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Morphism of schemes

In algebraic geometry, a morphism of schemes generalizes a morphism of algebraic varieties just as a scheme generalizes an algebraic variety. It is, by definition, a morphism in the category of schemes.

A morphism of algebraic stacks generalizes a morphism of schemes.

Definition edit

By definition, a morphism of schemes is just a morphism of locally ringed spaces.

A scheme, by definition, has open affine charts and thus a morphism of schemes can also be described in terms of such charts (compare the definition of morphism of varieties).[1] Let ƒ:XY be a morphism of schemes. If x is a point of X, since ƒ is continuous, there are open affine subsets U = Spec A of X containing x and V = Spec B of Y such that ƒ(U) ⊆ V. Then ƒ: UV is a morphism of affine schemes and thus is induced by some ring homomorphism BA (cf. #Affine case.) In fact, one can use this description to "define" a morphism of schemes; one says that ƒ:XY is a morphism of schemes if it is locally induced by ring homomorphisms between coordinate rings of affine charts.

  • Note: It would not be desirable to define a morphism of schemes as a morphism of ringed spaces. One trivial reason is that there is an example of a ringed-space morphism between affine schemes that is not induced by a ring homomorphism (for example,[2] a morphism of ringed spaces:
     
that sends the unique point to s and that comes with  .) More conceptually, the definition of a morphism of schemes needs to capture "Zariski-local nature" or localization of rings;[3] this point of view (i.e., a local-ringed space) is essential for a generalization (topos).

Let f : XY be a morphism of schemes with  . Then, for each point x of X, the homomorphism on the stalks:

 

is a local ring homomorphism: i.e.,   and so induces an injective homomorphism of residue fields

 .

(In fact, φ maps th n-th power of a maximal ideal to the n-th power of the maximal ideal and thus induces the map between the (Zariski) cotangent spaces.)

For each scheme X, there is a natural morphism

 

which is an isomorphism if and only if X is affine; θ is obtained by gluing U → target which come from restrictions to open affine subsets U of X. This fact can also be stated as follows: for any scheme X and a ring A, there is a natural bijection:

 

(Proof: The map   from the right to the left is the required bijection. In short, θ is an adjunction.)

Moreover, this fact (adjoint relation) can be used to characterize an affine scheme: a scheme X is affine if and only if for each scheme S, the natural map

 

is bijective.[4] (Proof: if the maps are bijective, then   and X is isomorphic to   by Yoneda's lemma; the converse is clear.)

A morphism as a relative scheme edit

Fix a scheme S, called a base scheme. Then a morphism   is called a scheme over S or an S-scheme; the idea of the terminology is that it is a scheme X together with a map to the base scheme S. For example, a vector bundle ES over a scheme S is an S-scheme.

An S-morphism from p:XS to q:YS is a morphism ƒ:XY of schemes such that p = q ∘ ƒ. Given an S-scheme  , viewing S as an S-scheme over itself via the identity map, an S-morphism   is called a S-section or just a section.

All the S-schemes form a category: an object in the category is an S-scheme and a morphism in the category an S-morphism. (Succinctly, this category is the slice category of the category of schemes with the base object S.)

Affine case edit

Let   be a ring homomorphism and let

 

be the induced map. Then

  •   is continuous.[5]
  • If   is surjective, then   is a homeomorphism onto its image.[6]
  • For every ideal I of A,  [7]
  •   has dense image if and only if the kernel of   consists of nilpotent elements. (Proof: the preceding formula with I = 0.) In particular, when B is reduced,   has dense image if and only if   is injective.

Let f: Spec A → Spec B be a morphism of schemes between affine schemes with the pullback map  : BA. That it is a morphism of locally ringed spaces translates to the following statement: if   is a point of Spec A,

 .

(Proof: In general,   consists of g in A that has zero image in the residue field k(x); that is, it has the image in the maximal ideal  . Thus, working in the local rings,  . If  , then   is a unit element and so   is a unit element.)

Hence, each ring homomorphism BA defines a morphism of schemes Spec A → Spec B and, conversely, all morphisms between them arise this fashion.

Examples edit

Basic ones edit

  • Let R be a field or   For each R-algebra A, to specify an element of A, say f in A, is to give a R-algebra homomorphism   such that  . Thus,  . If X is a scheme over S = Spec R, then taking   and using the fact Spec is a right adjoint to the global section functor, we get
     
    where  . Note the equality is that of rings.
  • Similarly, for any S-scheme X, there is the identification of the multiplicative groups:
     
    where   is the multiplicative group scheme.
  • Many examples of morphisms come from families parameterized by some base space. For example,
     
    is a projective morphism of projective varieties where the base space parameterizes quadrics in  .

Graph morphism edit

Given a morphism of schemes   over a scheme S, the morphism   induced by the identity   and f is called the graph morphism of f. The graph morphism of the identity is called the diagonal morphism.

