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- \documentclass{lecture}
-
- \begin{document}
-
- \chapter{Algebraic varieties}
-
- \section{Spaces with functions}
-
- \begin{definition}[]
- Let $k$ be a field. A \emph{space with functions over $k$} is a pair
- $(X, \mathcal{O}_x)$ where $X$ is a topological space and
- $\mathcal{O}_X$ is a subsheaf of the sheaf of $k$-valued functions, seen as
- a sheef of $k$-algebras, and satisfying the following condition:
-
- If $U \subseteq X$ is an open set and $f \in \mathcal{O}_X(U)$, then
- the set
- \[
- D_U(f) \coloneqq \{ x \in U \mid f(x) \neq 0\}
- \] is open in $U$ and the function $\frac{1}{f}\colon D_U(f) \to k$,
- $x \mapsto \frac{1}{f(x)}$ belongs to $\mathcal{O}_X(D_U(f))$.
- \end{definition}
-
- \begin{bem}[]
- Concretely, it means that there is for each open set $U \subseteq X$ a
- $k$-Algebra $\mathcal{O}_X(U)$ of ,,regular`` functions such that
- \begin{enumerate}[(i)]
- \item the restriction of a regular function $f\colon U \to k$ to
- a sub-open $U' \subseteq U$ is regular on $U'$.
- \item if $f\colon U \to k$ is a function and $(U_{\alpha})_{\alpha \in A}$ is
- an open cover of $U$ such that $f|_{U_{\alpha}}$ is regular on
- $U_{\alpha}$, then $f$ is regular on $U$.
- \item if $f$ is regular on $U$, the set $\{f \neq 0\} $ is open in $U$ and
- $\frac{1}{f}$ is regular wherever it is defined.
- \end{enumerate}
- \end{bem}
-
- \begin{bem}[]
- If $\{0\} $ is closed in $k$ and $f\colon U \to k$ is continuous, then
- $D_U(f)$ is open in $U$. So, this conditions is often automatically met in practice.
- \end{bem}
-
- \begin{bsp}
-
- \begin{enumerate}[(i)]
- \item $(X, \mathcal{C}_X)$ a topological space endowed with its sheaf of $\R$-valued
- (or $\mathbb{C}$-valued) continuous functions, the fields $\R$ and $\mathbb{C}$
- being endowed here with their classical topology.
- \item $(V, \mathcal{O}_V)$ where
- $V = \mathcal{V}(P_1, \ldots, P_m)$ is an algebraic subset of $k^{n}$
- (endowed with the Zariski topology) and, for all $U \subseteq V$ open,
- \[
- \mathcal{O}_V(U) \coloneqq
- \left\{ f \colon U \to k\ \middle \vert
- \begin{array}{l}
- \forall x \in U \exists x \in U_x \text{ open},
- P, Q \in k[x_1, \ldots, x_n] \text{ such that }\\ \text{for } z \in U \cap U_x,
- Q(z) \neq 0 \text{ and } f(z) = \frac{P(z)}{Q(z)}
- \end{array}
- \right\}
- .\]
- \item $(M, \mathcal{C}^{\infty}_M)$ where
- $M = \varphi^{-1}(0)$ is a non-singular level set of a $\mathcal{C}^{\infty}$
- map $\varphi\colon \Omega \to \R^{m}$ where
- $\Omega \subseteq \R^{p+m}$ is an open set
- (in the usual topology of $\R^{p+m}$)
- and, for all $U \subseteq M$ open,
- $\mathcal{C}^{\infty}_M(U)$ locally smooth maps.
- %\[
- %\mathcal{C}^{\infty}_M(U)
- %\coloneqq \{ f \colon U \to \R\}
- %.\]
- \end{enumerate}
-
- \end{bsp}
-
- \begin{aufgabe}[]
- Let $(X, \mathcal{O}_X)$ be a space with functions and let $U \subseteq X$ be
- an open subset. Define, for all $U' \subseteq U$ open,
- \[
- \mathcal{O}_X|_{U}(U') \coloneqq \mathcal{O}_X(U')
- .\] Then $(U, \mathcal{O}_X|_U)$ is a space with functions.
