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\input{preamble} | |
% OK, start here. | |
% | |
\begin{document} | |
\title{Bootstrap} | |
\maketitle | |
\phantomsection | |
\label{section-phantom} | |
\tableofcontents | |
\section{Introduction} | |
\label{section-introduction} | |
\noindent | |
In this chapter we use the material from the preceding sections to | |
give criteria under which a presheaf of sets on the category of schemes | |
is an algebraic space. Some of this material comes from the work | |
of Artin, see \cite{ArtinI}, \cite{ArtinII}, | |
\cite{Artin-Theorem-Representability}, | |
\cite{Artin-Construction-Techniques}, | |
\cite{Artin-Algebraic-Spaces}, | |
\cite{Artin-Algebraic-Approximation}, | |
\cite{Artin-Implicit-Function}, | |
and \cite{ArtinVersal}. | |
However, our method will be to use as much as possible arguments | |
similar to those of the paper by Keel and Mori, see | |
\cite{K-M}. | |
\section{Conventions} | |
\label{section-conventions} | |
\noindent | |
The standing assumption is that all schemes are contained in | |
a big fppf site $\Sch_{fppf}$. And all rings $A$ considered | |
have the property that $\Spec(A)$ is (isomorphic) to an | |
object of this big site. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $S$ be a scheme and let $X$ be an algebraic space over $S$. | |
In this chapter and the following we will write $X \times_S X$ | |
for the product of $X$ with itself (in the category of algebraic | |
spaces over $S$), instead of $X \times X$. | |
\section{Morphisms representable by algebraic spaces} | |
\label{section-morphism-representable-by-spaces} | |
\noindent | |
Here we define the notion of one presheaf being relatively representable | |
by algebraic spaces over another, and we prove some properties of this notion. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-morphism-representable-by-spaces} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme contained in $\Sch_{fppf}$. | |
Let $F$, $G$ be presheaves on $\Sch_{fppf}/S$. | |
We say a morphism $a : F \to G$ is | |
{\it representable by algebraic spaces} | |
if for every $U \in \Ob((\Sch/S)_{fppf})$ and | |
any $\xi : U \to G$ the fiber product $U \times_{\xi, G} F$ | |
is an algebraic space. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
Here is a sanity check. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-morphism-spaces-is-representable-by-spaces} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $f : X \to Y$ be a morphism of algebraic spaces over $S$. | |
Then $f$ is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
This is formal. It relies on the fact that | |
the category of algebraic spaces over $S$ has fibre products, see | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-fibre-product-spaces}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-base-change-transformation} | |
\begin{slogan} | |
A base change of a representable by algebraic spaces morphism of | |
presheaves is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{slogan} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
G' \times_G F \ar[r] \ar[d]^{a'} & F \ar[d]^a \\ | |
G' \ar[r] & G | |
} | |
$$ | |
be a fibre square of presheaves on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
If $a$ is representable by algebraic spaces so is $a'$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Omitted. Hint: This is formal. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-representable-by-spaces-transformation-to-sheaf} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme contained in $\Sch_{fppf}$. | |
Let $F, G : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$. | |
Let $a : F \to G$ be representable by algebraic spaces. | |
If $G$ is a sheaf, then so is $F$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
(Same as the proof of | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-representable-transformation-to-sheaf}.) | |
Let $\{\varphi_i : T_i \to T\}$ be a covering of the site | |
$(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
Let $s_i \in F(T_i)$ which satisfy the sheaf condition. | |
Then $\sigma_i = a(s_i) \in G(T_i)$ satisfy the sheaf condition | |
also. Hence there exists a unique $\sigma \in G(T)$ such | |
that $\sigma_i = \sigma|_{T_i}$. By assumption | |
$F' = h_T \times_{\sigma, G, a} F$ is a sheaf. | |
Note that $(\varphi_i, s_i) \in F'(T_i)$ satisfy the | |
sheaf condition also, and hence come from some unique | |
$(\text{id}_T, s) \in F'(T)$. Clearly $s$ is the section of | |
$F$ we are looking for. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-representable-by-spaces-transformation-diagonal} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme contained in $\Sch_{fppf}$. | |
Let $F, G : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$. | |
Let $a : F \to G$ be representable by algebraic spaces. | |
Then $\Delta_{F/G} : F \to F \times_G F$ is representable by | |
algebraic spaces. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
(Same as the proof of | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-representable-transformation-diagonal}.) | |
Let $U$ be a scheme. Let $\xi = (\xi_1, \xi_2) \in (F \times_G F)(U)$. | |
Set $\xi' = a(\xi_1) = a(\xi_2) \in G(U)$. | |
By assumption there exist an algebraic space $V$ and a morphism $V \to U$ | |
representing the fibre product $U \times_{\xi', G} F$. | |
In particular, the elements $\xi_1, \xi_2$ give morphisms | |
$f_1, f_2 : U \to V$ over $U$. Because $V$ represents the | |
fibre product $U \times_{\xi', G} F$ and because | |
$\xi' = a \circ \xi_1 = a \circ \xi_2$ | |
we see that if $g : U' \to U$ is a morphism then | |
$$ | |
g^*\xi_1 = g^*\xi_2 | |
\Leftrightarrow | |
f_1 \circ g = f_2 \circ g. | |
$$ | |
In other words, we see that $U \times_{\xi, F \times_G F} F$ | |
is represented by $V \times_{\Delta, V \times V, (f_1, f_2)} U$ | |
which is an algebraic space. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
The proof of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces-over-space} | |
below is actually slightly tricky. Namely, | |
we cannot use the argument of the proof of | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-representable-over-space} | |
because we do not yet know that a composition of transformations | |
representable by algebraic spaces is representable by algebraic | |
spaces. In fact, we will use this lemma to prove that statement. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-representable-by-spaces-over-space} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme contained in $\Sch_{fppf}$. | |
Let $F, G : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$. | |
Let $a : F \to G$ be representable by algebraic spaces. | |
If $G$ is an algebraic space, then so is $F$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We have seen in | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces-transformation-to-sheaf} | |
that $F$ is a sheaf. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $U$ be a scheme and let $U \to G$ be a surjective \'etale morphism. | |
In this case $U \times_G F$ is an algebraic space. Let $W$ be a scheme | |
and let $W \to U \times_G F$ be a surjective \'etale morphism. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
First we claim that $W \to F$ is representable. | |
To see this let $X$ be a scheme and let $X \to F$ be a morphism. | |
Then | |
$$ | |
W \times_F X = W \times_{U \times_G F} U \times_G F \times_F X | |
= W \times_{U \times_G F} (U \times_G X) | |
$$ | |
Since both $U \times_G F$ and $G$ are algebraic spaces we see that | |
this is a scheme. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Next, we claim that $W \to F$ is surjective and \'etale (this makes | |
sense now that we know it is representable). This follows from the | |
formula above since both $W \to U \times_G F$ and $U \to G$ | |
are \'etale and surjective, hence | |
$W \times_{U \times_G F} (U \times_G X) \to U \times_G X$ and | |
$U \times_G X \to X$ are surjective and \'etale, and the composition of | |
surjective \'etale morphisms is surjective and \'etale. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Set $R = W \times_F W$. By the above $R$ is a scheme and | |
the projections $t, s : R \to W$ | |
are \'etale. It is clear that $R$ is an equivalence relation, and | |
$W \to F$ is a surjection of sheaves. Hence $R$ is an \'etale equivalence | |
relation and $F = W/R$. Hence $F$ is an algebraic space by | |
Spaces, | |
Theorem \ref{spaces-theorem-presentation}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-representable-by-spaces} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $a : F \to G$ be a map of presheaves on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
Suppose $a : F \to G$ is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
If $X$ is an algebraic space over $S$, and $X \to G$ is a map of presheaves | |
then $X \times_G F$ is an algebraic space. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation} the transformation | |
$X \times_G F \to X$ is representable by algebraic spaces. Hence it is | |
an algebraic space by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces-over-space}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-composition-transformation} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
F \ar[r]^a & G \ar[r]^b & H | |
} | |
$$ | |
be maps of presheaves on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
If $a$ and $b$ are representable by algebraic spaces, so is | |
$b \circ a$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $T$ be a scheme over $S$, and let $T \to H$ be a morphism. | |
By assumption $T \times_H G$ is an algebraic space. Hence by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces} | |
we see that $T \times_H F = (T \times_H G) \times_G F$ is an | |
algebraic space as well. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-product-transformations} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F_i, G_i : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$, $i = 1, 2$. | |
Let $a_i : F_i \to G_i$, $i = 1, 2$ | |
be representable by algebraic spaces. | |
Then | |
$$ | |
a_1 \times a_2 : F_1 \times F_2 \longrightarrow G_1 \times G_2 | |
$$ | |
is a representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Write $a_1 \times a_2$ as the composition | |
$F_1 \times F_2 \to G_1 \times F_2 \to G_1 \times G_2$. | |
The first arrow is the base change of $a_1$ by the map | |
$G_1 \times F_2 \to G_1$, and the second arrow | |
is the base change of $a_2$ by the map | |
$G_1 \times G_2 \to G_2$. Hence this lemma is a formal | |
consequence of Lemmas \ref{lemma-composition-transformation} | |
and \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-representable-by-spaces-permanence} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Let $a : F \to G$ and $b : G \to H$ be | |
transformations of functors $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$. | |
Assume | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\Delta : G \to G \times_H G$ is representable | |
by algebraic spaces, and | |
\item $b \circ a : F \to H$ is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $a$ is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $U$ be a scheme over $S$ and let $\xi \in G(U)$. Then | |
$$ | |
U \times_{\xi, G, a} F = | |
(U \times_{b(\xi), H, b \circ a} F) \times_{(\xi, a), (G \times_H G), \Delta} G | |
$$ | |
Hence the result using Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-glueing-sheaves} | |
Let $S \in \Ob(\Sch_{fppf})$. Let $F$ be a presheaf of sets on | |
$(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. Assume | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf for the Zariski topology on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$, | |
\item there exists an index set $I$ and subfunctors $F_i \subset F$ such that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item each $F_i$ is an fppf sheaf, | |
\item each $F_i \to F$ is representable by algebraic spaces, | |
\item $\coprod F_i \to F$ becomes surjective after fppf sheafification. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an fppf sheaf. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $T \in \Ob((\Sch/S)_{fppf})$ and let $s \in F(T)$. By (2)(c) | |
there exists an fppf covering $\{T_j \to T\}$ such that | |
$s|_{T_j}$ is a section of $F_{\alpha(j)}$ for some $\alpha(j) \in I$. | |
Let $W_j \subset T$ be the image of $T_j \to T$ | |
which is an open subscheme Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-fppf-open}. | |
By (2)(b) we see | |
$F_{\alpha(j)} \times_{F, s|_{W_j}} W_j \to W_j$ is a monomorphism | |
of algebraic spaces through which $T_j$ factors. Since $\{T_j \to W_j\}$ | |
is an fppf covering, we conclude that | |
$F_{\alpha(j)} \times_{F, s|_{W_j}} W_j = W_j$, in other words | |
$s|_{W_j} \in F_{\alpha(j)}(W_j)$. Hence we conclude that | |
$\coprod F_i \to F$ is surjective for the Zariski topology. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $\{T_j \to T\}$ be an fppf covering in $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
Let $s, s' \in F(T)$ with $s|_{T_j} = s'|_{T_j}$ for all $j$. | |
We want to show that $s, s'$ are equal. As $F$ is a Zariski sheaf by (1) | |
we may work Zariski locally on $T$. By the result of the previous paragraph | |
