Datasets:
Tasks:
Text Generation
Modalities:
Text
Sub-tasks:
language-modeling
Languages:
English
Size:
100K - 1M
License:
\input{preamble} | |
% OK, start here. | |
% | |
\begin{document} | |
\title{Crystalline Cohomology} | |
\maketitle | |
\phantomsection | |
\label{section-phantom} | |
\tableofcontents | |
\section{Introduction} | |
\label{section-introduction} | |
\noindent | |
This chapter is based on a lecture series given by Johan de Jong | |
held in 2012 at Columbia University. | |
The goals of this chapter are to give a quick introduction to | |
crystalline cohomology. A reference is the book \cite{Berthelot}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We have moved the more elementary purely algebraic discussion of divided | |
power rings to a preliminary chapter as it is also useful | |
in discussing Tate resolutions in commutative algebra. | |
Please see Divided Power Algebra, Section \ref{dpa-section-introduction}. | |
\section{Divided power envelope} | |
\label{section-divided-power-envelope} | |
\noindent | |
The construction of the following lemma will be dubbed the | |
divided power envelope. It will play an important role later. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divided-power-envelope} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map. Let $J \subset B$ be an ideal | |
with $IB \subset J$. There exists a homomorphism of | |
divided power rings | |
$$ | |
(A, I, \gamma) \longrightarrow (D, \bar J, \bar \gamma) | |
$$ | |
such that | |
$$ | |
\Hom_{(A, I, \gamma)}((D, \bar J, \bar \gamma), (C, K, \delta)) = | |
\Hom_{(A, I)}((B, J), (C, K)) | |
$$ | |
functorially in the divided power algebra $(C, K, \delta)$ over | |
$(A, I, \gamma)$. Here the LHS is morphisms of divided | |
power rings over $(A, I, \gamma)$ and the RHS is morphisms of | |
(ring, ideal) pairs over $(A, I)$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Denote $\mathcal{C}$ the category of divided power rings | |
$(C, K, \delta)$. Consider the functor | |
$F : \mathcal{C} \longrightarrow \textit{Sets}$ defined by | |
$$ | |
F(C, K, \delta) = | |
\left\{ | |
(\varphi, \psi) | |
\middle| | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\varphi : (A, I, \gamma) \to (C, K, \delta) | |
\text{ homomorphism of divided power rings} \\ | |
\psi : (B, J) \to (C, K)\text{ an } | |
A\text{-algebra homomorphism with }\psi(J) \subset K | |
\end{matrix} | |
\right\} | |
$$ | |
We will show that | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-a-version-of-brown} | |
applies to this functor which will | |
prove the lemma. Suppose that $(\varphi, \psi) \in F(C, K, \delta)$. | |
Let $C' \subset C$ be the subring generated by $\varphi(A)$, | |
$\psi(B)$, and $\delta_n(\psi(f))$ for all $f \in J$. | |
Let $K' \subset K \cap C'$ be the ideal of $C'$ generated by | |
$\varphi(I)$ and $\delta_n(\psi(f))$ for $f \in J$. | |
Then $(C', K', \delta|_{K'})$ is a divided power ring and | |
$C'$ has cardinality bounded by the cardinal | |
$\kappa = |A| \otimes |B|^{\aleph_0}$. | |
Moreover, $\varphi$ factors as $A \to C' \to C$ and $\psi$ factors | |
as $B \to C' \to C$. This proves assumption (1) of | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-a-version-of-brown} | |
holds. Assumption (2) is clear | |
as limits in the category of divided power rings commute with the | |
forgetful functor $(C, K, \delta) \mapsto (C, K)$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-limits} and its proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-divided-power-envelope} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map. Let $J \subset B$ be an ideal | |
with $IB \subset J$. The divided power algebra $(D, \bar J, \bar\gamma)$ | |
constructed in Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-envelope} | |
is called the {\it divided power envelope of $J$ in $B$ | |
relative to $(A, I, \gamma)$} and is denoted $D_B(J)$ or $D_{B, \gamma}(J)$. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma) \to (C, K, \delta)$ be a homomorphism of divided | |
power rings. The universal property of | |
$D_{B, \gamma}(J) = (D, \bar J, \bar \gamma)$ is | |
$$ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\text{ring maps }B \to C \\ | |
\text{ which map }J\text{ into }K | |
\end{matrix} | |
\longleftrightarrow | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\text{divided power homomorphisms} \\ | |
(D, \bar J, \bar \gamma) \to (C, K, \delta) | |
\end{matrix} | |
$$ | |
and the correspondence is given by precomposing with the map $B \to D$ | |
which corresponds to $\text{id}_D$. Here are some properties of | |
$(D, \bar J, \bar \gamma)$ which follow directly from the universal | |
property. There are $A$-algebra maps | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-divided-power-envelope} | |
B \longrightarrow D \longrightarrow B/J | |
\end{equation} | |
The first arrow maps $J$ into $\bar J$ and $\bar J$ is the kernel | |
of the second arrow. The elements $\bar\gamma_n(x)$ where $n > 0$ | |
and $x$ is an element in the image of $J \to D$ generate $\bar J$ | |
as an ideal in $D$ and generate $D$ as a $B$-algebra. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divided-power-envelop-quotient} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $\varphi : B' \to B$ be a surjection of $A$-algebras with kernel $K$. | |
Let $IB \subset J \subset B$ be an ideal. Let $J' \subset B'$ | |
be the inverse image of $J$. Write | |
$D_{B', \gamma}(J') = (D', \bar J', \bar\gamma)$. | |
Then $D_{B, \gamma}(J) = (D'/K', \bar J'/K', \bar\gamma)$ | |
where $K'$ is the ideal generated by the elements $\bar\gamma_n(k)$ | |
for $n \geq 1$ and $k \in K$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Write $D_{B, \gamma}(J) = (D, \bar J, \bar \gamma)$. | |
The universal property of $D'$ gives us a homomorphism $D' \to D$ | |
of divided power algebras. As $B' \to B$ and $J' \to J$ are surjective, we | |
see that $D' \to D$ is surjective (see remarks above). It is clear that | |
$\bar\gamma_n(k)$ is in the kernel for $n \geq 1$ and $k \in K$, i.e., | |
we obtain a homomorphism $D'/K' \to D$. Conversely, there exists a divided | |
power structure on $\bar J'/K' \subset D'/K'$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-kernel}. | |
Hence the universal property of $D$ gives an inverse $D \to D'/K'$ and we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
In the situation of Definition \ref{definition-divided-power-envelope} | |
we can choose a surjection $P \to B$ where $P$ is a polynomial | |
algebra over $A$ and let $J' \subset P$ be the inverse image of $J$. | |
The previous lemma describes $D_{B, \gamma}(J)$ in terms of | |
$D_{P, \gamma}(J')$. Note that $\gamma$ extends to a divided power | |
structure $\gamma'$ on $IP$ by | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-gamma-extends}. Hence | |
$D_{P, \gamma}(J') = D_{P, \gamma'}(J')$ is an example of a special | |
case of divided power envelopes we describe in the following lemma. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-describe-divided-power-envelope} | |
Let $(B, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power algebra. Let $I \subset J \subset B$ | |
be an ideal. Let $(D, \bar J, \bar \gamma)$ be the divided power envelope | |
of $J$ relative to $\gamma$. Choose elements $f_t \in J$, $t \in T$ such | |
that $J = I + (f_t)$. Then there exists a surjection | |
$$ | |
\Psi : B\langle x_t \rangle \longrightarrow D | |
$$ | |
of divided power rings mapping $x_t$ to the image of $f_t$ in $D$. | |
The kernel of $\Psi$ is generated by the elements $x_t - f_t$ and | |
all | |
$$ | |
\delta_n\left(\sum r_t x_t - r_0\right) | |
$$ | |
whenever $\sum r_t f_t = r_0$ in $B$ for some $r_t \in B$, $r_0 \in I$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
In the statement of the lemma we think of $B\langle x_t \rangle$ | |
as a divided power ring with ideal | |
$J' = IB\langle x_t \rangle + B\langle x_t \rangle_{+}$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Remark \ref{dpa-remark-divided-power-polynomial-algebra}. | |
The existence of $\Psi$ follows from the universal property of | |
