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Proj construction

In algebraic geometry, Proj is a construction analogous to the spectrum-of-a-ring construction of affine schemes, which produces objects with the typical properties of projective spaces and projective varieties. The construction, while not functorial, is a fundamental tool in scheme theory.

In this article, all rings will be assumed to be commutative and with identity.

Proj of a graded ring edit

Proj as a set edit

Let   be a commutative graded ring, where

 
is the direct sum decomposition associated with the gradation. The irrelevant ideal of   is the ideal of elements of positive degree
 
We say an ideal is homogeneous if it is generated by homogeneous elements. Then, as a set,
 
For brevity we will sometimes write   for  .

Proj as a topological space edit

We may define a topology, called the Zariski topology, on   by defining the closed sets to be those of the form

 

where   is a homogeneous ideal of  . As in the case of affine schemes it is quickly verified that the   form the closed sets of a topology on  .

Indeed, if   are a family of ideals, then we have   and if the indexing set I is finite, then  

Equivalently, we may take the open sets as a starting point and define

 

A common shorthand is to denote   by  , where   is the ideal generated by  . For any ideal  , the sets   and   are complementary, and hence the same proof as before shows that the sets   form a topology on  . The advantage of this approach is that the sets  , where   ranges over all homogeneous elements of the ring  , form a base for this topology, which is an indispensable tool for the analysis of  , just as the analogous fact for the spectrum of a ring is likewise indispensable.

Proj as a scheme edit

We also construct a sheaf on  , called the “structure sheaf” as in the affine case, which makes it into a scheme. As in the case of the Spec construction there are many ways to proceed: the most direct one, which is also highly suggestive of the construction of regular functions on a projective variety in classical algebraic geometry, is the following. For any open set   of   (which is by definition a set of homogeneous prime ideals of   not containing  ) we define the ring   to be the set of all functions

 

(where   denotes the subring of the ring of fractions   consisting of fractions of homogeneous elements of the same degree) such that for each prime ideal   of  :

  1.   is an element of  ;
  2. There exists an open subset   containing   and homogeneous elements   of   of the same degree such that for each prime ideal   of  :
    •   is not in  ;
    •  

It follows immediately from the definition that the   form a sheaf of rings   on  , and it may be shown that the pair ( ,  ) is in fact a scheme (this is accomplished by showing that each of the open subsets   is in fact an affine scheme).

The sheaf associated to a graded module edit

The essential property of   for the above construction was the ability to form localizations   for each prime ideal   of  . This property is also possessed by any graded module   over  , and therefore with the appropriate minor modifications the preceding section constructs for any such   a sheaf, denoted  , of  -modules on  . This sheaf is quasicoherent by construction. If   is generated by finitely many elements of degree   (e.g. a polynomial ring or a homogenous quotient of it), all quasicoherent sheaves on   arise from graded modules by this construction.[1] The corresponding graded module is not unique.

The twisting sheaf of Serre edit

A special case of the sheaf associated to a graded module is when we take   to be   itself with a different grading: namely, we let the degree   elements of   be the degree   elements of  , so

 
and denote  . We then obtain   as a quasicoherent sheaf on  , denoted   or simply  , called the twisting sheaf of Serre. It can be checked that   is in fact an invertible sheaf.

One reason for the utility of   is that it recovers the algebraic information of   that was lost when, in the construction of  , we passed to fractions of degree zero. In the case Spec A for a ring A, the global sections of the structure sheaf form A itself, whereas the global sections of   here form only the degree-zero elements of  . If we define

 

then each   contains the degree-  information about  , denoted  , and taken together they contain all the grading information that was lost. Likewise, for any sheaf of graded  -modules   we define

 

and expect this “twisted” sheaf to contain grading information about  . In particular, if   is the sheaf associated to a graded  -module   we likewise expect it to contain lost grading information about  . This suggests, though erroneously, that   can in fact be reconstructed from these sheaves; as

 
however, this is true in the case that   is a polynomial ring, below. This situation is to be contrasted with the fact that the spec functor is adjoint to the global sections functor in the category of locally ringed spaces.