Types of morphisms edit

Finite type edit

Morphisms of finite type are one of the basic tools for constructing families of varieties. A morphism   is of finite type if there exists a cover   such that the fibers   can be covered by finitely many affine schemes   making the induced ring morphisms   into finite-type morphisms. A typical example of a finite-type morphism is a family of schemes. For example,

 

is a morphism of finite type. A simple non-example of a morphism of finite-type is   where   is a field. Another is an infinite disjoint union

 

Closed immersion edit

A morphism of schemes   is a closed immersion if the following conditions hold:

  1.   defines a homeomorphism of   onto its image
  2.   is surjective

This condition is equivalent to the following: given an affine open   there exists an ideal   such that  

Examples edit

Of course, any (graded) quotient   defines a subscheme of   ( ). Consider the quasi-affine scheme   and the subset of the  -axis contained in  . Then if we take the open subset   the ideal sheaf is   while on the affine open   there is no ideal since the subset does not intersect this chart.

Separated edit

Separated morphisms define families of schemes which are "Hausdorff". For example, given a separated morphism   in   the associated analytic spaces   are both Hausdorff. We say a morphism of scheme   is separated if the diagonal morphism   is a closed immersion. In topology, an analogous condition for a space   to be Hausdorff is if the diagonal set

 

is a closed subset of  . Nevertheless, most schemes are not Hausdorff as topological spaces, as the Zariski topology is in general highly non-Hausdorff.

Examples edit

Most morphisms encountered in scheme theory will be separated. For example, consider the affine scheme

 

over   Since the product scheme is

 

the ideal defining the diagonal is generated by

 

showing the diagonal scheme is affine and closed. This same computation can be used to show that projective schemes are separated as well.

Non-examples edit

The only time care must be taken is when you are gluing together a family of schemes. For example, if we take the diagram of inclusions

 

then we get the scheme-theoretic analogue of the classical line with two-origins.

Proper edit

A morphism   is called proper if

  1. it is separated
  2. of finite-type
  3. universally closed

The last condition means that given a morphism   the base change morphism   is a closed immersion. Most known examples of proper morphisms are in fact projective; but, examples of proper varieties which are not projective can be found using toric geometry.

Projective edit

Projective morphisms define families of projective varieties over a fixed base scheme. Note that there are two definitions: Hartshornes which states that a morphism   is called projective if there exists a closed immersion   and the EGA definition which states that a scheme   is projective if there is a quasi-coherent  -module of finite type such that there is a closed immersion  . The second definition is useful because an exact sequence of   modules can be used to define projective morphisms.

Projective morphism over a point edit

A projective morphism   defines a projective scheme. For example,

 

defines a projective curve of genus   over  .

Family of projective hypersurfaces edit

If we let   then the projective morphism

 

defines a family of Calabi-Yau manifolds which degenerate.

Lefschetz pencil edit

Another useful class of examples of projective morphisms are Lefschetz Pencils: they are projective morphisms   over some field  . For example, given smooth hypersurfaces   defined by the homogeneous polynomials   there is a projective morphism

 

giving the pencil.

EGA projective edit

A nice classical example of a projective scheme is by constructing projective morphisms which factor through rational scrolls. For example, take   and the vector bundle  . This can be used to construct a  -bundle   over  . If we want to construct a projective morphism using this sheaf we can take an exact sequence, such as

 

which defines the structure sheaf of the projective scheme   in  

Flat edit

Intuition edit

Flat morphisms have an algebraic definition but have a very concrete geometric interpretation: flat families correspond to families of varieties which vary "continuously". For example,

 

is a family of smooth affine quadric curves which degenerate to the normal crossing divisor

 

at the origin.

Properties edit

One important property that a flat morphism must satisfy is that the dimensions of the fibers should be the same. A simple non-example of a flat morphism then is a blowup since the fibers are either points or copies of some  .

Definition edit

Let   be a morphism of schemes. We say that   is flat at a point   if the induced morphism   yields an exact functor   Then,   is flat if it is flat at every point of  . It is also faithfully flat if it is a surjective morphism.

Non-example edit

Using our geometric intuition it obvious that

 

is not flat since the fiber over   is   with the rest of the fibers are just a point. But, we can also check this using the definition with local algebra: Consider the ideal   Since   we get a local algebra morphism

 

If we tensor

 

with  , the map

 

has a non-zero kernel due the vanishing of  . This shows that the morphism is not flat.

Unramified edit

A morphism   of affine schemes is unramified if  . We can use this for the general case of a morphism of schemes  . We say that   is unramified at   if there is an affine open neighborhood   and an affine open   such that   and   Then, the morphism is unramified if it is unramified at every point in  .

Geometric example edit

One example of a morphism which is flat and generically unramified, except for at a point, is

 

We can compute the relative differentials using the sequence

 

showing

 

if we take the fiber  , then the morphism is ramified since

 

otherwise we have

 

showing that it is unramified everywhere else.