- \end{aufgabe}
-
- \begin{bsp}[]
-
- \begin{enumerate}[(i)]
- \item $(V, \mathcal{O}_V)$ an algebraic subset of $k^{n}$,
- $f\colon V \to k$ a polynomial function,
- $U \coloneqq D_V(f)$ is open in $V$ and the sheaf
- of regular functions that we defined on the locally closed subset
- $D_V(f) = D_{k^{n}}(f) \cap V$ coincides with
- the restriction to $D_V(f)$ of the sheaf of regular functions on $V$.
- \item $B \subseteq \R^{n}$ or $\mathbb{C}^{n}$ an open ball
- (with respect to the usual topology), equipped with the sheaf of
- $\mathcal{C}^{\infty}$ or holomorphic functions.
- \end{enumerate}
-
- \end{bsp}
-
- \section{Morphisms}
-
- \begin{bem}[]
- Note that if $f\colon X \to Y$ is a map and
- $h\colon U \to k$ is a function defined on a subset $U \subseteq Y$, there
- is a pullback map $f_U^{*}$ taking
- $h\colon U \to k$ to the function
- $f_U^{*} \coloneqq h \circ f \colon f^{-1}(U) \to k$. This map is a homomorphism of $k$-algebras.
- Moreover given a map $g\colon Y \to Z$ and a subset $V \subseteq Z$ such that
- $g^{-1}(V) \subseteq U$, we have, for all $h\colon V \to k$,
- \[
- f_U^{*}(g_V^{*}(h)) = f_U^{*}(h \circ g) = (h \circ g) \circ f = h \circ (g \circ f)
- = (g \circ f)_V^{*}(h)
- .\]
- \end{bem}
-
- \begin{definition}[]
- Let $(X, \mathcal{O}_X)$ and $(Y, \mathcal{O}_Y)$ be two spaces with functions over a field
- $k$. A \emph{morphism of spaces with functions} between $(X, \mathcal{O}_X)$
- and $(Y, \mathcal{O}_Y)$ is a
- continuous map $f\colon X \to Y$ such that, for all open set $U \subseteq Y$, the
- pullback map $f_U^{*}$ takes a regular function on the open set $U \subseteq Y$ to
- a regular function on the open set $f^{-1}(U) \subseteq X$.
- \end{definition}
-
- \begin{bem}[]
- Then, given open sets $U' \subseteq U$ in $Y$, we have compatible homomorphisms of $k$-algebras:
-
- In other words, we have a morphism of sheaves on $Y$
- $f^{*}\colon \mathcal{O}_Y \to f_{*} \mathcal{O}_X$, where
- by definition $(f_{*}\mathcal{O}_X)(U) = \mathcal{O}_X(f^{-1}(U))$.
- \end{bem}
-
- \begin{aufgabe}[]
- Given $g\colon Y \to Z$, show that $(g \circ f)_{*}\mathcal{O}_X
- = g_{*}(f_{*} \mathcal{O}_X)$ and that
- $g_{*}$ is a functor from sheaves on $Y$ to sheaves on $Z$.
- \end{aufgabe}
-
- \begin{bem}
- If $f\colon (X, \mathcal{O}_X) \to (Y, \mathcal{O}_Y)$
- and $g\colon (Y, \mathcal{O}_Y) \to (Z, \mathcal{O}_Z)$ are morphisms,
- so is the composed map $g \circ f\colon X \to Z$.
- \end{bem}
-
- \begin{satz}[]
- Let $(X, \mathcal{O}_X)$ and $(Y, \mathcal{O}_Y)$ be locally closed subsets
- of an affine space $(X \subseteq k^{n}, Y \subseteq K^{m})$ equipped with
- their respective sheaves of regular functions. Then a map $f\colon X \to Y$
- is a morphism of spaces with functions if and only if $f = (f_1, \ldots, f_m)$ with
- each $f_i\colon X \to k$ a regular function on $X$.
- \end{satz}
-
- \begin{proof}
- The proof that if each of the $f_i$'s is a regular function, then $f$ is a morphism
- is similar to point (i) of the previous example: it holds because the pullback
- of a regular function (in particular, the pullback of a polynomial) by a regular function
- is a regular function, and because an equation of the form $h(x) = 0$ for $h$ a regular
- function is locally equivalent to a polynomial equation $P(x) = 0$.
