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Cone (algebraic geometry)

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(Redirected from Projective completion of a cone) Generalization of a vector bundle

In algebraic geometry, a cone is a generalization of a vector bundle. Specifically, given a scheme X, the relative Spec

C = Spec X R {\displaystyle C=\operatorname {Spec} _{X}R}

of a quasi-coherent graded OX-algebra R is called the cone or affine cone of R. Similarly, the relative Proj

P ( C ) = Proj X R {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} (C)=\operatorname {Proj} _{X}R}

is called the projective cone of C or R.

Note: The cone comes with the G m {\displaystyle \mathbb {G} _{m}} -action due to the grading of R; this action is a part of the data of a cone (whence the terminology).

Examples

  • If X = Spec k is a point and R is a homogeneous coordinate ring, then the affine cone of R is the (usual) affine cone over the projective variety corresponding to R.
  • If R = 0 I n / I n + 1 {\displaystyle R=\bigoplus _{0}^{\infty }I^{n}/I^{n+1}} for some ideal sheaf I, then Spec X R {\displaystyle \operatorname {Spec} _{X}R} is the normal cone to the closed scheme determined by I.
  • If R = 0 L n {\displaystyle R=\bigoplus _{0}^{\infty }L^{\otimes n}} for some line bundle L, then Spec X R {\displaystyle \operatorname {Spec} _{X}R} is the total space of the dual of L.
  • More generally, given a vector bundle (finite-rank locally free sheaf) E on X, if R=Sym(E) is the symmetric algebra generated by the dual of E, then the cone Spec X R {\displaystyle \operatorname {Spec} _{X}R} is the total space of E, often written just as E, and the projective cone Proj X R {\displaystyle \operatorname {Proj} _{X}R} is the projective bundle of E, which is written as P ( E ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} (E)} .
  • Let F {\displaystyle {\mathcal {F}}} be a coherent sheaf on a Deligne–Mumford stack X. Then let C ( F ) := Spec X ( Sym ( F ) ) . {\displaystyle C({\mathcal {F}}):=\operatorname {Spec} _{X}(\operatorname {Sym} ({\mathcal {F}})).} For any f : T X {\displaystyle f:T\to X} , since global Spec is a right adjoint to the direct image functor, we have: C ( F ) ( T ) = Hom O X ( Sym ( F ) , f O T ) {\displaystyle C({\mathcal {F}})(T)=\operatorname {Hom} _{{\mathcal {O}}_{X}}(\operatorname {Sym} ({\mathcal {F}}),f_{*}{\mathcal {O}}_{T})} ; in particular, C ( F ) {\displaystyle C({\mathcal {F}})} is a commutative group scheme over X.
  • Let R be a graded O X {\displaystyle {\mathcal {O}}_{X}} -algebra such that R 0 = O X {\displaystyle R_{0}={\mathcal {O}}_{X}} and R 1 {\displaystyle R_{1}} is coherent and locally generates R as R 0 {\displaystyle R_{0}} -algebra. Then there is a closed immersion
Spec X R C ( R 1 ) {\displaystyle \operatorname {Spec} _{X}R\hookrightarrow C(R_{1})}
given by Sym ( R 1 ) R {\displaystyle \operatorname {Sym} (R_{1})\to R} . Because of this, C ( R 1 ) {\displaystyle C(R_{1})} is called the abelian hull of the cone Spec X R . {\displaystyle \operatorname {Spec} _{X}R.} For example, if R = 0 I n / I n + 1 {\displaystyle R=\oplus _{0}^{\infty }I^{n}/I^{n+1}} for some ideal sheaf I, then this embedding is the embedding of the normal cone into the normal bundle.