Etale edit

A morphism of schemes   is called étale if it is flat and unramfied. These are the algebro-geometric analogue of covering spaces. The two main examples to think of are covering spaces and finite separable field extensions. Examples in the first case can be constructed by looking at branched coverings and restricting to the unramified locus.

Morphisms as points edit

By definition, if X, S are schemes (over some base scheme or ring B), then a morphism from S to X (over B) is an S-point of X and one writes:

 

for the set of all S-points of X. This notion generalizes the notion of solutions to a system of polynomial equations in classical algebraic geometry. Indeed, let X = Spec(A) with  . For a B-algebra R, to give an R-point of X is to give an algebra homomorphism AR, which in turn amounts to giving a homomorphism

 

that kills fi's. Thus, there is a natural identification:

 

Example: If X is an S-scheme with structure map π: XS, then an S-point of X (over S) is the same thing as a section of π.

In category theory, Yoneda's lemma says that, given a category C, the contravariant functor

 

is fully faithful (where   means the category of presheaves on C). Applying the lemma to C = the category of schemes over B, this says that a scheme over B is determined by its various points.

It turns out that in fact it is enough to consider S-points with only affine schemes S, precisely because schemes and morphisms between them are obtained by gluing affine schemes and morphisms between them. Because of this, one usually writes X(R) = X(Spec R) and view X as a functor from the category of commutative B-algebras to Sets.

Example: Given S-schemes X, Y with structure maps p, q,

 .

Example: With B still denoting a ring or scheme, for each B-scheme X, there is a natural bijection

  { the isomorphism classes of line bundles L on X together with n + 1 global sections generating L. };

in fact, the sections si of L define a morphism  . (See also Proj construction#Global Proj.)

Remark: The above point of view (which goes under the name functor of points and is due to Grothendieck) has had a significant impact on the foundations of algebraic geometry. For example, working with a category-valued (pseudo-)functor instead of a set-valued functor leads to the notion of a stack, which allows one to keep track of morphisms between points.

Rational map edit

A rational map of schemes is defined in the same way for varieties. Thus, a rational map from a reduced scheme X to a separated scheme Y is an equivalence class of a pair   consisting of an open dense subset U of X and a morphism  . If X is irreducible, a rational function on X is, by definition, a rational map from X to the affine line   or the projective line  

A rational map is dominant if and only if it sends the generic point to the generic point.[8]

A ring homomorphism between function fields need not induce a dominant rational map (even just a rational map).[9] For example, Spec k[x] and Spec k(x) and have the same function field (namely, k(x)) but there is no rational map from the former to the latter. However, it is true that any inclusion of function fields of algebraic varieties induces a dominant rational map (see morphism of algebraic varieties#Properties.)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Vakil 2014, Exercise 6.3.C.
  2. ^ Vakil 2014, Exercise 6.2.E.
  3. ^ Derived Algebraic Geometry V: Structured Spaces (PDF), 22 February 2011, § 1.
  4. ^ Grothendieck & Dieudonné 1960, Ch. I, Corollarie 1.6.4.
  5. ^ Proof:   for all f in A.
  6. ^ Grothendieck & Dieudonné 1960, Ch. I, Corollaire 1.2.4.
  7. ^ Grothendieck & Dieudonné 1960, Ch. I, 1.2.2.3.
  8. ^ Vakil 2014, Exercise 6.5.A
  9. ^ Vakil 2014, A paragraph after Exercise 6.5.B

