Let X —> Y —> Z be morphism of schemes. Let P be one of the following properties of morphisms of schemes: flat, locally finite type, locally finite presentation. Assume that X —> Z has P and that {X —> Y} can be refined by an fppf covering of Y. Then Y —> Z is P. See Tag 06NB.
Unobstructed in codimension 3
So this is a follow up on the post about Burch’s theorem. Namely, I’ve just learned in the last month or so that the next case of this is in Eisenbud + Buchsbaum Algebra structures for finite free resolutions, and some structure theorems for ideals of codimension 3. It says that the resolution of a codimension 3 Gorenstein singularity R/I with R regular has a free resolution of the form
0 —> R —> R^n —f—> R^n —> R
where f is an alternating matrix and the other arrows are given by Pfaffians of f.
Moreover, if R/J is an almost complete intersection of grade 3, then R/J is linked to a Gorenstein R/I as above and a similar type of resolution can be obtained (results of Brown, kustin, etc).
OK, this is cool, very cool.
It seems completely clear that similarly to Burch’s theorem this implies that such a singularity is unobstructed, just as in the codimension 2 Cohen-Macaulay case. To be precise, as a simple consequence of the paper we obtain:
If R = k[[x, y, z]] and R —> S is an Artinian quotient ring such that either (1) S is Gorenstein, or (2) the kernel of R —> S is generated by at most 4 elements, then the miniversal deformation space of S is a power series ring over k.
Right…?
What I’d like is a reference to articles (with page and line numbers) stating exactly the above for (1) and (2). A generic reference to unobstructedness of determinantal singularities doesn’t count. I’ve googled and binged, but no luck so far. Can you help?
Or maybe this is just one of the innumerable results in our field that are so clearly true that you cannot formulate it in a paper as your paper will be immediately rejected?
Lemma of the day
Let (An) be an inverse system of abelian groups. The following are equivalent
- (An) is zero as a pro-object,
- lim An = 0 and R1lim An = 0 and the same holds for ⨁ i ∈ N (An).
See Tag 091C.
Lemma of the day
Let A be a Noetherian ring and I ⊂ A an ideal. For every n let M_n be a flat A/I^n-module. Let M_{n + 1} —> M_n be a surjective A-module map. Then the inverse limit M =lim M_n is a flat A-module (see Tag 0912).
Update
Since the last update we have added the following material:
- universal property of blowing up (schemes) Tag 0806
- admissible blowups (schemes) Tag 080J
- strict transform (schemes) Tag 080C
- a section on fitting ideals (algebra) Tag 07Z6
- flattening by blowing up (schemes) Tag 080X
- proper modifications can be dominated by blowups (schemes) Tag 081T
- relative spectrum (spaces) Tag 03WD
- scheme theoretic closure (spaces) Tag 0831
- effective Cartier divisors (spaces) Tag 083A
- relative Proj (spaces) Tag 0848
- blowing up (spaces) Tag 085P
- strict transforms (spaces) Tag 0861
- admissible blowups (spaces) Tag 086A
- generalities on limits (spaces) Tag 07SB
- flattening by blowups (spaces) Tag 087A
- David Rydh’s result that a decent space has a dense open subscheme Tag 086U
- QCoh is Grothendieck (spaces and stacks) Tag 077V Tag 0781
- proper modifications can be dominated by blowups (spaces) Tag 087G
- multiple versions of Chow’s lemma (spaces) Tag 089J Tag 088U Tag 089L Tag 089M
- David Rydh’s result that a locally separated algebraic space is decent Tag 088J
- Grothendieck existence theorem (schemes) Tag 087V Tag 0886
- Grothendieck algebraization theorem (schemes) Tag 089A
- proper pushforward preserves coherence (spaces) Tag 08AP
- theorem on formal functions (spaces) Tag 08AU
- Grothendieck existence theorem (spaces) Tag 08BE Tag 08BF
- a little bit about m-regularity Tag 08A2
- connected spaces are nonempty (thanks to Burt) Tag 004S
- decent group space over field is separated Tag 08BH
- derived Mayer-Vietoris (ringed spaces) Tag 08BR
- derived categories of modules (schemes) Tag 08CV
- D(QCoh(O_X) = D_{QCoh}(O_X) for X quasi-compact with affine diagonal (schemes) Tag 08DB
- Lipman and Neeman’s result on approximation by perfect complexes (schemes) Tag 08ES
- derived categories of modules (spaces), Tag 08EZ
- Induction principle for quasi-compact and quasi-separated algebraic spaces using distinguished squares (this is really fun!) Tag 08GL
- derived Mayer-Vietoris using distinguished squares Tag 08GS
- D(QCoh(O_X) = D_{QCoh}(O_X) for X quasi-compact with affine diagonal (spaces) Tag 08H1
- approximation by perfect complexes (spaces) Tag 08HP
- bunch of improvements to the bibliography bibliography
- being projective is not local on the base Tag 08J0
- descent data for schemes need not be effective, even for a projective morphism Tag 08KE