Computations

Consider the complete intersection ideal ( f , g 1 , g 2 , g 3 ) C [ x 0 , , x n ] {\displaystyle (f,g_{1},g_{2},g_{3})\subset \mathbb {C} } and let X {\displaystyle X} be the projective scheme defined by the ideal sheaf I = ( f ) ( g 1 , g 2 , g 3 ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {I}}=(f)(g_{1},g_{2},g_{3})} . Then, we have the isomorphism of O P n {\displaystyle {\mathcal {O}}_{\mathbb {P} ^{n}}} -algebras is given by

n 0 I n I n + 1 O X [ a , b , c ] ( g 2 a g 1 b , g 3 a g 1 c , g 3 b g 2 c ) {\displaystyle \bigoplus _{n\geq 0}{\frac {{\mathcal {I}}^{n}}{{\mathcal {I}}^{n+1}}}\cong {\frac {{\mathcal {O}}_{X}}{(g_{2}a-g_{1}b,g_{3}a-g_{1}c,g_{3}b-g_{2}c)}}}

Properties

If S R {\displaystyle S\to R} is a graded homomorphism of graded OX-algebras, then one gets an induced morphism between the cones:

C R = Spec X R C S = Spec X S {\displaystyle C_{R}=\operatorname {Spec} _{X}R\to C_{S}=\operatorname {Spec} _{X}S} .

If the homomorphism is surjective, then one gets closed immersions C R C S , P ( C R ) P ( C S ) . {\displaystyle C_{R}\hookrightarrow C_{S},\,\mathbb {P} (C_{R})\hookrightarrow \mathbb {P} (C_{S}).}

In particular, assuming R0 = OX, the construction applies to the projection R = R 0 R 1 R 0 {\displaystyle R=R_{0}\oplus R_{1}\oplus \cdots \to R_{0}} (which is an augmentation map) and gives

σ : X C R {\displaystyle \sigma :X\hookrightarrow C_{R}} .

It is a section; i.e., X σ C R X {\displaystyle X{\overset {\sigma }{\to }}C_{R}\to X} is the identity and is called the zero-section embedding.

Consider the graded algebra R with variable t having degree one: explicitly, the n-th degree piece is

R n R n 1 t R n 2 t 2 R 0 t n {\displaystyle R_{n}\oplus R_{n-1}t\oplus R_{n-2}t^{2}\oplus \cdots \oplus R_{0}t^{n}} .

Then the affine cone of it is denoted by C R [ t ] = C R 1 {\displaystyle C_{R}=C_{R}\oplus 1} . The projective cone P ( C R 1 ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} (C_{R}\oplus 1)} is called the projective completion of CR. Indeed, the zero-locus t = 0 is exactly P ( C R ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} (C_{R})} and the complement is the open subscheme CR. The locus t = 0 is called the hyperplane at infinity.

O(1)

Let R be a quasi-coherent graded OX-algebra such that R0 = OX and R is locally generated as OX-algebra by R1. Then, by definition, the projective cone of R is:

P ( C ) = Proj X R = lim Proj ( R ( U ) ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} (C)=\operatorname {Proj} _{X}R=\varinjlim \operatorname {Proj} (R(U))}

where the colimit runs over open affine subsets U of X. By assumption R(U) has finitely many degree-one generators xi's. Thus,

Proj ( R ( U ) ) P r × U . {\displaystyle \operatorname {Proj} (R(U))\hookrightarrow \mathbb {P} ^{r}\times U.}

Then Proj ( R ( U ) ) {\displaystyle \operatorname {Proj} (R(U))} has the line bundle O(1) given by the hyperplane bundle O P r ( 1 ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {O}}_{\mathbb {P} ^{r}}(1)} of P r {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} ^{r}} ; gluing such local O(1)'s, which agree locally, gives the line bundle O(1) on P ( C ) {\displaystyle \mathbb {P} (C)} .

For any integer n, one also writes O(n) for the n-th tensor power of O(1). If the cone C=SpecXR is the total space of a vector bundle E, then O(-1) is the tautological line bundle on the projective bundle P(E).

Remark: When the (local) generators of R have degree other than one, the construction of O(1) still goes through but with a weighted projective space in place of a projective space; so the resulting O(1) is not necessarily a line bundle. In the language of divisor, this O(1) corresponds to a Q-Cartier divisor.

Notes

  1. Behrend & Fantechi 1997, § 1.

References

Lecture Notes

References

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