References edit

morphism, schemes, algebraic, geometry, morphism, schemes, generalizes, morphism, algebraic, varieties, just, scheme, generalizes, algebraic, variety, definition, morphism, category, schemes, morphism, algebraic, stacks, generalizes, morphism, schemes, content. In algebraic geometry a morphism of schemes generalizes a morphism of algebraic varieties just as a scheme generalizes an algebraic variety It is by definition a morphism in the category of schemes A morphism of algebraic stacks generalizes a morphism of schemes Contents 1 Definition 2 A morphism as a relative scheme 3 Affine case 4 Examples 4 1 Basic ones 4 2 Graph morphism 5 Types of morphisms 5 1 Finite type 5 2 Closed immersion 5 2 1 Examples 5 3 Separated 5 3 1 Examples 5 3 2 Non examples 5 4 Proper 5 5 Projective 5 5 1 Projective morphism over a point 5 5 2 Family of projective hypersurfaces 5 5 3 Lefschetz pencil 5 5 4 EGA projective 5 6 Flat 5 6 1 Intuition 5 6 2 Properties 5 6 3 Definition 5 6 4 Non example 5 7 Unramified 5 7 1 Geometric example 5 8 Etale 6 Morphisms as points 7 Rational map 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesDefinition editBy definition a morphism of schemes is just a morphism of locally ringed spaces A scheme by definition has open affine charts and thus a morphism of schemes can also be described in terms of such charts compare the definition of morphism of varieties 1 Let ƒ X Y be a morphism of schemes If x is a point of X since ƒ is continuous there are open affine subsets U Spec A of X containing x and V Spec B of Y such that ƒ U V Then ƒ U V is a morphism of affine schemes and thus is induced by some ring homomorphism B A cf Affine case In fact one can use this description to define a morphism of schemes one says that ƒ X Y is a morphism of schemes if it is locally induced by ring homomorphisms between coordinate rings of affine charts Note It would not be desirable to define a morphism of schemes as a morphism of ringed spaces One trivial reason is that there is an example of a ringed space morphism between affine schemes that is not induced by a ring homomorphism for example 2 a morphism of ringed spaces Spec k x Spec k y y h 0 s y displaystyle operatorname Spec k x to operatorname Spec k y y eta 0 s y nbsp that sends the unique point to s and that comes with k y y k x y x displaystyle k y y to k x y mapsto x nbsp More conceptually the definition of a morphism of schemes needs to capture Zariski local nature or localization of rings 3 this point of view i e a local ringed space is essential for a generalization topos Let f X Y be a morphism of schemes with ϕ O Y f O X displaystyle phi mathcal O Y to f mathcal O X nbsp Then for each point x of X the homomorphism on the stalks ϕ O Y f x O X x displaystyle phi mathcal O Y f x to mathcal O X x nbsp is a local ring homomorphism i e ϕ m f x m x displaystyle phi mathfrak m f x subseteq mathfrak m x nbsp and so induces an injective homomorphism of residue fields ϕ k f x k x displaystyle phi k f x hookrightarrow k x nbsp In fact f maps th n th power of a maximal ideal to the n th power of the maximal ideal and thus induces the map between the Zariski cotangent spaces For each scheme X there is a natural morphism 8 X Spec G X O X displaystyle theta X to operatorname Spec Gamma X mathcal O X nbsp which is an isomorphism if and only if X is affine 8 is obtained by gluing U target which come from restrictions to open affine subsets U of X This fact can also be stated as follows for any scheme X and a ring A there is a natural bijection Mor X Spec A Hom A G X O X displaystyle operatorname Mor X operatorname Spec A cong operatorname Hom A Gamma X mathcal O X nbsp Proof The map ϕ Spec ϕ 8 displaystyle phi mapsto operatorname Spec phi circ theta nbsp from the right to the left is the required bijection In short 8 is an adjunction Moreover this fact adjoint relation can be used to characterize an affine scheme a scheme X is affine if and only if for each scheme S the natural map Mor S X Hom G X O X G S O S displaystyle operatorname Mor S X to operatorname Hom Gamma X mathcal O X Gamma S mathcal O S nbsp is bijective 4 Proof if the maps are bijective then Mor X Mor Spec G X O X displaystyle operatorname Mor X simeq operatorname Mor operatorname Spec Gamma X mathcal O X nbsp and X is isomorphic to Spec G X O X displaystyle operatorname Spec Gamma X mathcal O X nbsp by Yoneda s lemma the converse is clear A morphism as a relative scheme editFix a scheme S called a base scheme Then a morphism p X S displaystyle p X to S nbsp is called a scheme over S or an S scheme the idea of the terminology is that it is a scheme X together with a map to the base scheme S For example a vector bundle E S over a scheme S is an S scheme An S morphism from p X S to q Y S is a morphism ƒ X Y of schemes such that p q ƒ Given an S scheme X S displaystyle X to S nbsp viewing S as an S scheme over itself via the identity map an S morphism S X displaystyle S to X nbsp is called a S section or just a section All the S schemes form a category an object in the category is an S scheme and a morphism in the category an S morphism Succinctly this category is the slice category of the category of schemes with the base object S Affine case editLet f B A