) b is a flat A[T ]/(p)-module. Now put B = A[T ]/(p). To show that Spec B b Spec A is unramified, it is enough to prove that the B b - module Ω Bb /A is zero. We have that Ω B/A is the B-module generated by dt and the relation p (T )dt = 0 (see e.g. [Mat86, p. 195]). That is Ω B/A is isomorphic to A[T ]/(p, p) as a B-module. But then Ω Bb /A = (Ω B/A ) b = (A[T ]/(p, p)) b = (A[T ]/(p)) b /(p ) b = 0 since p is invertible in B b. Hence Spec B b Spec A is unramified and thus étale. Theorem (Local structure theorem, [Mil80, I.3.14, I.3.16]). Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. The following are equivalent: (1) f is étale at x; (2) There exists open affine sets U x and V f(x) such that f(u) V and f U : U V is standard étale; (3) There exists open affine sets U = Spec B x and V = Spec A f(x), such that B = A[T 1,..., T n ]/(p 1,..., p n ) where det ( p i / T j ) is invertible in B, and f U : U V is induced by the canonical homomorphism A B. Proof. (1) (2): By Lemma 1.3.3, f is étale in a neighborhood of x. Now see [Mil80, I.3.14]. (2) (3): This follows since (A[T ]/p) b = A[T, S]/(p, bs 1) and ( ) ( ) p/ T p/ S p = (T ) 0 (bs 1)/ T (bs 1)/ S b /b b is invertible. Since we have already showed that every standard étale morphism is étale, it is enough to show that (3) implies (2) to finish the proof. (3) (2): Since B is generated as an A-algebra by the elements T 1,..., T n, we have that Ω B/A is generated as a B-module by the elements dt 1,..., dt n and the relations ( ) dp i = n j=1 p i T j dt j = 0, 1 i n. Indeed, the derivation d: B Ω B/A is surjective and every element in B may be written as a polynomial f(t 1,..., T n ). By the Leibniz rule we have n f df(t 1,..., T n ) = dt i. T i Since the image of det( p i / T j ) in B is a unit, there is a unique solution to ( ), namely dt 1 = = dt n = 0. Hence Spec B Spec A is unramified by Proposition To show that B is flat as an A-module, one may use Proposition and induction on n. We have that A[T 1,..., T n ] is a free A-module and hence flat over i=1

21 1.5. HENSELIAN RINGS 19 A. The idea is to show inductively that A[T 1,..., T n ]/(p 1,..., p i ) is flat over A as i ranges from 0 to n. This is done in [Mum99, p. 221]. Example Let n be a positive integer and X = Spec Z[T ]/(T n 1). Consider the morphism f : X Spec Z given by the canonical homomorphism Z Z[T ]/(T n 1). It is clear that f is étale in the open subscheme D(n) = X \ V ((n)) since (T n 1)/ T = nt n 1 and O X (D(n)) = (Z[T ]/(T n 1)) n. That is, nt n 1 has an inverse n 1 T in (Z[T ]/(T n 1)) n. Example (Artin-Schreier cover). Let k be a field of non-zero characteristic p and take f k[t ]. The morphism Spec k[t, x]/(x p x f) Spec k[t ] is étale since (x p x f)/ x = px p 1 1 = 1. If p does not divide the degree of f then this covering is non-trivial Henselian rings For a scheme X, we denote by ClOp(X) the collection of clopen subsets of X. Definition Let X be a scheme and X 0 a closed subscheme. The pair (X, X 0 ) is called a Henselian pair if for every finite morphism X X, the induced map ClOp(X ) ClOp(X X X 0 ) is bijective. Definition A local ring (A, m) is called Henselian if (Spec A, Spec A/m) is a Henselian pair. Lemma There is a bijective correspondence ClOp(Spec A) { idempotents of A }. Proof. If e A is idempotent and p Spec A, then e p if and only if 1 e / p. Hence we get that V (e) = D(1 e) is clopen with complement D(e) = V (1 e). Conversely, if U Spec A is clopen, then U (Spec A \ U) is an open cover of Spec A and hence, by the sheaf property, there is a unique element a O Spec A (Spec A) = A, such that a U = 1 and a Spec A\U = 0. Hence (1 a) U = 0 and (1 a) Spec A\U = 1. Thus a(a 1) = 0 since the restrictions to U and Spec A \ U are zero and hence a is idempotent. We get that U = D(a). If f is a polynomial with coefficients in a local ring A with maximal ideal m, then we use the notation f for its image in (A/m)[x]. Theorem ([Mil80, I.4.2]). Let (A, m) be a local ring, X = Spec A, and let x be the closed point in X. The following are equivalent: (1) A is Henselian; (2) every finite A-algebra B is a direct product of local rings B = B i ; (3) if f : Y X is a quasi-finite and separated morphism, then Y = Y 0 Y 1 Y n, where x / f(y 0 ) and for i 1, Y i = Spec B i is finite over X where each B i is a local ring; (4) if f : Y X is an étale morphism then every morphism γ : Spec κ(x) Y, such that f γ(spec κ(x)) = x, factors through a section s: X Y of f; (5) if f A[x] is a monic polynomial such that f factors as f = g 0 h 0, with g 0 and h 0 coprime, then f factors as gh, where ḡ = g 0 and h = h 0.

22 20 1. ÉTALE MORPHISMS Proof. (1) (2): Let f : Spec B Spec A be finite. We have Spec B A Spec κ(x) = Spec (B A κ(x)). There is a bijective correspondence between idempotents of B and idempotents of B A κ(x) = B/m x B. If B is not local, then there exists a non-trivial idempotent ē B/m x B, and hence ē lifts to some non-trivial idempotent e B. Hence B = eb (1 e)b where eb 0 and (1 e)b 0. Iterating this process yields the desired splitting. (2) (3): Let f : Y X be quasi-finite and separated. According to Theorem 0.0.1, f factors as Y f Y g X where f is an open immersion and g is finite. Hence Y = Spec B for some finite A-algebra B, and by (2), B = B i. Each B i is of the form B i = O Y,y for some closed point y Y. Let Y 1 = Spec O Y,y where the disjoint union is over all closed points y of Y that are contained in Y. Thus Y 1 is clopen in Y and hence also clopen in Y. Put Y 0 = Y \ Y 1. Then we have Y = Y 0 Y1 and it is clear that Y 0 contains no closed points of Y. Since Y 1 is finite over X we get that all points in the fiber over x are closed. Hence they are also closed in Y since the preimage of x in Y is closed. Thus x / f(y 0 ). (3) (4): Suppose that f : Y X is étale and we have a morphism Spec κ(x) Y with image y Y such that f(y) = x. Then we have embeddings κ(x) κ(y) κ(x) and hence κ(y) = κ(x). Since O Y,y is a flat A-module, it is free [Mil80, I.2.9]. But f is étale and hence we have that m y = m x O Y,y and κ(x) = κ(y) = O Y,y A κ(x). That is, O Y,y has rank 1, i.e., O Y,y = A. By (3) we may assume that Y = Spec B where B is a local ring. That is, B = O Y,y = A. Hence (4) holds. (4) (5): See the proof of (d) (d ) (d) in [Mil80, I.4.2]. (5) (1): It is enough to show that for every finite A-algebra B, the homomorphism B B A (A/m) = B/mB gives a bijection of idempotents. But this follows immediately from (5) since every nilpotent in B/mB lifts to a unique idempotent in B. Remark One may actually replace étale with smooth in Theorem (4) (see [Gro67, Corollaire ]). Example Any complete local ring is Henselian [Sta, Tag 04GM].