divided power polynomial rings. Surjectivity of $\Psi$ follows from | |
the fact that its image is a divided power subring of $D$, hence equal to $D$ | |
by the universal property of $D$. It is clear that | |
$x_t - f_t$ is in the kernel. Set | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{R} = \{(r_0, r_t) \in I \oplus \bigoplus\nolimits_{t \in T} B | |
\mid \sum r_t f_t = r_0 \text{ in }B\} | |
$$ | |
If $(r_0, r_t) \in \mathcal{R}$ then it is clear that | |
$\sum r_t x_t - r_0$ is in the kernel. | |
As $\Psi$ is a homomorphism of divided power rings | |
and $\sum r_tx_t - r_0 \in J'$ | |
it follows that $\delta_n(\sum r_t x_t - r_0)$ is in the kernel as well. | |
Let $K \subset B\langle x_t \rangle$ be the ideal generated by | |
$x_t - f_t$ and the elements $\delta_n(\sum r_t x_t - r_0)$ for | |
$(r_0, r_t) \in \mathcal{R}$. | |
To show that $K = \Ker(\Psi)$ it suffices to show that | |
$\delta$ extends to $B\langle x_t \rangle/K$. Namely, if so the universal | |
property of $D$ gives a map $D \to B\langle x_t \rangle/K$ | |
inverse to $\Psi$. Hence we have to show that $K \cap J'$ is | |
preserved by $\delta_n$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-kernel}. | |
Let $K' \subset B\langle x_t \rangle$ be the ideal | |
generated by the elements | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\delta_m(\sum r_t x_t - r_0)$ where $m > 0$ and | |
$(r_0, r_t) \in \mathcal{R}$, | |
\item $x_{t'}^{[m]}(x_t - f_t)$ where $m > 0$ and $t', t \in I$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
We claim that $K' = K \cap J'$. The claim proves that $K \cap J'$ | |
is preserved by $\delta_n$, $n > 0$ by the criterion of | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-kernel} (2)(c) | |
and a computation of $\delta_n$ | |
of the elements listed which we leave to the reader. | |
To prove the claim note that $K' \subset K \cap J'$. | |
Conversely, if $h \in K \cap J'$ then, modulo $K'$ we can write | |
$$ | |
h = \sum r_t (x_t - f_t) | |
$$ | |
for some $r_t \in B$. As $h \in K \cap J' \subset J'$ | |
we see that $r_0 = \sum r_t f_t \in I$. Hence $(r_0, r_t) \in \mathcal{R}$ | |
and we see that | |
$$ | |
h = \sum r_t x_t - r_0 | |
$$ | |
is in $K'$ as desired. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divided-power-envelope-add-variables} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $B$ be an $A$-algebra and $IB \subset J \subset B$ an ideal. | |
Let $x_i$ be a set of variables. Then | |
$$ | |
D_{B[x_i], \gamma}(JB[x_i] + (x_i)) = D_{B, \gamma}(J) \langle x_i \rangle | |
$$ | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
One possible proof is to deduce this from | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-describe-divided-power-envelope} | |
as any relation between $x_i$ in $B[x_i]$ is trivial. | |
On the other hand, the lemma follows from the universal property | |
of the divided power polynomial algebra and the universal property of | |
divided power envelopes. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Conditions (1) and (2) of the following lemma hold if $B \to B'$ is flat | |
at all primes of $V(IB') \subset \Spec(B')$ and is very closely related | |
to that condition, see | |
Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-what-does-it-mean}. | |
It in particular says that taking the divided power | |
envelope commutes with localization. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-flat-base-change-divided-power-envelope} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $B \to B'$ be a homomorphism of $A$-algebras. | |
Assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $B/IB \to B'/IB'$ is flat, and | |
\item $\text{Tor}_1^B(B', B/IB) = 0$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then for any ideal $IB \subset J \subset B$ the canonical map | |
$$ | |
D_B(J) \otimes_B B' \longrightarrow D_{B'}(JB') | |
$$ | |
is an isomorphism. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Set $D = D_B(J)$ and denote $\bar J \subset D$ its divided power ideal | |
with divided power structure $\bar\gamma$. The universal property of | |
$D$ produces a $B$-algebra map $D \to D_{B'}(JB')$, whence a map as in | |
the lemma. It suffices to show that | |
the divided powers $\bar\gamma$ extend to $D \otimes_B B'$ since then | |
the universal property of $D_{B'}(JB')$ will produce a map | |
$D_{B'}(JB') \to D \otimes_B B'$ inverse to the one in the lemma. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Choose a surjection $P \to B'$ where $P$ is a polynomial algebra over $B$. | |
In particular $B \to P$ is flat, hence $D \to D \otimes_B P$ is flat by | |
Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-flat-base-change}. | |
Then $\bar\gamma$ extends to $D \otimes_B P$ by | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-gamma-extends}; we | |
will denote this extension | |
$\bar\gamma$ also. Set $\mathfrak a = \Ker(P \to B')$ so that | |
we have the short exact sequence | |
$$ | |
0 \to \mathfrak a \to P \to B' \to 0 | |
$$ | |
Thus $\text{Tor}_1^B(B', B/IB) = 0$ implies that | |
$\mathfrak a \cap IP = I\mathfrak a$. | |
Now we have the following commutative diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
B/J \otimes_B \mathfrak a \ar[r]_\beta & | |
B/J \otimes_B P \ar[r] & | |
B/J \otimes_B B' \\ | |
D \otimes_B \mathfrak a \ar[r]^\alpha \ar[u] & | |
D \otimes_B P \ar[r] \ar[u] & | |
D \otimes_B B' \ar[u] \\ | |
\bar J \otimes_B \mathfrak a \ar[r] \ar[u] & | |
\bar J \otimes_B P \ar[r] \ar[u] & | |
\bar J \otimes_B B' \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
This diagram is exact even with $0$'s added at the top and the right. | |
We have to show the divided powers on the ideal | |
$\bar J \otimes_B P$ preserve the ideal | |
$\Im(\alpha) \cap \bar J \otimes_B P$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-kernel}. | |
Consider the exact sequence | |
$$ | |
0 \to \mathfrak a/I\mathfrak a \to P/IP \to B'/IB' \to 0 | |
$$ | |
(which uses that $\mathfrak a \cap IP = I\mathfrak a$ as seen above). | |
As $B'/IB'$ is flat over $B/IB$ this sequence remains exact after | |
applying $B/J \otimes_{B/IB} -$, see | |
Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-flat-tor-zero}. Hence | |
$$ | |
\Ker(B/J \otimes_{B/IB} \mathfrak a/I\mathfrak a \to | |
B/J \otimes_{B/IB} P/IP) = | |
\Ker(\mathfrak a/J\mathfrak a \to P/JP) | |
$$ | |
is zero. Thus $\beta$ is injective. It follows that | |
$\Im(\alpha) \cap \bar J \otimes_B P$ is the | |
image of $\bar J \otimes \mathfrak a$. Now if | |
$f \in \bar J$ and $a \in \mathfrak a$, then | |
$\bar\gamma_n(f \otimes a) = \bar\gamma_n(f) \otimes a^n$ | |
hence the result is clear. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
The following lemma is a special case of | |
\cite[Proposition 2.1.7]{dJ-crystalline} which in turn is a | |
generalization of \cite[Proposition 2.8.2]{Berthelot}. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-flat-extension-divided-power-envelope} | |
Let $(B, I, \gamma) \to (B', I', \gamma')$ be a homomorphism of | |
divided power rings. Let $I \subset J \subset B$ and | |
$I' \subset J' \subset B'$ be ideals. Assume | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $B/I \to B'/I'$ is flat, and | |
\item $J' = JB' + I'$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then the canonical map | |
$$ | |
D_{B, \gamma}(J) \otimes_B B' \longrightarrow D_{B', \gamma'}(J') | |
$$ | |
is an isomorphism. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Set $D = D_{B, \gamma}(J)$. Choose elements $f_t \in J$ which generate $J/I$. | |
Set $\mathcal{R} = \{(r_0, r_t) \in I \oplus \bigoplus\nolimits_{t \in T} B | |
\mid \sum r_t f_t = r_0 \text{ in }B\}$ as in the proof of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-describe-divided-power-envelope}. This lemma shows that | |
$$ | |
D = B\langle x_t \rangle/ K | |
$$ | |
where $K$ is generated by the elements $x_t - f_t$ and | |
$\delta_n(\sum r_t x_t - r_0)$ for $(r_0, r_t) \in \mathcal{R}$. | |
Thus we see that | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-base-change} | |
D \otimes_B B' = B'\langle x_t \rangle/K' | |
