Proj construction

In algebraic geometry, Proj is a construction analogous to the spectrum-of-a-ring construction of affine schemes, which produces objects with the typical properties of projective spaces and projective varieties. It is a fundamental tool in scheme theory.

In this article, all rings will be assumed to be commutative and with identity.

Proj of a graded ring

Proj as a set

Let S be a graded ring, where

S = \bigoplus_{i\ge 0} S_i

is the direct sum decomposition associated with the gradation.

Define the set Proj S to be the set of all homogeneous prime ideals that do not contain the irrelevant ideal

S_+ = \bigoplus_{i>0} S_i.

For brevity we will sometimes write X for Proj S.

Proj as a topological space

We may define a topology, called the Zariski topology, on Proj S by defining the closed sets to be those of the form

V(a) = \{ p \in \operatorname{Proj}\, S \mid a \subseteq p \},

where a is a homogeneous ideal of S. As in the case of affine schemes it is quickly verified that the V(a) form the closed sets of a topology on X.

Indeed, if (a_i)_{i\in I} are a family of ideals, then we have \bigcap V(a_i) = V (\Sigma a_i) and if the indexing set I is finite, then \bigcup V(a_i) = V (\Pi a_i).

Equivalently, we may take the open sets as a starting point and define

D(a) = \{ p \in \operatorname{Proj}\, S \mid a \;\not\subseteq\; p \}.

A common shorthand is to denote D(Sf) by D(f), where Sf is the ideal generated by f. For any a, D(a) and V(a) are obviously complementary and hence the same proof as before shows that the D(a) are a topology on Proj S. The advantage of this approach is that the D(f), where f ranges over all homogeneous elements of S, form a base for this topology, which is an indispensable tool for the analysis of Proj S just as the analogous fact for the spectrum of a ring is likewise indispensable.

Proj as a scheme

We also construct a sheaf on Proj S, called the “structure sheaf” as in the affine case, which makes it into a scheme. As in the case of the Spec construction there are many ways to proceed: the most direct one, which is also highly suggestive of the construction of regular functions on a projective variety in classical algebraic geometry, is the following. For any open set U of Proj S (which is by definition a set of homogeneous prime ideals of S not containing S_+) we define the ring O_X(U) to be the set of all functions

f \colon U \to \bigcup_{p \in U} S_{(p)}

(where S_{(p)} denotes the subring of the ring of fractions S_p consisting of fractions of homogeneous elements of the same degree) such that for each prime ideal p of U:

  1. f(p) is an element of S_{(p)};
  2. There exists an open subset V of U containing p and homogeneous elements s, t of S of the same degree such that for each prime ideal q of V:
    • t is not in q;
    • f(q) = s/t.

It follows immediately from the definition that the O_X(U) form a sheaf of rings O_X on Proj S, and it may be shown that the pair (Proj S, O_X) is in fact a scheme (this is accomplished by showing that each of the open subsets D(f) is in fact an affine scheme).

The sheaf associated to a graded module

The essential property of S for the above construction was the ability to form localizations S_{(p)} for each prime ideal p of S. This property is also possessed by any graded module M over S, and therefore with the appropriate minor modifications the preceding section constructs for any such M a sheaf, denoted \tilde{M}, of graded O_X-modules on Proj S.

The twisting sheaf of Serre

For related information, and the classical Serre twist sheaf, see tautological bundle

A special case of the sheaf associated to a graded module is when we take M to be S itself with a different grading: namely, we let the degree d elements of M be the degree (d + 1) elements of S, and denote M = S(1). We then obtain \tilde{M} as a sheaf of graded O_X-modules on Proj S, denoted O_X(1) or simply O(1), called the twisting sheaf of Serre (named after Jean-Pierre Serre). It can be checked that O(1) is in fact an invertible sheaf.

One reason for the utility of O(1) is that it recovers the algebraic information of S that was lost when, in the construction of O_X, we passed to fractions of degree zero. In the case Spec A for a ring A, the global sections of the structure sheaf form A itself, whereas the global sections of O_X here form only the degree-zero elements of S. If we define

O(n) = \bigotimes_{i = 1}^n O(1)

then each O(n) contains the degree-n information about S, and taken together they contain all the grading information that was lost. Likewise, for any sheaf of graded O_X-modules N we define

N(n) = N \otimes O(n)

and expect this “twisted” sheaf to contain grading information about N. In particular, if N is the sheaf associated to a graded S-module M we likewise expect it to contain lost grading information about M. This suggests, though erroneously, that S can in fact be reconstructed from these sheaves; however, this is true in the case that S is a polynomial ring, below. This situation is to be contrasted with the fact that the spec functor is adjoint to the global sections functor in the category of locally ringed spaces.