23 CHAPTER 2 Representable functors 2.1. Definitions and examples Let C be a category. A functor F : C op (Set) is called representable if it is isomorphic to the functor h X = Hom C (, X) for some object X in C. We also say that X represents the functor F. Note that for a morphism ϕ: Y Z in C, the map ϕ : h X (Z) h X (Y ) is given by sending a morphism ψ : Z X to the morphism ψ ϕ: Y X. Furthermore, we have a natural transformation h ϕ : h Y h Z defined by sending a morphism β : W Y to the composition ϕ β : W Z. Remark A functor F : C op (Set) is representable if and only if it has a universal object, that is, if there exists a pair (X, ξ), where X is an object in C and ξ F X, such that for any Y C and any element η F Y, there exists a unique f Hom(Y, X) such that f (ξ) = η. Example Let A be a ring, let f 1,..., f m A[T 1,..., T n ] be polynomials, and put R = A[T 1,..., T n ]/(f 1,..., f m ). Let S be a scheme over Spec A and put X = Spec R. We have Hom (Sch) (S, X) Hom (A-alg) (R, Γ(S, O S )) {s Γ(S, O S ) n : f 1 (s) = = f n (s) = 0}, where the last isomorphism is given by sending an A-algebra homomorphism ϕ to the tuple (ϕ(t 1 ),..., ϕ(t n )) (clearly f i (ϕ(t 1 ),..., ϕ(t n )) = ϕ(f i (T 1,..., T n )) for all 1 i n). Hence we see that the functor (Sch/A) (Set) that sends a scheme S over Spec A to the set {s Γ(S, O S ) n : f 1 (s) = = f n (s) = 0} is represented by Spec (A[T 1,..., T n ]/(f 1,..., f n )). Example (Affine n-space). In particular, the functor (Sch) op (Set) that sends a scheme S to the set Γ(S, O S ) n is represented by Spec (Z[T 1,..., T n ]). Indeed, we have bijections Hom (Sch) (S, A n ) Hom (Ring) (Z[T 1,..., T n ], Γ(S, O S )) Γ(S, O S ) n, which are natural in S. Example (G m = Spec Z[T, T 1 ]). As another special case of Example 2.1.2, we get that the functor (Sch) op (Set) that sends a scheme S to the set Γ(S, O S ) of units in Γ(S, O S ) is represented by G m. This follows from the isomorphism Z[T, T 1 ] = Z[T, X]/(T X 1). Example (The Grassmannian) Consider the functor G k,n : (Sch) op (Set) 21

24 22 2. REPRESENTABLE FUNCTORS defined by G k,n (X) = {F O n X : O n X /F is locally free of rank n k} and which takes a morphism f : Y X to the map G k,n (f): G k,n (X) G k,n (Y ) which takes F to the pullback f F. To see that f F G k,n (Y ) note first that i : F O n X gives a morphism f F f (O n X ) = O n Y which is injective since i is injective and O n X /i(f) is locally free [GW10, 8.10]. For any subset I {1,..., n} we may define a subfunctor G I G k,n by G I (X) = {F G k,n (X): O I X O n X O n X /F is an isomorphism}, where the morphism O I X O n X is induced by the inclusion I {1,..., n} and by O I X we mean O X O X with one component for each index in I. For every F G I (X) we have a morphism O n X O I X with kernel F, and conversely, for every retraction τ : O n X O I X of the inclusion O I X O n X, we get that ker(τ) G I (X). Hence there is a bijection between the set of retractions r : O n X O I X of the inclusion O I X O n X and elements of G I(X). It is not hard to see that this bijection is functorial in X. Such a retraction r must be the identity on the indices in I and hence r is completely determined by its values on the index set I c = {1,..., n} \ I. Hence we conclude that we have a functorial bijection But we also have natural bijections G I (X) Hom (OX -mod)(o Ic X, O I X ). Hom (OX -mod)(o Ic X, O I X ) Hom (Set)(I c I, Γ(X, O X )) Γ(X, O X ) k(n k) (see [GW10, 7.4.6]), and by Example we conclude that there is a natural bijection G I (X) Hom (Sch) (X, A k(n k) ). That is, the functor G I is represented by the affine scheme A k(n k). This may be used to show that the functor G k,n is representable (see [GW10, Proposition 8.14]). In particular, one may show that G 1,n+1 is represented by the projective space P n Z The Yoneda embedding Lemma (Yoneda s lemma). For any object X in C, the map α X,F : Hom(h X, F) F(X) is a bijection which is natural in X and F. τ τ X (id X ), Proof. The first part follows from the fact that any natural transformation τ : h X F is completely determined by the image of id X h X (X) in F(X). Indeed, consider the commutative diagram h X (X) τ X F(X) f h X (Y ) f τ Y F(Y ) induced by a morphism f : Y X. We have τ Y (f) = τ Y (f (id X )) = f (τ X (id X )). This proves the first part.

25 2.2. THE YONEDA EMBEDDING 23 Let f : Y X be a morphism in C, and let h f : h Y h X be the induced natural transformation. To prove naturality in X, we need to show that the following diagram commutes: Hom(h X, F) α X,F f # F(X) f Hom(h Y, F) α Y,F F(Y ) where f # is the map defined by taking h X F to the composition h Y h X F. Let τ : h X F be a natural transformation. Then f α X,F (τ) = f (τ X (id X )) = τ Y (f) = τ Y (f id Y ) = (τ h f ) Y (id Y ) = α Y,F f # (τ). Naturality in F is trivial since if η : F G is a natural transformation of functors, then Hom(h X, F) Hom(h X, G) is just given by composition with η and by definition we have (η τ) X (id X ) = η X (τ X (id X )). Hence we have a functor Hom(h ( ), F): C op (Set); X Hom(h X, F) and Lemma says that there is an isomorphism of functors Hom(h ( ), F) = F. Remark Note that Yoneda s lemma implies that any map F(X) F(Y ) given by a morphism Y X is exactly the map given by left composition by h Y h X. A morphism f : X Y in a category C gives a natural transformation h X h Y by composing with f. Thus, the assignment X h X is a functor C PreSh(C) from C to the category PreSh(C) of functors C op (Set) (that is, the category of presheaves on C). Yoneda s lemma implies that i.e., the functor X h X is fully faithful. Hom PreSh(C) (h X, h Y ) Hom C (X, Y ), Definition The embedding C PreSh(C); X h X Yoneda embedding. is called the Remark Yoneda s lemma implies that there is an equivalence of categories between C and the category of representable functors F : C op (Set) given by sending an object X to h X. Hence if Y is an object in C, we write X(Y ) = h X (Y ) = Hom C (Y, X). Remark Note that two objects X and Y in a category C are isomorphic if and only if h X and h Y are isomorphic as functors (C X,Y ) op (Set) where C X,Y is the full subcategory of C with only two objects X and Y. Remark Note that since id: S S is the final object in Sch/S, we have that h S is the final object in the category PreSh(Sch/S). Indeed, every S-scheme

26 24 2. REPRESENTABLE FUNCTORS X comes with a morphism f : X S. Morphisms ϕ: X S are commutative diagrams X ϕ S f S Obviously, we must have f = ϕ and hence h S (X) consists of a single point. Thus, if F is a presheaf on (Sch/S) then there is a unique map F(X) h S (X) for each S-scheme X. This gives the unique natural transformation F h S. id