Projective n-space edit

If   is a ring, we define projective n-space over   to be the scheme

 

The grading on the polynomial ring   is defined by letting each   have degree one and every element of  , degree zero. Comparing this to the definition of  , above, we see that the sections of   are in fact linear homogeneous polynomials, generated by the   themselves. This suggests another interpretation of  , namely as the sheaf of “coordinates” for  , since the   are literally the coordinates for projective  -space.

Examples of Proj edit

Proj over the affine line edit

If we let the base ring be  , then

 
has a canonical projective morphism to the affine line   whose fibers are elliptic curves except at the points   where the curves degenerate into nodal curves. So there is a fibration
 
which is also a smooth morphism of schemes (which can be checked using the Jacobian criterion).

Projective hypersurfaces and varieties edit

The projective hypersurface   is an example of a Fermat quintic threefold which is also a Calabi–Yau manifold. In addition to projective hypersurfaces, any projective variety cut out by a system of homogeneous polynomials

 
in  -variables can be converted into a projective scheme using the proj construction for the graded algebra
 
giving an embedding of projective varieties into projective schemes.

Weighted projective space edit

Weighted projective spaces can be constructed using a polynomial ring whose variables have non-standard degrees. For example, the weighted projective space   corresponds to taking   of the ring   where   have weight   while   has weight 2.

Bigraded rings edit

The proj construction extends to bigraded and multigraded rings. Geometrically, this corresponds to taking products of projective schemes. For example, given the graded rings

 
with the degree of each generator  . Then, the tensor product of these algebras over   gives the bigraded algebra
 
where the   have weight   and the   have weight  . Then the proj construction gives
 
which is a product of projective schemes. There is an embedding of such schemes into projective space by taking the total graded algebra
 
where a degree   element is considered as a degree   element. This means the  -th graded piece of   is the module
 
In addition, the scheme   now comes with bigraded sheaves   which are the tensor product of the sheaves   where
 
and
 
are the canonical projections coming from the injections of these algebras from the tensor product diagram of commutative algebras.

Global Proj edit

A generalization of the Proj construction replaces the ring S with a sheaf of algebras and produces, as the result, a scheme which might be thought of as a fibration of Proj's of rings. This construction is often used, for example, to construct projective space bundles over a base scheme.

Assumptions edit

Formally, let X be any scheme and S be a sheaf of graded  -algebras (the definition of which is similar to the definition of  -modules on a locally ringed space): that is, a sheaf with a direct sum decomposition

 

where each   is an  -module such that for every open subset U of X, S(U) is an  -algebra and the resulting direct sum decomposition

 

is a grading of this algebra as a ring. Here we assume that  . We make the additional assumption that S is a quasi-coherent sheaf; this is a “consistency” assumption on the sections over different open sets that is necessary for the construction to proceed.

Construction edit

In this setup we may construct a scheme   and a “projection” map p onto X such that for every open affine U of X,

 

This definition suggests that we construct   by first defining schemes   for each open affine U, by setting

 

and maps  , and then showing that these data can be glued together “over” each intersection of two open affines U and V to form a scheme Y which we define to be  . It is not hard to show that defining each   to be the map corresponding to the inclusion of   into S(U) as the elements of degree zero yields the necessary consistency of the  , while the consistency of the   themselves follows from the quasi-coherence assumption on S.

The twisting sheaf edit

If S has the additional property that   is a coherent sheaf and locally generates S over   (that is, when we pass to the stalk of the sheaf S at a point x of X, which is a graded algebra whose degree-zero elements form the ring   then the degree-one elements form a finitely-generated module over   and also generate the stalk as an algebra over it) then we may make a further construction. Over each open affine U, Proj S(U) bears an invertible sheaf O(1), and the assumption we have just made ensures that these sheaves may be glued just like the   above; the resulting sheaf on   is also denoted O(1) and serves much the same purpose for   as the twisting sheaf on the Proj of a ring does.

Proj of a quasi-coherent sheaf edit

Let   be a quasi-coherent sheaf on a scheme  . The sheaf of symmetric algebras   is naturally a quasi-coherent sheaf of graded  -modules, generated by elements of degree 1. The resulting scheme is denoted by  . If   is of finite type, then its canonical morphism   is a projective morphism.[2]

For any  , the fiber of the above morphism over   is the projective space   associated to the dual of the vector space   over  .

