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Divisor (algebraic geometry)

In algebraic geometry, divisors are a generalization of codimension-1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties. Two different generalizations are in common use, Cartier divisors and Weil divisors (named for Pierre Cartier and André Weil by David Mumford). Both are derived from the notion of divisibility in the integers and algebraic number fields.

Globally, every codimension-1 subvariety of projective space is defined by the vanishing of one homogeneous polynomial; by contrast, a codimension-r subvariety need not be definable by only r equations when r is greater than 1. (That is, not every subvariety of projective space is a complete intersection.) Locally, every codimension-1 subvariety of a smooth variety can be defined by one equation in a neighborhood of each point. Again, the analogous statement fails for higher-codimension subvarieties. As a result of this property, much of algebraic geometry studies an arbitrary variety by analysing its codimension-1 subvarieties and the corresponding line bundles.

On singular varieties, this property can also fail, and so one has to distinguish between codimension-1 subvarieties and varieties which can locally be defined by one equation. The former are Weil divisors while the latter are Cartier divisors.

Topologically, Weil divisors play the role of homology classes, while Cartier divisors represent cohomology classes. On a smooth variety (or more generally a regular scheme), a result analogous to Poincaré duality says that Weil and Cartier divisors are the same.

The name "divisor" goes back to the work of Dedekind and Weber, who showed the relevance of Dedekind domains to the study of algebraic curves.[1] The group of divisors on a curve (the free abelian group generated by all divisors) is closely related to the group of fractional ideals for a Dedekind domain.

An algebraic cycle is a higher codimension generalization of a divisor; by definition, a Weil divisor is a cycle of codimension 1.

Divisors on a Riemann surface edit

A Riemann surface is a 1-dimensional complex manifold, and so its codimension-1 submanifolds have dimension 0. The group of divisors on a compact Riemann surface X is the free abelian group on the points of X.

Equivalently, a divisor on a compact Riemann surface X is a finite linear combination of points of X with integer coefficients. The degree of a divisor on X is the sum of its coefficients.

For any nonzero meromorphic function f on X, one can define the order of vanishing of f at a point p in X, ordp(f). It is an integer, negative if f has a pole at p. The divisor of a nonzero meromorphic function f on the compact Riemann surface X is defined as

 

which is a finite sum. Divisors of the form (f) are also called principal divisors. Since (fg) = (f) + (g), the set of principal divisors is a subgroup of the group of divisors. Two divisors that differ by a principal divisor are called linearly equivalent.

On a compact Riemann surface, the degree of a principal divisor is zero; that is, the number of zeros of a meromorphic function is equal to the number of poles, counted with multiplicity. As a result, the degree is well-defined on linear equivalence classes of divisors.

Given a divisor D on a compact Riemann surface X, it is important to study the complex vector space of meromorphic functions on X with poles at most given by D, called H0(X, O(D)) or the space of sections of the line bundle associated to D. The degree of D says a lot about the dimension of this vector space. For example, if D has negative degree, then this vector space is zero (because a meromorphic function cannot have more zeros than poles). If D has positive degree, then the dimension of H0(X, O(mD)) grows linearly in m for m sufficiently large. The Riemann–Roch theorem is a more precise statement along these lines. On the other hand, the precise dimension of H0(X, O(D)) for divisors D of low degree is subtle, and not completely determined by the degree of D. The distinctive features of a compact Riemann surface are reflected in these dimensions.

One key divisor on a compact Riemann surface is the canonical divisor. To define it, one first defines the divisor of a nonzero meromorphic 1-form along the lines above. Since the space of meromorphic 1-forms is a 1-dimensional vector space over the field of meromorphic functions, any two nonzero meromorphic 1-forms yield linearly equivalent divisors. Any divisor in this linear equivalence class is called the canonical divisor of X, KX. The genus g of X can be read from the canonical divisor: namely, KX has degree 2g − 2. The key trichotomy among compact Riemann surfaces X is whether the canonical divisor has negative degree (so X has genus zero), zero degree (genus one), or positive degree (genus at least 2). For example, this determines whether X has a Kähler metric with positive curvature, zero curvature, or negative curvature. The canonical divisor has negative degree if and only if X is isomorphic to the Riemann sphere CP1.

Weil divisors edit

Let X be an integral locally Noetherian scheme. A prime divisor or irreducible divisor on X is an integral closed subscheme Z of codimension 1 in X. A Weil divisor on X is a formal sum over the prime divisors Z of X,

 

where the collection   is locally finite. If X is quasi-compact, local finiteness is equivalent to   being finite. The group of all Weil divisors is denoted Div(X). A Weil divisor D is effective if all the coefficients are non-negative. One writes DD′ if the difference DD′ is effective.

For example, a divisor on an algebraic curve over a field is a formal sum of finitely many closed points. A divisor on Spec Z is a formal sum of prime numbers with integer coefficients and therefore corresponds to a non-zero fractional ideal in Q. A similar characterization is true for divisors on   where K is a number field.

If ZX is a prime divisor, then the local ring   has Krull dimension one. If   is non-zero, then the order of vanishing of f along Z, written ordZ(f), is the length of   This length is finite,[2] and it is additive with respect to multiplication, that is, ordZ(fg) = ordZ(f) + ordZ(g).[3] If k(X) is the field of rational functions on X, then any non-zero fk(X) may be written as a quotient g / h, where g and h are in   and the order of vanishing of f is defined to be ordZ(g) − ordZ(h).[4] With this definition, the order of vanishing is a function ordZ : k(X)×Z. If X is normal, then the local ring   is a discrete valuation ring, and the function ordZ is the corresponding valuation. For a non-zero rational function f on X, the principal Weil divisor associated to f is defined to be the Weil divisor

 

It can be shown that this sum is locally finite and hence that it indeed defines a Weil divisor. The principal Weil divisor associated to f is also notated (f). If f is a regular function, then its principal Weil divisor is effective, but in general this is not true. The additivity of the order of vanishing function implies that

 

Consequently div is a homomorphism, and in particular its image is a subgroup of the group of all Weil divisors.

Let X be a normal integral Noetherian scheme. Every Weil divisor D determines a coherent sheaf   on X. Concretely it may be defined as subsheaf of the sheaf of rational functions[5]

 

That is, a nonzero rational function f is a section of   over U if and only if for any prime divisor Z intersecting U,

 

where nZ is the coefficient of Z in D. If D is principal, so D is the divisor of a rational function g, then there is an isomorphism

 

since   is an effective divisor and so   is regular thanks to the normality of X. Conversely, if   is isomorphic to   as an  -module, then D is principal. It follows that D is locally principal if and only if   is invertible; that is, a line bundle.

If D is an effective divisor that corresponds to a subscheme of X (for example D can be a reduced divisor or a prime divisor), then the ideal sheaf of the subscheme D is equal to  This leads to an often used short exact sequence,

 

The sheaf cohomology of this sequence shows that   contains information on whether regular functions on D are the restrictions of regular functions on X.

There is also an inclusion of sheaves

 

This furnishes a canonical element of   namely, the image of the global section 1. This is called the canonical section and may be denoted sD. While the canonical section is the image of a nowhere vanishing rational function, its image in   vanishes along D because the transition functions vanish along D. When D is a smooth Cartier divisor, the cokernel of the above inclusion may be identified; see #Cartier divisors below.