27 CHAPTER 3 Sheaves of sets In the following chapter we will discuss sheaves on sites, which is a generalization of the concept of a sheaf on a topological space. The definition is very similar, keeping in mind that the fiber product U i U U j in the category Open(X) of open subsets of a topological space X, with morphisms given by inclusions, is just the intersection U i U j taken in U Grothendieck topologies and sites The main references to the following section are [FGI + 05, Mil80, Mil21, Tam94]. Definition Let C be a category with fiber products. A Grothendieck topology on C is defined by the following data: for each object U in C we have a collection Cov(U) of coverings of U. A covering is a set of arrows {U i U} i I. The coverings satisfy the following axioms: (1) if V U is an isomorphism then {V U} is a covering; (2) if {U i U} is a covering and V U is a morphism, then {V U U i V } is a covering; (3) if {U i U} is a covering and for every index i we have a covering {V ij U i }, then {V ij U i U} is a covering of U. A category together with a Grothendieck topology is called a site. If S is a site then the underlying category is denoted by Cat(S). For any family of maps {φ i : U i U} between spaces of any kind, we say {ϕ i : U i U} is jointly surjective if U = ϕ i (U i ). Remark We will sometimes also use the following notation, as in [Mil80, II.1]: Let E be a class of morphisms of schemes such that (1) every isomorphism is in E, (2) any composition of morphisms in E is in E, and (3) any base change of a morphism in E is in E. Let S be a scheme and E a class of morphisms as above. Let C/S be a full subcategory of Sch/S which is closed under taking fiber products and such that for any U S in C/S and any E-morphism U U, the composition U U S is in C/S. Then we get a Grothendieck topology on C/S by taking as coverings: all collections {ϕ i : U i U} of E-morphisms over S such that U = ϕ i (U i ). The resulting site will be denoted by S E or (C/S) E. Example (Small classical topology on a topological space X). Consider the category Open(X) of open subsets of a topological space X, where the morphisms are given by inclusions. A covering of an open subset U X is a jointly surjective family {U i U}. Example (The big classical topology on (Top)). Consider the category (Top) of topological spaces. A covering of a topological space U is a jointly surjective family of open embeddings U i U. 25

28 26 3. SHEAVES OF SETS Example (Small Zariski site on X). Consider the category ZarOp(X) of Zariski-open subsets of a scheme X with morphisms that are inclusion maps. A covering is a jointly surjective family {U i U}. This site is denoted X zar. Example (Big Zariski site on S). Consider the category (Sch/S) of schemes over S. A covering of a scheme U S is a jointly surjective family of open immersions U i U over S. The corresponding site is denoted by S Zar. Example (Small étale site on X). Let (ét/x) be the category whose objects are étale morphisms U X and whose arrows are X-morphisms V U of schemes. The coverings are jointly surjective families of morphisms {U i U} in (ét/x) (i.e., étale X-morphisms). By Lemma 1.3.5, the property of being étale is stable under base change and composition and hence this defines a Grothendieck topology on (ét/x). The corresponding site is denoted Xét. Example (Big étale site over S). The site with underlying category (Sch/S) and coverings which are jointly surjective families {U i U} of étale S- morphisms is denoted by SÉt. Example (Big flat site on S). Consider the category (Sch/S) with coverings which are jointly surjective families {U i U} of flat S-morphisms which are locally of finite presentation. Note that this implies that the induced map Ui U is flat and surjective, i.e., faithfully flat. This site is denoted by S Fl. Definition A morphism X Y of schemes is called an fpqc morphism if it is faithfully flat and every quasi-compact open subset of Y is the image of a quasi-compact open subset of X. Example (Big fpqc site on S). The site with underlying category (Sch/S) and coverings which are jointly surjective families {U i U} of S-morphisms such that the induced map U i U is fpqc is denoted by S Fpqc. Remark For a scheme S, we have continuous morphisms (see Definition 4.1.1) S Fpqc S Fl SÉt S Zar induced by the identity morphism S S. Sét S zar Proposition ([FGI + 05, Proposition 2.33]). Let f : X Y be a surjective morphism of schemes. The following are equivalent: (1) every quasi-compact open subset of Y is the image of a quasi-compact open subset of X; (2) there is a covering Y = V i of Y by open affine subschemes V i such that each V i is the image of a quasi-compact open subset of X; (3) for every x X, there is an open neighborhood U of x, such that the restriction f : U f(u) is quasi-compact and f(u) is open in Y ; (4) for every x X there is a quasi-compact open neighborhood U of x such that f(u) is open in Y and affine Sheaves of sets Definition A presheaf (of sets) on a site S is a functor F : Cat(S) op (Set). A presheaf F is called separated if for every covering {U i U}, the map F(U) i I F(U i )

29 3.2. SHEAVES OF SETS 27 is injective. A presheaf F is called a sheaf if the diagram ( ) F(U) F(U i ) pr 1 F(U j U U l ) pr i I 2 (j,l) I I is an equalizer diagram for every covering {U i U} i I in S, where the parallel arrows are defined as follows: pr k : i F(U i ) j,l F(U j U U l ), k {1, 2} sends (a i ) i to the element with component at index (j, l) equal to pr 1a j if k = 1 and pr 2a l if k = 2. Given a presheaf F and a morphism U V, we call the induced map F(V ) F(U) a restriction map. Remark To say that ( ) is an equalizer diagram, or that F(U) F(Ui ) is an equalizer of the diagram F(U i ) F(U i U U j ) is to say that for each arrow A F(U i ) such that the composites h: A F(U i ) F(U i U U j ) coincides, there is a unique arrow h : A F(U) such that h is the composition of h with the arrow F(U) F(U i ). To say that there always exists such an arrow h is to say that F(U) maps surjectively onto the subset of F(U i ) consisting of all elements whose images under the two maps to F(U i U U j ) coincide. To say that such a map h (whenever it exists) is unique, is to say that the map F(U) F(U i ) is injective, i.e., that F is separated. Remark Note that if we have morphisms Y α Z β X in some category C with fiber products, then h Z X Y = h Z hx h Y in the category PreSh(C). Indeed, let F be a presheaf and suppose that we have a commutative diagram: F h Y h Z Let W be an object in C. An element in F(W ) will be mapped to some ϕ: W Y and some ψ : W Z such that α ϕ = β ψ. But this gives a unique map γ : W Z X Y such that ϕ = pr Y γ and ψ = pr Z γ. Hence we conclude that every F(W ) h Y (W ) and F(W ) h Z (W ) factors uniquely through h Z X Y (W ). That is, h Z X Y = h Z hx h Z. Remark To define a presheaf we do not need a topology on the category, and hence we may not only speak of presheaves on sites, but also presheaves on categories. A morphism of sheaves is just a natural transformation of presheaves. Given a site S, we get a category of sheaves on S, i.e., a category where the objects are sheaves on S and the morphisms are morphisms of sheaves on S. h X

30 28 3. SHEAVES OF SETS Definition Given a site S, let PreSh(S) denote the category of presheaves on S and let Sh(S) denote the category of sheaves on S. Example (Sheaf on (C/S) E of a set M). Let M be a set and S a scheme. For every S-scheme X, define M(X) = M π0(x) = Hom (Set) (π 0 (X), M), where π 0 (X) denotes the set of connected components of X. A morphism f : Y X of S-schemes maps a connected component of Y into a connected component of X, and hence f defines a map σ : π 0 (Y ) π 0 (X). Hence we get a map Hom (Set) (π 0 (X), M) Hom (Set) (π 0 (Y ), M). This defines a presheaf and it is not hard to see that this presheaf is also a sheaf. This sheaf will be denoted by M S or just M. Example A representable functor (Top) op (Set) is a sheaf in the big classical topology (defined in Example 3.1.4). Indeed, consider the functor Hom (Top) (, X) where X is a topological space. Let U i be an open covering of U and suppose that we have continuous maps f i : U i X for each i I, such that f i and f j agree on U i U j for each i, j I. Then there is a unique continuous map f : U X such that f Ui = f i. Example Any representable presheaf F on S Zar is a sheaf. Indeed, let X be an S-scheme and let {U i U} be a covering in S Zar. The fiber product U i U U j may be identified with the intersection U i U j in U. It is a well known fact that if U = U i and we have S-morphisms f i : U i X that agree on each intersection U i U j, then there is a unique S-morphism f : U X such that f Ui = f i. Lemma ([FGI + 05, 2.60]). A presheaf F on S Fpqc is a sheaf if and only if it satisfies the following two conditions: (1) F satisfies the sheaf condition for Zariski open coverings; (2) for any cover {V U} in S Fpqc with U and V affine, we have that is an equalizer diagram. F(U) F(V ) F(V U V ) Proof. It is clear that the two conditions are necessary for F to be a sheaf on S Fpqc. For the converse, suppose that {U i U} i I is a covering in S Fpqc, with U and each U i affine. If F satisfies (1) then F( U i ) = F(U i ) since {U j U i } j is a Zariski open covering. We have that ( Ui ) U ( Ui ) = (U i U U j ), and hence if the index set I is finite then U i is affine, and hence the upper row in the diagram F(U) F(Ui ) F(Ui U U j ) F(U) F( U i ) F(( U i ) U ( U i )) is an equalizer diagram by (2) (this is the diagram arising from the cover { U i U}). Now let {g : V V } be any covering in S Fpqc. By Proposition there is a covering V = V i V i := g(v i of open quasi-compact subschemes such that the image ) is open and affine for each i. Hence we may write each V i as a finite