we may assume there exist $i$ such that $s \in F_i(T)$. Then we see that | |
$s'|_{T_j}$ is a section of $F_i$. By (2)(b) we see | |
$F_{i} \times_{F, s'} T \to T$ is a monomorphism of algebraic spaces | |
through which all of the $T_j$ factor. Hence we conclude that | |
$s' \in F_i(T)$. Since $F_i$ is a sheaf for the fppf topology | |
we conclude that $s = s'$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $\{T_j \to T\}$ be an fppf covering in $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ and let | |
$s_j \in F(T_j)$ such that | |
$s_j|_{T_j \times_T T_{j'}} = s_{j'}|_{T_j \times_T T_{j'}}$. By assumption | |
(2)(b) we may refine the covering and assume that $s_j \in F_{\alpha(j)}(T_j)$ | |
for some $\alpha(j) \in I$. Let $W_j \subset T$ be the image of $T_j \to T$ | |
which is an open subscheme Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-fppf-open}. | |
Then $\{T_j \to W_j\}$ is an fppf covering. Since $F_{\alpha(j)}$ is a sub | |
presheaf of $F$ we see that the two restrictions of $s_j$ to | |
$T_j \times_{W_j} T_j$ agree as elements of | |
$F_{\alpha(j)}(T_j \times_{W_j} T_j)$. Hence, the sheaf condition for | |
$F_{\alpha(j)}$ implies there exists a $s'_j \in F_{\alpha(j)}(W_j)$ | |
whose restriction to $T_j$ is $s_j$. For a pair of indices | |
$j$ and $j'$ the sections $s'_j|_{W_j \cap W_{j'}}$ and | |
$s'_{j'}|_{W_j \cap W_{j'}}$ of $F$ agree by the result of the | |
previous paragraph. This finishes the proof by the fact that | |
$F$ is a Zariski sheaf. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Properties of maps of presheaves representable by algebraic spaces} | |
\label{section-representable-by-spaces-properties} | |
\noindent | |
Here is the definition that makes this work. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-property-transformation} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Let $a : F \to G$ be a map of presheaves on | |
$(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ which is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
Let $\mathcal{P}$ be a property of morphisms of algebraic spaces which | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item is preserved under any base change, and | |
\item is fppf local on the base, see | |
Descent on Spaces, | |
Definition \ref{spaces-descent-definition-property-morphisms-local}. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
In this case we say that $a$ has {\it property $\mathcal{P}$} if for every | |
scheme $U$ and $\xi : U \to G$ the resulting morphism of algebraic spaces | |
$U \times_G F \to U$ has property $\mathcal{P}$. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
It is important to note that we will only use this definition for | |
properties of morphisms that are stable under base change, and | |
local in the fppf topology on the base. This is | |
not because the definition doesn't make sense otherwise; rather it | |
is because we may want to give a different definition which is | |
better suited to the property we have in mind. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
The definition above applies\footnote{Being preserved under base | |
change holds by | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Lemmas | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-surjective}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-quasi-compact}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-etale}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-smooth}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-flat}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-separated}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-finite-type}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-quasi-finite}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-finite-presentation}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-affine}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-proper}, and | |
Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-lemma-base-change-immersions}. | |
Being fppf local on the base holds by | |
Descent on Spaces, Lemmas | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-surjective}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-quasi-compact}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-etale}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-smooth}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-flat}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-separated}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-finite-type}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-quasi-finite}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-locally-finite-presentation}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-affine}, | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-proper}, and | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-closed-immersion}. | |
} | |
for example to the properties of being | |
``surjective'', | |
``quasi-compact'', | |
``\'etale'', | |
``smooth'', | |
``flat'', | |
``separated'', | |
``(locally) of finite type'', | |
``(locally) quasi-finite'', | |
``(locally) of finite presentation'', | |
``affine'', | |
``proper'', and | |
``a closed immersion''. | |
In other words, $a$ is | |
{\it surjective} | |
(resp.\ {\it quasi-compact}, | |
{\it \'etale}, | |
{\it smooth}, | |
{\it flat}, | |
{\it separated}, | |
{\it (locally) of finite type}, | |
{\it (locally) quasi-finite}, | |
{\it (locally) of finite presentation}, | |
{\it proper}, | |
{\it a closed immersion}) | |
if for every scheme $T$ and map $\xi : T \to G$ | |
the morphism of algebraic spaces $T \times_{\xi, G} F \to T$ is | |
surjective | |
(resp.\ quasi-compact, | |
\'etale, | |
flat, | |
separated, | |
(locally) of finite type, | |
(locally) quasi-finite, | |
(locally) of finite presentation, | |
proper, | |
a closed immersion). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Next, we check consistency with the already existing notions. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-morphism-spaces-is-representable-by-spaces} | |
any morphism between algebraic spaces over $S$ is representable by | |
algebraic spaces. And by | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-surjective-local} | |
(resp.\ \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-quasi-compact-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-etale-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-smooth-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-flat-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-separated-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-finite-type-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-quasi-finite-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-finite-presentation-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-affine-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-proper-local}, | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-closed-immersion-local}) | |
the definition of | |
surjective | |
(resp.\ quasi-compact, | |
\'etale, | |
smooth, | |
flat, | |
separated, | |
(locally) of finite type, | |
(locally) quasi-finite, | |
(locally) of finite presentation, | |
affine, | |
proper, | |
closed immersion) | |
above agrees with the already existing definition of morphisms | |
of algebraic spaces. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Some formal lemmas follow. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-base-change-transformation-property} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $\mathcal{P}$ be a property as in | |
Definition \ref{definition-property-transformation}. | |
Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
G' \times_G F \ar[r] \ar[d]^{a'} & F \ar[d]^a \\ | |
G' \ar[r] & G | |
} | |
$$ | |
be a fibre square of presheaves on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
If $a$ is representable by algebraic spaces and has $\mathcal{P}$ | |
so does $a'$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Omitted. Hint: This is formal. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-composition-transformation-property} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $\mathcal{P}$ be a property as in | |
Definition \ref{definition-property-transformation}, | |
and assume $\mathcal{P}$ is stable under composition. | |
Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
F \ar[r]^a & G \ar[r]^b & H | |
} | |
$$ | |
be maps of presheaves on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
If $a$, $b$ are representable by algebraic spaces and has | |
$\mathcal{P}$ so does $b \circ a$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Omitted. Hint: See | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-composition-transformation} | |
and use stability under composition. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-product-transformations-property} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F_i, G_i : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$, | |
$i = 1, 2$. | |
Let $a_i : F_i \to G_i$, $i = 1, 2$ be representable by algebraic spaces. | |
Let $\mathcal{P}$ be a property as in | |
Definition \ref{definition-property-transformation} | |
which is stable under composition. | |
If $a_1$ and $a_2$ have property $\mathcal{P}$ so does | |
$a_1 \times a_2 : F_1 \times F_2 \longrightarrow G_1 \times G_2$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Note that the lemma makes sense by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-product-transformations}. | |
Proof omitted. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-transformations-property-implication} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F, G : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$. | |
Let $a : F \to G$ be a transformation of functors representable by | |
algebraic spaces. | |
Let $\mathcal{P}$, $\mathcal{P}'$ be properties as in | |
Definition \ref{definition-property-transformation}. | |
Suppose that for any morphism $f : X \to Y$ of algebraic spaces over $S$ | |
we have $\mathcal{P}(f) \Rightarrow \mathcal{P}'(f)$. | |
If $a$ has property $\mathcal{P}$, then | |
$a$ has property $\mathcal{P}'$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Formal. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-surjective-flat-locally-finite-presentation} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F, G : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$ be sheaves. | |
Let $a : F \to G$ be representable by algebraic spaces, flat, | |
locally of finite presentation, and surjective. | |
Then $a : F \to G$ is surjective as a map of sheaves. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $T$ be a scheme over $S$ and let $g : T \to G$ be a $T$-valued point of | |
$G$. By assumption $T' = F \times_G T$ is an algebraic space and | |
the morphism $T' \to T$ is a flat, locally of finite presentation, and | |
surjective morphism of algebraic spaces. | |
Let $U \to T'$ be a surjective \'etale morphism, where $U$ is a scheme. | |
Then by the definition of flat morphisms of algebraic spaces | |
the morphism of schemes $U \to T$ is flat. Similarly for | |
``locally of finite presentation''. The morphism $U \to T$ is surjective | |
also, see | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-surjective-local}. | |
Hence we see that $\{U \to T\}$ is an fppf covering such | |
that $g|_U \in G(U)$ comes from an element of $F(U)$, namely | |
the map $U \to T' \to F$. This proves the map is surjective as | |
a map of sheaves, see | |
Sites, Definition \ref{sites-definition-sheaves-injective-surjective}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Bootstrapping the diagonal} | |
\label{section-bootstrap-diagonal} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we prove that the diagonal of a sheaf $F$ on | |
$(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ is representable as soon as there exists | |
an ``fppf cover'' of $F$ by a scheme or by an algebraic space, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-bootstrap-diagonal}. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-representable-diagonal} | |
\begin{slogan} | |
The diagonal of a presheaf is representable by algebraic spaces if and only if | |
every map from a scheme to the presheaf is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{slogan} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
If $F$ is a presheaf on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
The following are equivalent: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\Delta_F : F \to F \times F$ is representable by algebraic spaces, | |
\item for every scheme $T$ any map $T \to F$ is representable by algebraic | |
spaces, and | |
\item for every algebraic space $X$ any map $X \to F$ is representable | |
by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Assume (1). Let $X \to F$ be as in (3). Let $T$ be a scheme, and let | |
$T \to F$ be a morphism. Then we have | |
$$ | |
T \times_F X = (T \times_S X) \times_{F \times F, \Delta} F | |
$$ | |
which is an algebraic space by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces} | |
and (1). Hence $X \to F$ is representable, i.e., (3) holds. | |
The implication (3) $\Rightarrow$ (2) is trivial. Assume (2). | |
Let $T$ be a scheme, and let $(a, b) : T \to F \times F$ be a morphism. | |
Then | |