Assume that X is a normal integral separated scheme of finite type over a field. Let D be a Weil divisor. Then   is a rank one reflexive sheaf, and since   is defined as a subsheaf of   it is a fractional ideal sheaf (see below). Conversely, every rank one reflexive sheaf corresponds to a Weil divisor: The sheaf can be restricted to the regular locus, where it becomes free and so corresponds to a Cartier divisor (again, see below), and because the singular locus has codimension at least two, the closure of the Cartier divisor is a Weil divisor.

Divisor class group edit

The Weil divisor class group Cl(X) is the quotient of Div(X) by the subgroup of all principal Weil divisors. Two divisors are said to be linearly equivalent if their difference is principal, so the divisor class group is the group of divisors modulo linear equivalence. For a variety X of dimension n over a field, the divisor class group is a Chow group; namely, Cl(X) is the Chow group CHn−1(X) of (n−1)-dimensional cycles.

Let Z be a closed subset of X. If Z is irreducible of codimension one, then Cl(XZ) is isomorphic to the quotient group of Cl(X) by the class of Z. If Z has codimension at least 2 in X, then the restriction Cl(X) → Cl(XZ) is an isomorphism.[6] (These facts are special cases of the localization sequence for Chow groups.)

On a normal integral Noetherian scheme X, two Weil divisors D, E are linearly equivalent if and only if   and   are isomorphic as  -modules. Isomorphism classes of reflexive sheaves on X form a monoid with product given as the reflexive hull of a tensor product. Then   defines a monoid isomorphism from the Weil divisor class group of X to the monoid of isomorphism classes of rank-one reflexive sheaves on X.

Examples edit

  • Let k be a field, and let n be a positive integer. Since the polynomial ring k[x1, ..., xn] is a unique factorization domain, the divisor class group of affine space An over k is equal to zero.[7] Since projective space Pn over k minus a hyperplane H is isomorphic to An, it follows that the divisor class group of Pn is generated by the class of H. From there, it is straightforward to check that Cl(Pn) is in fact isomorphic to the integers Z, generated by H. Concretely, this means that every codimension-1 subvariety of Pn is defined by the vanishing of a single homogeneous polynomial.
  • Let X be an algebraic curve over a field k. Every closed point p in X has the form Spec E for some finite extension field E of k, and the degree of p is defined to be the degree of E over k. Extending this by linearity gives the notion of degree for a divisor on X. If X is a projective curve over k, then the divisor of a nonzero rational function f on X has degree zero.[8] As a result, for a projective curve X, the degree gives a homomorphism deg: Cl(X) → Z.
  • For the projective line P1 over a field k, the degree gives an isomorphism Cl(P1) ≅ Z. For any smooth projective curve X with a k-rational point, the degree homomorphism is surjective, and the kernel is isomorphic to the group of k-points on the Jacobian variety of X, which is an abelian variety of dimension equal to the genus of X. It follows, for example, that the divisor class group of a complex elliptic curve is an uncountable abelian group.
  • Generalizing the previous example: for any smooth projective variety X over a field k such that X has a k-rational point, the divisor class group Cl(X) is an extension of a finitely generated abelian group, the Néron–Severi group, by the group of k-points of a connected group scheme  [9] For k of characteristic zero,   is an abelian variety, the Picard variety of X.
  •  
    The affine quadric cone xy = z2.
    Let X be the quadric cone of dimension 2, defined by the equation xy = z2 in affine 3-space over a field. Then the line D in X defined by x = z = 0 is not principal on X near the origin. Note that D can be defined as a set by one equation on X, namely x = 0; but the function x on X vanishes to order 2 along D, and so we only find that 2D is Cartier (as defined below) on X. In fact, the divisor class group Cl(X) is isomorphic to the cyclic group Z/2, generated by the class of D.[10]
  • Let X be the quadric cone of dimension 3, defined by the equation xy = zw in affine 4-space over a field. Then the plane D in X defined by x = z = 0 cannot be defined in X by one equation near the origin, even as a set. It follows that D is not Q-Cartier on X; that is, no positive multiple of D is Cartier. In fact, the divisor class group Cl(X) is isomorphic to the integers Z, generated by the class of D.[11]

The canonical divisor edit

Let X be a normal variety over a perfect field. The smooth locus U of X is an open subset whose complement has codimension at least 2. Let j: UX be the inclusion map, then the restriction homomorphism:

 

is an isomorphism, since XU has codimension at least 2 in X. For example, one can use this isomorphism to define the canonical divisor KX of X: it is the Weil divisor (up to linear equivalence) corresponding to the line bundle of differential forms of top degree on U. Equivalently, the sheaf   on X is the direct image sheaf   where n is the dimension of X.

Example: Let X = Pn be the projective n-space with the homogeneous coordinates x0, ..., xn. Let U = {x0 ≠ 0}. Then U is isomorphic to the affine n-space with the coordinates yi = xi/x0. Let

 

Then ω is a rational differential form on U; thus, it is a rational section of   which has simple poles along Zi = {xi = 0}, i = 1, ..., n. Switching to a different affine chart changes only the sign of ω and so we see ω has a simple pole along Z0 as well. Thus, the divisor of ω is

 

and its divisor class is

 

where [H] = [Zi], i = 0, ..., n. (See also the Euler sequence.)

Cartier divisors edit

Let X be an integral Noetherian scheme. Then X has a sheaf of rational functions   All regular functions are rational functions, which leads to a short exact sequence

 

A Cartier divisor on X is a global section of   An equivalent description is that a Cartier divisor is a collection   where   is an open cover of   is a section of   on   and   on   up to multiplication by a section of  

Cartier divisors also have a sheaf-theoretic description. A fractional ideal sheaf is a sub- -module of   A fractional ideal sheaf J is invertible if, for each x in X, there exists an open neighborhood U of x on which the restriction of J to U is equal to   where   and the product is taken in   Each Cartier divisor defines an invertible fractional ideal sheaf using the description of the Cartier divisor as a collection   and conversely, invertible fractional ideal sheaves define Cartier divisors. If the Cartier divisor is denoted D, then the corresponding fractional ideal sheaf is denoted   or L(D).

By the exact sequence above, there is an exact sequence of sheaf cohomology groups:

 

A Cartier divisor is said to be principal if it is in the image of the homomorphism   that is, if it is the divisor of a rational function on X. Two Cartier divisors are linearly equivalent if their difference is principal. Every line bundle L on an integral Noetherian scheme X is the class of some Cartier divisor. As a result, the exact sequence above identifies the Picard group of line bundles on an integral Noetherian scheme X with the group of Cartier divisors modulo linear equivalence. This holds more generally for reduced Noetherian schemes, or for quasi-projective schemes over a Noetherian ring,[12] but it can fail in general (even for proper schemes over C), which lessens the interest of Cartier divisors in full generality.[13]

Assume D is an effective Cartier divisor. Then there is a short exact sequence

 

This sequence is derived from the short exact sequence relating the structure sheaves of X and D and the ideal sheaf of D. Because D is a Cartier divisor,   is locally free, and hence tensoring that sequence by   yields another short exact sequence, the one above. When D is smooth,   is the normal bundle of D in X.

