Smooth topology

In algebraic geometry, the smooth topology is a certain Grothendieck topology, which is finer than étale topology. Its main use is to define the cohomology of an algebraic stack with coefficients in, say, the étale sheaf \mathbb{Q}_l.

To understand the problem that motivates the notion, consider the classifying stack B\mathbb{G}_m over \operatorname{Spec} \mathbf{F}_q. Then B\mathbb{G}_m = \operatorname{Spec} \mathbf{F}_q in the étale topology;[1] i.e., just a point. However, we expect the "correct" cohomology ring of B\mathbb{G}_m to be more like that of \mathbb{C} P^\infty as the ring should classify line bundles. Thus, the cohomology of B\mathbb{G}_m should be defined using smooth topology for formulae like Behrend's fixed point formula to hold.

Notes

  1. Behrend, Proposition 5.2.9; in particular, the proof.

References