$$ | |
F \times_{\Delta_F, F \times F} T = | |
(T \times_{a, F, b} T) \times_{T \times T, \Delta_T} T | |
$$ | |
which is an algebraic space by assumption. Hence $\Delta_F$ is | |
representable by algebraic spaces, i.e., (1) holds. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
In particular if $F$ is a presheaf satisfying the equivalent conditions of | |
the lemma, then for any morphism $X \to F$ where $X$ is an algebraic space | |
it makes sense to say that $X \to F$ is surjective (resp.\ \'etale, flat, | |
locally of finite presentation) by using | |
Definition \ref{definition-property-transformation}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Before we actually do the bootstrap we prove a fun lemma. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-after-fppf-sep-lqf} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
E \ar[r]_a \ar[d]_f & F \ar[d]^g \\ | |
H \ar[r]^b & G | |
} | |
$$ | |
be a cartesian diagram of sheaves on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$, so | |
$E = H \times_G F$. If | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $g$ is representable by algebraic spaces, surjective, flat, and | |
locally of finite presentation, and | |
\item $a$ is representable by algebraic spaces, separated, and | |
locally quasi-finite | |
\end{enumerate} | |
then $b$ is representable (by schemes) as well as separated and | |
locally quasi-finite. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $T$ be a scheme, and let $T \to G$ be a morphism. | |
We have to show that $T \times_G H$ is a scheme, and that | |
the morphism $T \times_G H \to T$ is separated and | |
locally quasi-finite. Thus we may base change the whole diagram to $T$ | |
and assume that $G$ is a scheme. In this case $F$ is an algebraic space. | |
Let $U$ be a scheme, and let $U \to F$ be a surjective \'etale morphism. | |
Then $U \to F$ is representable, surjective, flat and | |
locally of finite presentation by | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemmas \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-etale-flat} and | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-etale-locally-finite-presentation}. | |
By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-composition-transformation} | |
$U \to G$ is surjective, flat and locally of finite presentation also. | |
Note that the base change $E \times_F U \to U$ of $a$ is still | |
separated and locally quasi-finite (by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation-property}). Hence we | |
may replace the upper part of the diagram of the lemma by | |
$E \times_F U \to U$. In other words, we may assume that | |
$F \to G$ is a surjective, flat morphism of schemes | |
which is locally of finite presentation. | |
In particular, $\{F \to G\}$ is an fppf covering of schemes. | |
By | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Proposition | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-proposition-locally-quasi-finite-separated-over-scheme} | |
we conclude that $E$ is a scheme also. | |
By | |
Descent, Lemma \ref{descent-lemma-descent-data-sheaves} | |
the fact that $E = H \times_G F$ means that we get a descent datum | |
on $E$ relative to the fppf covering $\{F \to G\}$. | |
By | |
More on Morphisms, Lemma | |
\ref{more-morphisms-lemma-separated-locally-quasi-finite-morphisms-fppf-descend} | |
this descent datum is effective. | |
By | |
Descent, Lemma \ref{descent-lemma-descent-data-sheaves} | |
again this implies that $H$ is a scheme. | |
By | |
Descent, Lemmas \ref{descent-lemma-descending-property-separated} and | |
\ref{descent-lemma-descending-property-quasi-finite} | |
it now follows that $b$ is separated and locally quasi-finite. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Here is the result that the section title refers to. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-bootstrap-diagonal} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$ be a functor. | |
Assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item the presheaf $F$ is a sheaf, | |
\item there exists an algebraic space $X$ and a map $X \to F$ | |
which is representable by algebraic spaces, surjective, flat and | |
locally of finite presentation. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $\Delta_F$ is representable (by schemes). | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $U \to X$ be a surjective \'etale morphism from a scheme towards $X$. | |
Then $U \to X$ is representable, surjective, flat and | |
locally of finite presentation by | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemmas \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-etale-flat} and | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-etale-locally-finite-presentation}. | |
By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-composition-transformation-property} | |
the composition $U \to F$ is representable by algebraic spaces, | |
surjective, flat and locally of finite presentation also. | |
Thus we see that $R = U \times_F U$ is an algebraic space, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces}. | |
The morphism of algebraic spaces $R \to U \times_S U$ is | |
a monomorphism, hence separated (as the diagonal of a monomorphism | |
is an isomorphism, see | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-monomorphism}). | |
Since $U \to F$ is locally of finite presentation, both | |
morphisms $R \to U$ are locally of finite presentation, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation-property}. | |
Hence $R \to U \times_S U$ is locally of finite type (use | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemmas \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-finite-presentation-finite-type} and | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-permanence-finite-type}). | |
Altogether this means that | |
$R \to U \times_S U$ is a monomorphism which is locally of finite | |
type, hence a separated and locally quasi-finite morphism, see | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-monomorphism-loc-finite-type-loc-quasi-finite}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Now we are ready to prove that $\Delta_F$ is representable. | |
Let $T$ be a scheme, and let $(a, b) : T \to F \times F$ be a morphism. | |
Set | |
$$ | |
T' = (U \times_S U) \times_{F \times F} T. | |
$$ | |
Note that $U \times_S U \to F \times F$ is | |
representable by algebraic spaces, surjective, flat and | |
locally of finite presentation by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-product-transformations-property}. | |
Hence $T'$ is an algebraic space, and the projection morphism | |
$T' \to T$ is surjective, flat, and locally of finite presentation. | |
Consider $Z = T \times_{F \times F} F$ (this is a sheaf) and | |
$$ | |
Z' = T' \times_{U \times_S U} R | |
= T' \times_T Z. | |
$$ | |
We see that $Z'$ is an algebraic space, and | |
$Z' \to T'$ is separated and locally quasi-finite by the | |
discussion in the first paragraph of the proof which showed that $R$ is | |
an algebraic space and that the | |
morphism $R \to U \times_S U$ has those properties. | |
Hence we may apply | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-after-fppf-sep-lqf} | |
to the diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
Z' \ar[r] \ar[d] & T' \ar[d] \\ | |
Z \ar[r] & T | |
} | |
$$ | |
and we conclude. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Here is a variant of the result above. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-bootstrap-locally-quasi-finite} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Let $F : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$ be a | |
functor. Let $X$ be a scheme and let $X \to F$ be representable by algebraic | |
spaces and locally quasi-finite. Then $X \to F$ is representable | |
(by schemes). | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $T$ be a scheme and let $T \to F$ be a morphism. We have to show that | |
the algebraic space $X \times_F T$ is representable by a scheme. Consider | |
the morphism | |
$$ | |
X \times_F T \longrightarrow X \times_{\Spec(\mathbf{Z})} T | |
$$ | |
Since $X \times_F T \to T$ is locally quasi-finite, so is the displayed | |
arrow (Morphisms of Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-permanence-quasi-finite}). | |
On the other hand, the displayed arrow is a monomorphism | |
and hence separated (Morphisms of Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-monomorphism-separated}). | |
Thus $X \times_F T$ is a scheme by Morphisms of Spaces, Proposition | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-proposition-locally-quasi-finite-separated-over-scheme}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Bootstrap} | |
\label{section-bootstrap} | |
\noindent | |
We warn the reader right away that the result of this section will | |
be superseded by the stronger | |
Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap}. | |
On the other hand, the theorem in this section is quite a bit easier to | |
prove and still provides quite a bit of insight into how things work, | |
especially for those readers mainly interested in Deligne-Mumford | |
stacks. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
In | |
Spaces, Section \ref{spaces-section-algebraic-spaces} | |
we defined an algebraic space as a sheaf in the fppf topology whose | |
diagonal is representable, and such that there exist a surjective \'etale | |
morphism from a scheme towards it. In this section we show that | |
a sheaf in the fppf topology whose diagonal is representable by algebraic | |
spaces and which has an \'etale surjective covering by an algebraic space | |
is also an algebraic space. | |
In other words, the category of algebraic spaces is an enlargement of the | |
category of schemes by those fppf sheaves $F$ which have a representable | |
diagonal and an \'etale covering by a scheme. The | |
result of this section says that doing the same process again starting with | |
the category of algebraic spaces, does not lead to yet another category. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Another motivation for the material in this section is that it will guarantee | |
later that a Deligne-Mumford stack whose inertia stack is trivial is equivalent | |
to an algebraic space, see | |
Algebraic Stacks, Lemma \ref{algebraic-lemma-algebraic-stack-no-automorphisms}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Here is the main result of this section (as we mentioned above this | |
will be superseded by the stronger | |
Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap}). | |
\begin{theorem} | |
\label{theorem-bootstrap} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$ be a functor. | |
Assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item the presheaf $F$ is a sheaf, | |
\item the diagonal morphism $F \to F \times F$ is representable by | |
algebraic spaces, and | |
\item there exists an algebraic space $X$ | |
and a map $X \to F$ which is surjective, and \'etale. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
or assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item[(a)] the presheaf $F$ is a sheaf, and | |
\item[(b)] there exists an algebraic space $X$ and a map $X \to F$ | |
which is representable by algebraic paces, surjective, and \'etale. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an algebraic space. | |
\end{theorem} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We will use the remarks directly below | |
Definition \ref{definition-property-transformation} | |
without further mention. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume (1), (2), and (3) and let $X \to F$ be as in (3). | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-diagonal} the morphism | |
$X \to F$ is representable by algebraic spaces. Thus | |
we see that (a) and (b) hold. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume (a) and (b) and let $X \to F$ be as in (b). | |
Let $U \to X$ be a surjective \'etale morphism from a scheme towards $X$. | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-composition-transformation} the transformation | |
$U \to F$ is representable by algebraic spaces, surjective, and \'etale. | |
Hence to prove that $F$ is an algebraic space boils down to proving that | |
$\Delta_F$ is representable (Spaces, Definition | |
\ref{spaces-definition-algebraic-space}). This follows immediately from | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-bootstrap-diagonal}. | |
On the other hand we can circumvent this lemma and show directly $F$ | |
is an algebraic space as in the next paragraph. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Namely, let $U$ be a scheme and let $U \to F$ be representable by algebraic | |
spaces, surjective, and \'etale. Consider the fibre product $R = U \times_F U$. | |
Both projections $R \to U$ are representable by algebraic spaces, surjective, | |
and \'etale (Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation-property}). | |
In particular $R$ is an algebraic space by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-representable-by-spaces-over-space}. | |
The morphism of algebraic spaces $R \to U \times_S U$ is a monomorphism, | |
hence separated (as the diagonal of a monomorphism is an isomorphism). | |