31 3.3. SIEVES AND ELEMENTARY TOPOI 29 union of open subschemes V ik V i. The V i s form an open affine covering of V. Now consider the following diagram: F(V ) γ F(V ) F(V V V ) α F(V i ) i β δ F(V i k ik ) F(V ik V V i k,l il ) F(V i V j ) i,j F(V ik V i,jk,l jl ) The first two columns are equalizer diagrams by (1) and the second row is an equalizer diagram by (2). The maps α and β are injective and hence so is γ. Thus F is a separated presheaf on S Fpqc and hence the bottom row is injective. Now take an element s F(V ) and suppose that s maps to the same element via the two maps to F(V V V ). Then δ(s) maps to the same element via the two maps to i k,l F(V ik V V il ), which implies that δ(s) im(β). Let t i F(V i) be the element such that β(t) = δ(s). We have that δ(s) maps to the same element in i,j k,l F(V ik V jl ) and since the bottom row is injective t must map to the same element via the two maps to i,j F(V i V j ). Thus t im(α) and since δ is injective, we see that s im(γ). Thus the top row is an equalizer diagram and hence F is a sheaf on S Fpqc Sieves and elementary topoi Let X be a set and A a subset of X. Then A is completely determined by a characteristic map χ A : X {0, 1}, where χ A (x) = 0 if x A and χ A (x) = 1 if x / A. This gives a pullback diagram A {0} X {0, 1} One says that the inclusion (monomorphism) {0} {0, 1} is a subobject classifier. In general, if C is a category with terminal object 1, then a subobject classifier for C is a monomorphism 1 Ω such that for every monomorphism A X in C, there is a unique pullback square A 1 X (see [ML98, p. 105]). A category C is called an elementary topos, if it satisfies the following three properties: Ω (1) C has all finite limits; (2) C has a subobject classifier; (3) C is cartesian closed (see [ML98, p. 97]). The category Sh(S) of sheaves on a site S is an elementary topos [MLM94, III.7.4]. The subobject classifier is defined in terms of sieves.

32 30 3. SHEAVES OF SETS Definition Let U be an object in a category C. Then a subfunctor of is called a sieve. h U : C op (Set) The subobject classifier Ω in Sh(S) is defined by taking Ω(U) to be the set of all so called closed sieves on U for any object U in S. Let F be a sheaf on S. Every subsheaf G of F is determined by its characteristic morphism χ G : F Ω. See [MLM94, Section III.7] for details. We will only use the fact that distinct subsheaves gives distinct characteristic morphisms Epimorphisms Recall that an arrow X Y between objects in a category C is called an epimorphism if whenever we have two arrows f, g : Y Z such that the compositions X Y Z agree, we have f = g. Equivalently we can say that the map Hom C (Y, Z) Hom C (X, Z) is injective for every object Z. Recall also that a diagram W β α X Y is a coequalizer diagram (X Y is a coequalizer of W X) if every morphism X V such that the two maps W X V coincide factors uniquely through X Y. Now, if we have a pair of morphisms α, β : W X, then every morphism X V such that the maps W β α X V coincide factors through X Y if and only if Hom C (Y, V ) maps surjectively onto the subset {f Hom(X, V ) : f α = f β}. Hence we conclude that W β α X Y is a coequalizer diagram in a small category C if and only if the diagram Hom C (Y, V ) Hom C (X, V ) Hom C (W, V ) is an equalizer diagram in (Set) for every object V in C. This means in particular that Hom C (Y, V ) Hom C (X, V ) is injective for every Y V and thus that X Y is an epimorphism. Definition A morphism X Y in a category C with fiber products is called an effective epimorphism if the following diagram is a coequalizer diagram: X Y X pr 1 pr 2 X Y. We say that X Y is a universally effective epimorphism if for every morphism Y Y, the morphism X Y Y Y is an effective epimorphism. Remark Thus, to say that any presheaf h X on S Fpqc (given by an S- scheme X) is a sheaf, (it is a sheaf in the Zariski topology) is to say that any fpqc morphism V U, with U and V affine, is an effective epimorphism. Definition For an object X in a category C, let h X be the covariant functor Hom C (X, ): C (Set).

NOTES ON FLAT MORPHISMS AND THE FPQC TOPOLOGY

NOTES ON FLAT MORPHISMS AND THE FPQC TOPOLOGY NOTES ON FLAT MORPHISMS AND THE FPQC TOPOLOGY RUNE HAUGSENG The aim of these notes is to define flat and faithfully flat morphisms and review some of their important properties, and to define the fpqc

More information

SMA. Grothendieck topologies and schemes

SMA. Grothendieck topologies and schemes SMA Grothendieck topologies and schemes Rafael GUGLIELMETTI Semester project Supervised by Prof. Eva BAYER FLUCKIGER Assistant: Valéry MAHÉ April 27, 2012 2 CONTENTS 3 Contents 1 Prerequisites 5 1.1 Fibred

More information

1 Notations and Statement of the Main Results

1 Notations and Statement of the Main Results An introduction to algebraic fundamental groups 1 Notations and Statement of the Main Results Throughout the talk, all schemes are locally Noetherian. All maps are of locally finite type. There two main

More information

ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY COURSE NOTES, LECTURE 9: SCHEMES AND THEIR MODULES.

ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY COURSE NOTES, LECTURE 9: SCHEMES AND THEIR MODULES. ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY COURSE NOTES, LECTURE 9: SCHEMES AND THEIR MODULES. ANDREW SALCH 1. Affine schemes. About notation: I am in the habit of writing f (U) instead of f 1 (U) for the preimage of a subset

More information

APPENDIX 2: AN INTRODUCTION TO ÉTALE COHOMOLOGY AND THE BRAUER GROUP

APPENDIX 2: AN INTRODUCTION TO ÉTALE COHOMOLOGY AND THE BRAUER GROUP APPENDIX 2: AN INTRODUCTION TO ÉTALE COHOMOLOGY AND THE BRAUER GROUP In this appendix we review some basic facts about étale cohomology, give the definition of the (cohomological) Brauer group, and discuss

More information

SUMMER COURSE IN MOTIVIC HOMOTOPY THEORY

SUMMER COURSE IN MOTIVIC HOMOTOPY THEORY SUMMER COURSE IN MOTIVIC HOMOTOPY THEORY MARC LEVINE Contents 0. Introduction 1 1. The category of schemes 2 1.1. The spectrum of a commutative ring 2 1.2. Ringed spaces 5 1.3. Schemes 10 1.4. Schemes

More information

HARTSHORNE EXERCISES

HARTSHORNE EXERCISES HARTSHORNE EXERCISES J. WARNER Hartshorne, Exercise I.5.6. Blowing Up Curve Singularities (a) Let Y be the cusp x 3 = y 2 + x 4 + y 4 or the node xy = x 6 + y 6. Show that the curve Ỹ obtained by blowing

More information

Exercises of the Algebraic Geometry course held by Prof. Ugo Bruzzo. Alex Massarenti

Exercises of the Algebraic Geometry course held by Prof. Ugo Bruzzo. Alex Massarenti Exercises of the Algebraic Geometry course held by Prof. Ugo Bruzzo Alex Massarenti SISSA, VIA BONOMEA 265, 34136 TRIESTE, ITALY E-mail address: alex.massarenti@sissa.it These notes collect a series of

More information

A Grothendieck site is a small category C equipped with a Grothendieck topology T. A Grothendieck topology T consists of a collection of subfunctors

A Grothendieck site is a small category C equipped with a Grothendieck topology T. A Grothendieck topology T consists of a collection of subfunctors Contents 5 Grothendieck topologies 1 6 Exactness properties 10 7 Geometric morphisms 17 8 Points and Boolean localization 22 5 Grothendieck topologies A Grothendieck site is a small category C equipped

More information

CHAPTER 1. Étale cohomology

CHAPTER 1. Étale cohomology CHAPTER 1 Étale cohomology This chapter summarizes the theory of the étale topology on schemes, culminating in the results on l-adic cohomology that are needed in the construction of Galois representations

More information

1. Algebraic vector bundles. Affine Varieties

1. Algebraic vector bundles. Affine Varieties 0. Brief overview Cycles and bundles are intrinsic invariants of algebraic varieties Close connections going back to Grothendieck Work with quasi-projective varieties over a field k Affine Varieties 1.