- base change for Rf_*RHom(E, G) (schemes) Tag 08IC
- base change for Rf_*RHom(E, G) (spaces) Tag 08JM
- the Hom functor Tag 08JS
- the stack of coherent sheaves Tag 08WC
- deformation theory: rings, modules, ringed spaces, sheaves of modules on ringed spaces, ringed topoi, sheaves of modules on ringed topoi Tag 08KX
- subtopoi Tag 08LT
- standard simplicial resolutions Tag 08N8
- cotangent complex Tag 08P6
- snake lemma now has a proof without picking elements Tag 010H
- constructing polynomial resolutions Tag 08PX
- (trivial) Kan fibrations Tag 08NK Tag 08NT
- Quillen’s spectral sequence Tag 08RF
- cotangent complex and obstructions (algebra) Tag 08SP
- cotangent complex and obstructions (ringed spaces) Tag 08UZ
- cotangent complex and obstructions (ringed topoi) Tag 08V5
- fixed an error in Artin’s axioms point out by David Rydh 2ccbbe3087e4dc2b1df2193c81ede7486931424c
- skeleton chapter on dualizing complexes (algebra) Tag 08XH
- descent for universally injective morphisms (thanks to Kiran Kedlaya) Tag 08WE
This brings us up to May 1 of this year. At that point I started to work on a chapter on pro-\’etale cohomology, in order to advertise work by Bhargav Bhatt and Peter Scholze in some lectures in Stockholm (KTH). The authors graciously send me a copy of their (for the moment) unfinished manuscript. The chapter covers only a small part of their material, leading up to the definition of constructible complexes and the proper base change theorem. All mistakes are mine. I’ve tried to put most of the background material in other chapters. As is usual for the Stacks project, whenever you try to add something new you are forced to add a lot of background material to go along with it. Here is a list of some of the things we added.
- pro-\’etale cohomology (schemes) Tag 0966
- Gleason’s theorem on extremally disconnected spaces (I strongly recommend the original paper) Tag 08YH
- Hochster’s spectral spaces (I strongly recommend the original paper) Tag 08YF
- Stone Cech compactification Tag 0908
- Olivier’s theorem on absolutely flat extensions of strictly henselian rings (I strongly recommend the original paper) Tag 092Z
- weakly \’etale morphisms (schemes) Tag 094N
- derived completion (algebra; I’ve tried to give some references but I’d love to know more about the history of this topic) Tag 091N
- constructible sheaves (etale) Tag 05BE Tag 095M
- derived completion (ringed topoi) Tag 0995 Tag 099L Tag 099P
- derived category D_c (etale) Tag 095V
Enjoy!
Features wanted
Pieter Belmans is currently coding and testing a new version of the Stacks project website. What would be very useful is to have some more feedback from you, the user! Please leave a comment on this blog post if
- There is something that doesn’t work on the current site (broken links, etc).
- There is something you don’t like about the current set up.
- There is a feature you’d like to see in the new version.
Any suggestions, annoyances, recommendations, etc will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Geeks only: Of course, just like the Stacks project itself, the Stacks project website is an open source project and you can hack it yourself if you want and know how to. To get your work incorporated back into the site, you may want to talk to Pieter before doing too much work. Send us those cool layouts, visualizations, web-apps, etc, please!
Named destinations
Please move along if you are not a nerd: nothing to see here.
Still here? OK, so occasionally I try to see if embedded pdf viewers will open a pdf at a named destination. In the past the only setup that did this was using adobe reader. But yesterday I discovered that it now works with google chrome and its built in pdf reader! BUT… you have to use the format
http://stacks.math.columbia.edu/download/algebra.pdf#nameddest=0567
because the more compact version
http://stacks.math.columbia.edu/download/algebra.pdf#0567
doesn’t work. (You will need a reasonably up to date version of chrome.) Today I discovered that it also works with firefox on my ubuntu system. In fact both versions of the link work. It turns out that the Ubuntu firefox browser uses Mozilla’s built pdf viewer. If this is not already installed on your system you can install it as an add on — here is a link. However, on my 64 bit gentoo system, it still didn’t work until I installed the development version of pdf.js you can find here.
Unfortunately, the cross file links (e.g. a reference to a lemma in the algebra chapter from another chapter) do not (yet) work for chrome/libpdf.so and firefox/pdf.js. This used to work with the adobe reader (for example on windows) and works with the rekonq/okular combination on kde.
Test it on your system. I’d love some feedback.