Since $R \to U$ is \'etale, we see that $R \to U$ is locally quasi-finite, see | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-etale-locally-quasi-finite}. | |
We conclude that also $R \to U \times_S U$ is | |
locally quasi-finite by | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-permanence-quasi-finite}. | |
Hence | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Proposition | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-proposition-locally-quasi-finite-separated-over-scheme} | |
applies and $R$ is a scheme. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-surjective-flat-locally-finite-presentation} | |
the map $U \to F$ is a surjection of sheaves. Thus $F = U/R$. | |
We conclude that $F$ is an algebraic space by | |
Spaces, Theorem \ref{spaces-theorem-presentation}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Finding opens} | |
\label{section-finding-opens} | |
\medskip\noindent | |
First we prove a lemma which is a slight improvement and generalization of | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-finding-opens} | |
to quotient sheaves associated to groupoids. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-better-finding-opens} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $(U, R, s, t, c)$ be a groupoid scheme over $S$. | |
Let $g : U' \to U$ be a morphism. | |
Assume | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item the composition | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
U' \times_{g, U, t} R \ar[r]_-{\text{pr}_1} \ar@/^3ex/[rr]^h | |
& R \ar[r]_s & U | |
} | |
$$ | |
has an open image $W \subset U$, and | |
\item the resulting map $h : U' \times_{g, U, t} R \to W$ | |
defines a surjection of sheaves in the fppf topology. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Let $R' = R|_{U'}$ be the restriction of $R$ to $U'$. Then the map | |
of quotient sheaves | |
$$ | |
U'/R' \to U/R | |
$$ | |
in the fppf topology is representable, and is an open immersion. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Note that $W$ is an $R$-invariant open subscheme of $U$. | |
This is true because the set of points of $W$ is the set | |
of points of $U$ which are equivalent in the sense of | |
Groupoids, | |
Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-pre-equivalence-equivalence-relation-points} | |
to a point of $g(U') \subset U$ (the lemma applies as $j : R \to U \times_S U$ | |
is a pre-equivalence relation by | |
Groupoids, Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-groupoid-pre-equivalence}). | |
Also $g : U' \to U$ factors through $W$. | |
Let $R|_W$ be the restriction of $R$ to $W$. | |
Then it follows that $R'$ is also the restriction of $R|_W$ to $U'$. | |
Hence we can factor the map of sheaves of the lemma as | |
$$ | |
U'/R' \longrightarrow W/R|_W \longrightarrow U/R | |
$$ | |
By Groupoids, Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-groupoid-restrict} | |
we see that the first arrow is an isomorphism of sheaves. | |
Hence it suffices to show the lemma in case $g$ is the immersion | |
of an $R$-invariant open into $U$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume $U' \subset U$ is an $R$-invariant open and $g$ is the inclusion | |
morphism. Set $F = U/R$ and $F' = U'/R'$. By | |
Groupoids, | |
Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence-relation-restrict} | |
or \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-groupoid-restrict} | |
the map $F' \to F$ is injective. Let $\xi \in F(T)$. | |
We have to show that $T \times_{\xi, F} F'$ is representable | |
by an open subscheme of $T$. | |
There exists an fppf covering $\{f_i : T_i \to T\}$ such that | |
$\xi|_{T_i}$ is the image via $U \to U/R$ of a morphism $a_i : T_i \to U$. | |
Set $V_i = a_i^{-1}(U')$. | |
We claim that $V_i \times_T T_j = T_i \times_T V_j$ as open subschemes | |
of $T_i \times_T T_j$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
As $a_i \circ \text{pr}_0$ and $a_j \circ \text{pr}_1$ are morphisms | |
$T_i \times_T T_j \to U$ which both map to the section | |
$\xi|_{T_i \times_T T_j} \in F(T_i \times_T T_j)$ we can find | |
an fppf covering $\{f_{ijk} : T_{ijk} \to T_i \times_T T_j\}$ and morphisms | |
$r_{ijk} : T_{ijk} \to R$ such that | |
$$ | |
a_i \circ \text{pr}_0 \circ f_{ijk} = s \circ r_{ijk}, | |
\quad | |
a_j \circ \text{pr}_1 \circ f_{ijk} = t \circ r_{ijk}, | |
$$ | |
see | |
Groupoids, Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence}. | |
Since $U'$ is $R$-invariant we have $s^{-1}(U') = t^{-1}(U')$ and | |
hence $f_{ijk}^{-1}(V_i \times_T T_j) = f_{ijk}^{-1}(T_i \times_T V_j)$. | |
As $\{f_{ijk}\}$ is surjective this implies the claim above. | |
Hence by | |
Descent, Lemma \ref{descent-lemma-open-fpqc-covering} | |
there exists an open subscheme $V \subset T$ such that | |
$f_i^{-1}(V) = V_i$. We claim that $V$ represents $T \times_{\xi, F} F'$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
As a first step, we will show that $\xi|_V$ lies in $F'(V) \subset F(V)$. | |
Namely, the family of morphisms $\{V_i \to V\}$ is an fppf covering, | |
and by construction we have $\xi|_{V_i} \in F'(V_i)$. | |
Hence by the sheaf property of $F'$ we get $\xi|_V \in F'(V)$. | |
Finally, let $T' \to T$ be a morphism of schemes and | |
that $\xi|_{T'} \in F'(T')$. To finish the proof we have to show that | |
$T' \to T$ factors through $V$. | |
We can find a fppf covering $\{T'_j \to T'\}_{j \in J}$ and morphisms | |
$b_j : T'_j \to U'$ such that $\xi|_{T'_j}$ is the image via | |
$U' \to U/R$ of $b_j$. Clearly, it is enough to show that the compositions | |
$T'_j \to T$ factor through $V$. Hence we may assume that $\xi|_{T'}$ | |
is the image of a morphism $b : T' \to U'$. Now, it is enough to show | |
that $T'\times_T T_i \to T_i$ factors through $V_i$. Over the scheme | |
$T' \times_T T_i$ the restriction of $\xi$ is the image of two | |
elements of $(U/R)(T' \times_T T_i)$, namely $a_i \circ \text{pr}_1$, and | |
$b \circ \text{pr}_0$, the second of which factors through the $R$-invariant | |
open $U'$. Hence by | |
Groupoids, Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence} | |
there exists a covering $\{h_k : Z_k \to T' \times_T T_i\}$ and morphisms | |
$r_k : Z_k \to R$ such that $a_i \circ \text{pr}_1 \circ h_k = s \circ r_k$ | |
and $b \circ \text{pr}_0 \circ h_k = t \circ r_k$. As $U'$ is an $R$-invariant | |
open the fact that $b$ has image in $U'$ then implies that each | |
$a_i \circ \text{pr}_1 \circ h_k$ has image in $U'$. It follows from this | |
that $T' \times_T T_i \to T_i$ has image in $V_i$ by definition of $V_i$ | |
which concludes the proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Slicing equivalence relations} | |
\label{section-slicing} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we explain how to ``improve'' a given equivalence | |
relation by slicing. This is not a kind of ``\'etale slicing'' that you | |
may be used to but a much coarser kind of slicing. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-slice-equivalence-relation} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $j : R \to U \times_S U$ be an equivalence relation on schemes over $S$. | |
Assume $s, t : R \to U$ are flat and locally of finite presentation. | |
Then there exists an equivalence relation $j' : R' \to U'\times_S U'$ | |
on schemes over $S$, and an isomorphism | |
$$ | |
U'/R' \longrightarrow U/R | |
$$ | |
induced by a morphism $U' \to U$ which maps $R'$ into $R$ such that | |
$s', t' : R \to U$ are flat, locally of finite presentation | |
and locally quasi-finite. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We will prove this lemma in several steps. We will use without further | |
mention that an equivalence relation gives rise to a groupoid scheme | |
and that the restriction of an equivalence relation is an equivalence | |
relation, see | |
Groupoids, Lemmas | |
\ref{groupoids-lemma-restrict-relation}, | |
\ref{groupoids-lemma-equivalence-groupoid}, and | |
\ref{groupoids-lemma-restrict-groupoid-relation}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Step 1: We may assume that $s, t : R \to U$ are locally of finite presentation | |
and Cohen-Macaulay morphisms. Namely, as in | |
More on Groupoids, Lemma \ref{more-groupoids-lemma-make-CM} | |
let $g : U' \to U$ be the open subscheme such that | |
$t^{-1}(U') \subset R$ is the maximal open over which $s : R \to U$ is | |
Cohen-Macaulay, and denote $R'$ the restriction of $R$ to $U'$. | |
By the lemma cited above we see that | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
t^{-1}(U') \ar@{=}[r] & | |
U' \times_{g, U, t} R \ar[r]_-{\text{pr}_1} \ar@/^3ex/[rr]^h & | |
R \ar[r]_s & | |
U | |
} | |
$$ | |
is surjective. Since $h$ is flat and locally of finite presentation, we | |
see that $\{h\}$ is a fppf covering. Hence by | |
Groupoids, Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-groupoid-restrict} | |
we see that $U'/R' \to U/R$ is an isomorphism. By the construction of $U'$ | |
we see that $s', t'$ are Cohen-Macaulay and locally of finite presentation. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Step 2. Assume $s, t$ are Cohen-Macaulay and locally of finite presentation. | |
Let $u \in U$ be a point of finite type. By | |
More on Groupoids, Lemma \ref{more-groupoids-lemma-max-slice-quasi-finite} | |
there exists an affine scheme $U'$ and a morphism $g : U' \to U$ such that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $g$ is an immersion, | |
\item $u \in U'$, | |
\item $g$ is locally of finite presentation, | |
\item $h$ is flat, locally of finite presentation and locally quasi-finite, and | |
\item the morphisms $s', t' : R' \to U'$ are flat, locally of finite | |
presentation and locally quasi-finite. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Here we have used the notation introduced in | |
More on Groupoids, Situation \ref{more-groupoids-situation-slice}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Step 3. For each point $u \in U$ which is of finite type | |
choose a $g_u : U'_u \to U$ as in | |
Step 2 and denote $R'_u$ the restriction of $R$ to $U'_u$. | |
Denote $h_u = s \circ \text{pr}_1 : U'_u \times_{g_u, U, t} R \to U$. Set | |
$U' = \coprod_{u \in U} U'_u$, and $g = \coprod g_u$. Let $R'$ be the | |
restriction of $R$ to $U'$ as above. We claim that | |
the pair $(U', g)$ works\footnote{Here we should check that $U'$ is not | |
too large, i.e., that it is isomorphic to an object of the category | |
$\Sch_{fppf}$, see | |
Section \ref{section-conventions}. | |
This is a purely set theoretical matter; let us use the notion of size of | |
a scheme introduced in | |
Sets, Section \ref{sets-section-categories-schemes}. | |
Note that each $U'_u$ has size at most the size of $U$ | |
and that the cardinality of the index set is at most the cardinality of | |
$|U|$ which is bounded by the size of $U$. Hence $U'$ is isomorphic | |
to an object of $\Sch_{fppf}$ by | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-what-is-in-it} part (6).}. | |
Note that | |
\begin{align*} | |
R' = & | |
\coprod\nolimits_{u_1, u_2 \in U} | |
(U'_{u_1} \times_{g_{u_1}, U, t} R) | |
\times_R | |
(R \times_{s, U, g_{u_2}} U'_{u_2}) \\ | |
= & | |
\coprod\nolimits_{u_1, u_2 \in U} | |
(U'_{u_1} \times_{g_{u_1}, U, t} R) \times_{h_{u_1}, U, g_{u_2}} U'_{u_2} | |
\end{align*} | |
Hence the projection $s' : R' \to U' = \coprod U'_{u_2}$ | |
is flat, locally of finite | |
presentation and locally quasi-finite as a base change of $\coprod h_{u_1}$. | |
Finally, by construction the morphism | |
$h : U' \times_{g, U, t} R \to U$ is equal to $\coprod h_u$ hence | |
its image contains all points of finite type of $U$. | |
Since each $h_u$ is flat and locally of finite presentation we conclude that | |
$h$ is flat and locally of finite presentation. | |
In particular, the image of $h$ is open (see | |
Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-fppf-open}) | |
and since the set of points of finite type is dense (see | |
Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-enough-finite-type-points}) | |
we conclude that the image of $h$ is $U$. This implies that | |
$\{h\}$ is an fppf covering. By | |
Groupoids, Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-groupoid-restrict} | |
this means that $U'/R' \to U/R$ is an isomorphism. | |
This finishes the proof of the lemma. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Quotient by a subgroupoid} | |
\label{section-dividing} | |
\noindent | |
We need one more lemma before we can do our final bootstrap. | |
Let us discuss what is going on in terms of ``plain'' groupoids before | |
embarking on the scheme theoretic version. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $\mathcal{C}$ be a groupoid, see | |
Categories, Definition \ref{categories-definition-groupoid}. | |
As discussed in | |
Groupoids, Section \ref{groupoids-section-groupoids} | |
this corresponds to a quintuple $(\text{Ob}, \text{Arrows}, s, t, c)$. | |
Suppose we are given a subset $P \subset \text{Arrows}$ such that | |
$(\text{Ob}, P, s|_P, t|_P, c|_P)$ is also a groupoid and such | |
that there are no nontrivial automorphisms in $P$. Then we can construct | |
the quotient groupoid | |
$(\overline{\text{Ob}}, \overline{\text{Arrows}}, \overline{s}, | |
\overline{t}, \overline{c})$ | |
as follows: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\overline{\text{Ob}} = \text{Ob}/P$ | |