\end{equation} | |
where $K'$ is generated by the images in $B'\langle x_t \rangle$ | |
of the generators of $K$ listed above. Let $f'_t \in B'$ be the image | |
of $f_t$. By assumption (1) we see that the elements $f'_t \in J'$ | |
generate $J'/I'$ and we see that $x_t - f'_t \in K'$. Set | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{R}' = | |
\{(r'_0, r'_t) \in I' \oplus \bigoplus\nolimits_{t \in T} B' | |
\mid \sum r'_t f'_t = r'_0 \text{ in }B'\} | |
$$ | |
To finish the proof we have to show that | |
$\delta'_n(\sum r'_t x_t - r'_0) \in K'$ for | |
$(r'_0, r'_t) \in \mathcal{R}'$, because then the presentation | |
(\ref{equation-base-change}) of $D \otimes_B B'$ is identical | |
to the presentation of $D_{B', \gamma'}(J')$ obtain in | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-describe-divided-power-envelope} from the generators $f'_t$. | |
Suppose that $(r'_0, r'_t) \in \mathcal{R}'$. Then | |
$\sum r'_t f'_t = 0$ in $B'/I'$. As $B/I \to B'/I'$ is flat by | |
assumption (1) we can apply the equational criterion of flatness | |
(Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-flat-eq}) to see | |
that there exist an $m > 0$ and | |
$r_{jt} \in B$ and $c_j \in B'$, $j = 1, \ldots, m$ such | |
that | |
$$ | |
r_{j0} = \sum\nolimits_t r_{jt} f_t \in I \text{ for } j = 1, \ldots, m | |
$$ | |
and | |
$$ | |
i'_t = r'_t - \sum\nolimits_j c_j r_{jt} \in I' \text{ for all }t | |
$$ | |
Note that this also implies that | |
$r'_0 = \sum_t i'_t f_t + \sum_j c_j r_{j0}$. | |
Then we have | |
\begin{align*} | |
\delta'_n(\sum\nolimits_t r'_t x_t - r'_0) | |
& = | |
\delta'_n( | |
\sum\nolimits_t i'_t x_t + | |
\sum\nolimits_{t, j} c_j r_{jt} x_t - | |
\sum\nolimits_t i'_t f_t - | |
\sum\nolimits_j c_j r_{j0}) \\ | |
& = | |
\delta'_n( | |
\sum\nolimits_t i'_t(x_t - f_t) + | |
\sum\nolimits_j c_j (\sum\nolimits_t r_{jt} x_t - r_{j0})) | |
\end{align*} | |
Since $\delta_n(a + b) = \sum_{m = 0, \ldots, n} \delta_m(a) \delta_{n - m}(b)$ | |
and since $\delta_m(\sum i'_t(x_t - f_t))$ is in the ideal | |
generated by $x_t - f_t \in K'$ for $m > 0$, it suffices to prove that | |
$\delta_n(\sum c_j (\sum r_{jt} x_t - r_{j0}))$ is in $K'$. | |
For this we use | |
$$ | |
\delta_n(\sum\nolimits_j c_j (\sum\nolimits_t r_{jt} x_t - r_{j0})) | |
= | |
\sum c_1^{n_1} \ldots c_m^{n_m} | |
\delta_{n_1}(\sum r_{1t} x_t - r_{10}) \ldots | |
\delta_{n_m}(\sum r_{mt} x_t - r_{m0}) | |
$$ | |
where the sum is over $n_1 + \ldots + n_m = n$. This proves what we want. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Some explicit divided power thickenings} | |
\label{section-explicit-thickenings} | |
\noindent | |
The constructions in this section will help us to define the connection | |
on a crystal in modules on the crystalline site. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divided-power-first-order-thickening} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. Let $M$ be an $A$-module. | |
Let $B = A \oplus M$ as an $A$-algebra where $M$ is an ideal of square zero | |
and set $J = I \oplus M$. Set | |
$$ | |
\delta_n(x + z) = \gamma_n(x) + \gamma_{n - 1}(x)z | |
$$ | |
for $x \in I$ and $z \in M$. | |
Then $\delta$ is a divided power structure and | |
$A \to B$ is a homomorphism of divided power rings from | |
$(A, I, \gamma)$ to $(B, J, \delta)$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We have to check conditions (1) -- (5) of | |
Divided Power Algebra, Definition \ref{dpa-definition-divided-powers}. | |
We will prove this directly for this case, but please see the proof of | |
the next lemma for a method which avoids calculations. | |
Conditions (1) and (3) are clear. Condition (2) follows from | |
\begin{align*} | |
\delta_n(x + z)\delta_m(x + z) | |
& = | |
(\gamma_n(x) + \gamma_{n - 1}(x)z)(\gamma_m(x) + \gamma_{m - 1}(x)z) \\ | |
& = \gamma_n(x)\gamma_m(x) + \gamma_n(x)\gamma_{m - 1}(x)z + | |
\gamma_{n - 1}(x)\gamma_m(x)z \\ | |
& = | |
\frac{(n + m)!}{n!m!} \gamma_{n + m}(x) + | |
\left(\frac{(n + m - 1)!}{n!(m - 1)!} + | |
\frac{(n + m - 1)!}{(n - 1)!m!}\right) | |
\gamma_{n + m - 1}(x) z \\ | |
& = | |
\frac{(n + m)!}{n!m!}\delta_{n + m}(x + z) | |
\end{align*} | |
Condition (5) follows from | |
\begin{align*} | |
\delta_n(\delta_m(x + z)) | |
& = | |
\delta_n(\gamma_m(x) + \gamma_{m - 1}(x)z) \\ | |
& = | |
\gamma_n(\gamma_m(x)) + \gamma_{n - 1}(\gamma_m(x))\gamma_{m - 1}(x)z \\ | |
& = | |
\frac{(nm)!}{n! (m!)^n} \gamma_{nm}(x) + | |
\frac{((n - 1)m)!}{(n - 1)! (m!)^{n - 1}} | |
\gamma_{(n - 1)m}(x) \gamma_{m - 1}(x) z \\ | |
& = \frac{(nm)!}{n! (m!)^n}(\gamma_{nm}(x) + \gamma_{nm - 1}(x) z) | |
\end{align*} | |
by elementary number theory. To prove (4) we have to see that | |
$$ | |
\delta_n(x + x' + z + z') | |
= | |
\gamma_n(x + x') + \gamma_{n - 1}(x + x')(z + z') | |
$$ | |
is equal to | |
$$ | |
\sum\nolimits_{i = 0}^n | |
(\gamma_i(x) + \gamma_{i - 1}(x)z) | |
(\gamma_{n - i}(x') + \gamma_{n - i - 1}(x')z') | |
$$ | |
This follows easily on collecting the coefficients of | |
$1$, $z$, and $z'$ and using condition (4) for $\gamma$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divided-power-second-order-thickening} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. Let $M$, $N$ be $A$-modules. | |
Let $q : M \times M \to N$ be an $A$-bilinear map. | |
Let $B = A \oplus M \oplus N$ as an $A$-algebra with multiplication | |
$$ | |
(x, z, w)\cdot (x', z', w') = (xx', xz' + x'z, xw' + x'w + q(z, z') + q(z', z)) | |
$$ | |
and set $J = I \oplus M \oplus N$. Set | |
$$ | |
\delta_n(x, z, w) = (\gamma_n(x), \gamma_{n - 1}(x)z, | |
\gamma_{n - 1}(x)w + \gamma_{n - 2}(x)q(z, z)) | |
$$ | |
for $(x, z, w) \in J$. | |
Then $\delta$ is a divided power structure and | |
$A \to B$ is a homomorphism of divided power rings from | |
$(A, I, \gamma)$ to $(B, J, \delta)$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Suppose we want to prove that property (4) of | |
Divided Power Algebra, Definition \ref{dpa-definition-divided-powers} | |
is satisfied. Pick $(x, z, w)$ and $(x', z', w')$ in $J$. | |
Pick a map | |
$$ | |
A_0 = \mathbf{Z}\langle s, s'\rangle \longrightarrow A,\quad | |
s \longmapsto x, | |
s' \longmapsto x' | |
$$ | |
which is possible by the universal property of divided power | |
polynomial rings. Set $M_0 = A_0 \oplus A_0$ and | |
$N_0 = A_0 \oplus A_0 \oplus M_0 \otimes_{A_0} M_0$. | |
Let $q_0 : M_0 \times M_0 \to N_0$ be the obvious map. | |
Define $M_0 \to M$ as the $A_0$-linear map which sends | |
the basis vectors of $M_0$ to $z$ and $z'$. Define $N_0 \to N$ | |
as the $A_0$ linear map which sends the first two basis vectors | |
of $N_0$ to $w$ and $w'$ and uses | |
$M_0 \otimes_{A_0} M_0 \to M \otimes_A M \xrightarrow{q} N$ | |
on the last summand. Then we see that it suffices to prove the | |
identity (4) for the situation $(A_0, M_0, N_0, q_0)$. | |
Similarly for the other identities. This reduces us to the case | |
of a $\mathbf{Z}$-torsion free ring $A$ and $A$-torsion free modules. | |
In this case all we have to do is show that | |
$$ | |
n! \delta_n(x, z, w) = (x, z, w)^n | |
$$ | |
in the ring $A$, see Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-silly}. | |
To see this note that | |
$$ | |
(x, z, w)^2 = (x^2, 2xz, 2xw + 2q(z, z)) | |
$$ | |
and by induction | |
$$ | |
(x, z, w)^n = (x^n, nx^{n - 1}z, nx^{n - 1}w + n(n - 1)x^{n - 2}q(z, z)) | |
$$ | |
On the other hand, | |
$$ | |
n! \delta_n(x, z, w) = (n!\gamma_n(x), n!\gamma_{n - 1}(x)z, | |
n!\gamma_{n - 1}(x)w + n!\gamma_{n - 2}(x) q(z, z)) | |
$$ | |
which matches. This finishes the proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Compatibility} | |
\label{section-compatibility} | |
\noindent | |
This section isn't required reading; it explains how our discussion | |
fits with that of \cite{Berthelot}. | |
Consider the following technical notion. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-compatible} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ and $(B, J, \delta)$ be divided power rings. | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map. We say | |
{\it $\delta$ is compatible with $\gamma$} | |
