Sheaves and schemes form the backbone of modern algebraic geometry. They provide a powerful framework for studying geometric objects algebraically, bridging the gap between local and global properties. This approach allows for a unified treatment of various mathematical structures.
Sheaves generalize functions on topological spaces, assigning data to open sets compatibly. Schemes, built from affine schemes, extend the notion of algebraic varieties. Together, they enable the study of complex geometric objects and their properties using algebraic techniques.
Sheaves generalize the notion of functions on a topological space by assigning data to open sets in a way that is compatible with restrictions
Presheaves consist of a contravariant functor from the category of open sets of a topological space X to a target category (often the category of sets, abelian groups, or rings)
Sheaf axioms ensure local data can be glued together consistently
Identity axiom: The identity morphism on an open set induces the identity morphism on the corresponding sheaf
Gluing axiom: If {Ui} is an open cover of an open set U and si∈F(Ui) agree on overlaps, then there exists a unique s∈F(U) restricting to each si
Stalks capture the local behavior of a sheaf at a point by considering the direct limit of sections over all open neighborhoods of the point
Ringed spaces combine a topological space with a sheaf of rings, providing a foundation for studying schemes
Locally ringed spaces require the stalks of the structure sheaf to be local rings, a key property for defining schemes
Sheaf Theory Foundations
Sheaves can be defined on various categories, such as topological spaces, sites, or topoi, allowing for a wide range of applications
Morphisms of sheaves are natural transformations between the corresponding functors, preserving the sheaf structure
Operations on sheaves include direct sums, tensor products, and sheaf Hom, enabling the study of sheaf cohomology and other constructions
Exact sequences of sheaves play a crucial role in understanding the relationships between different sheaves and computing cohomology
The sheafification process turns a presheaf into a sheaf by enforcing the gluing axiom, providing a universal way to associate a sheaf to a presheaf
The étalé space construction provides a geometric perspective on sheaves by representing them as continuous maps to the base space
Sheaf cohomology extends the notion of cohomology to sheaves, capturing global information from local data
Derived functors of the global sections functor Γ yield sheaf cohomology groups Hi(X,F)
From Ringed Spaces to Schemes
Affine schemes are the building blocks of scheme theory, defined as the spectrum of a commutative ring A with the Zariski topology and the structure sheaf OSpec(A)
The Zariski topology on Spec(A) is generated by basic open sets of the form D(f)={p∈Spec(A)∣f∈/p} for f∈A
The structure sheaf OSpec(A) assigns to each open set U the ring of regular functions on U, given by the localization Af for f∈A such that D(f)⊆U
Schemes are obtained by gluing affine schemes along open subsets, generalizing the notion of algebraic varieties
A scheme (X,OX) is a locally ringed space that is locally isomorphic to an affine scheme
Morphisms of schemes are morphisms of locally ringed spaces, compatible with the structure sheaves
Fiber products of schemes allow for the construction of new schemes from existing ones, enabling the study of geometric properties and moduli problems
Properties of Schemes
Reducedness and irreducibility are important geometric properties of schemes
A scheme is reduced if its structure sheaf has no nilpotent elements in its stalks
A scheme is irreducible if it is not the union of two proper closed subschemes
Separation axioms, such as the Hausdorff property and separatedness, control the global behavior of schemes
A scheme is separated if the diagonal morphism Δ:X→X×X is a closed immersion
Properness is a stronger condition than separatedness, requiring the diagonal morphism to be proper (universally closed and separated)
Dimension theory for schemes extends the notion of dimension from algebraic varieties
The dimension of a scheme at a point is the Krull dimension of the local ring at that point
The dimension of a scheme is the supremum of the dimensions at its points
Smoothness and regularity characterize the local geometry of schemes
A scheme is regular at a point if the local ring at that point is a regular local ring
A scheme is smooth over a base scheme if it is locally of finite presentation and the fibers are geometrically regular
Morphisms of Schemes
Morphisms of schemes are locally determined by morphisms of affine schemes, which correspond to ring homomorphisms in the opposite direction