is the set of $P$-isomorphism classes, | |
\item $\overline{\text{Arrows}} = P\backslash \text{Arrows}/P$ | |
is the set of arrows in $\mathcal{C}$ up to pre-composing and | |
post-composing by arrows of $P$, | |
\item the source and target maps | |
$\overline{s}, \overline{t} : P\backslash \text{Arrows}/P \to \text{Ob}/P$ | |
are induced by $s, t$, | |
\item composition is defined by the rule | |
$\overline{c}(\overline{a}, \overline{b}) = \overline{c(a, b)}$ | |
which is well defined. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
In fact, it turns out that the original groupoid | |
$(\text{Ob}, \text{Arrows}, s, t, c)$ is canonically | |
isomorphic to the restriction (see discussion in | |
Groupoids, Section \ref{groupoids-section-restrict-groupoid}) | |
of the groupoid | |
$(\overline{\text{Ob}}, \overline{\text{Arrows}}, \overline{s}, | |
\overline{t}, \overline{c})$ via the quotient map | |
$g : \text{Ob} \to \overline{\text{Ob}}$. Recall that this means | |
that | |
$$ | |
\text{Arrows} = | |
\text{Ob} | |
\times_{g, \overline{\text{Ob}}, \overline{t}} | |
\overline{\text{Arrows}} | |
\times_{\overline{s}, \overline{\text{Ob}}, g} | |
\text{Ob} | |
$$ | |
which holds as $P$ has no nontrivial automorphisms. | |
We omit the details. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
The following lemma holds in much greater generality, but this is | |
the version we use in the proof of the final bootstrap (after which | |
we can more easily prove the more general versions of this lemma). | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divide-subgroupoid} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $(U, R, s, t, c)$ be a groupoid scheme over $S$. | |
Let $P \to R$ be monomorphism of schemes. Assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $(U, P, s|_P, t|_P, c|_{P \times_{s, U, t}P})$ is a groupoid scheme, | |
\item $s|_P, t|_P : P \to U$ are finite locally free, | |
\item $j|_P : P \to U \times_S U$ is a monomorphism. | |
\item $U$ is affine, and | |
\item $j : R \to U \times_S U$ is separated and locally quasi-finite, | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $U/P$ is representable by an affine scheme $\overline{U}$, the | |
quotient morphism $U \to \overline{U}$ is finite locally free, and | |
$P = U \times_{\overline{U}} U$. Moreover, $R$ is the restriction of a | |
groupoid scheme | |
$(\overline{U}, \overline{R}, \overline{s}, \overline{t}, \overline{c})$ | |
on $\overline{U}$ via the quotient morphism $U \to \overline{U}$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Conditions (1), (2), (3), and (4) and | |
Groupoids, Proposition \ref{groupoids-proposition-finite-flat-equivalence} | |
imply the affine scheme $\overline{U}$ representing $U/P$ exists, | |
the morphism $U \to \overline{U}$ is finite locally free, and | |
$P = U \times_{\overline{U}} U$. The identification | |
$P = U \times_{\overline{U}} U$ is such that $t|_P = \text{pr}_0$ and | |
$s|_P = \text{pr}_1$, and such that composition is equal to | |
$\text{pr}_{02} : U \times_{\overline{U}} U \times_{\overline{U}} U | |
\to U \times_{\overline{U}} U$. | |
A product of finite locally free morphisms is finite locally free (see | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-product-representable-transformations-property} | |
and | |
Morphisms, Lemmas \ref{morphisms-lemma-base-change-finite-locally-free} and | |
\ref{morphisms-lemma-composition-finite-locally-free}). | |
To get $\overline{R}$ we are going to descend | |
the scheme $R$ via the finite locally free morphism | |
$U \times_S U \to \overline{U} \times_S \overline{U}$. | |
Namely, note that | |
$$ | |
(U \times_S U) | |
\times_{(\overline{U} \times_S \overline{U})} | |
(U \times_S U) | |
= | |
P \times_S P | |
$$ | |
by the above. Thus giving a descent datum (see | |
Descent, Definition \ref{descent-definition-descent-datum}) | |
for $R / U \times_S U / \overline{U} \times_S \overline{U}$ | |
consists of an isomorphism | |
$$ | |
\varphi : | |
R \times_{(U \times_S U), t \times t} (P \times_S P) | |
\longrightarrow | |
(P \times_S P) \times_{s \times s, (U \times_S U)} R | |
$$ | |
over $P \times_S P$ satisfying a cocycle condition. We define $\varphi$ | |
on $T$-valued points by the rule | |
$$ | |
\varphi : (r, (p, p')) \longmapsto ((p, p'), p^{-1} \circ r \circ p') | |
$$ | |
where the composition is taken in the groupoid category | |
$(U(T), R(T), s, t, c)$. | |
This makes sense because for $(r, (p, p'))$ to be a $T$-valued point | |
of the source of $\varphi$ it needs to be the case that $t(r) = t(p)$ | |
and $s(r) = t(p')$. Note that this map is an isomorphism | |
with inverse given by | |
$((p, p'), r') \mapsto (p \circ r' \circ (p')^{-1}, (p, p'))$. | |
To check the cocycle condition we have to verify that | |
$\varphi_{02} = \varphi_{12} \circ \varphi_{01}$ | |
as maps over | |
$$ | |
(U \times_S U) | |
\times_{(\overline{U} \times_S \overline{U})} (U \times_S U) | |
\times_{(\overline{U} \times_S \overline{U})} (U \times_S U) = | |
(P \times_S P) \times_{s \times s, (U \times_S U), t \times t} (P \times_S P) | |
$$ | |
By explicit calculation we see that | |
$$ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\varphi_{02} & (r, (p_1, p_1'), (p_2, p_2')) & \mapsto & | |
((p_1, p_1'), (p_2, p_2'), | |
(p_1 \circ p_2)^{-1} \circ r \circ (p_1' \circ p_2')) \\ | |
\varphi_{01} & (r, (p_1, p_1'), (p_2, p_2')) & \mapsto & | |
((p_1, p_1'), p_1^{-1} \circ r \circ p_1', (p_2, p_2')) \\ | |
\varphi_{12} & ((p_1, p_1'), r, (p_2, p_2')) & \mapsto & | |
((p_1, p_1'), (p_2, p_2'), p_2^{-1} \circ r \circ p_2') | |
\end{matrix} | |
$$ | |
(with obvious notation) which implies what we want. | |
As $j$ is separated and locally quasi-finite by (5) we may apply | |
More on Morphisms, Lemma | |
\ref{more-morphisms-lemma-separated-locally-quasi-finite-morphisms-fppf-descend} | |
to get a scheme $\overline{R} \to \overline{U} \times_S \overline{U}$ | |
and an isomorphism | |
$$ | |
R \to \overline{R} \times_{(\overline{U} \times_S \overline{U})} (U \times_S U) | |
$$ | |
which identifies the descent datum $\varphi$ with the canonical | |
descent datum on | |
$\overline{R} \times_{(\overline{U} \times_S \overline{U})} (U \times_S U)$, | |
see | |
Descent, Definition \ref{descent-definition-effective}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Since $U \times_S U \to \overline{U} \times_S \overline{U}$ is finite | |
locally free we conclude that $R \to \overline{R}$ is finite locally free | |
as a base change. Hence $R \to \overline{R}$ is surjective as a map of | |
sheaves on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
Our choice of $\varphi$ implies that given $T$-valued points $r, r' \in R(T)$ | |
these have the same image in $\overline{R}$ if and only if | |
$p^{-1} \circ r \circ p'$ for some $p, p' \in P(T)$. Thus | |
$\overline{R}$ represents the sheaf | |
$$ | |
T \longmapsto \overline{R(T)} = P(T)\backslash R(T)/P(T) | |
$$ | |
with notation as in the discussion preceding the lemma. | |
Hence we can define the groupoid structure on | |
$(\overline{U} = U/P, \overline{R} = P\backslash R/P)$ exactly as in | |
the discussion of the ``plain'' groupoid case. | |
It follows from this that $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is the pullback of | |
this groupoid structure via the morphism $U \to \overline{U}$. | |
This concludes the proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Final bootstrap} | |
\label{section-final-bootstrap} | |
\noindent | |
The following result goes quite a bit beyond the earlier results. | |
\begin{theorem} | |
\label{theorem-final-bootstrap} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$ be a functor. | |
Any one of the following conditions implies that $F$ is an algebraic space: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F = U/R$ where $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is a groupoid in algebraic spaces | |
over $S$ such that $s, t$ are flat and locally of finite presentation, and | |
$j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is an equivalence relation, | |
\item $F = U/R$ where $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is a groupoid scheme | |
over $S$ such that $s, t$ are flat and locally of finite presentation, and | |
$j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is an equivalence relation, | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf and there exists an algebraic space $U$ and a morphism | |
$U \to F$ which is representable by algebraic spaces, | |
surjective, flat and locally of finite presentation, | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf and there exists a scheme $U$ and a morphism | |
$U \to F$ which is representable by algebraic spaces or schemes, | |
surjective, flat and locally of finite presentation, | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf, $\Delta_F$ is representable by algebraic spaces, | |
and there exists an algebraic space $U$ and a morphism $U \to F$ which is | |
surjective, flat, and locally of finite presentation, or | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf, $\Delta_F$ is representable, | |
and there exists a scheme $U$ and a morphism $U \to F$ which is | |
surjective, flat, and locally of finite presentation. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{theorem} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Trivial observations: (6) is a special case of (5) and | |
(4) is a special case of (3). | |
We first prove that cases (5) and (3) reduce to case (1). | |
Namely, by bootstrapping the diagonal | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-bootstrap-diagonal} | |
we see that (3) implies (5). In case (5) we set $R = U \times_F U$ which | |
is an algebraic space by assumption. Moreover, by assumption both | |
projections $s, t : R \to U$ are surjective, flat and locally of | |
finite presentation. The map $j : R \to U \times_S U$ is clearly an | |
equivalence relation. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-surjective-flat-locally-finite-presentation} | |
the map $U \to F$ is a surjection of sheaves. Thus $F = U/R$ | |
which reduces us to case (1). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Next, we show that (1) reduces to (2). | |
Namely, let $(U, R, s, t, c)$ be a groupoid in algebraic spaces | |
over $S$ such that $s, t$ are flat and locally of finite presentation, and | |
$j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is an equivalence relation. | |
Choose a scheme $U'$ and a surjective \'etale morphism $U' \to U$. | |
Let $R' = R|_{U'}$ be the restriction of $R$ to $U'$. By | |
Groupoids in Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence-relation-restrict} | |
we see that $U/R = U'/R'$. Since $s', t' : R' \to U'$ are also | |
flat and locally of finite presentation (see | |
More on Groupoids in Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-more-groupoids-lemma-restrict-preserves-type}) | |
this reduces us to the case where $U$ is a scheme. | |
As $j$ is an equivalence relation we see that $j$ is a monomorphism. | |
As $s : R \to U$ is locally of finite presentation we see that | |
$j : R \to U \times_S U$ is locally of finite type, see | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-permanence-finite-type}. | |
By | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-monomorphism-loc-finite-type-loc-quasi-finite} | |
we see that $j$ is locally quasi-finite and separated. | |
Hence if $U$ is a scheme, then $R$ is a scheme by | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Proposition | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-proposition-locally-quasi-finite-separated-over-scheme}. | |
Thus we reduce to proving the theorem in case (2). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume $F = U/R$ where $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is a groupoid scheme | |
over $S$ such that $s, t$ are flat and locally of finite presentation, and | |
$j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is an equivalence relation. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-slice-equivalence-relation} | |
we reduce to that case where $s, t$ are flat, | |
locally of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite. | |
Let $U = \bigcup_{i \in I} U_i$ be an affine open covering | |
(with index set $I$ of cardinality $\leq$ than the size of $U$ to avoid | |
set theoretic problems later -- most readers can safely ignore this remark). | |
Let $(U_i, R_i, s_i, t_i, c_i)$ be the restriction of $R$ | |
to $U_i$. It is clear that $s_i, t_i$ are still flat, locally of finite | |
presentation, and locally quasi-finite as $R_i$ is the open subscheme | |
$s^{-1}(U_i) \cap t^{-1}(U_i)$ of $R$ | |
and $s_i, t_i$ are the restrictions of $s, t$ to this open. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-better-finding-opens} | |
(or the simpler | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-finding-opens}) | |
the map $U_i/R_i \to U/R$ is representable by open immersions. | |
Hence if we can show that $F_i = U_i/R_i$ is an algebraic space, then | |
$\coprod_{i \in I} F_i$ is an algebraic space by | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces}. | |
As $U = \bigcup U_i$ is an open covering it is clear that | |
$\coprod F_i \to F$ is surjective. Thus | |