if there exists a divided power structure $\bar\gamma$ on | |
$J + IB$ such that | |
$$ | |
(A, I, \gamma) \to (B, J + IB, \bar \gamma)\quad\text{and}\quad | |
(B, J, \delta) \to (B, J + IB, \bar \gamma) | |
$$ | |
are homomorphisms of divided power rings. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $A \to C$ be a ring map with $p$ nilpotent in $C$. | |
Assume that $\gamma$ extends to $IC$ (see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-gamma-extends}). | |
In this situation, the (big affine) crystalline site of | |
$\Spec(C)$ over $\Spec(A)$ | |
as defined in \cite{Berthelot} | |
is the opposite of the category of systems | |
$$ | |
(B, J, \delta, A \to B, C \to B/J) | |
$$ | |
where | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $(B, J, \delta)$ is a divided power ring with $p$ nilpotent in $B$, | |
\item $\delta$ is compatible with $\gamma$, and | |
\item the diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
B \ar[r] & B/J \\ | |
A \ar[u] \ar[r] & C \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
is commutative. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
The conditions | |
``$\gamma$ extends to $C$ and $\delta$ compatible with $\gamma$'' | |
are used in \cite{Berthelot} to insure that | |
the crystalline cohomology of $\Spec(C)$ is the same as the crystalline | |
cohomology of $\Spec(C/IC)$. We will avoid this issue | |
by working exclusively with $C$ such that $IC = 0$\footnote{Of course there | |
will be a price to pay.}. In this case, | |
for a system $(B, J, \delta, A \to B, C \to B/J)$ as above, | |
the commutativity of the displayed diagram above implies $IB \subset J$ and | |
compatibility is equivalent to the condition that | |
$(A, I, \gamma) \to (B, J, \delta)$ is a homomorphism of divided | |
power rings. | |
\section{Affine crystalline site} | |
\label{section-affine-site} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we discuss the algebraic variant of the crystalline site. | |
Our basic situation in which we discuss this material will be as | |
follows. | |
\begin{situation} | |
\label{situation-affine} | |
Here $p$ is a prime number, $(A, I, \gamma)$ is a divided power | |
ring such that $A$ is a $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$-algebra, and $A \to C$ is a | |
ring map such that $IC = 0$ and such that $p$ is nilpotent in $C$. | |
\end{situation} | |
\noindent | |
Usually the prime number $p$ will be contained in the | |
divided power ideal $I$. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-affine-thickening} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item A {\it divided power thickening} of $C$ over $(A, I, \gamma)$ | |
is a homomorphism of divided power algebras $(A, I, \gamma) \to (B, J, \delta)$ | |
such that $p$ is nilpotent in $B$ and a ring map $C \to B/J$ such that | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
B \ar[r] & B/J \\ | |
& C \ar[u] \\ | |
A \ar[uu] \ar[r] & A/I \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
is commutative. | |
\item A {\it homomorphism of divided power thickenings} | |
$$ | |
(B, J, \delta, C \to B/J) \longrightarrow (B', J', \delta', C \to B'/J') | |
$$ | |
is a homomorphism $\varphi : B \to B'$ of divided power $A$-algebras such | |
that $C \to B/J \to B'/J'$ is the given map $C \to B'/J'$. | |
\item We denote $\text{CRIS}(C/A, I, \gamma)$ or simply $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ | |
the category of divided power thickenings of $C$ over $(A, I, \gamma)$. | |
\item We denote $\text{Cris}(C/A, I, \gamma)$ or simply $\text{Cris}(C/A)$ | |
the full subcategory consisting of $(B, J, \delta, C \to B/J)$ such that | |
$C \to B/J$ is an isomorphism. We often denote such an object | |
$(B \to C, \delta)$ with $J = \Ker(B \to C)$ being understood. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
Note that for a divided power thickening $(B, J, \delta)$ as above | |
the ideal $J$ is locally nilpotent, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-nil}. | |
There is a canonical functor | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-forget-affine} | |
\text{CRIS}(C/A) \longrightarrow C\text{-algebras},\quad | |
(B, J, \delta) \longmapsto B/J | |
\end{equation} | |
This category does not have equalizers or fibre products in general. | |
It also doesn't have an initial object ($=$ empty colimit) in general. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-affine-thickenings-colimits} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ has finite products (but not infinite ones), | |
\item $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ has all finite nonempty colimits and | |
(\ref{equation-forget-affine}) commutes with these, and | |
\item $\text{Cris}(C/A)$ has all finite nonempty colimits and | |
$\text{Cris}(C/A) \to \text{CRIS}(C/A)$ commutes with them. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
The empty product, i.e., the final object in the category of divided | |
power thickenings of $C$ over $(A, I, \gamma)$, is the zero ring viewed | |
as an $A$-algebra endowed with the zero ideal and the unique divided powers | |
on the zero ideal and finally endowed with the unique homomorphism of $C$ to | |
the zero ring. If $(B_t, J_t, \delta_t)_{t \in T}$ is a family of objects of | |
$\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ then we can form the product | |
$(\prod_t B_t, \prod_t J_t, \prod_t \delta_t)$ as in | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-limits}. | |
The map $C \to \prod B_t/\prod J_t = \prod B_t/J_t$ is clear. | |
However, we are only guaranteed that $p$ is nilpotent in $\prod_t B_t$ | |
if $T$ is finite. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Given two objects $(B, J, \gamma)$ and $(B', J', \gamma')$ of | |
$\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ we can form a cocartesian diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(B, J, \delta) \ar[r] & (B'', J'', \delta'') \\ | |
(A, I, \gamma) \ar[r] \ar[u] & (B', J', \delta') \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
in the category of divided power rings. Then we see that we have | |
$$ | |
B''/J'' = B/J \otimes_{A/I} B'/J' \longleftarrow C \otimes_{A/I} C | |
$$ | |
see Divided Power Algebra, Remark \ref{dpa-remark-forgetful}. | |
Denote $J'' \subset K \subset B''$ | |
the ideal such that | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
B''/J'' \ar[r] & B''/K \\ | |
C \otimes_{A/I} C \ar[r] \ar[u] & C \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
is a pushout, i.e., $B''/K \cong B/J \otimes_C B'/J'$. | |
Let $D_{B''}(K) = (D, \bar K, \bar \delta)$ | |
be the divided power envelope of $K$ in $B''$ relative to | |
$(B'', J'', \delta'')$. Then it is easily verified that | |
$(D, \bar K, \bar \delta)$ is a coproduct of $(B, J, \delta)$ and | |
$(B', J', \delta')$ in $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Next, we come to coequalizers. Let | |
$\alpha, \beta : (B, J, \delta) \to (B', J', \delta')$ be morphisms of | |
$\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. Consider $B'' = B'/ (\alpha(b) - \beta(b))$. Let | |
$J'' \subset B''$ be the image of $J'$. Let | |
$D_{B''}(J'') = (D, \bar J, \bar\delta)$ be the divided power envelope of | |
$J''$ in $B''$ relative to $(B', J', \delta')$. Then it is easily verified | |
that $(D, \bar J, \bar \delta)$ is the coequalizer of $(B, J, \delta)$ and | |
$(B', J', \delta')$ in $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
By Categories, Lemma \ref{categories-lemma-almost-finite-colimits-exist} | |
we have all finite nonempty colimits in $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. The constructions | |
above shows that (\ref{equation-forget-affine}) commutes with them. | |
This formally implies part (3) as $\text{Cris}(C/A)$ is the fibre category | |
of (\ref{equation-forget-affine}) over $C$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-completed-affine-site} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine} we denote | |
$\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$ the category whose objects are | |