Comparison of Weil divisors and Cartier divisors edit

A Weil divisor D is said to be Cartier if and only if the sheaf   is invertible. When this happens,   (with its embedding in MX) is the line bundle associated to a Cartier divisor. More precisely, if   is invertible, then there exists an open cover {Ui} such that   restricts to a trivial bundle on each open set. For each Ui, choose an isomorphism   The image of   under this map is a section of   on Ui. Because   is defined to be a subsheaf of the sheaf of rational functions, the image of 1 may be identified with some rational function fi. The collection   is then a Cartier divisor. This is well-defined because the only choices involved were of the covering and of the isomorphism, neither of which change the Cartier divisor. This Cartier divisor may be used to produce a sheaf, which for distinction we will notate L(D). There is an isomorphism of   with L(D) defined by working on the open cover {Ui}. The key fact to check here is that the transition functions of   and L(D) are compatible, and this amounts to the fact that these functions all have the form  

In the opposite direction, a Cartier divisor   on an integral Noetherian scheme X determines a Weil divisor on X in a natural way, by applying   to the functions fi on the open sets Ui.

If X is normal, a Cartier divisor is determined by the associated Weil divisor, and a Weil divisor is Cartier if and only if it is locally principal.

A Noetherian scheme X is called factorial if all local rings of X are unique factorization domains.[5] (Some authors say "locally factorial".) In particular, every regular scheme is factorial.[14] On a factorial scheme X, every Weil divisor D is locally principal, and so   is always a line bundle.[7] In general, however, a Weil divisor on a normal scheme need not be locally principal; see the examples of quadric cones above.

Effective Cartier divisors edit

Effective Cartier divisors are those which correspond to ideal sheaves. In fact, the theory of effective Cartier divisors can be developed without any reference to sheaves of rational functions or fractional ideal sheaves.

Let X be a scheme. An effective Cartier divisor on X is an ideal sheaf I which is invertible and such that for every point x in X, the stalk Ix is principal. It is equivalent to require that around each x, there exists an open affine subset U = Spec A such that UD = Spec A / (f), where f is a non-zero divisor in A. The sum of two effective Cartier divisors corresponds to multiplication of ideal sheaves.

There is a good theory of families of effective Cartier divisors. Let φ : XS be a morphism. A relative effective Cartier divisor for X over S is an effective Cartier divisor D on X which is flat over S. Because of the flatness assumption, for every   there is a pullback of D to   and this pullback is an effective Cartier divisor. In particular, this is true for the fibers of φ.

Kodaira's lemma edit

As a basic result of the (big) Cartier divisor, there is a result called Kodaira's lemma:[15][16]

Let X be a irreducible projective variety and let D be a big Cartier divisor on X and let H be an arbitrary effective Cartier divisor on X. Then

 .

for all sufficiently large  .

Kodaira's lemma gives some results about the big divisor.

Functoriality edit

Let φ : XY be a morphism of integral locally Noetherian schemes. It is often—but not always—possible to use φ to transfer a divisor D from one scheme to the other. Whether this is possible depends on whether the divisor is a Weil or Cartier divisor, whether the divisor is to be moved from X to Y or vice versa, and what additional properties φ might have.

If Z is a prime Weil divisor on X, then   is a closed irreducible subscheme of Y. Depending on φ, it may or may not be a prime Weil divisor. For example, if φ is the blow up of a point in the plane and Z is the exceptional divisor, then its image is not a Weil divisor. Therefore, φ*Z is defined to be   if that subscheme is a prime divisor and is defined to be the zero divisor otherwise. Extending this by linearity will, assuming X is quasi-compact, define a homomorphism Div(X) → Div(Y) called the pushforward. (If X is not quasi-compact, then the pushforward may fail to be a locally finite sum.) This is a special case of the pushforward on Chow groups.

If Z is a Cartier divisor, then under mild hypotheses on φ, there is a pullback  . Sheaf-theoretically, when there is a pullback map  , then this pullback can be used to define pullback of Cartier divisors. In terms of local sections, the pullback of   is defined to be  . Pullback is always defined if φ is dominant, but it cannot be defined in general. For example, if X = Z and φ is the inclusion of Z into Y, then φ*Z is undefined because the corresponding local sections would be everywhere zero. (The pullback of the corresponding line bundle, however, is defined.)

If φ is flat, then pullback of Weil divisors is defined. In this case, the pullback of Z is φ*Z = φ−1(Z). The flatness of φ ensures that the inverse image of Z continues to have codimension one. This can fail for morphisms which are not flat, for example, for a small contraction.

The first Chern class edit

For an integral Noetherian scheme X, the natural homomorphism from the group of Cartier divisors to that of Weil divisors gives a homomorphism

 

known as the first Chern class.[17][18] The first Chern class is injective if X is normal, and it is an isomorphism if X is factorial (as defined above). In particular, Cartier divisors can be identified with Weil divisors on any regular scheme, and so the first Chern class is an isomorphism for X regular.

Explicitly, the first Chern class can be defined as follows. For a line bundle L on an integral Noetherian scheme X, let s be a nonzero rational section of L (that is, a section on some nonempty open subset of L), which exists by local triviality of L. Define the Weil divisor (s) on X by analogy with the divisor of a rational function. Then the first Chern class of L can be defined to be the divisor (s). Changing the rational section s changes this divisor by linear equivalence, since (fs) = (f) + (s) for a nonzero rational function f and a nonzero rational section s of L. So the element c1(L) in Cl(X) is well-defined.

For a complex variety X of dimension n, not necessarily smooth or proper over C, there is a natural homomorphism, the cycle map, from the divisor class group to Borel–Moore homology:

 

The latter group is defined using the space X(C) of complex points of X, with its classical (Euclidean) topology. Likewise, the Picard group maps to integral cohomology, by the first Chern class in the topological sense:

 

The two homomorphisms are related by a commutative diagram, where the right vertical map is cap product with the fundamental class of X in Borel–Moore homology:

 

For X smooth over C, both vertical maps are isomorphisms.

Global sections of line bundles and linear systems edit

A Cartier divisor is effective if its local defining functions fi are regular (not just rational functions). In that case, the Cartier divisor can be identified with a closed subscheme of codimension 1 in X, the subscheme defined locally by fi = 0. A Cartier divisor D is linearly equivalent to an effective divisor if and only if its associated line bundle   has a nonzero global section s; then D is linearly equivalent to the zero locus of s.

Let X be a projective variety over a field k. Then multiplying a global section of   by a nonzero scalar in k does not change its zero locus. As a result, the projective space of lines in the k-vector space of global sections H0(X, O(D)) can be identified with the set of effective divisors linearly equivalent to D, called the complete linear system of D. A projective linear subspace of this projective space is called a linear system of divisors.