displaystyle varphi B to A nbsp be a ring homomorphism and let f a Spec A Spec B p f 1 p displaystyle begin cases varphi a operatorname Spec A to operatorname Spec B mathfrak p mapsto varphi 1 mathfrak p end cases nbsp be the induced map Then f a displaystyle varphi a nbsp is continuous 5 If f displaystyle varphi nbsp is surjective then f a displaystyle varphi a nbsp is a homeomorphism onto its image 6 For every ideal I of A f a V I V f 1 I displaystyle overline varphi a V I V varphi 1 I nbsp 7 f a displaystyle varphi a nbsp has dense image if and only if the kernel of f displaystyle varphi nbsp consists of nilpotent elements Proof the preceding formula with I 0 In particular when B is reduced f a displaystyle varphi a nbsp has dense image if and only if f displaystyle varphi nbsp is injective Let f Spec A Spec B be a morphism of schemes between affine schemes with the pullback map f displaystyle varphi nbsp B A That it is a morphism of locally ringed spaces translates to the following statement if x p x displaystyle x mathfrak p x nbsp is a point of Spec A p f x f 1 p x displaystyle mathfrak p f x varphi 1 mathfrak p x nbsp Proof In general p x displaystyle mathfrak p x nbsp consists of g in A that has zero image in the residue field k x that is it has the image in the maximal ideal m x displaystyle mathfrak m x nbsp Thus working in the local rings g f x 0 f g f m f x m x g f 1 m x displaystyle g f x 0 Rightarrow varphi g in varphi mathfrak m f x subseteq mathfrak m x Rightarrow g in varphi 1 mathfrak m x nbsp If g f x 0 displaystyle g f x neq 0 nbsp then g displaystyle g nbsp is a unit element and so f g displaystyle varphi g nbsp is a unit element Hence each ring homomorphism B A defines a morphism of schemes Spec A Spec B and conversely all morphisms between them arise this fashion Examples editSee also morphism of varieties Examples Basic ones edit Let R be a field or Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp For each R algebra A to specify an element of A say f in A is to give a R algebra homomorphism R t A displaystyle R t to A nbsp such that t f displaystyle t mapsto f nbsp Thus A Hom R alg R t A displaystyle A operatorname Hom R text alg R t A nbsp If X is a scheme over S Spec R then taking A G X O X displaystyle A Gamma X mathcal O X nbsp and using the fact Spec is a right adjoint to the global section functor we get G X O X Mor S X A S 1 displaystyle Gamma X mathcal O X operatorname Mor S X mathbb A S 1 nbsp where A S 1 Spec R t displaystyle mathbb A S 1 operatorname Spec R t nbsp Note the equality is that of rings Similarly for any S scheme X there is the identification of the multiplicative groups G X O X Mor S X G m displaystyle Gamma X mathcal O X operatorname Mor S X mathbb G m nbsp where G m Spec R t t 1 displaystyle mathbb G m operatorname Spec R t t 1 nbsp is the multiplicative group scheme Many examples of morphisms come from families parameterized by some base space For example Proj C x y a b c a x 2 b x y c y 2 Proj C a b c P a b c 2 displaystyle text Proj left frac mathbb C x y a b c ax 2 bxy cy 2 right to text Proj mathbb C a b c mathbb P a b c 2 nbsp is a projective morphism of projective varieties where the base space parameterizes quadrics in P 1 displaystyle mathbb P 1 nbsp Graph morphism edit Given a morphism of schemes f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp over a scheme S the morphism X X S Y displaystyle X to X times S Y nbsp induced by the identity 1 X X X displaystyle 1 X X to X nbsp and f is called the graph morphism of f The graph morphism of the identity is called the diagonal morphism Types of morphisms editSee also glossary of algebraic geometry Finite type edit Morphisms of finite type are one of the basic tools for constructing families of varieties A morphism f X S displaystyle f X to S nbsp is of finite type if there exists a cover Spec A i S displaystyle operatorname Spec A i to S nbsp such that the fibers X S Spec A i displaystyle X times S operatorname Spec A i nbsp can be covered by finitely many affine schemes Spec B i j displaystyle operatorname Spec B ij nbsp making the induced ring morphisms A i B i j displaystyle A i to B ij nbsp into finite type morphisms A typical example of a finite type morphism is a family of schemes For example Spec Z x y z x n z y n z 5 1 Spec Z z z 5 1 displaystyle operatorname Spec left frac mathbb Z x y z x n zy n z 5 1 right to operatorname Spec left frac mathbb Z z z 5 1 right nbsp is a morphism of finite type A simple non example of a morphism of finite type is Spec k x 1 x 2 x 3 Spec k displaystyle operatorname Spec k x 1 x 2 x 3 ldots to operatorname Spec k nbsp where k displaystyle k nbsp is a field Another is an infinite disjoint union X X displaystyle coprod infty X to X nbsp Closed immersion edit A morphism of schemes i Z X displaystyle i Z to X nbsp is a closed immersion if the following conditions hold i displaystyle i nbsp defines a homeomorphism of Z displaystyle Z nbsp onto its image i O X i O Z displaystyle i mathcal O X to i mathcal O Z nbsp is surjectiveThis condition is equivalent to the following given an affine open Spec R U X displaystyle operatorname Spec R U subseteq X nbsp there exists an ideal I R displaystyle I subseteq R nbsp such that i 1 U Spec R I