If   is a quasi-coherent sheaf of graded  -modules, generated by   and such that   is of finite type, then   is a closed subscheme of   and is then projective over  . In fact, every closed subscheme of a projective   is of this form.[3]

Projective space bundles edit

As a special case, when   is locally free of rank  , we get a projective bundle   over   of relative dimension  . Indeed, if we take an open cover of X by open affines   such that when restricted to each of these,   is free over A, then

 

and hence   is a projective space bundle. Many families of varieties can be constructed as subschemes of these projective bundles, such as the Weierstrass family of elliptic curves. For more details, see the main article.

Example of Global Proj edit

Global proj can be used to construct Lefschetz pencils. For example, let   and take homogeneous polynomials   of degree k. We can consider the ideal sheaf   of   and construct global proj of this quotient sheaf of algebras  . This can be described explicitly as the projective morphism  .

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ravi Vakil (2015). Foundations of Algebraic Geometry (PDF)., Corollary 15.4.3.
  2. ^ EGA, II.5.5.
  3. ^ EGA, II.5.5.1.

proj, construction, proj, redirects, here, cartographic, conversion, software, proj, vector, operation, vector, projection, algebraic, geometry, proj, construction, analogous, spectrum, ring, construction, affine, schemes, which, produces, objects, with, typic. Proj redirects here For the cartographic conversion software see PROJ For the vector operation see Vector projection In algebraic geometry Proj is a construction analogous to the spectrum of a ring construction of affine schemes which produces objects with the typical properties of projective spaces and projective varieties The construction while not functorial is a fundamental tool in scheme theory In this article all rings will be assumed to be commutative and with identity Contents 1 Proj of a graded ring 1 1 Proj as a set 1 2 Proj as a topological space 1 3 Proj as a scheme 1 4 The sheaf associated to a graded module 1 5 The twisting sheaf of Serre 1 6 Projective n space 2 Examples of Proj 2 1 Proj over the affine line 2 2 Projective hypersurfaces and varieties 2 3 Weighted projective space 2 4 Bigraded rings 3 Global Proj 3 1 Assumptions 3 2 Construction 3 3 The twisting sheaf 3 4 Proj of a quasi coherent sheaf 3 5 Projective space bundles 4 Example of Global Proj 5 See also 6 ReferencesProj of a graded ring editProj as a set edit Let S displaystyle S nbsp be a commutative graded ring whereS i 0Si displaystyle S bigoplus i geq 0 S i nbsp is the direct sum decomposition associated with the gradation The irrelevant ideal of S displaystyle S nbsp is the ideal of elements of positive degreeS i gt 0Si displaystyle S bigoplus i gt 0 S i nbsp We say an ideal is homogeneous if it is generated by homogeneous elements Then as a set Proj S P S homogeneous prime ideal S P displaystyle operatorname Proj S P subseteq S text homogeneous prime ideal S not subseteq P nbsp For brevity we will sometimes write X displaystyle X nbsp for Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp Proj as a topological space edit We may define a topology called the Zariski topology on Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp by defining the closed sets to be those of the form V a p Proj S a p displaystyle V a p in operatorname Proj S mid a subseteq p nbsp where a displaystyle a nbsp is a homogeneous ideal of S displaystyle S nbsp As in the case of affine schemes it is quickly verified that the V a displaystyle V a nbsp form the closed sets of a topology on X displaystyle X nbsp Indeed if ai i I displaystyle a i i in I nbsp are a family of ideals then we have V ai V ai textstyle bigcap V a i V left sum a i right nbsp and if the indexing set I is finite then V ai V ai textstyle bigcup V a i V left prod a i right nbsp Equivalently we may take the open sets as a starting point and define D a p Proj S a p displaystyle D a p in operatorname Proj S mid a not subseteq p nbsp A common shorthand is to denote D Sf displaystyle D Sf nbsp by D f displaystyle D f nbsp where Sf displaystyle Sf nbsp is the ideal generated by f displaystyle f nbsp For any ideal a displaystyle a nbsp the sets D a displaystyle D a nbsp and V a displaystyle V a nbsp are complementary and hence the same proof as before shows that the sets D a displaystyle D a nbsp form a topology on Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp The advantage of this approach is that the sets D f displaystyle D f nbsp where f displaystyle f nbsp ranges over all homogeneous elements of the ring S displaystyle S nbsp form a base for this topology which is an indispensable tool for the analysis of Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp just as the analogous fact for the spectrum of a ring is likewise indispensable Proj as a scheme edit We also construct a sheaf on Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp called the structure sheaf as in the affine case which makes it into a scheme As in the case of the Spec construction there are many ways to proceed the most direct one which is also highly suggestive of the construction of regular functions on a projective variety in classical algebraic geometry is the following For any open set U displaystyle U nbsp of Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp which is by definition a set of homogeneous prime ideals of S displaystyle S nbsp not containing S displaystyle S nbsp we define the ring OX U displaystyle O X U nbsp to be the set of all functions f U p US p displaystyle f colon U to bigcup p in U S p nbsp where S p displaystyle S p nbsp denotes the subring of the ring of fractions Sp displaystyle S p nbsp consisting of fractions of homogeneous elements of the same degree such that for each prime ideal p displaystyle p nbsp of U displaystyle U nbsp f p displaystyle f p nbsp is an element of S p displaystyle S p nbsp There exists an open subset V U displaystyle V subseteq U nbsp containing p displaystyle p nbsp and homogeneous elements s t displaystyle s t nbsp of S displaystyle S nbsp of the same degree such that for each prime ideal q displaystyle q nbsp of V displaystyle V nbsp t displaystyle t nbsp is not in q displaystyle q nbsp f q s t displaystyle f q s t nbsp It follows immediately from the definition that the OX U displaystyle O X U nbsp form a sheaf of rings OX displaystyle O X nbsp on Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp and it may be shown that the pair Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp OX displaystyle O X nbsp is in fact a scheme this is accomplished by showing that each of the open subsets D f displaystyle D f nbsp is in fact an affine scheme The sheaf associated to a graded module edit The essential property of S displaystyle S nbsp for the above construction was the ability to form localizations S p displaystyle S p nbsp for each prime ideal p displaystyle p nbsp of S displaystyle S nbsp This property is also possessed by any graded module M displaystyle M nbsp over S displaystyle S nbsp and therefore with the appropriate minor modifications the preceding section constructs for any such M displaystyle M nbsp a sheaf denoted M displaystyle tilde M nbsp of OX displaystyle O X nbsp modules on Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp This sheaf is quasicoherent by construction If S displaystyle S nbsp is generated by finitely many elements of degree 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp e g a polynomial ring or a homogenous quotient of it all quasicoherent sheaves on Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp arise from graded modules by this construction 1 The corresponding graded module is not unique The twisting sheaf of Serre edit For related information and the classical Serre twist sheaf see Tautological bundle A special case of the sheaf associated to a graded module is when we take M displaystyle M nbsp to be S displaystyle S nbsp itself with a different grading namely we let the degree d displaystyle d nbsp elements of M displaystyle M nbsp be the degree d 1 displaystyle d 1 nbsp elements of S displaystyle S nbsp soMd Sd 1 displaystyle M d S d 1 nbsp and denote M S 1 displaystyle M S 1 nbsp We then obtain M displaystyle tilde M nbsp as a quasicoherent sheaf on Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp denoted OX 1 displaystyle O X 1 nbsp or simply O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp called the twisting sheaf of Serre It can be checked that O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp is in fact an invertible sheaf One reason for the utility of O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp is that it recovers the algebraic information of S displaystyle S nbsp that was lost when in the construction of OX displaystyle O X nbsp we passed to fractions of degree