it follows that $U/R$ is an algebraic space, by | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-glueing-algebraic-spaces}. | |
In this way we reduce to the case where $U$ is affine and $s, t$ are flat, | |
locally of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite and | |
$j$ is an equivalence. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is a groupoid scheme over $S$, | |
with $U$ affine, such that $s, t$ are flat, locally of finite presentation, | |
and locally quasi-finite, and $j$ is an equivalence relation. | |
Choose $u \in U$. We apply | |
More on Groupoids in Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-more-groupoids-lemma-quasi-splitting-affine-scheme} | |
to $u \in U, R, s, t, c$. We obtain an affine scheme $U'$, an \'etale | |
morphism $g : U' \to U$, a point $u' \in U'$ with $\kappa(u) = \kappa(u')$ | |
such that the restriction $R' = R|_{U'}$ is quasi-split over $u'$. | |
Note that the image $g(U')$ is open as $g$ is \'etale and contains $u$. | |
Hence, repeatedly applying the lemma, we can find finitely many | |
points $u_i \in U$, $i = 1, \ldots, n$, | |
affine schemes $U'_i$, \'etale morphisms $g_i : U_i' \to U$, points | |
$u'_i \in U'_i$ with $g(u'_i) = u_i$ such that (a) each | |
restriction $R'_i$ is quasi-split over some point in $U'_i$ and | |
(b) $U = \bigcup_{i = 1, \ldots, n} g_i(U'_i)$. | |
Now we rerun the last part of the argument in the preceding paragraph: | |
Using | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-better-finding-opens} | |
(or the simpler | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-finding-opens}) | |
the map $U'_i/R'_i \to U/R$ is representable by open immersions. | |
If we can show that $F_i = U'_i/R'_i$ is an algebraic space, then | |
$\coprod_{i \in I} F_i$ is an algebraic space by | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces}. | |
As $\{g_i : U'_i \to U\}$ is an \'etale covering | |
it is clear that $\coprod F_i \to F$ is surjective. Thus | |
it follows that $U/R$ is an algebraic space, by | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-glueing-algebraic-spaces}. | |
In this way we reduce to the case where $U$ is affine and $s, t$ are flat, | |
locally of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite, | |
$j$ is an equivalence, and $R$ is quasi-split over $u$ for some | |
$u \in U$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is a groupoid scheme over $S$, | |
with $U$ affine, $u \in U$ such that $s, t$ are flat, locally | |
of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite and | |
$j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is an equivalence relation | |
and $R$ is quasi-split over $u$. Let $P \subset R$ be a quasi-splitting | |
of $R$ over $u$. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divide-subgroupoid} | |
we see that $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is the restriction of a groupoid | |
$(\overline{U}, \overline{R}, \overline{s}, \overline{t}, \overline{c})$ | |
by a surjective finite locally free morphism $U \to \overline{U}$ such that | |
$P = U \times_{\overline{U}} U$. Note that $s$ admits a factorization | |
$$ | |
R = U \times_{\overline{U}, \overline{t}} \overline{R} | |
\times_{\overline{s}, \overline{U}} U | |
\xrightarrow{\text{pr}_{23}} | |
\overline{R} \times_{\overline{s}, \overline{U}} U | |
\xrightarrow{\text{pr}_2} U | |
$$ | |
The map $\text{pr}_2$ is the base change of $\overline{s}$, and | |
the map $\text{pr}_{23}$ is a base change of the surjective finite locally | |
free map $U \to \overline{U}$. Since $s$ is flat, locally | |
of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite and since $\text{pr}_{23}$ | |
is surjective finite locally free (as a base change of such), we | |
conclude that $\text{pr}_2$ is flat, locally | |
of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite by | |
Descent, Lemmas | |
\ref{descent-lemma-flat-fpqc-local-source} and | |
\ref{descent-lemma-locally-finite-presentation-fppf-local-source} and | |
Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-quasi-finite-local-source}. | |
Since $\text{pr}_2$ is the base change of the morphism | |
$\overline{s}$ by $U \to \overline{U}$ and $\{U \to \overline{U}\}$ | |
is an fppf covering we conclude $\overline{s}$ is | |
flat, locally of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite, see | |
Descent, Lemmas \ref{descent-lemma-descending-property-flat}, | |
\ref{descent-lemma-descending-property-locally-finite-presentation}, and | |
\ref{descent-lemma-descending-property-quasi-finite}. The same goes | |
for $\overline{t}$. Consider the commutative diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
U \times_{\overline{U}} U \ar@{=}[r] \ar[rd] & P \ar[r] \ar[d] & R \ar[d] \\ | |
& \overline{U} \ar[r]^{\overline{e}} & \overline{R} | |
} | |
$$ | |
It is a general fact about restrictions that the outer four corners | |
form a cartesian diagram. By the equality we see the inner square is | |
cartesian. Since $P$ is open in $R$ (by definition of a quasi-splitting) | |
we conclude that $\overline{e}$ is an open immersion by | |
Descent, Lemma \ref{descent-lemma-descending-property-open-immersion}. | |
An application of | |
Groupoids, | |
Lemma \ref{groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence-relation-restrict} | |
shows that $U/R = \overline{U}/\overline{R}$. Hence we have reduced to | |
the case where $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is a groupoid scheme over $S$, | |
with $U$ affine, $u \in U$ such that $s, t$ are flat, locally | |
of finite presentation, and locally quasi-finite and | |
$j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is an equivalence relation | |
and $e : U \to R$ is an open immersion! | |
\medskip\noindent | |
But of course, if $e$ is an open immersion and | |
$s, t$ are flat and locally of finite presentation | |
then the morphisms $t, s$ are \'etale. | |
For example you can see this by applying | |
More on Groupoids, Lemma \ref{more-groupoids-lemma-sheaf-differentials} | |
which shows that $\Omega_{R/U} = 0$ which in turn implies | |
that $s, t : R \to U$ is G-unramified (see | |
Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-unramified-omega-zero}), | |
which in turn implies that $s, t$ are \'etale (see | |
Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-flat-unramified-etale}). | |
And if $s, t$ are \'etale then finally $U/R$ is an algebraic | |
space by | |
Spaces, Theorem \ref{spaces-theorem-presentation}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Applications} | |
\label{section-applications} | |
\noindent | |
As a first application we obtain the following fundamental fact: | |
$$ | |
\fbox{A sheaf which is fppf locally an algebraic space is an algebraic space.} | |
$$ | |
This is the content of the following lemma. | |
Note that assumption (2) is equivalent to the condition that | |
$F|_{(\Sch/S_i)_{fppf}}$ is an algebraic space, see | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-rephrase}. | |
Assumption (3) is a set theoretic condition which may be ignored | |
by those not worried about set theoretic questions. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-locally-algebraic-space} | |
\begin{slogan} | |
The definition of an algebraic space is fppf local. | |
\end{slogan} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$ be a functor. | |
Let $\{S_i \to S\}_{i \in I}$ be a covering of $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
Assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf, | |
\item each $F_i = h_{S_i} \times F$ is an algebraic space, and | |
\item $\coprod_{i \in I} F_i$ is an algebraic space (see | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces}). | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an algebraic space. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Consider the morphism $\coprod F_i \to F$. This is the base change | |
of $\coprod S_i \to S$ via $F \to S$. Hence it is representable, | |
locally of finite presentation, flat and surjective by our definition | |
of an fppf covering and | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation-property}. | |
Thus | |
Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap} | |
applies to show that $F$ is an algebraic space. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Here is a special case of Lemma \ref{lemma-locally-algebraic-space} | |
where we do not need to worry about set theoretical issues. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-locally-algebraic-space-finite-type} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. | |
Let $F : (\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$ be a functor. | |
Let $\{S_i \to S\}_{i \in I}$ be a covering of $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
Assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf, | |
\item each $F_i = h_{S_i} \times F$ is an algebraic space, and | |
\item the morphisms $F_i \to S_i$ are of finite type. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an algebraic space. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We will use | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-locally-algebraic-space} | |
above. To do this we will show that the assumption that | |
$F_i$ is of finite type over $S_i$ to prove that the set theoretic | |
condition in the lemma is satisfied (after perhaps refining the given | |
covering of $S$ a bit). | |
We suggest the reader skip the rest of the proof. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
If $S'_i \to S_i$ is a morphism of schemes then | |
$$ | |
h_{S'_i} \times F = | |
h_{S'_i} \times_{h_{S_i}} h_{S_i} \times F = | |
h_{S'_i} \times_{h_{S_i}} F_i | |
$$ | |
is an algebraic space of finite type over $S'_i$, see | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-fibre-product-spaces} | |
and | |
Morphisms of Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-finite-type}. | |
Thus we may refine the given covering. After doing this we may assume: | |
(a) each $S_i$ is affine, and (b) the cardinality of $I$ is at most | |
the cardinality of the set of points of $S$. (Since to cover | |
all of $S$ it is enough that each point is in the image of $S_i \to S$ | |
for some $i$.) | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Since each $S_i$ is affine and each $F_i$ of finite type over $S_i$ | |
we conclude that $F_i$ is quasi-compact. Hence by | |
Properties of Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-properties-lemma-quasi-compact-affine-cover} | |
we can find an affine $U_i \in \Ob((\Sch/S)_{fppf})$ | |
and a surjective \'etale morphism $U_i \to F_i$. The fact that | |
$F_i \to S_i$ is locally of finite type then implies that | |
$U_i \to S_i$ is locally of finite type, and in particular | |
$U_i \to S$ is locally of finite type. By | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-finite-type} | |
we conclude that $\text{size}(U_i) \leq \text{size}(S)$. | |
Since also $|I| \leq \text{size}(S)$ we conclude that | |
$\coprod_{i \in I} U_i$ is isomorphic to an object of | |
$(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ by | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-size} | |
and the construction of $\Sch$. This implies that | |
$\coprod F_i$ is an algebraic space by | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces} | |
and we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
As a second application we obtain | |
$$ | |
\fbox{Any fppf descent datum for algebraic spaces is effective.} | |
$$ | |
This holds modulo set theoretical difficulties; as an example result | |
we offer the following lemma. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-descend-algebraic-space} | |
\begin{slogan} | |
Fppf descent data for algebraic spaces are effective. | |
\end{slogan} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Let $\{X_i \to X\}_{i \in I}$ be an fppf | |
covering of algebraic spaces over $S$. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item If $I$ is countable\footnote{The restriction on countablility can be | |
ignored by those who do not care about set theoretical issues. We can allow | |
larger index sets here if we can bound the size of the algebraic spaces | |
which we are descending. See for example | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-locally-algebraic-space-finite-type}.}, then any | |
descent datum for algebraic spaces relative to $\{X_i \to X\}$ is effective. | |
\item Any descent datum $(Y_i, \varphi_{ij})$ relative to | |
$\{X_i \to X\}_{i \in I}$ (Descent on Spaces, Definition | |
\ref{spaces-descent-definition-descent-datum-for-family-of-morphisms}) | |
with $Y_i \to X_i$ of finite type | |
is effective. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Proof of (1). By | |
Descent on Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descent-data-sheaves} | |
this translates into the statement that an fppf sheaf $F$ | |
endowed with a map $F \to X$ is an algebraic space provided that | |
each $F \times_X X_i$ is an algebraic space. | |
The restriction on the cardinality of $I$ implies that | |
coproducts of algebraic spaces indexed by $I$ are algebraic spaces, see | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces} | |
and | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-what-is-in-it}. | |
The morphism | |