displaystyle i 1 U operatorname Spec R I nbsp Examples edit Of course any graded quotient R I displaystyle R I nbsp defines a subscheme of Spec R displaystyle operatorname Spec R nbsp Proj R displaystyle operatorname Proj R nbsp Consider the quasi affine scheme A 2 0 displaystyle mathbb A 2 0 nbsp and the subset of the x displaystyle x nbsp axis contained in X displaystyle X nbsp Then if we take the open subset Spec k x y y 1 displaystyle operatorname Spec k x y y 1 nbsp the ideal sheaf is x displaystyle x nbsp while on the affine open Spec k x y x 1 displaystyle operatorname Spec k x y x 1 nbsp there is no ideal since the subset does not intersect this chart Separated edit Separated morphisms define families of schemes which are Hausdorff For example given a separated morphism X S displaystyle X to S nbsp in Sch C displaystyle text Sch mathbb C nbsp the associated analytic spaces X C a n S C a n displaystyle X mathbb C an to S mathbb C an nbsp are both Hausdorff We say a morphism of scheme f X S displaystyle f X to S nbsp is separated if the diagonal morphism D X S X X S X displaystyle Delta X S X to X times S X nbsp is a closed immersion In topology an analogous condition for a space X displaystyle X nbsp to be Hausdorff is if the diagonal set D x x X X displaystyle Delta x x in X times X nbsp is a closed subset of X X displaystyle X times X nbsp Nevertheless most schemes are not Hausdorff as topological spaces as the Zariski topology is in general highly non Hausdorff Examples edit Most morphisms encountered in scheme theory will be separated For example consider the affine scheme X Spec C x y f displaystyle X operatorname Spec left frac mathbb C x y f right nbsp over Spec C displaystyle operatorname Spec mathbb C nbsp Since the product scheme is X C X Spec C x y f C C x y f displaystyle X times mathbb C X operatorname Spec left frac mathbb C x y f otimes mathbb C frac mathbb C x y f right nbsp the ideal defining the diagonal is generated by x 1 1 x y 1 1 y displaystyle x otimes 1 1 otimes x y otimes 1 1 otimes y nbsp showing the diagonal scheme is affine and closed This same computation can be used to show that projective schemes are separated as well Non examples edit The only time care must be taken is when you are gluing together a family of schemes For example if we take the diagram of inclusions Spec R x x 1 Spec R x Spec R x x 1 displaystyle begin matrix operatorname Spec R x x 1 amp amp amp searrow amp amp amp operatorname Spec R x amp nearrow amp operatorname Spec R x x 1 amp amp end matrix nbsp then we get the scheme theoretic analogue of the classical line with two origins Proper edit A morphism f X S displaystyle f X to S nbsp is called proper if it is separated of finite type universally closedThe last condition means that given a morphism S S displaystyle S to S nbsp the base change morphism S S X displaystyle S times S X nbsp is a closed immersion Most known examples of proper morphisms are in fact projective but examples of proper varieties which are not projective can be found using toric geometry Projective edit Projective morphisms define families of projective varieties over a fixed base scheme Note that there are two definitions Hartshornes which states that a morphism f X S displaystyle f X to S nbsp is called projective if there exists a closed immersion X P S n P n S displaystyle X to mathbb P S n mathbb P n times S nbsp and the EGA definition which states that a scheme X Sch S displaystyle X in text Sch S nbsp is projective if there is a quasi coherent O S displaystyle mathcal O S nbsp module of finite type such that there is a closed immersion X P S E displaystyle X to mathbb P S mathcal E nbsp The second definition is useful because an exact sequence of O S displaystyle mathcal O S nbsp modules can be used to define projective morphisms Projective morphism over a point edit A projective morphism f X displaystyle f X to nbsp defines a projective scheme For example Proj C x y z x n y n z n Spec C displaystyle text Proj left frac mathbb C x y z x n y n z n right to operatorname Spec mathbb C nbsp defines a projective curve of genus n 1 n 1 2 displaystyle n 1 n 1 2 nbsp over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp Family of projective hypersurfaces edit If we let S A t 1 displaystyle S mathbb A t 1 nbsp then the projective morphism Proj S O S x 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 x 0 5 x 4 5 t x 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 S displaystyle underline operatorname Proj S left frac mathcal O S x 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 left x 0 5 cdots x 4 5 tx 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 x 4 right right to S nbsp defines a family of Calabi Yau manifolds which degenerate Lefschetz pencil edit Another useful class of examples of projective morphisms are Lefschetz Pencils they are projective morphisms p X P k 1 Proj k s t displaystyle pi X to mathbb P k 1 operatorname Proj k s t nbsp over some field k displaystyle k nbsp For example given smooth hypersurfaces X 1 X 2 P k n displaystyle X 1 X 2 subseteq mathbb P k n nbsp defined by the homogeneous polynomials f 1 f 2 displaystyle f 1 f 2 nbsp there is a projective morphism Proj P 1 O P 1 x 0 x n s f 1 t f 2 P 1 displaystyle