Properties of morphisms, such as being affine, finite, proper, smooth, or étale, reflect geometric and algebraic properties of the schemes involved
Affine morphisms are characterized by the preimage of an affine open set being affine
Finite morphisms have finite fibers and are affine
Proper morphisms are universally closed and separated
Smooth morphisms are locally of finite presentation with geometrically regular fibers
Étale morphisms are flat and unramified, providing a notion of local isomorphism
Fiber products and base change allow for the study of morphisms and their behavior under pullbacks
Valuative criteria for properness and separatedness provide a way to check these properties using valuation rings
Flatness is a crucial property for families of schemes, ensuring that fibers vary continuously and have compatible dimensions
Cohomology of Sheaves
Sheaf cohomology is a powerful tool for studying global properties of schemes and sheaves
Čech cohomology provides a concrete way to compute sheaf cohomology using open covers and Čech cochains
The Čech complex associated to an open cover U={Ui} of a scheme X and a sheaf F yields Čech cohomology groups Hˇi(U,F)
Refining the open cover leads to isomorphic Čech cohomology groups, allowing for the definition of the Čech cohomology groups Hˇi(X,F)
Derived functor cohomology extends the notion of sheaf cohomology to derived categories, providing a more abstract and functorial approach
Serre duality relates the cohomology of a coherent sheaf on a proper smooth scheme to the cohomology of its dual sheaf, twisted by the canonical bundle
The Riemann-Roch theorem is a powerful tool for computing the Euler characteristic of a coherent sheaf on a proper smooth scheme, generalizing the classical theorem for curves and surfaces
Applications in Algebraic Geometry
Schemes provide a unified framework for studying algebraic varieties, arithmetic geometry, and complex analytic spaces
Algebraic varieties can be studied as schemes over algebraically closed fields, allowing for the use of sheaf-theoretic techniques
Arithmetic geometry studies schemes over rings of integers or finite fields, leading to important questions in number theory (Fermat's Last Theorem)
Complex analytic spaces can be viewed as schemes over the complex numbers, connecting algebraic geometry to complex analysis and topology (GAGA theorems)
Moduli spaces parametrize geometric objects, such as curves, surfaces, or vector bundles, and can often be constructed as schemes or stacks
The moduli space of elliptic curves M1,1 is a scheme classifying elliptic curves up to isomorphism
The moduli space of stable curves Mg is a proper smooth Deligne-Mumford stack parametrizing stable curves of genus g
Intersection theory on schemes extends the classical notion of intersecting subvarieties to the setting of schemes, allowing for the computation of intersection numbers and the study of enumerative geometry
Grothendieck's theory of motives aims to unify various cohomology theories and provide a universal cohomology theory for schemes, leading to deep conjectures and connections to other areas of mathematics
Advanced Topics and Open Problems
Derived algebraic geometry extends the theory of schemes to derived schemes, incorporating homotopical and higher categorical techniques
Derived schemes are locally modeled on the spectrum of a simplicial commutative ring, allowing for the study of derived intersections and virtual fundamental classes
Algebraic stacks generalize schemes by allowing for quotients by group actions and more general moduli problems
Artin stacks are algebraic stacks that admit a smooth cover by a scheme, providing a framework for studying moduli spaces with non-trivial automorphisms (moduli of curves, vector bundles)
The Weil conjectures, proved by Deligne using étale cohomology, relate the zeta function of a variety over a finite field to its topological properties, connecting arithmetic and geometry
The Hodge conjecture predicts that every Hodge class on a projective complex manifold is a linear combination of classes of algebraic cycles, linking complex geometry to algebraic cycles
The Tate conjecture suggests that the Galois invariants of the étale cohomology of a variety over a finitely generated field are spanned by classes of algebraic cycles, relating arithmetic to algebraic cycles
Motive theory and the standard conjectures aim to provide a unified framework for understanding cohomology theories and cycles on varieties, with connections to arithmetic, geometry, and representation theory
The Langlands program seeks to unify various areas of mathematics, including representation theory, number theory, and algebraic geometry, by relating Galois representations to automorphic forms and motives