zero In the case Spec A for a ring A the global sections of the structure sheaf form A itself whereas the global sections of OX displaystyle mathcal O X nbsp here form only the degree zero elements of S displaystyle S nbsp If we define O n i 1nO 1 displaystyle mathcal O n bigotimes i 1 n mathcal O 1 nbsp then each O n displaystyle mathcal O n nbsp contains the degree n displaystyle n nbsp information about S displaystyle S nbsp denoted Sn displaystyle S n nbsp and taken together they contain all the grading information that was lost Likewise for any sheaf of graded OX displaystyle mathcal O X nbsp modules N displaystyle N nbsp we define N n N O n displaystyle N n N otimes mathcal O n nbsp and expect this twisted sheaf to contain grading information about N displaystyle N nbsp In particular if N displaystyle N nbsp is the sheaf associated to a graded S displaystyle S nbsp module M displaystyle M nbsp we likewise expect it to contain lost grading information about M displaystyle M nbsp This suggests though erroneously that S displaystyle S nbsp can in fact be reconstructed from these sheaves as n 0H0 X OX n displaystyle bigoplus n geq 0 H 0 X mathcal O X n nbsp however this is true in the case that S displaystyle S nbsp is a polynomial ring below This situation is to be contrasted with the fact that the spec functor is adjoint to the global sections functor in the category of locally ringed spaces Projective n space edit Main article Algebraic geometry of projective spaces If A displaystyle A nbsp is a ring we define projective n space over A displaystyle A nbsp to be the scheme PAn Proj A x0 xn displaystyle mathbb P A n operatorname Proj A x 0 ldots x n nbsp The grading on the polynomial ring S A x0 xn displaystyle S A x 0 ldots x n nbsp is defined by letting each xi displaystyle x i nbsp have degree one and every element of A displaystyle A nbsp degree zero Comparing this to the definition of O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp above we see that the sections of O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp are in fact linear homogeneous polynomials generated by the xi displaystyle x i nbsp themselves This suggests another interpretation of O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp namely as the sheaf of coordinates for Proj S displaystyle operatorname Proj S nbsp since the xi displaystyle x i nbsp are literally the coordinates for projective n displaystyle n nbsp space Examples of Proj editProj over the affine line edit If we let the base ring be A C l displaystyle A mathbb C lambda nbsp thenX Proj A X Y Z ZY2 X X Z X lZ displaystyle X operatorname Proj left frac A X Y Z bullet ZY 2 X X Z X lambda Z bullet right nbsp has a canonical projective morphism to the affine line Al1 displaystyle mathbb A lambda 1 nbsp whose fibers are elliptic curves except at the points l 0 1 displaystyle lambda 0 1 nbsp where the curves degenerate into nodal curves So there is a fibrationEl X Al1 0 1 displaystyle begin matrix E lambda amp longrightarrow amp X amp amp downarrow amp amp mathbb A lambda 1 0 1 end matrix nbsp which is also a smooth morphism of schemes which can be checked using the Jacobian criterion Projective hypersurfaces and varieties edit The projective hypersurface Proj C X0 X4 X05 X45 displaystyle operatorname Proj left mathbb C X 0 ldots X 4 X 0 5 cdots X 4 5 right nbsp is an example of a Fermat quintic threefold which is also a Calabi Yau manifold In addition to projective hypersurfaces any projective variety cut out by a system of homogeneous polynomialsf1 0 fk 0 displaystyle f 1 0 ldots f k 0 nbsp in n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp variables can be converted into a projective scheme using the proj construction for the graded algebrak X0 Xn f1 fk displaystyle frac k X 0 ldots X n bullet f 1 ldots f k bullet nbsp giving an embedding of projective varieties into projective schemes Weighted projective space edit Main article Weighted projective space Weighted projective spaces can be constructed using a polynomial ring whose variables have non standard degrees For example the weighted projective space P 1 1 2 displaystyle mathbb P 1 1 2 nbsp corresponds to taking Proj displaystyle operatorname Proj nbsp of the ring A X0 X1 X2 displaystyle A X 0 X 1 X 2 nbsp where X0 X1 displaystyle X 0 X 1 nbsp have weight 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp while X2 displaystyle X 2 nbsp has weight 2 Bigraded rings edit The