More information

ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY: GLOSSARY AND EXAMPLES

ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY: GLOSSARY AND EXAMPLES ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY: GLOSSARY AND EXAMPLES HONGHAO GAO FEBRUARY 7, 2014 Quasi-coherent and coherent sheaves Let X Spec k be a scheme. A presheaf over X is a contravariant functor from the category of open

More information

Synopsis of material from EGA Chapter II, 4. Proposition (4.1.6). The canonical homomorphism ( ) is surjective [(3.2.4)].

Synopsis of material from EGA Chapter II, 4. Proposition (4.1.6). The canonical homomorphism ( ) is surjective [(3.2.4)]. Synopsis of material from EGA Chapter II, 4 4.1. Definition of projective bundles. 4. Projective bundles. Ample sheaves Definition (4.1.1). Let S(E) be the symmetric algebra of a quasi-coherent O Y -module.

More information

Smooth morphisms. Peter Bruin 21 February 2007

Smooth morphisms. Peter Bruin 21 February 2007 Smooth morphisms Peter Bruin 21 February 2007 Introduction The goal of this talk is to define smooth morphisms of schemes, which are one of the main ingredients in Néron s fundamental theorem [BLR, 1.3,

More information

where Σ is a finite discrete Gal(K sep /K)-set unramified along U and F s is a finite Gal(k(s) sep /k(s))-subset

where Σ is a finite discrete Gal(K sep /K)-set unramified along U and F s is a finite Gal(k(s) sep /k(s))-subset Classification of quasi-finite étale separated schemes As we saw in lecture, Zariski s Main Theorem provides a very visual picture of quasi-finite étale separated schemes X over a henselian local ring

More information

Algebraic varieties and schemes over any scheme. Non singular varieties

Algebraic varieties and schemes over any scheme. Non singular varieties Algebraic varieties and schemes over any scheme. Non singular varieties Trang June 16, 2010 1 Lecture 1 Let k be a field and k[x 1,..., x n ] the polynomial ring with coefficients in k. Then we have two

More information

MATH 8253 ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY WEEK 12

MATH 8253 ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY WEEK 12 MATH 8253 ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY WEEK 2 CİHAN BAHRAN 3.2.. Let Y be a Noetherian scheme. Show that any Y -scheme X of finite type is Noetherian. Moreover, if Y is of finite dimension, then so is X. Write f

More information

Lecture 9 - Faithfully Flat Descent

Lecture 9 - Faithfully Flat Descent Lecture 9 - Faithfully Flat Descent October 15, 2014 1 Descent of morphisms In this lecture we study the concept of faithfully flat descent, which is the notion that to obtain an object on a scheme X,

More information

0.1 Spec of a monoid

0.1 Spec of a monoid These notes were prepared to accompany the first lecture in a seminar on logarithmic geometry. As we shall see in later lectures, logarithmic geometry offers a natural approach to study semistable schemes.

More information

Modules over a Ringed Space

Modules over a Ringed Space Modules over a Ringed Space Daniel Murfet October 5, 2006 In these notes we collect some useful facts about sheaves of modules on a ringed space that are either left as exercises in [Har77] or omitted

More information

Representations and Linear Actions

Representations and Linear Actions Representations and Linear Actions Definition 0.1. Let G be an S-group. A representation of G is a morphism of S-groups φ G GL(n, S) for some n. We say φ is faithful if it is a monomorphism (in the category

More information

Some remarks on Frobenius and Lefschetz in étale cohomology

Some remarks on Frobenius and Lefschetz in étale cohomology Some remarks on obenius and Lefschetz in étale cohomology Gabriel Chênevert January 5, 2004 In this lecture I will discuss some more or less related issues revolving around the main idea relating (étale)

More information

The Picard Scheme and the Dual Abelian Variety

The Picard Scheme and the Dual Abelian Variety The Picard Scheme and the Dual Abelian Variety Gabriel Dorfsman-Hopkins May 3, 2015 Contents 1 Introduction 2 1.1 Representable Functors and their Applications to Moduli Problems............... 2 1.2 Conditions

More information

TOPICS IN ALGEBRA COURSE NOTES AUTUMN Contents. Preface Notations and Conventions

TOPICS IN ALGEBRA COURSE NOTES AUTUMN Contents. Preface Notations and Conventions TOPICS IN ALGEBRA COURSE NOTES AUTUMN 2003 ROBERT E. KOTTWITZ WRITTEN UP BY BRIAN D. SMITHLING Preface Notations and Conventions Contents ii ii 1. Grothendieck Topologies and Sheaves 1 1.1. A Motivating

More information

Lectures on algebraic stacks

Lectures on algebraic stacks Rend. Mat. Appl. (7). Volume 38, (2017), 1 169 RENDICONTI DI MATEMATICA E DELLE SUE APPLICAZIONI Lectures on algebraic stacks Alberto Canonaco Abstract. These lectures give a detailed and almost self-contained

More information

FILTERED RINGS AND MODULES. GRADINGS AND COMPLETIONS.

FILTERED RINGS AND MODULES. GRADINGS AND COMPLETIONS. FILTERED RINGS AND MODULES. GRADINGS AND COMPLETIONS. Let A be a ring, for simplicity assumed commutative. A filtering, or filtration, of an A module M means a descending sequence of submodules M = M 0

More information

14 Lecture 14: Basic generallities on adic spaces

14 Lecture 14: Basic generallities on adic spaces 14 Lecture 14: Basic generallities on adic spaces 14.1 Introduction The aim of this lecture and the next two is to address general adic spaces and their connection to rigid geometry. 14.2 Two open questions

More information

Lectures on Galois Theory. Some steps of generalizations

Lectures on Galois Theory. Some steps of generalizations = Introduction Lectures on Galois Theory. Some steps of generalizations Journée Galois UNICAMP 2011bis, ter Ubatuba?=== Content: Introduction I want to present you Galois theory in the more general frame

More information

Solutions to some of the exercises from Tennison s Sheaf Theory

Solutions to some of the exercises from Tennison s Sheaf Theory Solutions to some of the exercises from Tennison s Sheaf Theory Pieter Belmans June 19, 2011 Contents 1 Exercises at the end of Chapter 1 1 2 Exercises in Chapter 2 6 3 Exercises at the end of Chapter

More information

Lecture 2 Sheaves and Functors

Lecture 2 Sheaves and Functors Lecture 2 Sheaves and Functors In this lecture we will introduce the basic concept of sheaf and we also will recall some of category theory. 1 Sheaves and locally ringed spaces The definition of sheaf

More information

Arithmetic Algebraic Geometry

Arithmetic Algebraic Geometry Arithmetic Algebraic Geometry 2 Arithmetic Algebraic Geometry Travis Dirle December 4, 2016 2 Contents 1 Preliminaries 1 1.1 Affine Varieties.......................... 1 1.2 Projective Varieties........................