pairs $(B \to C, \delta)$ such that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $B$ is a $p$-adically complete $A$-algebra, | |
\item $B \to C$ is a surjection of $A$-algebras, | |
\item $\delta$ is a divided power structure on $\Ker(B \to C)$, | |
\item $A \to B$ is a homomorphism of divided power rings. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Morphisms are defined as in Definition \ref{definition-affine-thickening}. | |
Then $\text{Cris}(C/A) \subset \text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$ is the full | |
subcategory consisting of those $B$ such that $p$ is nilpotent in $B$. | |
Conversely, any object $(B \to C, \delta)$ of $\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$ | |
is equal to the limit | |
$$ | |
(B \to C, \delta) = \lim_e (B/p^eB \to C, \delta) | |
$$ | |
where for $e \gg 0$ the object $(B/p^eB \to C, \delta)$ lies | |
in $\text{Cris}(C/A)$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-extend-to-completion}. | |
In particular, we see that $\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$ is a full subcategory | |
of the category of pro-objects of $\text{Cris}(C/A)$, see | |
Categories, Remark \ref{categories-remark-pro-category}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-list-properties} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
Let $P \to C$ be a surjection of $A$-algebras with kernel $J$. | |
Write $D_{P, \gamma}(J) = (D, \bar J, \bar\gamma)$. | |
Let $(D^\wedge, J^\wedge, \bar\gamma^\wedge)$ be the | |
$p$-adic completion of $D$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-extend-to-completion}. | |
For every $e \geq 1$ set $P_e = P/p^eP$ and $J_e \subset P_e$ | |
the image of $J$ and write | |
$D_{P_e, \gamma}(J_e) = (D_e, \bar J_e, \bar\gamma)$. | |
Then for all $e$ large enough we have | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $p^eD \subset \bar J$ and $p^eD^\wedge \subset \bar J^\wedge$ | |
are preserved by divided powers, | |
\item $D^\wedge/p^eD^\wedge = D/p^eD = D_e$ as divided power rings, | |
\item $(D_e, \bar J_e, \bar\gamma)$ is an object of $\text{Cris}(C/A)$, | |
\item $(D^\wedge, \bar J^\wedge, \bar\gamma^\wedge)$ is equal to | |
$\lim_e (D_e, \bar J_e, \bar\gamma)$, and | |
\item $(D^\wedge, \bar J^\wedge, \bar\gamma^\wedge)$ is an object of | |
$\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Part (1) follows from | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-extend-to-completion}. | |
It is a general property of $p$-adic completion that | |
$D/p^eD = D^\wedge/p^eD^\wedge$. Since $D/p^eD$ is a divided power ring | |
and since $P \to D/p^eD$ factors through $P_e$, the universal property of | |
$D_e$ produces a map $D_e \to D/p^eD$. Conversely, the universal property | |
of $D$ produces a map $D \to D_e$ which factors through $D/p^eD$. We omit | |
the verification that these maps are mutually inverse. This proves (2). | |
If $e$ is large enough, then $p^eC = 0$, hence we see (3) holds. | |
Part (4) follows from | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-extend-to-completion}. | |
Part (5) is clear from the definitions. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-set-generators} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
Let $P$ be a polynomial algebra over $A$ and let | |
$P \to C$ be a surjection of $A$-algebras with kernel $J$. | |
With $(D_e, \bar J_e, \bar\gamma)$ as in Lemma \ref{lemma-list-properties}: | |
for every object $(B, J_B, \delta)$ of $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ there | |
exists an $e$ and a morphism $D_e \to B$ of $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We can find an $A$-algebra homomorphism $P \to B$ | |
lifting the map $C \to B/J_B$. By our definition of | |
$\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ we see that $p^eB = 0$ for | |
some $e$ hence $P \to B$ factors as $P \to P_e \to B$. | |
By the universal property of the divided power envelope we | |
conclude that $P_e \to B$ factors through $D_e$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-generator-completion} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
Let $P$ be a polynomial algebra over $A$ and let | |
$P \to C$ be a surjection of $A$-algebras with kernel $J$. | |
Let $(D, \bar J, \bar\gamma)$ be the $p$-adic completion of | |
$D_{P, \gamma}(J)$. For every object $(B \to C, \delta)$ of | |
$\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$ there | |
exists a morphism $D \to B$ of $\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We can find an $A$-algebra homomorphism $P \to B$ compatible | |
with maps to $C$. By our definition of | |
$\text{Cris}(C/A)$ we see that $P \to B$ factors as | |
$P \to D_{P, \gamma}(J) \to B$. As $B$ is $p$-adically complete | |
we can factor this map through $D$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Module of differentials} | |
\label{section-differentials} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we develop a theory of modules of differentials | |
for divided power rings. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-derivation} | |
Let $A$ be a ring. Let $(B, J, \delta)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map. Let $M$ be an $B$-module. | |
A {\it divided power $A$-derivation} into $M$ is a map | |
$\theta : B \to M$ which is additive, annihilates the elements | |
of $A$, satisfies the Leibniz rule | |
$\theta(bb') = b\theta(b') + b'\theta(b)$ and satisfies | |
$$ | |
\theta(\delta_n(x)) = \delta_{n - 1}(x)\theta(x) | |
$$ | |
for all $n \geq 1$ and all $x \in J$. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
In the situation of the definition, just as in the case of usual | |
derivations, there exists a {\it universal divided power $A$-derivation} | |
$$ | |
\text{d}_{B/A, \delta} : B \to \Omega_{B/A, \delta} | |
$$ | |
such that any divided power $A$-derivation $\theta : B \to M$ is equal to | |
$\theta = \xi \circ d_{B/A, \delta}$ for some unique $B$-linear map | |
$\xi : \Omega_{B/A, \delta} \to M$. If $(A, I, \gamma) \to (B, J, \delta)$ | |
is a homomorphism of divided power rings, then we can forget the | |
divided powers on $A$ and consider the divided power derivations of | |
$B$ over $A$. Here are some basic properties of the universal | |
module of (divided power) differentials. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-omega} | |
Let $A$ be a ring. Let $(B, J, \delta)$ be a divided power ring and | |
$A \to B$ a ring map. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item Consider $B[x]$ with divided power ideal $(JB[x], \delta')$ | |
where $\delta'$ is the extension of $\delta$ to $B[x]$. Then | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{B[x]/A, \delta'} = | |
\Omega_{B/A, \delta} \otimes_B B[x] \oplus B[x]\text{d}x. | |
$$ | |
\item Consider $B\langle x \rangle$ with divided power ideal | |
$(JB\langle x \rangle + B\langle x \rangle_{+}, \delta')$. Then | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{B\langle x\rangle/A, \delta'} = | |
\Omega_{B/A, \delta} \otimes_B B\langle x \rangle \oplus | |
B\langle x\rangle \text{d}x. | |
$$ | |
\item Let $K \subset J$ be an ideal preserved by $\delta_n$ for | |
all $n > 0$. Set $B' = B/K$ and denote $\delta'$ the induced | |
divided power on $J/K$. Then $\Omega_{B'/A, \delta'}$ is the quotient | |
of $\Omega_{B/A, \delta} \otimes_B B'$ by the $B'$-submodule generated | |
by $\text{d}k$ for $k \in K$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
These are proved directly from the construction of $\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$ | |
as the free $B$-module on the elements $\text{d}b$ modulo the relations | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\text{d}(b + b') = \text{d}b + \text{d}b'$, $b, b' \in B$, | |
\item $\text{d}a = 0$, $a \in A$, | |
\item $\text{d}(bb') = b \text{d}b' + b' \text{d}b$, $b, b' \in B$, | |
\item $\text{d}\delta_n(f) = \delta_{n - 1}(f)\text{d}f$, $f \in J$, $n > 1$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Note that the last relation explains why we get ``the same'' answer for | |
the divided power polynomial algebra and the usual polynomial algebra: | |