underline operatorname Proj mathbb P 1 left frac mathcal O mathbb P 1 x 0 ldots x n sf 1 tf 2 right to mathbb P 1 nbsp giving the pencil EGA projective edit A nice classical example of a projective scheme is by constructing projective morphisms which factor through rational scrolls For example take S P 1 displaystyle S mathbb P 1 nbsp and the vector bundle E O S O S O S 3 displaystyle mathcal E mathcal O S oplus mathcal O S oplus mathcal O S 3 nbsp This can be used to construct a P 2 displaystyle mathbb P 2 nbsp bundle P S E displaystyle mathbb P S mathcal E nbsp over S displaystyle S nbsp If we want to construct a projective morphism using this sheaf we can take an exact sequence such as O S d O S e E O X 0 displaystyle mathcal O S d oplus mathcal O S e to mathcal E to mathcal O X to 0 nbsp which defines the structure sheaf of the projective scheme X displaystyle X nbsp in P S E displaystyle mathbb P S mathcal E nbsp Flat edit Intuition edit Flat morphisms have an algebraic definition but have a very concrete geometric interpretation flat families correspond to families of varieties which vary continuously For example Spec C x y t x y t Spec C t displaystyle operatorname Spec left frac mathbb C x y t xy t right to operatorname Spec mathbb C t nbsp is a family of smooth affine quadric curves which degenerate to the normal crossing divisor Spec C x y x y displaystyle operatorname Spec left frac mathbb C x y xy right nbsp at the origin Properties edit One important property that a flat morphism must satisfy is that the dimensions of the fibers should be the same A simple non example of a flat morphism then is a blowup since the fibers are either points or copies of some P n displaystyle mathbb P n nbsp Definition edit Let f X S displaystyle f X to S nbsp be a morphism of schemes We say that f displaystyle f nbsp is flat at a point x X displaystyle x in X nbsp if the induced morphism O f x O x displaystyle mathcal O f x to mathcal O x nbsp yields an exact functor O f x O x displaystyle otimes mathcal O f x mathcal O x nbsp Then f displaystyle f nbsp is flat if it is flat at every point of X displaystyle X nbsp It is also faithfully flat if it is a surjective morphism Non example edit Using our geometric intuition it obvious that f Spec C x y x y Spec C x displaystyle f operatorname Spec mathbb C x y xy to operatorname Spec mathbb C x nbsp is not flat since the fiber over 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp is A 1 displaystyle mathbb A 1 nbsp with the rest of the fibers are just a point But we can also check this using the definition with local algebra Consider the ideal p x Spec C x y x y displaystyle mathfrak p x in operatorname Spec mathbb C x y xy nbsp Since f p x Spec C x displaystyle f mathfrak p x in operatorname Spec mathbb C x nbsp we get a local algebra morphism f p C x x C x y x y x displaystyle f mathfrak p left mathbb C x right x to left mathbb C x y xy right x nbsp If we tensor 0 C x x x C x x displaystyle 0 to mathbb C x x overset cdot x longrightarrow mathbb C x x nbsp with C x y x y x displaystyle mathbb C x y xy x nbsp the map C x y x y x x C x y x y x displaystyle mathbb C x y xy x xrightarrow cdot x mathbb C x y xy x nbsp has a non zero kernel due the vanishing of x y displaystyle xy nbsp This shows that the morphism is not flat Unramified edit A morphism f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp of affine schemes is unramified if W X Y 0 displaystyle Omega X Y 0 nbsp We can use this for the general case of a morphism of schemes f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp We say that f displaystyle f nbsp is unramified at x X displaystyle x in X nbsp if there is an affine open neighborhood x U displaystyle x in U nbsp and an affine open V Y displaystyle V subseteq Y nbsp such that f U V displaystyle f U subseteq V nbsp and W U V 0 displaystyle Omega U V 0 nbsp Then the morphism is unramified if it is unramified at every point in X displaystyle X nbsp Geometric example edit One example of a morphism which is flat and generically unramified except for at a point is Spec C t x x n t Spec C t displaystyle operatorname Spec left frac mathbb C t x x n t right to operatorname Spec mathbb C t nbsp We can compute the relative differentials using the sequence C t x x n t C t C t d t C t x x n t d t C t x x n t d x n x n 1 d x d t W X Y 0 displaystyle frac mathbb C t x x n t otimes mathbb C t mathbb C t dt to left frac mathbb C t x x n t dt oplus frac mathbb C t x x n t dx right nx n 1 dx dt to Omega X Y to 0 nbsp showing W X Y C t x x n t d x x n 1 d x 0 displaystyle Omega X Y cong left frac mathbb C t x x n t dx right x n 1 dx neq 0 nbsp if we take the fiber t 0 displaystyle t 0 nbsp then the morphism is ramified since W X 0 C C x x n d x x n 1 d x displaystyle Omega X 0 mathbb C left frac mathbb C x x n dx right x n 1 dx nbsp otherwise we have W X a C C x x n a d x x n 1 d x C x a d x 0 displaystyle Omega X alpha mathbb C left frac mathbb C x x n alpha dx right x n 1 dx cong frac mathbb C x alpha dx cong 0 nbsp showing that it is unramified everywhere else Etale edit A morphism of schemes f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp is called etale if it is flat and unramfied These are the algebro geometric analogue