One reason to study the space of global sections of a line bundle is to understand the possible maps from a given variety to projective space. This is essential for the classification of algebraic varieties. Explicitly, a morphism from a variety X to projective space Pn over a field k determines a line bundle L on X, the pullback of the standard line bundle   on Pn. Moreover, L comes with n+1 sections whose base locus (the intersection of their zero sets) is empty. Conversely, any line bundle L with n+1 global sections whose common base locus is empty determines a morphism XPn.[19] These observations lead to several notions of positivity for Cartier divisors (or line bundles), such as ample divisors and nef divisors.[20]

For a divisor D on a projective variety X over a field k, the k-vector space H0(X, O(D)) has finite dimension. The Riemann–Roch theorem is a fundamental tool for computing the dimension of this vector space when X is a projective curve. Successive generalizations, the Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem and the Grothendieck–Riemann–Roch theorem, give some information about the dimension of H0(X, O(D)) for a projective variety X of any dimension over a field.

Because the canonical divisor is intrinsically associated to a variety, a key role in the classification of varieties is played by the maps to projective space given by KX and its positive multiples. The Kodaira dimension of X is a key birational invariant, measuring the growth of the vector spaces H0(X, mKX) (meaning H0(X, O(mKX))) as m increases. The Kodaira dimension divides all n-dimensional varieties into n+2 classes, which (very roughly) go from positive curvature to negative curvature.

Q-divisors edit

Let X be a normal variety. A (Weil) Q-divisor is a finite formal linear combination of irreducible codimension-1 subvarieties of X with rational coefficients. (An R-divisor is defined similarly.) A Q-divisor is effective if the coefficients are nonnegative. A Q-divisor D is Q-Cartier if mD is a Cartier divisor for some positive integer m. If X is smooth, then every Q-divisor is Q-Cartier.

If

 

is a Q-divisor, then its round-down is the divisor

 

where   is the greatest integer less than or equal to a. The sheaf   is then defined to be  

The Grothendieck–Lefschetz hyperplane theorem edit

The Lefschetz hyperplane theorem implies that for a smooth complex projective variety X of dimension at least 4 and a smooth ample divisor Y in X, the restriction Pic(X) → Pic(Y) is an isomorphism. For example, if Y is a smooth complete intersection variety of dimension at least 3 in complex projective space, then the Picard group of Y is isomorphic to Z, generated by the restriction of the line bundle O(1) on projective space.

Grothendieck generalized Lefschetz's theorem in several directions, involving arbitrary base fields, singular varieties, and results on local rings rather than projective varieties. In particular, if R is a complete intersection local ring which is factorial in codimension at most 3 (for example, if the non-regular locus of R has codimension at least 4), then R is a unique factorization domain (and hence every Weil divisor on Spec(R) is Cartier).[21] The dimension bound here is optimal, as shown by the example of the 3-dimensional quadric cone, above.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dieudonné (1985), section VI.6.
  2. ^ Stacks Project, Tag 00PF.
  3. ^ Stacks Project, Tag 02MC.
  4. ^ Stacks Project, Tag 02MD.
  5. ^ a b Kollár (2013), Notation 1.2.
  6. ^ Hartshorne (1977), Proposition II.6.5.
  7. ^ a b Hartshorne (1977), Proposition II.6.2.
  8. ^ Stacks Project, Tag 02RS.
  9. ^ Kleiman (2005), Theorems 2.5 and 5.4, Remark 6.19.
  10. ^ Hartshorne (1977), Example II.6.5.2.
  11. ^ Hartshorne(1977), Exercise II.6.5.
  12. ^ Grothendieck, EGA IV, Part 4, Proposition 21.3.4, Corollaire 21.3.5.
  13. ^ Lazarsfeld (2004), Example 1.1.6.
  14. ^ Stacks Project, Tag 0AFW.
  15. ^ "Chapter 2. Preliminaries". Foundations of the minimal model program. Mathematical Society of Japan Memoirs. 2017. pp. 16–47. doi:10.2969/msjmemoirs/03501C020. ISBN 978-4-86497-045-7.
  16. ^ (Lazarsfeld 2004, p. 141, Proposition 2.2.6.)
  17. ^ For a variety X over a field, the Chern classes of any vector bundle on X act by cap product on the Chow groups of X, and the homomorphism here can be described as L ↦ c1(L) ∩ [X].
  18. ^ Eisenbud & Harris 2016, § 1.4.
  19. ^ Hartshorne (1977), Theorem II.7.1.
  20. ^ (Lazarsfeld 2004, Chapter 1)
  21. ^ Grothendieck, SGA 2, Corollaire XI.3.14.