More information

Representable presheaves

Representable presheaves Representable presheaves March 15, 2017 A presheaf on a category C is a contravariant functor F on C. In particular, for any object X Ob(C) we have the presheaf (of sets) represented by X, that is Hom

More information

ABSTRACT DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY VIA SHEAF THEORY

ABSTRACT DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY VIA SHEAF THEORY ABSTRACT DIFFERENTIAL GEOMETRY VIA SHEAF THEORY ARDA H. DEMIRHAN Abstract. We examine the conditions for uniqueness of differentials in the abstract setting of differential geometry. Then we ll come up

More information

CHEAT SHEET: PROPERTIES OF MORPHISMS OF SCHEMES

CHEAT SHEET: PROPERTIES OF MORPHISMS OF SCHEMES CHEAT SHEET: PROPERTIES OF MORPHISMS OF SCHEMES BRIAN OSSERMAN The purpose of this cheat sheet is to provide an easy reference for definitions of various properties of morphisms of schemes, and basic results

More information

Elementary (ha-ha) Aspects of Topos Theory

Elementary (ha-ha) Aspects of Topos Theory Elementary (ha-ha) Aspects of Topos Theory Matt Booth June 3, 2016 Contents 1 Sheaves on topological spaces 1 1.1 Presheaves on spaces......................... 1 1.2 Digression on pointless topology..................

More information

Lecture 9: Sheaves. February 11, 2018

Lecture 9: Sheaves. February 11, 2018 Lecture 9: Sheaves February 11, 2018 Recall that a category X is a topos if there exists an equivalence X Shv(C), where C is a small category (which can be assumed to admit finite limits) equipped with

More information

DESCENT THEORY (JOE RABINOFF S EXPOSITION)

DESCENT THEORY (JOE RABINOFF S EXPOSITION) DESCENT THEORY (JOE RABINOFF S EXPOSITION) RAVI VAKIL 1. FEBRUARY 21 Background: EGA IV.2. Descent theory = notions that are local in the fpqc topology. (Remark: we aren t assuming finite presentation,

More information

THE KEEL MORI THEOREM VIA STACKS

THE KEEL MORI THEOREM VIA STACKS THE KEEL MORI THEOREM VIA STACKS BRIAN CONRAD 1. Introduction Let X be an Artin stack (always assumed to have quasi-compact and separated diagonal over Spec Z; cf. [2, 1.3]). A coarse moduli space for

More information

Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009

Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009 MIT OpenCourseWare http://ocw.mit.edu 18.726 Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms. 18.726: Algebraic Geometry

More information

Modules over a Scheme

Modules over a Scheme Modules over a Scheme Daniel Murfet October 5, 2006 In these notes we collect various facts about quasi-coherent sheaves on a scheme. Nearly all of the material is trivial or can be found in [Gro60]. These

More information

Homology and Cohomology of Stacks (Lecture 7)

Homology and Cohomology of Stacks (Lecture 7) Homology and Cohomology of Stacks (Lecture 7) February 19, 2014 In this course, we will need to discuss the l-adic homology and cohomology of algebro-geometric objects of a more general nature than algebraic

More information

Notes on p-divisible Groups

Notes on p-divisible Groups Notes on p-divisible Groups March 24, 2006 This is a note for the talk in STAGE in MIT. The content is basically following the paper [T]. 1 Preliminaries and Notations Notation 1.1. Let R be a complete

More information

Derived Algebraic Geometry IX: Closed Immersions

Derived Algebraic Geometry IX: Closed Immersions Derived Algebraic Geometry I: Closed Immersions November 5, 2011 Contents 1 Unramified Pregeometries and Closed Immersions 4 2 Resolutions of T-Structures 7 3 The Proof of Proposition 1.0.10 14 4 Closed

More information

Lecture 3: Flat Morphisms

Lecture 3: Flat Morphisms Lecture 3: Flat Morphisms September 29, 2014 1 A crash course on Properties of Schemes For more details on these properties, see [Hartshorne, II, 1-5]. 1.1 Open and Closed Subschemes If (X, O X ) is a

More information

AFFINE PUSHFORWARD AND SMOOTH PULLBACK FOR PERVERSE SHEAVES

AFFINE PUSHFORWARD AND SMOOTH PULLBACK FOR PERVERSE SHEAVES AFFINE PUSHFORWARD AND SMOOTH PULLBACK FOR PERVERSE SHEAVES YEHAO ZHOU Conventions In this lecture note, a variety means a separated algebraic variety over complex numbers, and sheaves are C-linear. 1.

More information

ETALE COHOMOLOGY - PART 2. Draft Version as of March 15, 2004

ETALE COHOMOLOGY - PART 2. Draft Version as of March 15, 2004 ETALE COHOMOLOGY - PART 2 ANDREW ARCHIBALD AND DAVID SAVITT Draft Version as of March 15, 2004 Contents 1. Grothendieck Topologies 1 2. The Category of Sheaves on a Site 3 3. Operations on presheaves and

More information

Azumaya Algebras. Dennis Presotto. November 4, Introduction: Central Simple Algebras

Azumaya Algebras. Dennis Presotto. November 4, Introduction: Central Simple Algebras Azumaya Algebras Dennis Presotto November 4, 2015 1 Introduction: Central Simple Algebras Azumaya algebras are introduced as generalized or global versions of central simple algebras. So the first part

More information

Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009

Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009 MIT OpenCourseWare http://ocw.mit.edu 18.726 Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms. 18.726: Algebraic Geometry

More information

Tunisian Journal of Mathematics an international publication organized by the Tunisian Mathematical Society

Tunisian Journal of Mathematics an international publication organized by the Tunisian Mathematical Society unisian Journal of Mathematics an international publication organized by the unisian Mathematical Society Ramification groups of coverings and valuations akeshi Saito 2019 vol. 1 no. 3 msp msp UNISIAN

More information

Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009

Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009 MIT OpenCourseWare http://ocw.mit.edu 18.726 Algebraic Geometry Spring 2009 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms. 18.726: Algebraic Geometry

More information

BEZOUT S THEOREM CHRISTIAN KLEVDAL

BEZOUT S THEOREM CHRISTIAN KLEVDAL BEZOUT S THEOREM CHRISTIAN KLEVDAL A weaker version of Bézout s theorem states that if C, D are projective plane curves of degrees c and d that intersect transversally, then C D = cd. The goal of this

More information

which is a group homomorphism, such that if W V U, then

which is a group homomorphism, such that if W V U, then 4. Sheaves Definition 4.1. Let X be a topological space. A presheaf of groups F on X is a a function which assigns to every open set U X a group F(U) and to every inclusion V U a restriction map, ρ UV

More information

h M (T ). The natural isomorphism η : M h M determines an element U = η 1

h M (T ). The natural isomorphism η : M h M determines an element U = η 1 MODULI PROBLEMS AND GEOMETRIC INVARIANT THEORY 7 2.3. Fine moduli spaces. The ideal situation is when there is a scheme that represents our given moduli functor. Definition 2.15. Let M : Sch Set be a moduli

More information

ALGEBRAIC GROUPS. Disclaimer: There are millions of errors in these notes!

ALGEBRAIC GROUPS. Disclaimer: There are millions of errors in these notes! ALGEBRAIC GROUPS Disclaimer: There are millions of errors in these notes! 1. Some algebraic geometry The subject of algebraic groups depends on the interaction between algebraic geometry and group theory.