Projective n-space

If A is a ring, we define projective n-space over A to be the scheme

\mathbb{P}^n_A = \operatorname{Proj}\, A[x_0,\ldots, x_n].

The grading on the polynomial ring  S=A[x_0,\ldots, x_n] is defined by letting each  x_i have degree one and every element of A, degree zero. Comparing this to the definition of O(1), above, we see that the sections of O(1) are in fact linear homogeneous polynomials, generated by the x_i themselves. This suggests another interpretation of O(1), namely as the sheaf of “coordinates” for Proj S, since the x_i are literally the coordinates for projective n-space.

Global Proj

A generalization of the Proj construction replaces the ring S with a sheaf of algebras and produces, as the end result, a scheme which might be thought of as a fibration of Proj's of rings. This construction is often used, for example, to construct projective space bundles over a base scheme.

Assumptions

Formally, let X be any scheme and S be a sheaf of graded O_X-algebras (the definition of which is similar to the definition of O_X-modules on a locally ringed space): that is, a sheaf with a direct sum decomposition

S = \bigoplus_{i \geq 0} S_i

where each S_i is an O_X-module such that for every open subset U of X, S(U) is an O_X(U)-algebra and the resulting direct sum decomposition

S(U) = \bigoplus_{i \geq 0} S_i(U)

is a grading of this algebra as a ring. Here we assume that S_0 = O_X. We make the additional assumption that S is a quasi-coherent sheaf; this is a “consistency” assumption on the sections over different open sets that is necessary for the construction to proceed.

Construction

In this setup we may construct a scheme Proj S and a “projection” map p onto X such that for every open affine U of X,

(\operatorname{\mathbf{Proj}}\, S)|_{p^{-1}(U)} = \operatorname{Proj} (S(U)).

This definition suggests that we construct Proj S by first defining schemes Y_U for each open affine U, by setting

Y_U = \operatorname{Proj}\, S(U),

and maps p_U \colon Y_U \to U, and then showing that these data can be glued together “over” each intersection of two open affines U and V to form a scheme Y which we define to be Proj S. It is not hard to show that defining each p_U to be the map corresponding to the inclusion of O_X(U) into S(U) as the elements of degree zero yields the necessary consistency of the p_U, while the consistency of the Y_U themselves follows from the quasi-coherence assumption on S.

The twisting sheaf

If S has the additional property that S_1 is a coherent sheaf and locally generates S over S_0 (that is, when we pass to the stalk of the sheaf S at a point x of X, which is a graded algebra whose degree-zero elements form the ring O_{X,x} then the degree-one elements form a finitely-generated module over O_{X,x} and also generate the stalk as an algebra over it) then we may make a further construction. Over each open affine U, Proj S(U) bears an invertible sheaf O(1), and the assumption we have just made ensures that these sheaves may be glued just like the Y_U above; the resulting sheaf on Proj S is also denoted O(1) and serves much the same purpose for Proj S as the twisting sheaf on the Proj of a ring does.

Proj of a quasi-coherent sheaf

Let \mathcal E be a quasi-coherent sheaf on a scheme X. The sheaf of symmetric algebras \mathbf{Sym}_{O_X}(\mathcal E) is naturally a quasi-coherent sheaf of graded O_X-modules, generated by elements of degree 1. The resulting scheme is denoted by \mathbb P(\mathcal E). If \mathcal E is of finite type, then its canonical morphism p : \mathbb P(\mathcal E)\to X is a projective morphism.[1]

For any x\in X, the fiber of the above morphism over x is the projective space \mathbb P(\mathcal E(x)) associated to the dual of the vector space \mathcal E(x):=\mathcal E\otimes_{O_X} k(x) over k(x).

If \mathcal S is a quasi-coherent sheaf of graded O_X-modules, generated by \mathcal S_1 and such that \mathcal S_1 is of finite type, then \mathbf{Proj}\mathcal S is a closed subscheme of \mathbb P(\mathcal S_1) and is then projective over X. In fact, every closed subscheme of a projective \mathbb P(\mathcal E) is of this form.[2]

Projective space bundles

As a special case, when \mathcal E is locally free of rank n+1, we get a projective bundle \mathbb P(\mathcal E) over X of relative dimension n. Indeed, if we take an open cover of X by open affines U=\mathrm{Spec}(A) such that when restricted to each of these, \mathcal E is free over A, then

\mathbb P(\mathcal E)|_{p^{-1}(U)} \simeq \operatorname{Proj}\, A[x_0, \dots, x_n] = \mathbb{P}^n_A = \mathbb{P}^n_U,

and hence \mathbb P(\mathcal E) is a projective space bundle.

See also

References

  1. EGA, II.5.5.
  2. EGA, II.5.5.1.
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