References edit

External links edit

  • The Stacks Project Authors, The Stacks Project

divisor, algebraic, geometry, algebraic, geometry, divisors, generalization, codimension, subvarieties, algebraic, varieties, different, generalizations, common, cartier, divisors, weil, divisors, named, pierre, cartier, andré, weil, david, mumford, both, deri. In algebraic geometry divisors are a generalization of codimension 1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties Two different generalizations are in common use Cartier divisors and Weil divisors named for Pierre Cartier and Andre Weil by David Mumford Both are derived from the notion of divisibility in the integers and algebraic number fields Globally every codimension 1 subvariety of projective space is defined by the vanishing of one homogeneous polynomial by contrast a codimension r subvariety need not be definable by only r equations when r is greater than 1 That is not every subvariety of projective space is a complete intersection Locally every codimension 1 subvariety of a smooth variety can be defined by one equation in a neighborhood of each point Again the analogous statement fails for higher codimension subvarieties As a result of this property much of algebraic geometry studies an arbitrary variety by analysing its codimension 1 subvarieties and the corresponding line bundles On singular varieties this property can also fail and so one has to distinguish between codimension 1 subvarieties and varieties which can locally be defined by one equation The former are Weil divisors while the latter are Cartier divisors Topologically Weil divisors play the role of homology classes while Cartier divisors represent cohomology classes On a smooth variety or more generally a regular scheme a result analogous to Poincare duality says that Weil and Cartier divisors are the same The name divisor goes back to the work of Dedekind and Weber who showed the relevance of Dedekind domains to the study of algebraic curves 1 The group of divisors on a curve the free abelian group generated by all divisors is closely related to the group of fractional ideals for a Dedekind domain An algebraic cycle is a higher codimension generalization of a divisor by definition a Weil divisor is a cycle of codimension 1 Contents 1 Divisors on a Riemann surface 2 Weil divisors 3 Divisor class group 3 1 Examples 3 2 The canonical divisor 4 Cartier divisors 4 1 Comparison of Weil divisors and Cartier divisors 4 2 Effective Cartier divisors 5 Kodaira s lemma 6 Functoriality 7 The first Chern class 8 Global sections of line bundles and linear systems 9 Q divisors 10 The Grothendieck Lefschetz hyperplane theorem 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksDivisors on a Riemann surface editA Riemann surface is a 1 dimensional complex manifold and so its codimension 1 submanifolds have dimension 0 The group of divisors on a compact Riemann surface X is the free abelian group on the points of X Equivalently a divisor on a compact Riemann surface X is a finite linear combination of points of X with integer coefficients The degree of a divisor on X is the sum of its coefficients For any nonzero meromorphic function f on X one can define the order of vanishing of f at a point p in X ordp f It is an integer negative if f has a pole at p The divisor of a nonzero meromorphic function f on the compact Riemann surface X is defined as f p X ord p f p displaystyle f sum p in X operatorname ord p f p nbsp which is a finite sum Divisors of the form f are also called principal divisors Since fg f g the set of principal divisors is a subgroup of the group of divisors Two divisors that differ by a principal divisor are called linearly equivalent On a compact Riemann surface the degree of a principal divisor is zero that is the number of zeros of a meromorphic function is equal to the number of poles counted with multiplicity As a result the degree is well defined on linear equivalence classes of divisors Given a divisor D on a compact Riemann surface X it is important to study the complex vector space of meromorphic functions on X with poles at most given by D called H0 X O D or the space of sections of the line bundle associated to D The degree of D says a lot about the dimension of this vector space For example if D has negative degree then this vector space is zero because a meromorphic function cannot have more zeros than poles If D has positive degree then the dimension of H0 X O mD grows linearly in m for m sufficiently large The Riemann Roch theorem is a more precise statement along these lines On the other hand the precise dimension of H0 X O D for divisors D of low degree is subtle and not completely determined by the degree of D The distinctive features of a compact Riemann surface are reflected in these dimensions One key divisor on a compact Riemann surface is the canonical divisor To define it one first defines the divisor of a nonzero meromorphic 1 form along the lines above Since the space of meromorphic 1 forms is a 1 dimensional vector space over the field of meromorphic functions any two nonzero meromorphic 1 forms yield linearly equivalent divisors Any divisor in this linear equivalence class is called the canonical divisor of X KX The genus g of X can be read from the canonical divisor namely KX has degree 2g 2 The key trichotomy among compact Riemann surfaces X is whether the canonical divisor has negative degree so X has genus zero zero degree genus one or positive degree genus at least 2 For example this determines whether X has a Kahler metric with positive curvature zero curvature or negative curvature The canonical divisor has negative degree if and only if X is isomorphic to the Riemann sphere CP1 Weil divisors editLet X be an integral locally Noetherian scheme A prime divisor or irreducible divisor on X is an integral closed subscheme Z of codimension 1 in X A Weil divisor on X is a formal sum over the prime divisors Z of X Z n Z Z displaystyle sum Z n Z Z nbsp where the collection Z n Z 0 displaystyle Z n Z neq 0 nbsp is locally finite If X is quasi compact local finiteness is equivalent to Z n Z 0 displaystyle Z n Z neq 0 nbsp being finite The group of all Weil divisors is denoted Div X A Weil divisor D is effective if all the coefficients are non negative One writes D D if the difference D D is effective For example a divisor on an algebraic curve over a field is a formal sum of finitely many closed points A divisor on Spec Z is a formal sum of prime numbers with integer coefficients and therefore corresponds to a non zero fractional ideal in Q A similar characterization is true for divisors on Spec O K displaystyle operatorname Spec mathcal O K nbsp where K is a number field If Z X is a prime divisor then the local ring O X Z displaystyle mathcal O X Z nbsp has Krull dimension one If f O X Z displaystyle f in mathcal O X Z nbsp is non zero then the order of vanishing of f along Z written ordZ f is the length of O X Z f displaystyle mathcal O X Z f nbsp This length is finite 2 and it is additive with respect to multiplication that is ordZ fg ordZ f ordZ g 3 If k X is the field of rational functions on X then any non zero f k X may be written as a quotient g h where g and h are in O X Z displaystyle mathcal O X Z nbsp and the order of vanishing of f is defined to be ordZ g ordZ h 4 With this definition the order of vanishing is a function ordZ k X Z If X is normal then the local ring O X Z displaystyle mathcal O X Z nbsp is a discrete valuation ring and the function ordZ is the corresponding valuation For a non zero rational function f on X the principal Weil divisor associated to f is defined to be the Weil divisor div f Z ord Z f Z displaystyle operatorname div f sum Z operatorname ord Z f Z nbsp It can be shown that this sum is locally finite and hence that it indeed defines a Weil divisor The principal Weil divisor associated to f is also notated f If f is a regular function then its principal Weil divisor is effective but in general this is not true The additivity of the order of vanishing function implies that div f g div f div g displaystyle operatorname div fg operatorname div f operatorname div g nbsp Consequently div is a homomorphism and in particular its image is a subgroup of the group of all Weil divisors Let X be a normal integral Noetherian scheme Every Weil divisor D determines a coherent sheaf O X D displaystyle mathcal O X D nbsp on X Concretely it may be defined as subsheaf of the sheaf of rational functions 5 G U O X D f k X f 0 or div f D 0 on U displaystyle Gamma U mathcal O X D f in k X f 0 text or operatorname div f D geq 0 text on U nbsp That is a nonzero rational function f is a section of O X D displaystyle mathcal O X D nbsp over U if and only if for any prime divisor Z intersecting U ord Z f n Z displaystyle operatorname ord Z f geq n Z nbsp where nZ is the coefficient of Z in D If D is principal so D is the divisor of a rational function g then there is an isomorphism O D O X f f g displaystyle begin cases mathcal O D to mathcal O X f mapsto fg end cases nbsp since div f g displaystyle