$$ | |
\coprod F \times_X X_i \longrightarrow F | |
$$ | |
is representable by algebraic spaces (as the base change of | |
$\coprod X_i \to X$, see Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation}), | |
and surjective, flat, and locally of finite presentation | |
(as the base change of $\coprod X_i \to X$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation-property}). | |
Hence part (1) follows from Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Proof of (2). First we apply | |
Descent on Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descent-data-sheaves} | |
to obtain an fppf sheaf $F$ endowed with a map $F \to X$ | |
such that $F \times_X X_i = Y_i$ for all $i \in I$. | |
Our goal is to show that $F$ is an algebraic space. | |
Choose a scheme $U$ and a surjective \'etale morphism $U \to X$. | |
Then $F' = U \times_X F \to F$ is representable, surjective, and \'etale | |
as the base change of $U \to X$. | |
By Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap} it suffices to show | |
that $F' = U \times_X F$ is an algebraic space. | |
We may choose an fppf covering $\{U_j \to U\}_{j \in J}$ | |
where $U_j$ is a scheme refining the fppf covering | |
$\{X_i \times_X U \to U\}_{i \in I}$, see | |
Topologies on Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-topologies-lemma-refine-fppf-schemes}. | |
Thus we get a map $a : J \to I$ and for each $j$ | |
a morphism $U_j \to X_{a(j)}$ over $X$. | |
Then we see that $U_j \times_U F' = U_j \times_{X_{a(j)}} Y_{a(j)}$ | |
is of finite type over $U_j$. Hence $F'$ is an algebraic | |
space by Lemma \ref{lemma-locally-algebraic-space-finite-type}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Here is a different type of application. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-representable-by-spaces-cover} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Let $a : F \to G$ and $b : G \to H$ be | |
transformations of functors $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}^{opp} \to \textit{Sets}$. | |
Assume | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F, G, H$ are sheaves, | |
\item $a : F \to G$ is representable by algebraic spaces, flat, | |
locally of finite presentation, and surjective, and | |
\item $b \circ a : F \to H$ is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $b$ is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $U$ be a scheme over $S$ and let $\xi \in H(U)$. We have to show that | |
$U \times_{\xi, H} G$ is an algebraic space. On the other hand, we know | |
that $U \times_{\xi, H} F$ is an algebraic space and that | |
$U \times_{\xi, H} F \to U \times_{\xi, H} G$ is representable by | |
algebraic spaces, flat, locally of finite presentation, and surjective | |
as a base change of the morphism $a$ (see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-base-change-transformation-property}). | |
Thus the result follows from Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-quotient-stack-isom} | |
Assume $B \to S$ and $(U, R, s, t, c)$ are as in | |
Groupoids in Spaces, | |
Definition \ref{spaces-groupoids-definition-quotient-stack} (1). | |
For any scheme $T$ over $S$ and objects $x, y$ of $[U/R]$ over $T$ | |
the sheaf $\mathit{Isom}(x, y)$ on $(\Sch/T)_{fppf}$ | |
is an algebraic space. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
By | |
Groupoids in Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-quotient-stack-isom} | |
there exists an fppf covering $\{T_i \to T\}_{i \in I}$ | |
such that $\mathit{Isom}(x, y)|_{(\Sch/T_i)_{fppf}}$ | |
is an algebraic space for each $i$. By | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-rephrase} | |
this means that each $F_i = h_{S_i} \times \mathit{Isom}(x, y)$ | |
is an algebraic space. | |
Thus to prove the lemma we only have to verify the set theoretic condition | |
that $\coprod F_i$ is an algebraic space of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-locally-algebraic-space} | |
above to conclude. To do this we use | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces} | |
which requires showing that $I$ and the $F_i$ are not ``too large''. | |
We suggest the reader skip the rest of the proof. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Choose $U' \in \Ob(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ and a surjective | |
\'etale morphism $U' \to U$. Let $R'$ be the restriction of $R$ to $U'$. | |
Since $[U/R] = [U'/R']$ we may, after replacing $U$ by $U'$, | |
assume that $U$ is a scheme. (This step is here so that the | |
fibre products below are over a scheme.) | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Note that if we refine the covering $\{T_i \to T\}$ then it remains | |
true that each $F_i$ is an algebraic space. | |
Hence we may assume that each $T_i$ is affine. Since | |
$T_i \to T$ is locally of finite presentation, this then implies that | |
$\text{size}(T_i) \leq \text{size}(T)$, see | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-finite-type}. | |
We may also assume that the cardinality of the index set $I$ is at most the | |
cardinality of the set of points of $T$ since to get a | |
covering it suffices to check that each point of $T$ is in the image. | |
Hence $|I| \leq \text{size}(T)$. | |
Choose $W \in \Ob((\Sch/S)_{fppf})$ | |
and a surjective \'etale morphism $W \to R$. Note that in the proof of | |
Groupoids in Spaces, | |
Lemma \ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-quotient-stack-isom} | |
we showed that $F_i$ is representable by | |
$T_i \times_{(y_i, x_i), U \times_B U} R$ for some | |
$x_i, y_i : T_i \to U$. Hence now we see that | |
$V_i = T_i \times_{(y_i, x_i), U \times_B U} W$ is a | |
scheme which comes with an \'etale surjection $V_i \to F_i$. | |
By | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-size-fibre-product} | |
we see that | |
$$ | |
\text{size}(V_i) \leq \max\{\text{size}(T_i), \text{size}(W)\} | |
\leq \max\{\text{size}(T), \text{size}(W)\} | |
$$ | |
Hence, by | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-size} | |
we conclude that | |
$$ | |
\text{size}(\coprod\nolimits_{i \in I} V_i) | |
\leq \max\{|I|, \text{size}(T), \text{size}(W)\}. | |
$$ | |
Hence we conclude by our construction of $\Sch$ | |
that $\coprod_{i \in I} V_i$ is isomorphic to an object | |
$V$ of $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. This verifies the | |
hypothesis of | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces} | |
and we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-covering-quotient} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Consider an algebraic space $F$ of the form $F = U/R$ | |
where $(U, R, s, t, c)$ is a groupoid in algebraic spaces | |
over $S$ such that $s, t$ are flat and locally of finite presentation, and | |
$j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is an equivalence relation. | |
Then $U \to F$ is surjective, flat, and locally of finite presentation. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
This is almost but not quite a triviality. Namely, by | |
Groupoids in Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence} | |
and the fact that $j$ is a monomorphism we see that $R = U \times_F U$. | |
Choose a scheme $W$ and a surjective \'etale morphism $W \to F$. | |
As $U \to F$ is a surjection of sheaves we can find an fppf covering | |
$\{W_i \to W\}$ and maps $W_i \to U$ lifting the morphisms $W_i \to F$. | |
Then we see that | |
$$ | |
W_i \times_F U = W_i \times_U U \times_F U = W_i \times_{U, t} R | |
$$ | |
and the projection $W_i \times_F U \to W_i$ is the base change of | |
$t : R \to U$ hence flat and locally of finite presentation, see | |
Morphisms of Spaces, Lemmas | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-flat} and | |
\ref{spaces-morphisms-lemma-base-change-finite-presentation}. | |
Hence by | |
Descent on Spaces, Lemmas | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-flat} and | |
\ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-locally-finite-presentation} | |
we see that $U \to F$ is flat and locally of finite presentation. | |
It is surjective by | |
Spaces, Remark \ref{spaces-remark-warning}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-quotient-free-action} | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Let $X \to B$ be a morphism of algebraic spaces over | |
$S$. Let $G$ be a group algebraic space over $B$ and let | |
$a : G \times_B X \to X$ be an action of $G$ on $X$ over $B$. | |
If | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $a$ is a free action, and | |
\item $G \to B$ is flat and locally of finite presentation, | |
\end{enumerate} | |
then $X/G$ (see | |
Groupoids in Spaces, Definition | |
\ref{spaces-groupoids-definition-quotient-sheaf}) | |
is an algebraic space and $X \to X/G$ is surjective, flat, and locally | |
of finite presentation. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
The fact that $X/G$ is an algebraic space is immediate from | |
Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap} | |
and the definitions. Namely, $X/G = X/R$ where $R = G \times_B X$. | |
The morphisms $s, t : G \times_B X \to X$ are flat and locally of | |
finite presentation (clear for $s$ as a base change of $G \to B$ and | |
by symmetry using the inverse it follows for $t$) and the morphism | |
$j : G \times_B X \to X \times_B X$ is a monomorphism by | |
Groupoids in Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-free-action} | |
as the action is free. The assertions about the morphism $X \to X/G$ | |
follow from | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-covering-quotient}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-descent-torsor} | |
Let $\{S_i \to S\}_{i \in I}$ be a covering of $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$. | |
Let $G$ be a group algebraic space over $S$, and denote | |
$G_i = G_{S_i}$ the base changes. Suppose given | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item for each $i \in I$ an fppf $G_i$-torsor $X_i$ over $S_i$, | |
and | |
\item for each $i, j \in I$ a $G_{S_i \times_S S_j}$-equivariant isomorphism | |
$\varphi_{ij} : X_i \times_S S_j \to S_i \times_S X_j$ satisfying the cocycle | |
condition over every $S_i \times_S S_j \times_S S_j$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then there exists an fppf $G$-torsor $X$ over $S$ | |
whose base change to $S_i$ is isomorphic to $X_i$ such that we | |
recover the descent datum $\varphi_{ij}$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We may think of $X_i$ as a sheaf on $(\Sch/S_i)_{fppf}$, see | |
Spaces, Section \ref{spaces-section-change-base-scheme}. | |
By | |
Sites, Section \ref{sites-section-glueing-sheaves} | |
the descent datum $(X_i, \varphi_{ij})$ is effective in the sense that | |
there exists a unique sheaf $X$ on $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ which | |
recovers the algebraic spaces $X_i$ after restricting back to | |
$(\Sch/S_i)_{fppf}$. Hence we see that | |
$X_i = h_{S_i} \times X$. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-locally-algebraic-space} | |
we see that $X$ is an algebraic space, modulo verifying that $\coprod X_i$ | |
is an algebraic space which we do at the end of the proof. | |
By the equivalence of categories in | |
Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-mapping-property-glue} | |
the action maps $G_i \times_{S_i} X_i \to X_i$ | |
glue to give a map $a : G \times_S X \to X$. | |
Now we have to show that $a$ is an action and that $X$ | |
is a pseudo-torsor, and fppf locally trivial (see | |
Groupoids in Spaces, | |
Definition \ref{spaces-groupoids-definition-principal-homogeneous-space}). | |
These may be checked fppf locally, and | |
hence follow from the corresponding properties of the actions | |
$G_i \times_{S_i} X_i \to X_i$. Hence the lemma is true. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We suggest the reader skip the rest of the proof, which is purely set | |
theoretical. Pick coverings $\{S_{ij} \to S_j\}_{j \in J_i}$ of | |
$(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ | |
which trivialize the $G_i$ torsors $X_i$ (possible by assumption, and | |
Topologies, Lemma \ref{topologies-lemma-fppf-induced} part (1)). | |
Then $\{S_{ij} \to S\}_{i \in I, j \in J_i}$ is a covering of | |
$(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ and hence we may assume that each $X_i$ | |
is the trivial torsor! Of course we may also refine the covering further, | |
hence we may assume that each $S_i$ is affine and that the index | |
set $I$ has cardinality bounded by the cardinality of the set of points | |
of $S$. Choose $U \in \Ob((\Sch/S)_{fppf})$ and a surjective | |
\'etale morphism $U \to G$. Then we see that $U_i = U \times_S S_i$ comes | |
with an \'etale surjective morphism to $X_i \cong G_i$. By | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-size-fibre-product} | |
we see $\text{size}(U_i) \leq \max\{\text{size}(U), \text{size}(S_i)\}$. By | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-finite-type} | |
we have $\text{size}(S_i) \leq \text{size}(S)$. | |
Hence we see that | |
$\text{size}(U_i) \leq \max\{\text{size}(U), \text{size}(S)\}$ | |
for all $i \in I$. Together with the bound on $|I|$ we found above we | |
conclude from | |
Sets, Lemma \ref{sets-lemma-bound-size} | |