More information

LECTURE 1: SOME GENERALITIES; 1 DIMENSIONAL EXAMPLES

LECTURE 1: SOME GENERALITIES; 1 DIMENSIONAL EXAMPLES LECTURE 1: SOME GENERALITIES; 1 DIMENSIONAL EAMPLES VIVEK SHENDE Historically, sheaves come from topology and analysis; subsequently they have played a fundamental role in algebraic geometry and certain

More information

Descent on the étale site Wouter Zomervrucht, October 14, 2014

Descent on the étale site Wouter Zomervrucht, October 14, 2014 Descent on the étale site Wouter Zomervrucht, October 14, 2014 We treat two eatures o the étale site: descent o morphisms and descent o quasi-coherent sheaves. All will also be true on the larger pp and

More information

Scheme theoretic vector bundles

Scheme theoretic vector bundles Scheme theoretic vector bundles The best reference for this material is the first chapter of [Gro61]. What can be found below is a less complete treatment of the same material. 1. Introduction Let s start

More information

THE SMOOTH BASE CHANGE THEOREM

THE SMOOTH BASE CHANGE THEOREM THE SMOOTH BASE CHANGE THEOREM AARON LANDESMAN CONTENTS 1. Introduction 2 1.1. Statement of the smooth base change theorem 2 1.2. Topological smooth base change 4 1.3. A useful case of smooth base change

More information

ABSTRACT NONSINGULAR CURVES

ABSTRACT NONSINGULAR CURVES ABSTRACT NONSINGULAR CURVES Affine Varieties Notation. Let k be a field, such as the rational numbers Q or the complex numbers C. We call affine n-space the collection A n k of points P = a 1, a,..., a

More information

Boolean Algebras, Boolean Rings and Stone s Representation Theorem

Boolean Algebras, Boolean Rings and Stone s Representation Theorem Boolean Algebras, Boolean Rings and Stone s Representation Theorem Hongtaek Jung December 27, 2017 Abstract This is a part of a supplementary note for a Logic and Set Theory course. The main goal is to

More information

UNIVERSAL PROPERTY OF NON-ARCHIMEDEAN ANALYTIFICATION

UNIVERSAL PROPERTY OF NON-ARCHIMEDEAN ANALYTIFICATION UNIVERSAL PROPERTY OF NON-ARCHIMEDEAN ANALYTIFICATION BRIAN CONRAD 1. Introduction 1.1. Motivation. Over C and over non-archimedean fields, analytification of algebraic spaces is defined as the solution

More information

Direct Limits. Mathematics 683, Fall 2013

Direct Limits. Mathematics 683, Fall 2013 Direct Limits Mathematics 683, Fall 2013 In this note we define direct limits and prove their basic properties. This notion is important in various places in algebra. In particular, in algebraic geometry

More information

SCHEMES. David Harari. Tsinghua, February-March 2005

SCHEMES. David Harari. Tsinghua, February-March 2005 SCHEMES David Harari Tsinghua, February-March 2005 Contents 1. Basic notions on schemes 2 1.1. First definitions and examples.................. 2 1.2. Morphisms of schemes : first properties.............

More information

ON THE REPRESENTABILITY OF Hilb n k[x] (x) Roy Mikael Skjelnes

ON THE REPRESENTABILITY OF Hilb n k[x] (x) Roy Mikael Skjelnes ON THE REPRESENTABILITY OF Hilb n k[x] (x) Roy Mikael Skjelnes Abstract. Let k[x] (x) be the polynomial ring k[x] localized in the maximal ideal (x) k[x]. We study the Hilbert functor parameterizing ideals

More information

ALGEBRAIC GROUPS JEROEN SIJSLING

ALGEBRAIC GROUPS JEROEN SIJSLING ALGEBRAIC GROUPS JEROEN SIJSLING The goal of these notes is to introduce and motivate some notions from the theory of group schemes. For the sake of simplicity, we restrict to algebraic groups (as defined

More information

THE MODULI STACK OF G-BUNDLES JONATHAN WANG

THE MODULI STACK OF G-BUNDLES JONATHAN WANG THE MODULI STACK OF G-BUNDLES JONATHAN WANG Contents 1. Introduction 1 1.1. Acknowledgments 2 1.2. Notation and terminology 2 2. Quotient stacks 3 2.1. Characterizing [Z/G] 4 2.2. Twisting by torsors 7

More information

Motivic integration on Artin n-stacks

Motivic integration on Artin n-stacks Motivic integration on Artin n-stacks Chetan Balwe Nov 13,2009 1 / 48 Prestacks (This treatment of stacks is due to B. Toën and G. Vezzosi.) Let S be a fixed base scheme. Let (Aff /S) be the category of

More information

Introduction and preliminaries Wouter Zomervrucht, Februari 26, 2014

Introduction and preliminaries Wouter Zomervrucht, Februari 26, 2014 Introduction and preliminaries Wouter Zomervrucht, Februari 26, 204. Introduction Theorem. Serre duality). Let k be a field, X a smooth projective scheme over k of relative dimension n, and F a locally

More information

SJÄLVSTÄNDIGA ARBETEN I MATEMATIK

SJÄLVSTÄNDIGA ARBETEN I MATEMATIK SJÄLVSTÄNDIGA ARBETEN I MATEMATIK MATEMATISKA INSTITUTIONEN, STOCKHOLMS UNIVERSITET Equivariant Sheaves on Topological Categories av Johan Lindberg 2015 - No 7 MATEMATISKA INSTITUTIONEN, STOCKHOLMS UNIVERSITET,

More information

ALGEBRAIC K-THEORY HANDOUT 5: K 0 OF SCHEMES, THE LOCALIZATION SEQUENCE FOR G 0.

ALGEBRAIC K-THEORY HANDOUT 5: K 0 OF SCHEMES, THE LOCALIZATION SEQUENCE FOR G 0. ALGEBRAIC K-THEORY HANDOUT 5: K 0 OF SCHEMES, THE LOCALIZATION SEQUENCE FOR G 0. ANDREW SALCH During the last lecture, we found that it is natural (even just for doing undergraduatelevel complex analysis!)

More information

Math 248B. Applications of base change for coherent cohomology

Math 248B. Applications of base change for coherent cohomology Math 248B. Applications of base change for coherent cohomology 1. Motivation Recall the following fundamental general theorem, the so-called cohomology and base change theorem: Theorem 1.1 (Grothendieck).

More information

DERIVED CATEGORIES OF STACKS. Contents 1. Introduction 1 2. Conventions, notation, and abuse of language The lisse-étale and the flat-fppf sites

DERIVED CATEGORIES OF STACKS. Contents 1. Introduction 1 2. Conventions, notation, and abuse of language The lisse-étale and the flat-fppf sites DERIVED CATEGORIES OF STACKS Contents 1. Introduction 1 2. Conventions, notation, and abuse of language 1 3. The lisse-étale and the flat-fppf sites 1 4. Derived categories of quasi-coherent modules 5

More information

CHAPTER 0 PRELIMINARY MATERIAL. Paul Vojta. University of California, Berkeley. 18 February 1998

CHAPTER 0 PRELIMINARY MATERIAL. Paul Vojta. University of California, Berkeley. 18 February 1998 CHAPTER 0 PRELIMINARY MATERIAL Paul Vojta University of California, Berkeley 18 February 1998 This chapter gives some preliminary material on number theory and algebraic geometry. Section 1 gives basic

More information

CHAPTER 1. AFFINE ALGEBRAIC VARIETIES

CHAPTER 1. AFFINE ALGEBRAIC VARIETIES CHAPTER 1. AFFINE ALGEBRAIC VARIETIES During this first part of the course, we will establish a correspondence between various geometric notions and algebraic ones. Some references for this part of the

More information

What are stacks and why should you care?