in the first case $x$ is an element of the divided power ideal and hence | |
$\text{d}x^{[n]} = x^{[n - 1]}\text{d}x$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. In this setting the | |
correct version of the powers of $I$ is given by the divided powers | |
$$ | |
I^{[n]} = \text{ideal generated by } | |
\gamma_{e_1}(x_1) \ldots \gamma_{e_t}(x_t) | |
\text{ with }\sum e_j \geq n\text{ and }x_j \in I. | |
$$ | |
Of course we have $I^n \subset I^{[n]}$. Note that $I^{[1]} = I$. | |
Sometimes we also set $I^{[0]} = A$. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-diagonal-and-differentials} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma) \to (B, J, \delta)$ be a homomorphism | |
of divided power rings. Let $(B(1), J(1), \delta(1))$ be the coproduct | |
of $(B, J, \delta)$ with itself over $(A, I, \gamma)$, i.e., | |
such that | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(B, J, \delta) \ar[r] & (B(1), J(1), \delta(1)) \\ | |
(A, I, \gamma) \ar[r] \ar[u] & (B, J, \delta) \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
is cocartesian. Denote $K = \Ker(B(1) \to B)$. | |
Then $K \cap J(1) \subset J(1)$ is preserved by the divided power | |
structure and | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{B/A, \delta} = K/ \left(K^2 + (K \cap J(1))^{[2]}\right) | |
$$ | |
canonically. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
The fact that $K \cap J(1) \subset J(1)$ is preserved by the divided power | |
structure follows from the fact that $B(1) \to B$ is a homomorphism of | |
divided power rings. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Recall that $K/K^2$ has a canonical $B$-module structure. | |
Denote $s_0, s_1 : B \to B(1)$ the two coprojections and consider | |
the map $\text{d} : B \to K/K^2 +(K \cap J(1))^{[2]}$ given by | |
$b \mapsto s_1(b) - s_0(b)$. It is clear that $\text{d}$ is additive, | |
annihilates $A$, and satisfies the Leibniz rule. | |
We claim that $\text{d}$ is a divided power $A$-derivation. | |
Let $x \in J$. Set $y = s_1(x)$ and $z = s_0(x)$. | |
Denote $\delta$ the divided power structure on $J(1)$. | |
We have to show that $\delta_n(y) - \delta_n(z) = \delta_{n - 1}(y)(y - z)$ | |
modulo $K^2 +(K \cap J(1))^{[2]}$ for $n \geq 1$. | |
The equality holds for $n = 1$. Assume $n > 1$. | |
Note that $\delta_i(y - z)$ lies in $(K \cap J(1))^{[2]}$ for $i > 1$. | |
Calculating modulo $K^2 + (K \cap J(1))^{[2]}$ we have | |
$$ | |
\delta_n(z) = \delta_n(z - y + y) = | |
\sum\nolimits_{i = 0}^n \delta_i(z - y)\delta_{n - i}(y) = | |
\delta_{n - 1}(y) \delta_1(z - y) + \delta_n(y) | |
$$ | |
This proves the desired equality. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $M$ be a $B$-module. Let $\theta : B \to M$ be a divided power | |
$A$-derivation. | |
Set $D = B \oplus M$ where $M$ is an ideal of square zero. Define a | |
divided power structure on $J \oplus M \subset D$ by setting | |
$\delta_n(x + m) = \delta_n(x) + \delta_{n - 1}(x)m$ for $n > 1$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-first-order-thickening}. | |
There are two divided power algebra homomorphisms $B \to D$: the first | |
is given by the inclusion and the second by the map $b \mapsto b + \theta(b)$. | |
Hence we get a canonical homomorphism $B(1) \to D$ of divided power | |
algebras over $(A, I, \gamma)$. This induces a map $K \to M$ | |
which annihilates $K^2$ (as $M$ is an ideal of square zero) and | |
$(K \cap J(1))^{[2]}$ as $M^{[2]} = 0$. The composition | |
$B \to K/K^2 + (K \cap J(1))^{[2]} \to M$ equals $\theta$ by construction. | |
It follows that $\text{d}$ | |
is a universal divided power $A$-derivation and we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-filtration-differentials} | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map and let $(J, \delta)$ be a divided | |
power structure on $B$. The universal module $\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$ | |
comes with a little bit of extra structure, namely the $B$-submodule | |
$N$ of $\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$ generated by $\text{d}_{B/A, \delta}(J)$. | |
In terms of the isomorphism given in | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-diagonal-and-differentials} | |
this corresponds to the image of | |
$K \cap J(1)$ in $\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$. Consider the $A$-algebra | |
$D = B \oplus \Omega^1_{B/A, \delta}$ with ideal $\bar J = J \oplus N$ | |
and divided powers $\bar \delta$ as in the proof of the lemma. | |
Then $(D, \bar J, \bar \delta)$ is a divided power ring | |
and the two maps $B \to D$ given by $b \mapsto b$ and | |
$b \mapsto b + \text{d}_{B/A, \delta}(b)$ | |
are homomorphisms of divided power rings over $A$. Moreover, $N$ | |
is the smallest submodule of $\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$ such that this is true. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-diagonal-and-differentials-affine-site} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
Let $(B, J, \delta)$ be an object of $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. | |
Let $(B(1), J(1), \delta(1))$ be the coproduct of $(B, J, \delta)$ | |
with itself in $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. Denote | |
$K = \Ker(B(1) \to B)$. Then $K \cap J(1) \subset J(1)$ | |
is preserved by the divided power structure and | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{B/A, \delta} = K/ \left(K^2 + (K \cap J(1))^{[2]}\right) | |
$$ | |
canonically. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Word for word the same as the proof of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-diagonal-and-differentials}. | |
The only point that has to be checked is that the | |
divided power ring $D = B \oplus M$ is an object of $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ | |
and that the two maps $B \to C$ are morphisms of $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$. | |
Since $D/(J \oplus M) = B/J$ we can use $C \to B/J$ to view | |
$D$ as an object of $\text{CRIS}(C/A)$ | |
and the statement on morphisms is clear from the construction. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-module-differentials-divided-power-envelope} | |
Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power ring. Let $A \to B$ be a ring | |
map and let $IB \subset J \subset B$ be an ideal. Let | |
$D_{B, \gamma}(J) = (D, \bar J, \bar \gamma)$ be the divided power envelope. | |
Then we have | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{D/A, \bar\gamma} = \Omega_{B/A} \otimes_B D | |
$$ | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof}[First proof] | |
Let $M$ be a $D$-module. We claim that an $A$-derivation | |
$\vartheta : B \to M$ is the same thing as a divided power | |
$A$-derivation $\theta : D \to M$. The claim implies the | |
statement by the Yoneda lemma. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Consider the square zero thickening $D \oplus M$ of $D$. | |
There is a divided power structure $\delta$ on $\bar J \oplus M$ | |
if we set the higher divided power operations zero on $M$. | |
In other words, we set | |
$\delta_n(x + m) = \bar\gamma_n(x) + \bar\gamma_{n - 1}(x)m$ for | |
any $x \in \bar J$ and $m \in M$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-first-order-thickening}. | |
Consider the $A$-algebra map $B \to D \oplus M$ whose first | |
component is given by the map $B \to D$ and whose second component | |
is $\vartheta$. By the universal property we get a corresponding | |
homomorphism $D \to D \oplus M$ of divided power algebras | |
whose second component is the divided power | |
$A$-derivation $\theta$ corresponding to $\vartheta$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{proof}[Second proof] | |
We will prove this first when $B$ is flat over $A$. In this case $\gamma$ | |
extends to a divided power structure $\gamma'$ on $IB$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-gamma-extends}. | |
Hence $D = D_{B, \gamma'}(J)$ is equal to a quotient of | |
the divided power ring $(D', J', \delta)$ where $D' = B\langle x_t \rangle$ | |