- Open at named destination, short version: http://stacks.math.columbia.edu/download/brauer.pdf#074M
- Open at named destination, long version: http://stacks.math.columbia.edu/download/brauer.pdf#nameddest=074M
- Both of these should open the chapter on Brauer groups at Lemma Tag 074M, which today is Lemma 5.3 on page 5. To try the cross file link functionality, in the proof of that lemma, click on the link to Algebra, Lemma 33.17.
Does this work for you? Leave a comment. Thanks!
Signs and tensor products
If M and N are modules over a ring A there is a canonical map M ⊗ N —> N ⊗ M by flipping tensors. If M = N this map is an involution but not the identity. For example, if V is a vector space of dimension n then flipping tensors gives an involution of V ⊗ V whose eigenvalues are 1 and -1 with multiplicity n(n + 1)/2 and n(n – 1)/2.
Now, let’s consider derived tensor product. There is a canonical map M ⊗L N —> M ⊗L N which gives an involution of M ⊗L M when M = N. For example, if M = A/I, then we get an involution Tor1A(M, M) = I/I2. In this case, it seems clear that this map is either 1 or -1. My guess would be it is -1… Let’s see if I am right.
To figure out what the sign is, suppose we have a double complex M*, * which is symmetric, i.e., Mp, q = Mq, p switching the two differentials. (My convention: the two differentials of a double complex commute.) OK, so now we want this flipping map M*, * —> M*, * to induce a map of associated total complexes
Tot(M*, *) ——> Tot(M*, *)
but in the construction of Tot there are signs. Namely, emanating from the (p,q) spot is the differential d1 + (-1)pd2 (again a convention). Thus when we move an element from Mp, q to Mq, p without signs, this isn’t compatible with the differential d on Tot. What works is to throw in a sign (-1)pq for the map Mp, q —> Mq, p.
In order to use this for our example of Tor1A(A/I, A/I) assume for the moment that I is flat. Then the double complex
I ⊗ A —> A ⊗ A
| |
I ⊗ I —> A ⊗ I
computes the tor group. Note that in degrees (-1, 0) and (0, -1) we have I and that a cocycle is of the form f ⊕ -f with f ∈ I. Thus flipping this gives -f ⊕ f, i.e., the opposite. So it seems my hunch was correct.
Ok, but now what if K = M[1] in D(A) for some flat A-module M and we consider the action of flipping on H^{-2}(K ⊗L K) = M ⊗ M. It is clear from the above that the action of flipping is by -1 times the usual flipping map of M ⊗ M. Thus the S_2-coinvariants on this gives the second exterior square of M over A.
And now I’ve finally gotten to the point I wanted to make in this blog post. Let’s use the above to define derived symmetric powers of K in D(A). Choose a K-flat complex K* representing K and use the above to get an action of S_n on the total complex associated to the n-fold tensor product of K*. (Carefully take the total complex and use group generated by flipping adjacent indices and the sign I used above for those.) Call this complex of A[S_n]-modules K⊗ n. Then set
LSymn(K) = K⊗ n ⊗LA[Sn] A
In this situation the above shows that H-n(LSymn(M[1])) = ∧n(M).
[Edit: Bhargav points out that this isn’t the derived symmetric power you get in the symplicial world. For example, if K = A[0], then we get S_n group homology. Whereas if you think if A as a constant simplicial module, then Sym_n(A) = A.]
Derived lower shriek
Let (X, OX) be a ringed space. Let π : C —> X be a stack over X where we use the topology on X to view X as a site. Endow C with the topology inherited from X (see Definition 06NV). This (roughly) means that the fibre categories CU where U ⊂ X is open are endowed with the chaotic topology. Denote B = π -1OX and think of C as a ringed site and π as a morphism of ringed sites
π : (C, B) —-> (X, OX)
The functor π* = π -1 : Mod(OX) —> Mod(B) commutes with all limits and colimits on modules and hence has a left adjoint π! : Mod(B) —> Mod(OX). In fact, if F is a sheaf of B-modules on C, then we can describe π!F as the sheaf associated to the presheaf
U |—> colimξ in opposite of CU F(ξ)
on the topological space X. (Colimit taken in category OX(U)-modules.) Actually, it turns out that the situation above is a special case of this section of the Stacks project and we obtain a left derived extension Lπ! : D(B) —> D(OX) for free (note there are no boundedness assumptions).
In fact, the construction shows a little bit more. Namely, let ξ be an object of C lying over the open U ⊂ X. Then we can consider the localization morphism jξ : C/ξ —> C and the sheaf Oξ = jξ, !B|ξ. Any B-module is a quotient of a direct sum of these Oξ and we have
Lπ! Oξ = π! Oξ
Cool, so this gives us a bit of control in trying to compute Lπ!.