proj construction extends to bigraded and multigraded rings Geometrically this corresponds to taking products of projective schemes For example given the graded ringsA C X0 X1 B C Y0 Y1 displaystyle A bullet mathbb C X 0 X 1 text B bullet mathbb C Y 0 Y 1 nbsp with the degree of each generator 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp Then the tensor product of these algebras over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp gives the bigraded algebraA CB S C X0 X1 Y0 Y1 displaystyle begin aligned A bullet otimes mathbb C B bullet amp S bullet bullet amp mathbb C X 0 X 1 Y 0 Y 1 end aligned nbsp where the Xi displaystyle X i nbsp have weight 1 0 displaystyle 1 0 nbsp and the Yi displaystyle Y i nbsp have weight 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 nbsp Then the proj construction givesProj S P1 Spec C P1 displaystyle text Proj S bullet bullet mathbb P 1 times text Spec mathbb C mathbb P 1 nbsp which is a product of projective schemes There is an embedding of such schemes into projective space by taking the total graded algebraS S displaystyle S bullet bullet to S bullet nbsp where a degree a b displaystyle a b nbsp element is considered as a degree a b displaystyle a b nbsp element This means the k displaystyle k nbsp th graded piece of S displaystyle S bullet nbsp is the moduleSk a b kSa b displaystyle S k bigoplus a b k S a b nbsp In addition the scheme Proj S displaystyle text Proj S bullet bullet nbsp now comes with bigraded sheaves O a b displaystyle mathcal O a b nbsp which are the tensor product of the sheaves p1 O a p2 O b displaystyle pi 1 mathcal O a otimes pi 2 mathcal O b nbsp wherep1 Proj S Proj A displaystyle pi 1 text Proj S bullet bullet to text Proj A bullet nbsp and p2 Proj S Proj B displaystyle pi 2 text Proj S bullet bullet to text Proj B bullet nbsp are the canonical projections coming from the injections of these algebras from the tensor product diagram of commutative algebras Global Proj editA generalization of the Proj construction replaces the ring S with a sheaf of algebras and produces as the result a scheme which might be thought of as a fibration of Proj s of rings This construction is often used for example to construct projective space bundles over a base scheme Assumptions edit Formally let X be any scheme and S be a sheaf of graded OX displaystyle O X nbsp algebras the definition of which is similar to the definition of OX displaystyle O X nbsp modules on a locally ringed space that is a sheaf with a direct sum decomposition S i 0Si displaystyle S bigoplus i geq 0 S i nbsp where each Si displaystyle S i nbsp is an OX displaystyle O X nbsp module such that for every open subset U of X S U is an OX U displaystyle O X U nbsp algebra and the resulting direct sum decomposition S U i 0Si U displaystyle S U bigoplus i geq 0 S i U nbsp is a grading of this algebra as a ring Here we assume that S0 OX displaystyle S 0 O X nbsp We make the additional assumption that S is a quasi coherent sheaf this is a consistency assumption on the sections over different open sets that is necessary for the construction to proceed Construction edit In this setup we may construct a scheme Proj S displaystyle operatorname mathbf Proj S nbsp and a projection map p onto X such that for every open affine U of X Proj S p 1 U Proj S U displaystyle operatorname mathbf Proj S p 1 U operatorname Proj S U nbsp This definition suggests that we construct Proj S displaystyle operatorname mathbf Proj S nbsp by first defining schemes YU displaystyle Y U nbsp for each open affine U by setting YU Proj S U displaystyle Y U operatorname Proj S U nbsp and maps pU YU U displaystyle p U colon Y U to U nbsp and then showing that these data can be glued together over each intersection of two open affines U and V to form a scheme Y which we define to be Proj S displaystyle operatorname mathbf Proj S nbsp It is not hard to show that defining each pU displaystyle p U nbsp to be the map corresponding to the inclusion of OX U displaystyle O X U nbsp into S U as the elements of degree zero yields the necessary consistency of the pU displaystyle p U nbsp while the consistency of the YU displaystyle Y U nbsp themselves follows from the quasi coherence assumption on S The twisting sheaf edit If S has the additional property that S1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp is a coherent sheaf and locally generates S over S0 displaystyle S 0 nbsp that is when we pass to