operatorname div fg nbsp is an effective divisor and so f g displaystyle fg nbsp is regular thanks to the normality of X Conversely if O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is isomorphic to O X displaystyle mathcal O X nbsp as an O X displaystyle mathcal O X nbsp module then D is principal It follows that D is locally principal if and only if O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is invertible that is a line bundle If D is an effective divisor that corresponds to a subscheme of X for example D can be a reduced divisor or a prime divisor then the ideal sheaf of the subscheme D is equal to O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp This leads to an often used short exact sequence 0 O X D O X O D 0 displaystyle 0 to mathcal O X D to mathcal O X to mathcal O D to 0 nbsp The sheaf cohomology of this sequence shows that H 1 X O X D displaystyle H 1 X mathcal O X D nbsp contains information on whether regular functions on D are the restrictions of regular functions on X There is also an inclusion of sheaves 0 O X O X D displaystyle 0 to mathcal O X to mathcal O X D nbsp This furnishes a canonical element of G X O X D displaystyle Gamma X mathcal O X D nbsp namely the image of the global section 1 This is called the canonical section and may be denoted sD While the canonical section is the image of a nowhere vanishing rational function its image in O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp vanishes along D because the transition functions vanish along D When D is a smooth Cartier divisor the cokernel of the above inclusion may be identified see Cartier divisors below Assume that X is a normal integral separated scheme of finite type over a field Let D be a Weil divisor Then O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is a rank one reflexive sheaf and since O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is defined as a subsheaf of M X displaystyle mathcal M X nbsp it is a fractional ideal sheaf see below Conversely every rank one reflexive sheaf corresponds to a Weil divisor The sheaf can be restricted to the regular locus where it becomes free and so corresponds to a Cartier divisor again see below and because the singular locus has codimension at least two the closure of the Cartier divisor is a Weil divisor Divisor class group editThe Weil divisor class group Cl X is the quotient of Div X by the subgroup of all principal Weil divisors Two divisors are said to be linearly equivalent if their difference is principal so the divisor class group is the group of divisors modulo linear equivalence For a variety X of dimension n over a field the divisor class group is a Chow group namely Cl X is the Chow group CHn 1 X of n 1 dimensional cycles Let Z be a closed subset of X If Z is irreducible of codimension one then Cl X Z is isomorphic to the quotient group of Cl X by the class of Z If Z has codimension at least 2 in X then the restriction Cl X Cl X Z is an isomorphism 6 These facts are special cases of the localization sequence for Chow groups On a normal integral Noetherian scheme X two Weil divisors D E are linearly equivalent if and only if O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp and O E displaystyle mathcal O E nbsp are isomorphic as O X displaystyle mathcal O X nbsp modules Isomorphism classes of reflexive sheaves on X form a monoid with product given as the reflexive hull of a tensor product Then D O X D displaystyle D mapsto mathcal O X D nbsp defines a monoid isomorphism from the Weil divisor class group of X to the monoid of isomorphism classes of rank one reflexive sheaves on X Examples edit Let k be a field and let n be a positive integer Since the polynomial ring k x1 xn is a unique factorization domain the divisor class group of affine space An over k is equal to zero 7 Since projective space Pn over k minus a hyperplane H is isomorphic to An it follows that the divisor class group of Pn is generated by the class of H From there it is straightforward to check that Cl Pn is in fact isomorphic to the integers Z generated by H Concretely this means that every codimension 1 subvariety of Pn is defined by the vanishing of a single homogeneous polynomial Let X be an algebraic curve over a field k Every closed point p in X has the form Spec E for some finite extension field E of k and the degree of p is defined to be the degree of E over k Extending this by linearity gives the notion of degree for a divisor on X If X is a projective curve over k then the divisor of a nonzero rational function f on X has degree zero 8 As a result for a projective curve X the degree gives a homomorphism deg Cl X Z For the projective line P1 over a field k the degree gives an isomorphism Cl P1 Z For any smooth projective curve X with a k rational point the degree homomorphism is surjective and the kernel is isomorphic to the group of k points on the Jacobian variety of X which is an abelian variety of dimension equal to the genus of X It follows for example that the divisor class group of a complex elliptic curve is an uncountable abelian group Generalizing the previous example for any smooth projective variety X over a field k such that X has a k rational point the divisor class group Cl X is an extension of a finitely generated abelian group the Neron Severi group by the group of k points of a connected group scheme Pic X k 0 displaystyle operatorname Pic X k 0 nbsp 9 For k of characteristic zero Pic X k 0 displaystyle operatorname Pic X k 0 nbsp is an abelian variety the Picard variety of X For R the ring of integers of a number field the divisor class group Cl R Cl Spec R is also called the ideal class group of R It is a finite abelian group Understanding ideal class groups is a central goal of algebraic number theory nbsp The affine quadric cone xy z2 Let X be the quadric cone of dimension 2 defined by the equation xy z2 in affine 3 space over a field Then the line D in X defined by x z 0 is not principal on X near the origin Note that D can be defined as a set by one equation on X namely x 0 but the function x on X vanishes to order 2 along D and so we only find that 2D is Cartier as defined below on X In fact the divisor class group Cl X is isomorphic to the cyclic group Z 2 generated by the class of D 10 Let X be the quadric cone of dimension 3 defined by the equation xy zw in affine 4 space over a field Then the plane D in X defined by x z 0 cannot be defined in X by one equation near the origin even as a set It follows that D is not Q Cartier on X that is no positive multiple of D is Cartier In fact the divisor class group Cl X is isomorphic to the integers Z generated by the class of D 11 The canonical divisor edit Let X be a normal variety over a perfect field The smooth locus U of X is an open subset whose complement has codimension at least 2 Let j U X be the inclusion map then the restriction homomorphism j Cl X Cl U Pic U displaystyle j operatorname Cl X to operatorname Cl U operatorname Pic U nbsp is an isomorphism since X U has codimension at least 2 in X For example one can use this isomorphism to define the canonical divisor KX of X it is the Weil divisor up to linear equivalence corresponding to the line bundle of differential forms of top degree on U Equivalently the sheaf O K X displaystyle mathcal O K X nbsp on X is the direct image sheaf j W U n displaystyle j Omega U n nbsp where n is the dimension of X Example Let X Pn be the projective n space with the homogeneous coordinates x0 xn Let U x0 0 Then U is isomorphic to the affine n space with the coordinates yi xi x0 Let w d y 1 y 1 d y n y n displaystyle omega dy 1 over y 1 wedge dots wedge dy n over y n nbsp Then w is a rational differential form on U thus it is a rational section of W P n n displaystyle Omega mathbf P n n nbsp which has simple poles along Zi xi 0 i 1 n Switching to a different affine chart changes only the sign of w and so we see w has a simple pole along Z0 as well Thus the divisor of w is div w Z 0 Z n displaystyle operatorname div omega Z 0 dots Z n nbsp and its divisor class is K P n div w n 1 H displaystyle K mathbf P n operatorname div omega n 1 H nbsp where H Zi i 0 n See also the Euler sequence Cartier divisors editLet X be an integral Noetherian scheme Then X has a sheaf of rational functions M X displaystyle mathcal M X nbsp All regular functions are rational functions which leads to a short exact sequence 0 O X M X M X O X 0 displaystyle 0 to mathcal O X times to mathcal M X times to mathcal M X times mathcal O X times to 0 nbsp A Cartier divisor on X is a global section of M X O X displaystyle mathcal M X times mathcal O X times nbsp An equivalent description is that a Cartier divisor is a collection U i f i displaystyle U i f i nbsp where U i displaystyle U i nbsp is an open cover of X f i displaystyle X f i nbsp is a section of M X displaystyle mathcal M X times nbsp on U i displaystyle U i nbsp and f i f j displaystyle f i f j nbsp on U i U j displaystyle U i cap U j nbsp up to multiplication by a section of O X displaystyle mathcal O X times nbsp Cartier divisors also have a sheaf