Let x be a point of X. Let Cx denote the category
colimx ∈ U ⊂ X CU
This makes sense as C is a stack over X so we can think of it as a sheaf of categories. If F is a sheaf of B-modules on C, then the stalk of π!F is just the colimit of the “values” of F over Cx. Since taking stalks is exact, I think this should mean that we can compute the stalk of Lπ!F at x by taking the corresponding construction over the category Cx with its chaotic topology.
Another tool to compute Lπ! should be that if C is given as the stackification of a category C‘ fibred over X, then it should be sufficient to compute with C‘. Going back to the discussion and especially the example in this post we have to replace our choice of C there. We should start with the fibred category C‘ of immersions φ : U —> AnB (not necessarily closed) and commutative diagrams over B. Then C should be the stackification of that. Then with all of the above you’d get the cotangent complex of X/B by doing the same construction as in the affine case. The key is that affine locally C‘ has a good co-simplicial object computing the derived lower shriek functor. You use the localization of sheaves of algebras construction to provide C with a sheaf of rings surjecting onto the pullback of the structure sheaf of X (and not to change the underlying category).
A similar procedure is going to define the base change CS given a morphism of schemes S —> B, i.e., as underlying fibred category start with some category of diagrams of schemes and use the localization of sheaves of algebras construction to endow this with a structure sheaf.
I think this will just work and in fact it simplifies the original idea I had for the stacks C and CS. We’ll see.
A cotangent complex
Let me quickly explain how to define the cotangent complex of a ring map R —> S using the ideas of the previous 3 posts. Again we will work in the affine case.
Consider again the category C which is opposite to the category of surjections of R-algebras φ : P —> S where P is a polynomial R-algebra. Endow C with the chaotic topology (where all presheaves are sheaves). There is a surjection of sheaves of rings O —> B where O associates the value P to the object (P, φ) and where B is the constant sheaf with value S. (Please excuse the weird notation.) We consider as before the morphism of sites
π : (C, B) ——> (point, S)
and we will use the existence of the derived funtor Lπ!. Then I claim that
LS/R = Lπ!(ΩO/R ⊗O B)
In fact, it doesn’t matter if this is actually true or not, because arguing similarly to the previous post we see that inf autos, defos, and obstructions are computed by taking ext groups out of the object defined on the right hand side of the equation, so we can take it as our cotangent complex. Ha!
Still I am pretty sure the two sides are (canonically) equal (see update below). For example
H0(Lπ!(ΩO/R ⊗O B)) = π!(ΩO/R ⊗O B) = ΩS/R
by a direct computation of the colimit of the modules ΩP/R ⊗ S over the category of pairs (P, φ). Maybe there is a reference?
[Edit 3 hours later: Both Bhargav Bhatt and Jack Hall have pointed out that this is very similar to what happens in Quillen’s notes “homology of commutative rings”, and that there is further work by Gaitsgory and Jonathan Wise. As usual, I am looking for something very simple that I can add to the Stacks project without first developing a huge amount of theory. The approach above seems short and sweet, but I am sure there’s all kinds of problems with it — it might even be BALONEY!]
[Edit next day: OK, so now I’ve had time to glance at Quillen, Gaitsgory, and Wise. As Bhargav pointed out in his email, I have now discovered that the arrows in Quillen and Wise go in the opposite direction. For example, what Quillen says is that you take the category C of all R-algebra maps X —> S for varying R-algebras X. You endow C with a topology by declaring coverings to be surjective maps {X’ —> X} in C. Given an S-module M you get a sheaf DerR(-, M) which assigns to X —> S the module DerR(X, M). Then you define Dq(S/R, M) to be the q-th cohomology of this sheaf. Finally, you show that there is a complex LS/R so that ExtqS(LS/R, M) = Dq(S/R, M). Thus it seems that our thing above is at least technically different. The Gaitsgory thing seems to work *very very* roughly (I would be more than happy to be corrected on this) by having spaces be derived themselves, then representing it by a simplicial (or whatnot) smooth thing, and then taking the usual Omega. This is exactly what I am trying to avoid doing.]
[Update OK, I think the agreement holds. Sketch proof. Let P* —> S be a simplicial resolution of S by polynomial R-algebras (as in Quillen, Illusie, and everywhere). To show that the = sign in the post is true it suffices to prove that the left derived functors of π! of an abelian sheaf B on our category C are computed by the complex F(P*). It is OK for H0 by direct argument (this is one place where you really need all the algebras in C to be polynomial algebras). It is clear that the functors F |—> Hn(F(P*)) form a delta functor. Finally, you show you get zero for higher n when you apply it to the projective B-modules on C defined by the formula
(P, φ) |—-> free S-module on MorC((Q, ψ), (P, φ))
where ψ : Q –> S is a fixed object of C. Applying this to P* you get
free S-module on the simplicial set Mor(Q, P*)
which is contractible to a point by our choice of P*.]