that $\text{size}(\coprod U_i) \leq \max\{\text{size}(U), \text{size}(S)\}$. | |
Hence | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-coproduct-algebraic-spaces} | |
applies to show that $\coprod X_i$ is an algebraic space which is | |
what we had to prove. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Algebraic spaces in the \'etale topology} | |
\label{section-spaces-etale} | |
\noindent | |
Let $S$ be a scheme. Instead of working with sheaves over | |
the big fppf site $(\Sch/S)_{fppf}$ we could work with sheaves | |
over the big \'etale site $(\Sch/S)_\etale$. All of the material in | |
Algebraic Spaces, Sections \ref{spaces-section-representable} and | |
\ref{spaces-section-representable-properties} | |
makes sense for sheaves over $(\Sch/S)_\etale$. | |
Thus we get a second notion of algebraic spaces by working in the | |
\'etale topology. This notion is (a priori) weaker then the notion introduced | |
in Algebraic Spaces, Definition \ref{spaces-definition-algebraic-space} | |
since a sheaf in the fppf topology is certainly a sheaf in the \'etale | |
topology. However, the notions are equivalent as is shown by the following | |
lemma. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-spaces-etale} | |
Denote the common underlying category of $\Sch_{fppf}$ and $\Sch_\etale$ by | |
$\Sch_\alpha$ (see Topologies, Remark \ref{topologies-remark-choice-sites}). | |
Let $S$ be an object of $\Sch_\alpha$. Let | |
$$ | |
F : (\Sch_\alpha/S)^{opp} \longrightarrow \textit{Sets} | |
$$ | |
be a presheaf with the following properties: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf for the \'etale topology, | |
\item the diagonal $\Delta : F \to F \times F$ is representable, and | |
\item there exists $U \in \Ob(\Sch_\alpha/S)$ | |
and $U \to F$ which is surjective and \'etale. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an algebraic space in the sense of | |
Algebraic Spaces, Definition \ref{spaces-definition-algebraic-space}. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Note that properties (2) and (3) of the lemma and the corresponding | |
properties (2) and (3) of | |
Algebraic Spaces, Definition \ref{spaces-definition-algebraic-space} | |
are independent of the topology. This is true because these properties | |
involve only the notion of a fibre product of presheaves, maps of | |
presheaves, the notion of a representable transformation of functors, | |
and what it means for such a transformation to be surjective and \'etale. | |
Thus all we have to prove is that an \'etale sheaf $F$ with properties | |
(2) and (3) is also an fppf sheaf. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
To do this, let $R = U \times_F U$. By (2) the presheaf $R$ is representable | |
by a scheme and by (3) the projections $R \to U$ are \'etale. Thus | |
$j : R \to U \times_S U$ is an \'etale equivalence relation. Moreover | |
$U \to F$ identifies $F$ as the quotient of $U$ by $R$ for the | |
\'etale topology: (a) if $T \to F$ is a morphism, then $\{T \times_F U \to T\}$ | |
is an \'etale covering, hence $U \to F$ is a surjection of sheaves for the | |
\'etale topology, (b) if $a, b : T \to U$ map to the same section of $F$, | |
then $(a, b) : T \to R$ hence $a$ and $b$ have the same image in the quotient | |
of $U$ by $R$ for the \'etale topology. Next, let $U/R$ denote the quotient | |
sheaf in the fppf topology which is an algebraic space by | |
Spaces, Theorem \ref{spaces-theorem-presentation}. | |
Thus we have morphisms (transformations of functors) | |
$$ | |
U \to F \to U/R. | |
$$ | |
By the aforementioned | |
Spaces, Theorem \ref{spaces-theorem-presentation} | |
the composition is representable, surjective, and \'etale. Hence for any | |
scheme $T$ and morphism $T \to U/R$ the fibre product $V = T \times_{U/R} U$ | |
is a scheme surjective and \'etale over $T$. In other words, $\{V \to U\}$ | |
is an \'etale covering. This proves that $U \to U/R$ is surjective as | |
a map of sheaves in the \'etale topology. It follows that | |
$F \to U/R$ is surjective as a map of sheaves in the \'etale topology. | |
On the other hand, the map $F \to U/R$ is injective (as a map of presheaves) | |
since $R = U \times_{U/R} U$ again by | |
Spaces, Theorem \ref{spaces-theorem-presentation}. | |
It follows that $F \to U/R$ is an isomorphism of \'etale sheaves, see | |
Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-mono-epi-sheaves} | |
which concludes the proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
There is also an analogue of | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-etale-locally-representable-gives-space}. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-spaces-etale-locally-representable} | |
Denote the common underlying category of $\Sch_{fppf}$ and $\Sch_\etale$ by | |
$\Sch_\alpha$ (see Topologies, Remark \ref{topologies-remark-choice-sites}). | |
Let $S$ be an object of $\Sch_\alpha$. Let | |
$$ | |
F : (\Sch_\alpha/S)^{opp} \longrightarrow \textit{Sets} | |
$$ | |
be a presheaf with the following properties: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf for the \'etale topology, | |
\item there exists an algebraic space $U$ over $S$ | |
and a map $U \to F$ which is representable by | |
algebraic spaces, surjective, and \'etale. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an algebraic space in the sense of | |
Algebraic Spaces, Definition \ref{spaces-definition-algebraic-space}. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Set $R = U \times_F U$. This is an algebraic space as $U \to F$ is assumed | |
representable by algebraic spaces. The projections $s, t : R \to U$ are | |
\'etale morphisms of algebraic spaces as $U \to F$ is assumed \'etale. | |
The map $j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is a monomorphism and an | |
equivalence relation as $R = U \times_F U$. By | |
Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap} | |
the fppf quotient sheaf $F' = U/R$ is an algebraic space. | |
The morphism $U \to F'$ is surjective, flat, and locally of finite | |
presentation by Lemma \ref{lemma-covering-quotient}. | |
The map $R \to U \times_{F'} U$ is surjective as a map of fppf | |
sheaves by Groupoids in Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence} | |
and since $j$ is a monomorphism it is an isomorphism. | |
Hence the base change of $U \to F'$ by $U \to F'$ is \'etale, | |
and we conclude that $U \to F'$ is \'etale by | |
Descent on Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-etale}. | |
Thus $U \to F'$ is surjective as a map of \'etale sheaves. | |
This means that $F'$ is equal to the quotient sheaf $U/R$ | |
in the \'etale topology (small check omitted). Hence we obtain | |
a canonical factorization $U \to F' \to F$ and $F' \to F$ is an injective | |
map of sheaves. On the other hand, $U \to F$ is surjective as a map | |
of \'etale sheaves and hence so is $F' \to F$. This means that $F' = F$ | |
and the proof is complete. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
In fact, it suffices to have a smooth cover by a scheme and it suffices | |
to assume the diagonal is representable by algebraic spaces. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-spaces-etale-smooth-cover} | |
Denote the common underlying category of $\Sch_{fppf}$ | |
and $\Sch_\etale$ by $\Sch_\alpha$ (see | |
Topologies, Remark \ref{topologies-remark-choice-sites}). Let $S$ be an object | |
of $\Sch_\alpha$. | |
$$ | |
F : (\Sch_\alpha/S)^{opp} \longrightarrow \textit{Sets} | |
$$ | |
be a presheaf with the following properties: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf for the \'etale topology, | |
\item the diagonal $\Delta : F \to F \times F$ is representable | |
by algebraic spaces, and | |
\item there exists $U \in \Ob(\Sch_\alpha/S)$ | |
and $U \to F$ which is surjective and smooth. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an algebraic space in the sense of | |
Algebraic Spaces, Definition \ref{spaces-definition-algebraic-space}. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
The proof mirrors the proof of Lemma \ref{lemma-spaces-etale}. Let | |
$R = U \times_F U$. By (2) the presheaf $R$ is an algebraic space and by (3) | |
the projections $R \to U$ are smooth and surjective. Denote $(U, R, s, t, c)$ | |
the groupoid associated to the equivalence relation $j : R \to U \times_S U$ | |
(see Groupoids in Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-equivalence-groupoid}). | |
By Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap} we see that $X = U/R$ (quotient | |
in the fppf-topology) is an algebraic space. Using that the smooth | |
topology and the \'etale topology have the same sheaves (by | |
More on Morphisms, Lemma \ref{more-morphisms-lemma-etale-dominates-smooth}) | |
we see the map $U \to F$ identifies $F$ as the quotient of | |
$U$ by $R$ for the smooth topology (details omitted). | |
Thus we have morphisms (transformations of functors) | |
$$ | |
U \to F \to X. | |
$$ | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-covering-quotient} we see that $U \to X$ is | |
surjective, flat and locally of finite presentation. By | |
Groupoids in Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence} | |
(and the fact that $j$ is a monomorphism) we have $R = U \times_X U$. By | |
Descent on Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-smooth} | |
we conclude that $U \to X$ is smooth and surjective (as the projections | |
$R \to U$ are smooth and surjective and $\{U \to X\}$ is an fppf | |
covering). Hence for any scheme $T$ and morphism $T \to X$ the fibre product | |
$T \times_X U$ is an algebraic space surjective and smooth over $T$. | |
Choose a scheme $V$ and a surjective \'etale morphism $V \to T \times_X U$. | |
Then $\{V \to T\}$ is a smooth covering such that $V \to T \to X$ | |
lifts to a morphism $V \to U$. This proves that | |
$U \to X$ is surjective as a map of sheaves in the smooth topology. | |
It follows that $F \to X$ is surjective as a map of sheaves in the smooth | |
topology. On the other hand, the map $F \to X$ is injective (as a map | |
of presheaves) since $R = U \times_X U$. | |
It follows that $F \to X$ is an isomorphism of smooth ($=$ \'etale) | |
sheaves, see Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-mono-epi-sheaves} | |
which concludes the proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Finally, here is the analogue of | |
Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-lemma-etale-locally-representable-gives-space} | |
with a smooth morphism covering the space. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-spaces-smooth-locally-representable} | |
Denote the common underlying category of $\Sch_{fppf}$ and $\Sch_\etale$ by | |
$\Sch_\alpha$ (see Topologies, Remark \ref{topologies-remark-choice-sites}). | |
Let $S$ be an object of $\Sch_\alpha$. Let | |
$$ | |
F : (\Sch_\alpha/S)^{opp} \longrightarrow \textit{Sets} | |
$$ | |
be a presheaf with the following properties: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $F$ is a sheaf for the \'etale topology, | |
\item there exists an algebraic space $U$ over $S$ | |
and a map $U \to F$ which is representable by | |
algebraic spaces, surjective, and smooth. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then $F$ is an algebraic space in the sense of | |
Algebraic Spaces, Definition \ref{spaces-definition-algebraic-space}. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
The proof is identical to the proof of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-spaces-etale-locally-representable}. | |
Set $R = U \times_F U$. This is an algebraic space as $U \to F$ is assumed | |
representable by algebraic spaces. The projections $s, t : R \to U$ are | |
smooth morphisms of algebraic spaces as $U \to F$ is assumed smooth. | |
The map $j = (t, s) : R \to U \times_S U$ is a monomorphism and an | |
equivalence relation as $R = U \times_F U$. By | |
Theorem \ref{theorem-final-bootstrap} | |
the fppf quotient sheaf $F' = U/R$ is an algebraic space. | |
The morphism $U \to F'$ is surjective, flat, and locally of finite | |
presentation by Lemma \ref{lemma-covering-quotient}. | |
The map $R \to U \times_{F'} U$ is surjective as a map of fppf | |
sheaves by Groupoids in Spaces, Lemma | |
\ref{spaces-groupoids-lemma-quotient-pre-equivalence} | |
and since $j$ is a monomorphism it is an isomorphism. | |
Hence the base change of $U \to F'$ by $U \to F'$ is smooth, | |
and we conclude that $U \to F'$ is smooth by | |
Descent on Spaces, Lemma \ref{spaces-descent-lemma-descending-property-smooth}. | |
Thus $U \to F'$ is surjective as a map of \'etale sheaves (as the | |
smooth topology is equal to the \'etale topology by | |
More on Morphisms, Lemma \ref{more-morphisms-lemma-etale-dominates-smooth}). | |
This means that $F'$ is equal to the quotient sheaf $U/R$ | |
in the \'etale topology (small check omitted). Hence we obtain | |
a canonical factorization $U \to F' \to F$ and $F' \to F$ is an injective | |
map of sheaves. On the other hand, $U \to F$ is surjective as a map | |
of \'etale sheaves (as the smooth topology is the same as the | |
\'etale topology) and hence so is $F' \to F$. This means that $F' = F$ | |
and the proof is complete. | |
\end{proof} | |
\input{chapters} | |
\bibliography{my} | |
\bibliographystyle{amsalpha} | |
\end{document} | |