-
- Conversely, if $f\colon X \to Y \subseteq k^{m}$ is a morphism, then the pullback of
- the $i$-th projection $p_i\colon k^{m} \to k$ is a regular function
- on $X$. Since $f^{*}p_i = f_i$, the proposition is proved.
- \end{proof}
-
- \begin{bem}[]
- In the proof of the previous proposition, we used that if the
- $(f_i\colon X \to k)_{1 \le i \le m}$ are regular functions on the locally closed
- subset $X \subseteq k^{n}$, then the map
- \begin{salign*}
- f\colon X &\to k^{m} \\
- x &\mapsto (f_1(x), \ldots, f_m(x))
- \end{salign*} is continuous on $X$. This is because
- the pre-image of $f^{-1}(V)$ of an algebraic subset
- $V = V(P_1, \ldots, P_r) \subseteq k^{m}$ is the intersection
- of $X$ with the zero set
- \[
- W = V(P_1 \circ f, \ldots, P_r \circ f) \subseteq k^{n}
- \] which is indeed an algebraic set, because $P_j \circ f$ is a regular function
- so the equation $P_j \circ f = 0$ is equivalent to a polynomial equation.
-
- Beware, however, that if the $(f_i)_{1 \le i \le m}$ are only continuous maps, then
- $W$ is no longer an algebraic set, so we would need another argument in order to prove
- the continuity of $f$. Typically, in general topology, we
- say that $f\colon X \to k^{m}$ is continuous because its components $(f_1, \ldots, f_m)$ are
- continuous. This argument is valid when the topology used on $k^{m}$ is the
- product topology of the topologies on $k$. However, this does not hold in general
- for the Zariski topology, which is strictly larger than the product topology when $k$ is
- infinite.
- \end{bem}
-
- \begin{bsp}
-
- \begin{enumerate}[(i)]
- \item The projection map
- \begin{salign*}
- \mathcal{V}_{k^{2}}(y - x^2) &\to k \\
- (x,y) &\mapsto x
- \end{salign*}
- is a morphism of spaces with functions, because it is a regular function
- on $\mathcal{V}_{k^2}(y - x^2)$. It is actually an isomorphism, whose inverse
- is the morphism
- \begin{salign*}
- k &\to \mathcal{V}(y - x^2) \\
- x &\mapsto (x, x^2)
- .\end{salign*}
- Note that $\mathcal{V}_{k^2}(y-x^2)$ is the graph of the polynomial function
- $x \mapsto x^2$.
- \item Let $k$ be an infinite field. The map
- \begin{salign*}
- k &\to \mathcal{V}_{k^2}(y^2 - x^{3}) \\
- t &\mapsto (t^2, t ^{3})
- \end{salign*}
- is a morphism and a bijection, but it is not an isomorphism, because its inverse
- \begin{salign*}
- \mathcal{V}_{k^2}(y^2 - x^{3}) &\to k \\
- (x, y) &\mapsto \begin{cases}
- \frac{y}{x} & (x,y) \neq (0,0) \\
- 0 & (x,y) = (0,0)
- \end{cases}
- \end{salign*}
- is not a regular map (this is where we use that $k$ is infinite).
- \item Consider the groups $G = \mathrm{GL}(n; k)$, $\mathrm{SL}(n; k)$,
- $\mathrm{O}(n ; k)$, $\mathrm{SO}(n;k)$ etc. as locally closed subsets in
- $k^{n^2}$ and equip them with their sheaves of regular functions. Then the multiplication
- $\mu\colon G x G \to G, (g_1, g_2) \mapsto g_1g_2$ and
- and inversion $\iota\colon G \to G, g \mapsto g^{-1}$
- are morphisms (here $G\times G$ is viewed as a locally closed subset of
- $k^{n^2} \times k^{n^2} \simeq k^{2n^2}$, equipped with its Zariski topology), since
- they are given by regular functions in the coefficients of the matrices.
-
- Such groups will later be called \emph{affine algebraic groups}.
- \end{enumerate}
-
- \end{bsp}
-
- \end{document}
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