of covering spaces The two main examples to think of are covering spaces and finite separable field extensions Examples in the first case can be constructed by looking at branched coverings and restricting to the unramified locus Morphisms as points editSee also rational point Definition and Functor represented by a scheme By definition if X S are schemes over some base scheme or ring B then a morphism from S to X over B is an S point of X and one writes X S f f S X over B displaystyle X S f mid f S to X text over B nbsp for the set of all S points of X This notion generalizes the notion of solutions to a system of polynomial equations in classical algebraic geometry Indeed let X Spec A with A B t 1 t n f 1 f m displaystyle A B t 1 dots t n f 1 dots f m nbsp For a B algebra R to give an R point of X is to give an algebra homomorphism A R which in turn amounts to giving a homomorphism B t 1 t n R t i r i displaystyle B t 1 dots t n to R t i mapsto r i nbsp that kills fi s Thus there is a natural identification X Spec R r 1 r n R n f 1 r 1 r n f m r 1 r n 0 displaystyle X operatorname Spec R r 1 dots r n in R n f 1 r 1 dots r n cdots f m r 1 dots r n 0 nbsp Example If X is an S scheme with structure map p X S then an S point of X over S is the same thing as a section of p In category theory Yoneda s lemma says that given a category C the contravariant functor C P C Fct C op S e t s X Mor X displaystyle C to mathcal P C operatorname Fct C text op mathbf Sets X mapsto operatorname Mor X nbsp is fully faithful where P C displaystyle mathcal P C nbsp means the category of presheaves on C Applying the lemma to C the category of schemes over B this says that a scheme over B is determined by its various points It turns out that in fact it is enough to consider S points with only affine schemes S precisely because schemes and morphisms between them are obtained by gluing affine schemes and morphisms between them Because of this one usually writes X R X Spec R and view X as a functor from the category of commutative B algebras to Sets Example Given S schemes X Y with structure maps p q X S Y R X R S R Y R x y X R Y R p x q y displaystyle X times S Y R X R times S R Y R x y in X R times Y R mid p x q y nbsp Example With B still denoting a ring or scheme for each B scheme X there is a natural bijection P B n X displaystyle mathbf P B n X nbsp the isomorphism classes of line bundles L on X together with n 1 global sections generating L in fact the sections si of L define a morphism X P B n x s 0 x s n x displaystyle X to mathbf P B n x mapsto s 0 x dots s n x nbsp See also Proj construction Global Proj Remark The above point of view which goes under the name functor of points and is due to Grothendieck has had a significant impact on the foundations of algebraic geometry For example working with a category valued pseudo functor instead of a set valued functor leads to the notion of a stack which allows one to keep track of morphisms between points Rational map editMain article rational map A rational map of schemes is defined in the same way for varieties Thus a rational map from a reduced scheme X to a separated scheme Y is an equivalence class of a pair U f U displaystyle U f U nbsp consisting of an open dense subset U of X and a morphism f U U Y displaystyle f U U to Y nbsp If X is irreducible a rational function on X is by definition a rational map from X to the affine line A 1 displaystyle mathbb A 1 nbsp or the projective line P 1 displaystyle mathbb P 1 nbsp A rational map is dominant if and only if it sends the generic point to the generic point 8 A ring homomorphism between function fields need not induce a dominant rational map even just a rational map 9 For example Spec k x and Spec k x and have the same function field namely k x but there is no rational map from the former to the latter However it is true that any inclusion of function fields of algebraic varieties induces a dominant rational map see morphism of algebraic varieties Properties See also editRegular embedding Constructible set topology Universal homeomorphismNotes edit Vakil 2014 Exercise 6 3 C Vakil 2014 Exercise 6 2 E Derived Algebraic Geometry V Structured Spaces PDF 22 February 2011 1 Grothendieck amp Dieudonne 1960 Ch I Corollarie 1 6 4 Proof f a 1 D f D f f displaystyle varphi a 1 D f D varphi f nbsp for all f in A Grothendieck amp Dieudonne 1960 Ch I Corollaire 1 2 4 Grothendieck amp Dieudonne 1960 Ch I 1 2 2 3 Vakil 2014 Exercise 6 5 A Vakil 2014 A paragraph after Exercise 6 5 BReferences editGrothendieck Alexandre Dieudonne Jean 1960 Elements de geometrie algebrique I Le langage des schemas Publications Mathematiques de l IHES 4 doi 10 1007 bf02684778 MR 0217083 Hartshorne Robin 1977 Algebraic Geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics vol 52 New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90244 9 MR 0463157 Milne Review of Algebraic Geometry at Algebraic Groups The theory of group schemes of finite type over a field Vakil Ravi 30 December 2014 Foundations of Algebraic Geometry PDF Draft ed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morphism of schemes amp oldid 1207867342, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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