What are stacks and why should you care? What are stacks and why should you care? Milan Lopuhaä October 12, 2017 Todays goal is twofold: I want to tell you why you would want to study stacks in the first place, and I want to define what a stack

More information

3. The Sheaf of Regular Functions

3. The Sheaf of Regular Functions 24 Andreas Gathmann 3. The Sheaf of Regular Functions After having defined affine varieties, our next goal must be to say what kind of maps between them we want to consider as morphisms, i. e. as nice

More information

Lecture 6: Etale Fundamental Group

Lecture 6: Etale Fundamental Group Lecture 6: Etale Fundamental Group October 5, 2014 1 Review of the topological fundamental group and covering spaces 1.1 Topological fundamental group Suppose X is a path-connected topological space, and

More information

3. Categories and Functors We recall the definition of a category: Definition 3.1. A category C is the data of two collections. The first collection

3. Categories and Functors We recall the definition of a category: Definition 3.1. A category C is the data of two collections. The first collection 3. Categories and Functors We recall the definition of a category: Definition 3.1. A category C is the data of two collections. The first collection is called the objects of C and is denoted Obj(C). Given

More information

Chern classes à la Grothendieck

Chern classes à la Grothendieck Chern classes à la Grothendieck Theo Raedschelders October 16, 2014 Abstract In this note we introduce Chern classes based on Grothendieck s 1958 paper [4]. His approach is completely formal and he deduces

More information

3. Lecture 3. Y Z[1/p]Hom (Sch/k) (Y, X).

3. Lecture 3. Y Z[1/p]Hom (Sch/k) (Y, X). 3. Lecture 3 3.1. Freely generate qfh-sheaves. We recall that if F is a homotopy invariant presheaf with transfers in the sense of the last lecture, then we have a well defined pairing F(X) H 0 (X/S) F(S)

More information

AN INTRODUCTION TO AFFINE SCHEMES

AN INTRODUCTION TO AFFINE SCHEMES AN INTRODUCTION TO AFFINE SCHEMES BROOKE ULLERY Abstract. This paper gives a basic introduction to modern algebraic geometry. The goal of this paper is to present the basic concepts of algebraic geometry,

More information

SERRE FINITENESS AND SERRE VANISHING FOR NON-COMMUTATIVE P 1 -BUNDLES ADAM NYMAN

SERRE FINITENESS AND SERRE VANISHING FOR NON-COMMUTATIVE P 1 -BUNDLES ADAM NYMAN SERRE FINITENESS AND SERRE VANISHING FOR NON-COMMUTATIVE P 1 -BUNDLES ADAM NYMAN Abstract. Suppose X is a smooth projective scheme of finite type over a field K, E is a locally free O X -bimodule of rank

More information

Category Theory (UMV/TK/07)

Category Theory (UMV/TK/07) P. J. Šafárik University, Faculty of Science, Košice Project 2005/NP1-051 11230100466 Basic information Extent: 2 hrs lecture/1 hrs seminar per week. Assessment: Written tests during the semester, written

More information

Section Projective Morphisms

Section Projective Morphisms Section 2.7 - Projective Morphisms Daniel Murfet October 5, 2006 In this section we gather together several topics concerned with morphisms of a given scheme to projective space. We will show how a morphism

More information

Synopsis of material from EGA Chapter II, 3

Synopsis of material from EGA Chapter II, 3 Synopsis of material from EGA Chapter II, 3 3. Homogeneous spectrum of a sheaf of graded algebras 3.1. Homogeneous spectrum of a graded quasi-coherent O Y algebra. (3.1.1). Let Y be a prescheme. A sheaf

More information

THE ADIC TAME SITE KATHARINA HÜBNER

THE ADIC TAME SITE KATHARINA HÜBNER THE ADIC TAME SITE KATHARINA HÜBNER Abstract. For every adic space Z we construct a site Z t, the tame site of Z. For a scheme X over a base scheme S we obtain a tame site by associating with X/S an adic

More information

Factorization of birational maps for qe schemes in characteristic 0

Factorization of birational maps for qe schemes in characteristic 0 Factorization of birational maps for qe schemes in characteristic 0 AMS special session on Algebraic Geometry joint work with M. Temkin (Hebrew University) Dan Abramovich Brown University October 24, 2014

More information

Zariski s Main Theorem and some applications

Zariski s Main Theorem and some applications Zariski s Main Theorem and some applications Akhil Mathew January 18, 2011 Abstract We give an exposition of the various forms of Zariski s Main Theorem, following EGA. Most of the basic machinery (e.g.

More information

Some glances at topos theory. Francis Borceux

Some glances at topos theory. Francis Borceux Some glances at topos theory Francis Borceux Como, 2018 2 Francis Borceux francis.borceux@uclouvain.be Contents 1 Localic toposes 7 1.1 Sheaves on a topological space.................... 7 1.2 Sheaves

More information

NOTES ON ABELIAN VARIETIES

NOTES ON ABELIAN VARIETIES NOTES ON ABELIAN VARIETIES YICHAO TIAN AND WEIZHE ZHENG We fix a field k and an algebraic closure k of k. A variety over k is a geometrically integral and separated scheme of finite type over k. If X and

More information

Derived Algebraic Geometry XIV: Representability Theorems

Derived Algebraic Geometry XIV: Representability Theorems Derived Algebraic Geometry XIV: Representability Theorems March 14, 2012 Contents 1 The Cotangent Complex 6 1.1 The Cotangent Complex of a Spectrally Ringed -Topos.................... 7 1.2 The Cotangent

More information

Constructible Sheaves, Stalks, and Cohomology

Constructible Sheaves, Stalks, and Cohomology Constructible Sheaves, Stalks, and Cohomology Zev Rosengarten October 22, 2016 1 Constructible Sheaves We would like to understand cohomology with coefficients in some constant abelian group, like Z/l

More information

A GLIMPSE OF ALGEBRAIC K-THEORY: Eric M. Friedlander

A GLIMPSE OF ALGEBRAIC K-THEORY: Eric M. Friedlander A GLIMPSE OF ALGEBRAIC K-THEORY: Eric M. Friedlander During the first three days of September, 1997, I had the privilege of giving a series of five lectures at the beginning of the School on Algebraic

More information

PART I. Abstract algebraic categories

PART I. Abstract algebraic categories PART I Abstract algebraic categories It should be observed first that the whole concept of category is essentially an auxiliary one; our basic concepts are those of a functor and a natural transformation.

More information

Sheaves. S. Encinas. January 22, 2005 U V. F(U) F(V ) s s V. = s j Ui Uj there exists a unique section s F(U) such that s Ui = s i.

Sheaves. S. Encinas. January 22, 2005 U V. F(U) F(V ) s s V. = s j Ui Uj there exists a unique section s F(U) such that s Ui = s i. Sheaves. S. Encinas January 22, 2005 Definition 1. Let X be a topological space. A presheaf over X is a functor F : Op(X) op Sets, such that F( ) = { }. Where Sets is the category of sets, { } denotes

More information

Yuriy Drozd. Intriduction to Algebraic Geometry. Kaiserslautern 1998/99

Yuriy Drozd. Intriduction to Algebraic Geometry. Kaiserslautern 1998/99 Yuriy Drozd Intriduction to Algebraic Geometry Kaiserslautern 1998/99 CHAPTER 1 Affine Varieties 1.1. Ideals and varieties. Hilbert s Basis Theorem Let K be an algebraically closed field. We denote by

More information

A QUICK NOTE ON ÉTALE STACKS

A QUICK NOTE ON ÉTALE STACKS A QUICK NOTE ON ÉTALE STACKS DAVID CARCHEDI Abstract. These notes start by closely following a talk I gave at the Higher Structures Along the Lower Rhine workshop in Bonn, in January. I then give a taste

More information

1 Replete topoi. X = Shv proét (X) X is locally weakly contractible (next lecture) X is replete. D(X ) is left complete. K D(X ) we have R lim

1 Replete topoi. X = Shv proét (X) X is locally weakly contractible (next lecture) X is replete. D(X ) is left complete. K D(X ) we have R lim Reference: [BS] Bhatt, Scholze, The pro-étale topology for schemes In this lecture we consider replete topoi This is a nice class of topoi that include the pro-étale topos, and whose derived categories

More information

DERIVED CATEGORIES OF COHERENT SHEAVES

DERIVED CATEGORIES OF COHERENT SHEAVES DERIVED CATEGORIES OF COHERENT SHEAVES OLIVER E. ANDERSON Abstract. We give an overview of derived categories of coherent sheaves. [Huy06]. Our main reference is 1. For the participants without bacground

More information

FOUNDATIONS OF ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY CLASS 25

FOUNDATIONS OF ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY CLASS 25 FOUNDATIONS OF ALGEBRAIC GEOMETRY CLASS 25 RAVI VAKIL CONTENTS 1. Quasicoherent sheaves 1 2. Quasicoherent sheaves form an abelian category 5 We began by recalling the distinguished affine base. Definition.

More information