theoretic description A fractional ideal sheaf is a sub O X displaystyle mathcal O X nbsp module of M X displaystyle mathcal M X nbsp A fractional ideal sheaf J is invertible if for each x in X there exists an open neighborhood U of x on which the restriction of J to U is equal to O U f displaystyle mathcal O U cdot f nbsp where f M X U displaystyle f in mathcal M X times U nbsp and the product is taken in M X displaystyle mathcal M X nbsp Each Cartier divisor defines an invertible fractional ideal sheaf using the description of the Cartier divisor as a collection U i f i displaystyle U i f i nbsp and conversely invertible fractional ideal sheaves define Cartier divisors If the Cartier divisor is denoted D then the corresponding fractional ideal sheaf is denoted O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp or L D By the exact sequence above there is an exact sequence of sheaf cohomology groups H 0 X M X H 0 X M X O X H 1 X O X Pic X displaystyle H 0 X mathcal M X times to H 0 X mathcal M X times mathcal O X times to H 1 X mathcal O X times operatorname Pic X nbsp A Cartier divisor is said to be principal if it is in the image of the homomorphism H 0 X M X H 0 X M X O X displaystyle H 0 X mathcal M X times to H 0 X mathcal M X times mathcal O X times nbsp that is if it is the divisor of a rational function on X Two Cartier divisors are linearly equivalent if their difference is principal Every line bundle L on an integral Noetherian scheme X is the class of some Cartier divisor As a result the exact sequence above identifies the Picard group of line bundles on an integral Noetherian scheme X with the group of Cartier divisors modulo linear equivalence This holds more generally for reduced Noetherian schemes or for quasi projective schemes over a Noetherian ring 12 but it can fail in general even for proper schemes over C which lessens the interest of Cartier divisors in full generality 13 Assume D is an effective Cartier divisor Then there is a short exact sequence 0 O X O X D O D D 0 displaystyle 0 to mathcal O X to mathcal O X D to mathcal O D D to 0 nbsp This sequence is derived from the short exact sequence relating the structure sheaves of X and D and the ideal sheaf of D Because D is a Cartier divisor O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is locally free and hence tensoring that sequence by O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp yields another short exact sequence the one above When D is smooth O D D displaystyle O D D nbsp is the normal bundle of D in X Comparison of Weil divisors and Cartier divisors edit A Weil divisor D is said to be Cartier if and only if the sheaf O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is invertible When this happens O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp with its embedding in MX is the line bundle associated to a Cartier divisor More precisely if O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is invertible then there exists an open cover Ui such that O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp restricts to a trivial bundle on each open set For each Ui choose an isomorphism O U i O D U i displaystyle mathcal O U i to mathcal O D U i nbsp The image of 1 G U i O U i G U i O X displaystyle 1 in Gamma U i mathcal O U i Gamma U i mathcal O X nbsp under this map is a section of O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp on Ui Because O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is defined to be a subsheaf of the sheaf of rational functions the image of 1 may be identified with some rational function fi The collection U i f i displaystyle U i f i nbsp is then a Cartier divisor This is well defined because the only choices involved were of the covering and of the isomorphism neither of which change the Cartier divisor This Cartier divisor may be used to produce a sheaf which for distinction we will notate L D There is an isomorphism of O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp with L D defined by working on the open cover Ui The key fact to check here is that the transition functions of O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp and L D are compatible and this amounts to the fact that these functions all have the form f i f j displaystyle f i f j nbsp In the opposite direction a Cartier divisor U i f i displaystyle U i f i nbsp on an integral Noetherian scheme X determines a Weil divisor on X in a natural way by applying div displaystyle operatorname div nbsp to the functions fi on the open sets Ui If X is normal a Cartier divisor is determined by the associated Weil divisor and a Weil divisor is Cartier if and only if it is locally principal A Noetherian scheme X is called factorial if all local rings of X are unique factorization domains 5 Some authors say locally factorial In particular every regular scheme is factorial 14 On a factorial scheme X every Weil divisor D is locally principal and so O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is always a line bundle 7 In general however a Weil divisor on a normal scheme need not be locally principal see the examples of quadric cones above Effective Cartier divisors edit Effective Cartier divisors are those which correspond to ideal sheaves In fact the theory of effective Cartier divisors can be developed without any reference to sheaves of rational functions or fractional ideal sheaves Let X be a scheme An effective Cartier divisor on X is an ideal sheaf I which is invertible and such that for every point x in X the stalk Ix is principal It is equivalent to require that around each x there exists an open affine subset U Spec A such that U D Spec A f where f is a non zero divisor in A The sum of two effective Cartier divisors corresponds to multiplication of ideal sheaves There is a good theory of families of effective Cartier divisors Let f X S be a morphism A relative effective Cartier divisor for X over S is an effective Cartier divisor D on X which is flat over S Because of the flatness assumption for every S S displaystyle S to S nbsp there is a pullback of D to X S S displaystyle X times S S nbsp and this pullback is an effective Cartier divisor In particular this is true for the fibers of f Kodaira s lemma editAs a basic result of the big Cartier divisor there is a result called Kodaira s lemma 15 16 Let X be a irreducible projective variety and let D be a big Cartier divisor on X and let H be an arbitrary effective Cartier divisor on X ThenH 0 X O X m D H 0 displaystyle H 0 X mathcal O X mD H neq 0 nbsp for all sufficiently large m N X D displaystyle m in N X D nbsp Kodaira s lemma gives some results about the big divisor Functoriality editLet f X Y be a morphism of integral locally Noetherian schemes It is often but not always possible to use f to transfer a divisor D from one scheme to the other Whether this is possible depends on whether the divisor is a Weil or Cartier divisor whether the divisor is to be moved from X to Y or vice versa and what additional properties f might have If Z is a prime Weil divisor on X then f Z displaystyle overline varphi Z nbsp is a closed irreducible subscheme of Y Depending on f it may or may not be a prime Weil divisor For example if f is the blow up of a point in the plane and Z is the exceptional divisor then its image is not a Weil divisor Therefore f Z is defined to be f Z displaystyle overline varphi Z nbsp if that subscheme is a prime divisor and is defined to be the zero divisor otherwise Extending this by linearity will assuming X is quasi compact define a homomorphism Div X Div Y called the pushforward If X is not quasi compact then the pushforward may fail to be a locally finite sum This is a special case of the pushforward on Chow groups If Z is a Cartier divisor then under mild hypotheses on f there is a pullback f Z displaystyle varphi Z nbsp Sheaf theoretically when there is a pullback map f 1 M Y M X displaystyle varphi 1 mathcal M Y to mathcal M X nbsp then this pullback can be used to define pullback of Cartier divisors In terms of local sections the pullback of U i f i displaystyle U i f i nbsp is defined to be f 1 U i f i f displaystyle varphi 1 U i f i circ varphi nbsp Pullback is always defined if f is dominant but it cannot be defined in general For example if X Z and f is the inclusion of Z into Y then f Z is undefined because the corresponding local sections would be everywhere zero The pullback of the corresponding line bundle however is defined If f is flat then pullback of Weil divisors is defined In this case the pullback of Z is f Z f 1 Z The flatness of f ensures that the inverse image of Z continues to have codimension one This can fail for morphisms which are not flat for example for a small contraction The first Chern class editFor an integral Noetherian scheme X the natural homomorphism from the group of Cartier divisors to that of Weil divisors gives a homomorphism c 1 Pic X Cl X displaystyle c 1 operatorname Pic X to operatorname Cl X nbsp known as the first Chern class 17 18 The first Chern class is injective if X is normal and it is an isomorphism if X is factorial