the stalk of the sheaf S at a point x of X which is a graded algebra whose degree zero elements form the ring OX x displaystyle O X x nbsp then the degree one elements form a finitely generated module over OX x displaystyle O X x nbsp and also generate the stalk as an algebra over it then we may make a further construction Over each open affine U Proj S U bears an invertible sheaf O 1 and the assumption we have just made ensures that these sheaves may be glued just like the YU displaystyle Y U nbsp above the resulting sheaf on Proj S displaystyle operatorname mathbf Proj S nbsp is also denoted O 1 and serves much the same purpose for Proj S displaystyle operatorname mathbf Proj S nbsp as the twisting sheaf on the Proj of a ring does Proj of a quasi coherent sheaf edit Let E displaystyle mathcal E nbsp be a quasi coherent sheaf on a scheme X displaystyle X nbsp The sheaf of symmetric algebras SymOX E displaystyle mathbf Sym O X mathcal E nbsp is naturally a quasi coherent sheaf of graded OX displaystyle O X nbsp modules generated by elements of degree 1 The resulting scheme is denoted by P E displaystyle mathbb P mathcal E nbsp If E displaystyle mathcal E nbsp is of finite type then its canonical morphism p P E X displaystyle p mathbb P mathcal E to X nbsp is a projective morphism 2 For any x X displaystyle x in X nbsp the fiber of the above morphism over x displaystyle x nbsp is the projective space P E x displaystyle mathbb P mathcal E x nbsp associated to the dual of the vector space E x E OXk x displaystyle mathcal E x mathcal E otimes O X k x nbsp over k x displaystyle k x nbsp If S displaystyle mathcal S nbsp is a quasi coherent sheaf of graded OX displaystyle O X nbsp modules generated by S1 displaystyle mathcal S 1 nbsp and such that S1 displaystyle mathcal S 1 nbsp is of finite type then ProjS displaystyle mathbf Proj mathcal S nbsp is a closed subscheme of P S1 displaystyle mathbb P mathcal S 1 nbsp and is then projective over X displaystyle X nbsp In fact every closed subscheme of a projective P E displaystyle mathbb P mathcal E nbsp is of this form 3 Projective space bundles edit Main article Projective space bundle As a special case when E displaystyle mathcal E nbsp is locally free of rank n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp we get a projective bundle P E displaystyle mathbb P mathcal E nbsp over X displaystyle X nbsp of relative dimension n displaystyle n nbsp Indeed if we take an open cover of X by open affines U Spec A displaystyle U operatorname Spec A nbsp such that when restricted to each of these E displaystyle mathcal E nbsp is free over A then P E p 1 U Proj A x0 xn PAn PUn displaystyle mathbb P mathcal E p 1 U simeq operatorname Proj A x 0 dots x n mathbb P A n mathbb P U n nbsp and hence P E displaystyle mathbb P mathcal E nbsp is a projective space bundle Many families of varieties can be constructed as subschemes of these projective bundles such as the Weierstrass family of elliptic curves For more details see the main article Example of Global Proj editGlobal proj can be used to construct Lefschetz pencils For example let X Ps t1 displaystyle X mathbb P s t 1 nbsp and take homogeneous polynomials f g C x0 xn displaystyle f g in mathbb C x 0 ldots x n nbsp of degree k We can consider the ideal sheaf I sf tg displaystyle mathcal I sf tg nbsp of OX x0 xn displaystyle mathcal O X x 0 ldots x n nbsp and construct global proj of this quotient sheaf of algebras OX x0 xn I displaystyle mathcal O X x 0 ldots x n mathcal I nbsp This can be described explicitly as the projective morphism Proj C s t x0 xn sf tg Ps t1 displaystyle operatorname Proj mathbb C s t x 0 ldots x n sf tg to mathbb P s t 1 nbsp See also editProjective space Algebraic geometry of projective spaces ProjectivizationReferences edit Ravi Vakil 2015 Foundations of Algebraic Geometry PDF Corollary 15 4 3 EGA II 5 5 EGA II 5 5 1 Grothendieck Alexandre Dieudonne Jean 1961 Elements de geometrie algebrique II Etude globale elementaire de quelques classes de morphismes Publications Mathematiques de l IHES 8 doi 10 1007 bf02699291 MR 0217084 Hartshorne Robin 1977 Algebraic Geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 52 New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90244 9 MR 0463157 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proj construction amp oldid 1209482808, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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