and $J' = IB\langle x_t \rangle + B\langle x_t \rangle_{+}$ | |
by the elements $x_t - f_t$ and $\delta_n(\sum r_t x_t - r_0)$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-describe-divided-power-envelope} for notation | |
and explanation. Write $\text{d} : D' \to \Omega_{D'/A, \delta}$ | |
for the universal derivation. Note that | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{D'/A, \delta} = | |
\Omega_{B/A} \otimes_B D' \oplus \bigoplus D' \text{d}x_t, | |
$$ | |
see Lemma \ref{lemma-omega}. We conclude that $\Omega_{D/A, \bar\gamma}$ | |
is the quotient of $\Omega_{D'/A, \delta} \otimes_{D'} D$ by the submodule | |
generated by $\text{d}$ applied to the generators of the | |
kernel of $D' \to D$ listed above, see Lemma \ref{lemma-omega}. | |
Since $\text{d}(x_t - f_t) = - \text{d}f_t + \text{d}x_t$ | |
we see that we have $\text{d}x_t = \text{d}f_t$ in the quotient. | |
In particular we see that $\Omega_{B/A} \otimes_B D \to \Omega_{D/A, \gamma}$ | |
is surjective with kernel given by the images of $\text{d}$ | |
applied to the elements $\delta_n(\sum r_t x_t - r_0)$. | |
However, given a relation $\sum r_tf_t - r_0 = 0$ in $B$ with | |
$r_t \in B$ and $r_0 \in IB$ we see that | |
\begin{align*} | |
\text{d}\delta_n(\sum r_t x_t - r_0) | |
& = | |
\delta_{n - 1}(\sum r_t x_t - r_0)\text{d}(\sum r_t x_t - r_0) | |
\\ | |
& = | |
\delta_{n - 1}(\sum r_t x_t - r_0) | |
\left( | |
\sum r_t\text{d}(x_t - f_t) + \sum (x_t - f_t)\text{d}r_t | |
\right) | |
\end{align*} | |
because $\sum r_tf_t - r_0 = 0$ in $B$. Hence this is already zero in | |
$\Omega_{B/A} \otimes_A D$ and we win in the case that $B$ is flat over $A$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
In the general case we write $B$ as a quotient of a polynomial ring | |
$P \to B$ and let $J' \subset P$ be the inverse image of $J$. Then | |
$D = D'/K'$ with notation as in | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-envelop-quotient}. | |
By the case handled in the first paragraph of the proof we have | |
$\Omega_{D'/A, \bar\gamma'} = \Omega_{P/A} \otimes_P D'$. Then | |
$\Omega_{D/A, \bar \gamma}$ is the quotient of $\Omega_{P/A} \otimes_P D$ | |
by the submodule generated by $\text{d}\bar\gamma_n'(k)$ where $k$ | |
is an element of the kernel of $P \to B$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-omega} and the description of $K'$ from | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-envelop-quotient}. Since | |
$\text{d}\bar\gamma_n'(k) = \bar\gamma'_{n - 1}(k)\text{d}k$ we see | |
again that it suffices to divided by the submodule generated by | |
$\text{d}k$ with $k \in \Ker(P \to B)$ and since $\Omega_{B/A}$ | |
is the quotient of $\Omega_{P/A} \otimes_A B$ by these elements | |
(Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-differential-seq}) we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-divided-powers-de-rham-complex} | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map and let $(J, \delta)$ be a divided power | |
structure on $B$. Set | |
$\Omega_{B/A, \delta}^i = \wedge^i_B \Omega_{B/A, \delta}$ | |
where $\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$ is the target of the universal divided power | |
$A$-derivation $\text{d} = \text{d}_{B/A} : B \to \Omega_{B/A, \delta}$. | |
Note that $\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$ is the quotient of $\Omega_{B/A}$ by the | |
$B$-submodule generated by the elements | |
$\text{d}\delta_n(x) - \delta_{n - 1}(x)\text{d}x$ for $x \in J$. | |
We claim Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-de-rham-complex} applies. | |
To see this it suffices to verify the elements | |
$\text{d}\delta_n(x) - \delta_{n - 1}(x)\text{d}x$ | |
of $\Omega_B$ are mapped to zero in $\Omega^2_{B/A, \delta}$. | |
We observe that | |
$$ | |
\text{d}(\delta_{n - 1}(x)) \wedge \text{d}x | |
= \delta_{n - 2}(x) \text{d}x \wedge \text{d}x = 0 | |
$$ | |
in $\Omega^2_{B/A, \delta}$ as desired. Hence we obtain a | |
{\it divided power de Rham complex} | |
$$ | |
\Omega^0_{B/A, \delta} \to \Omega^1_{B/A, \delta} \to | |
\Omega^2_{B/A, \delta} \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
which will play an important role in the sequel. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-connection} | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map. Let $\Omega_{B/A} \to \Omega$ | |
be a quotient satisfying the assumptions of | |
Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-de-rham-complex}. | |
Let $M$ be a $B$-module. A {\it connection} is an additive map | |
$$ | |
\nabla : M \longrightarrow M \otimes_B \Omega | |
$$ | |
such that $\nabla(bm) = b \nabla(m) + m \otimes \text{d}b$ | |
for $b \in B$ and $m \in M$. In this situation we can define maps | |
$$ | |
\nabla : M \otimes_B \Omega^i \longrightarrow M \otimes_B \Omega^{i + 1} | |
$$ | |
by the rule $\nabla(m \otimes \omega) = \nabla(m) \wedge \omega + | |
m \otimes \text{d}\omega$. This works because if $b \in B$, then | |
\begin{align*} | |
\nabla(bm \otimes \omega) - \nabla(m \otimes b\omega) | |
& = | |
\nabla(bm) \wedge \omega + bm \otimes \text{d}\omega | |
- \nabla(m) \wedge b\omega - m \otimes \text{d}(b\omega) \\ | |
& = | |
b\nabla(m) \wedge \omega + m \otimes \text{d}b \wedge \omega | |
+ bm \otimes \text{d}\omega \\ | |
& \ \ \ \ \ \ - b\nabla(m) \wedge \omega - bm \otimes \text{d}(\omega) | |
- m \otimes \text{d}b \wedge \omega = 0 | |
\end{align*} | |
As is customary we say the connection is {\it integrable} if and | |
only if the composition | |
$$ | |
M \xrightarrow{\nabla} M \otimes_B \Omega^1 | |
\xrightarrow{\nabla} M \otimes_B \Omega^2 | |
$$ | |
is zero. In this case we obtain a complex | |
$$ | |
M \xrightarrow{\nabla} M \otimes_B \Omega^1 | |
\xrightarrow{\nabla} M \otimes_B \Omega^2 | |
\xrightarrow{\nabla} M \otimes_B \Omega^3 | |
\xrightarrow{\nabla} M \otimes_B \Omega^4 \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
which is called the de Rham complex of the connection. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-base-change-connection} | |
Consider a commutative diagram of rings | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
B \ar[r]_\varphi & B' \\ | |
A \ar[u] \ar[r] & A' \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
Let $\Omega_{B/A} \to \Omega$ and $\Omega_{B'/A'} \to \Omega'$ | |
be quotients satisfying the assumptions of | |
Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-de-rham-complex}. | |
Assume there is a map $\varphi : \Omega \to \Omega'$ which | |
fits into a commutative diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
\Omega_{B/A} \ar[r] \ar[d] & | |
\Omega_{B'/A'} \ar[d] \\ | |
\Omega \ar[r]^{\varphi} & | |
\Omega' | |
} | |
$$ | |
where the top horizontal arrow is the canonical map | |
$\Omega_{B/A} \to \Omega_{B'/A'}$ induced by $\varphi : B \to B'$. | |
In this situation, given any pair $(M, \nabla)$ where $M$ is a $B$-module | |
and $\nabla : M \to M \otimes_B \Omega$ is a connection | |
we obtain a {\it base change} $(M \otimes_B B', \nabla')$ where | |
$$ | |
\nabla' : | |
M \otimes_B B' | |
\longrightarrow | |
(M \otimes_B B') \otimes_{B'} \Omega' = M \otimes_B \Omega' | |
$$ | |
is defined by the rule | |
$$ | |
\nabla'(m \otimes b') = | |
\sum m_i \otimes b'\text{d}\varphi(b_i) + m \otimes \text{d}b' | |
$$ | |
if $\nabla(m) = \sum m_i \otimes \text{d}b_i$. If $\nabla$ is integrable, | |
then so is $\nabla'$, and in this case there is a canonical map of | |
de Rham complexes (Remark \ref{remark-connection}) | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-base-change-map-complexes} | |
M \otimes_B \Omega^\bullet | |
\longrightarrow | |
(M \otimes_B B') \otimes_{B'} (\Omega')^\bullet = | |
M \otimes_B (\Omega')^\bullet | |
\end{equation} | |
which maps $m \otimes \eta$ to $m \otimes \varphi(\eta)$. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-differentials-completion} | |
Let $A \to B$ be a ring map and let $(J, \delta)$ be a divided power | |
structure on $B$. Let $p$ be a prime number. Assume that $A$ is a | |
$\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$-algebra and that $p$ is nilpotent in $B/J$. Then | |