as defined above In particular Cartier divisors can be identified with Weil divisors on any regular scheme and so the first Chern class is an isomorphism for X regular Explicitly the first Chern class can be defined as follows For a line bundle L on an integral Noetherian scheme X let s be a nonzero rational section of L that is a section on some nonempty open subset of L which exists by local triviality of L Define the Weil divisor s on X by analogy with the divisor of a rational function Then the first Chern class of L can be defined to be the divisor s Changing the rational section s changes this divisor by linear equivalence since fs f s for a nonzero rational function f and a nonzero rational section s of L So the element c1 L in Cl X is well defined For a complex variety X of dimension n not necessarily smooth or proper over C there is a natural homomorphism the cycle map from the divisor class group to Borel Moore homology Cl X H 2 n 2 BM X Z displaystyle operatorname Cl X to H 2n 2 operatorname BM X mathbf Z nbsp The latter group is defined using the space X C of complex points of X with its classical Euclidean topology Likewise the Picard group maps to integral cohomology by the first Chern class in the topological sense Pic X H 2 X Z displaystyle operatorname Pic X to H 2 X mathbf Z nbsp The two homomorphisms are related by a commutative diagram where the right vertical map is cap product with the fundamental class of X in Borel Moore homology Pic X H 2 X Z Cl X H 2 n 2 BM X Z displaystyle begin array ccc operatorname Pic X amp longrightarrow amp H 2 X mathbf Z downarrow amp amp downarrow operatorname Cl X amp longrightarrow amp H 2n 2 operatorname BM X mathbf Z end array nbsp For X smooth over C both vertical maps are isomorphisms Global sections of line bundles and linear systems editA Cartier divisor is effective if its local defining functions fi are regular not just rational functions In that case the Cartier divisor can be identified with a closed subscheme of codimension 1 in X the subscheme defined locally by fi 0 A Cartier divisor D is linearly equivalent to an effective divisor if and only if its associated line bundle O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp has a nonzero global section s then D is linearly equivalent to the zero locus of s Let X be a projective variety over a field k Then multiplying a global section of O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp by a nonzero scalar in k does not change its zero locus As a result the projective space of lines in the k vector space of global sections H0 X O D can be identified with the set of effective divisors linearly equivalent to D called the complete linear system of D A projective linear subspace of this projective space is called a linear system of divisors One reason to study the space of global sections of a line bundle is to understand the possible maps from a given variety to projective space This is essential for the classification of algebraic varieties Explicitly a morphism from a variety X to projective space Pn over a field k determines a line bundle L on X the pullback of the standard line bundle O 1 displaystyle mathcal O 1 nbsp on Pn Moreover L comes with n 1 sections whose base locus the intersection of their zero sets is empty Conversely any line bundle L with n 1 global sections whose common base locus is empty determines a morphism X Pn 19 These observations lead to several notions of positivity for Cartier divisors or line bundles such as ample divisors and nef divisors 20 For a divisor D on a projective variety X over a field k the k vector space H0 X O D has finite dimension The Riemann Roch theorem is a fundamental tool for computing the dimension of this vector space when X is a projective curve Successive generalizations the Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem and the Grothendieck Riemann Roch theorem give some information about the dimension of H0 X O D for a projective variety X of any dimension over a field Because the canonical divisor is intrinsically associated to a variety a key role in the classification of varieties is played by the maps to projective space given by KX and its positive multiples The Kodaira dimension of X is a key birational invariant measuring the growth of the vector spaces H0 X mKX meaning H0 X O mKX as m increases The Kodaira dimension divides all n dimensional varieties into n 2 classes which very roughly go from positive curvature to negative curvature Q divisors editLet X be a normal variety A Weil Q divisor is a finite formal linear combination of irreducible codimension 1 subvarieties of X with rational coefficients An R divisor is defined similarly A Q divisor is effective if the coefficients are nonnegative A Q divisor D is Q Cartier if mD is a Cartier divisor for some positive integer m If X is smooth then every Q divisor is Q Cartier If D j a j Z j displaystyle D sum j a j Z j nbsp is a Q divisor then its round down is the divisor D a j Z j displaystyle lfloor D rfloor sum lfloor a j rfloor Z j nbsp where a displaystyle lfloor a rfloor nbsp is the greatest integer less than or equal to a The sheaf O D displaystyle mathcal O D nbsp is then defined to be O D displaystyle mathcal O lfloor D rfloor nbsp The Grothendieck Lefschetz hyperplane theorem editThe Lefschetz hyperplane theorem implies that for a smooth complex projective variety X of dimension at least 4 and a smooth ample divisor Y in X the restriction Pic X Pic Y is an isomorphism For example if Y is a smooth complete intersection variety of dimension at least 3 in complex projective space then the Picard group of Y is isomorphic to Z generated by the restriction of the line bundle O 1 on projective space Grothendieck generalized Lefschetz s theorem in several directions involving arbitrary base fields singular varieties and results on local rings rather than projective varieties In particular if R is a complete intersection local ring which is factorial in codimension at most 3 for example if the non regular locus of R has codimension at least 4 then R is a unique factorization domain and hence every Weil divisor on Spec R is Cartier 21 The dimension bound here is optimal as shown by the example of the 3 dimensional quadric cone above Notes edit Dieudonne 1985 section VI 6 Stacks Project Tag 00PF Stacks Project Tag 02MC Stacks Project Tag 02MD a b Kollar 2013 Notation 1 2 Hartshorne 1977 Proposition II 6 5 a b Hartshorne 1977 Proposition II 6 2 Stacks Project Tag 02RS Kleiman 2005 Theorems 2 5 and 5 4 Remark 6 19 Hartshorne 1977 Example II 6 5 2 Hartshorne 1977 Exercise II 6 5 Grothendieck EGA IV Part 4 Proposition 21 3 4 Corollaire 21 3 5 Lazarsfeld 2004 Example 1 1 6 Stacks Project Tag 0AFW Chapter 2 Preliminaries Foundations of the minimal model program Mathematical Society of Japan Memoirs 2017 pp 16 47 doi 10 2969 msjmemoirs 03501C020 ISBN 978 4 86497 045 7 Lazarsfeld 2004 p 141 Proposition 2 2 6 For a variety X over a field the Chern classes of any vector bundle on X act by cap product on the Chow groups of X and the homomorphism here can be described as L c1 L X Eisenbud amp Harris 2016 1 4 Hartshorne 1977 Theorem II 7 1 Lazarsfeld 2004 Chapter 1 Grothendieck SGA 2 Corollaire XI 3 14 References editDieudonne Jean 1985 History of Algebraic Geometry Wadsworth Mathematics Series translated by Judith D Sally Belmont CA Wadsworth International Group ISBN 0 534 03723 2 MR 0780183 Eisenbud David Harris Joe 2016 3264 and All That A Second Course in Algebraic Geometry C U P ISBN 978 1107602724 Grothendieck Alexandre Dieudonne Jean 1967 Elements de geometrie algebrique IV Etude locale des schemas et des morphismes de schemas Quatrieme partie Publications Mathematiques de l IHES 32 5 361 doi 10 1007 bf02732123 MR 0238860 Grothendieck Alexander Raynaud Michele 2005 1968 Laszlo Yves ed Cohomologie locale des faisceaux coherents et theoremes de Lefschetz locaux et globaux SGA 2 Documents Mathematiques vol 4 Paris Societe Mathematique de France arXiv math 0511279 Bibcode 2005math 11279G ISBN 978 2 85629 169 6 MR 2171939 Section II 6 of Hartshorne Robin 1977 Algebraic Geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 52 New York Heidelberg Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 1 4757 3849 0 ISBN 0 387 90244 9 MR 0463157 Kleiman Steven 2005 The Picard scheme Fundamental Algebraic Geometry Math Surveys Monogr vol 123 Providence R I American Mathematical Society pp 235 321 arXiv math 0504020 Bibcode 2005math 4020K MR 2223410 Kollar Janos 2013 Singularities of the Minimal Model Program Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139547895 ISBN 978 1 107 03534 8 MR 3057950 Lazarsfeld Robert 2004 Positivity in Algebraic Geometry vol 1 Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 642 18808 4 ISBN 3 540 22533 1 MR 2095471External links editThe Stacks Project Authors The Stacks Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Divisor algebraic geometry amp oldid 1149839274 Divisor class group, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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