we have | |
$$ | |
\lim_e \Omega_{B_e/A, \bar\delta} = | |
\lim_e \Omega_{B/A, \delta}/p^e\Omega_{B/A, \delta} = | |
\lim_e \Omega_{B^\wedge/A, \delta^\wedge}/p^e \Omega_{B^\wedge/A, \delta^\wedge} | |
$$ | |
see proof for notation and explanation. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
By Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-extend-to-completion} | |
we see that $\delta$ extends | |
to $B_e = B/p^eB$ for all sufficiently large $e$. Hence the first limit | |
make sense. The lemma also produces a divided power structure $\delta^\wedge$ | |
on the completion $B^\wedge = \lim_e B_e$, hence the last limit makes | |
sense. By Lemma \ref{lemma-omega} | |
and the fact that $\text{d}p^e = 0$ (always) | |
we see that the surjection | |
$\Omega_{B/A, \delta} \to \Omega_{B_e/A, \bar\delta}$ has kernel | |
$p^e\Omega_{B/A, \delta}$. Similarly for the kernel of | |
$\Omega_{B^\wedge/A, \delta^\wedge} \to \Omega_{B_e/A, \bar\delta}$. | |
Hence the lemma is clear. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Divided power schemes} | |
\label{section-divided-power-schemes} | |
\noindent | |
Some remarks on how to globalize the previous notions. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-divided-power-structure} | |
Let $\mathcal{C}$ be a site. Let $\mathcal{O}$ be a sheaf of rings | |
on $\mathcal{C}$. Let $\mathcal{I} \subset \mathcal{O}$ be a | |
sheaf of ideals. A {\it divided power structure $\gamma$} on $\mathcal{I}$ | |
is a sequence of maps $\gamma_n : \mathcal{I} \to \mathcal{I}$, $n \geq 1$ | |
such that for any object $U$ of $\mathcal{C}$ the triple | |
$$ | |
(\mathcal{O}(U), \mathcal{I}(U), \gamma) | |
$$ | |
is a divided power ring. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
To be sure this applies in particular to sheaves of rings on | |
topological spaces. But it's good to be a little bit more general | |
as the structure sheaf of the crystalline site lives on a... site! | |
A triple $(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ as in the | |
definition above is sometimes called a {\it divided power topos} | |
in this chapter. Given a second $(\mathcal{C}', \mathcal{I}', \gamma')$ and | |
given a morphism of ringed topoi | |
$(f, f^\sharp) : (\Sh(\mathcal{C}), \mathcal{O}) \to | |
(\Sh(\mathcal{C}'), \mathcal{O}')$ | |
we say that $(f, f^\sharp)$ induces a {\it morphism of divided | |
power topoi} if $f^\sharp(f^{-1}\mathcal{I}') \subset \mathcal{I}$ | |
and the diagrams | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
f^{-1}\mathcal{I}' \ar[d]_{f^{-1}\gamma'_n} \ar[r]_{f^\sharp} & | |
\mathcal{I} \ar[d]^{\gamma_n} \\ | |
f^{-1}\mathcal{I}' \ar[r]^{f^\sharp} & \mathcal{I} | |
} | |
$$ | |
are commutative for all $n \geq 1$. If $f$ comes from a morphism of | |
sites induced by a functor $u : \mathcal{C}' \to \mathcal{C}$ then | |
this just means that | |
$$ | |
(\mathcal{O}'(U'), \mathcal{I}'(U'), \gamma') | |
\longrightarrow | |
(\mathcal{O}(u(U')), \mathcal{I}(u(U')), \gamma) | |
$$ | |
is a homomorphism of divided power rings for all $U' \in \Ob(\mathcal{C}')$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
In the case of schemes we require the divided power ideal to be | |
{\bf quasi-coherent}. But apart from this the definition is exactly | |
the same as in the case of topoi. Here it is. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-divided-power-scheme} | |
A {\it divided power scheme} is a triple $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ | |
where $S$ is a scheme, $\mathcal{I}$ is a quasi-coherent sheaf of | |
ideals, and $\gamma$ is a divided power structure on $\mathcal{I}$. | |
A {\it morphism of divided power schemes} | |
$(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma) \to (S', \mathcal{I}', \gamma')$ is | |
a morphism of schemes $f : S \to S'$ such that | |
$f^{-1}\mathcal{I}'\mathcal{O}_S \subset \mathcal{I}$ and such that | |
$$ | |
(\mathcal{O}_{S'}(U'), \mathcal{I}'(U'), \gamma') | |
\longrightarrow | |
(\mathcal{O}_S(f^{-1}U'), \mathcal{I}(f^{-1}U'), \gamma) | |
$$ | |
is a homomorphism of divided power rings for all $U' \subset S'$ open. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
Recall that there is a 1-to-1 correspondence between quasi-coherent | |
sheaves of ideals and closed immersions, see | |
Morphisms, Section \ref{morphisms-section-closed-immersions}. | |
Thus given a divided power scheme $(T, \mathcal{J}, \gamma)$ we | |
get a canonical closed immersion $U \to T$ defined by $\mathcal{J}$. | |
Conversely, given a closed immersion $U \to T$ and a divided power | |
structure $\gamma$ on the sheaf of ideals $\mathcal{J}$ associated | |
to $U \to T$ we obtain a divided power scheme $(T, \mathcal{J}, \gamma)$. | |
In many situations we only want to consider such triples | |
$(U, T, \gamma)$ when the morphism $U \to T$ is a thickening, see | |
More on Morphisms, Definition \ref{more-morphisms-definition-thickening}. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-divided-power-thickening} | |
A triple $(U, T, \gamma)$ as above is called a {\it divided power thickening} | |
if $U \to T$ is a thickening. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
Fibre products of divided power schemes exist when one of the | |
three is a divided power thickening. Here is a formal statement. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-fibre-product} | |
Let $(U', T', \delta') \to (S'_0, S', \gamma')$ and | |
$(S_0, S, \gamma) \to (S'_0, S', \gamma')$ be morphisms of | |
divided power schemes. If $(U', T', \delta')$ is a divided power | |
thickening, then there exists a divided power scheme $(T_0, T, \delta)$ | |
and | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
T \ar[r] \ar[d] & T' \ar[d] \\ | |
S \ar[r] & S' | |
} | |
$$ | |
which is a cartesian diagram in the category of divided power schemes. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Omitted. Hints: If $T$ exists, then $T_0 = S_0 \times_{S'_0} U'$ | |
(argue as in Divided Power Algebra, Remark \ref{dpa-remark-forgetful}). | |
Since $T'$ is a divided power thickening, we see that $T$ | |
(if it exists) will be a divided power thickening too. | |
Hence we can define $T$ as the scheme with underlying topological | |
space the underlying topological space of $T_0 = S_0 \times_{S'_0} U'$ | |
and as structure sheaf on affine pieces the ring given | |
by Lemma \ref{lemma-affine-thickenings-colimits}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
We make the following observation. Suppose that $(U, T, \gamma)$ | |
is triple as above. Assume that $T$ is a scheme over $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$ | |
and that $p$ is locally nilpotent on $U$. Then | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $p$ locally nilpotent on $T \Leftrightarrow U \to T$ | |
is a thickening (see Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-nil}), and | |
\item $p^e\mathcal{O}_T$ is locally on $T$ preserved by $\gamma$ | |
for $e \gg 0$ (see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-extend-to-completion}). | |
\end{enumerate} | |
This suggest that good results on divided power thickenings will be | |
available under the following hypotheses. | |
\begin{situation} | |
\label{situation-global} | |
Here $p$ is a prime number and $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ is a divided power | |
scheme over $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$. We set $S_0 = V(\mathcal{I}) \subset S$. | |
Finally, $X \to S_0$ is a morphism of schemes such that $p$ is | |
locally nilpotent on $X$. | |
\end{situation} | |
\noindent | |
It is in this situation that we will define the big and small | |
crystalline sites. | |
\section{The big crystalline site} | |
\label{section-big-site} | |
\noindent | |
We first define the big site. Given a divided power scheme | |
$(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ we say $(T, \mathcal{J}, \delta)$ is | |
a divided power scheme over $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ if | |
$T$ comes endowed with a morphism $T \to S$ of divided power | |
schemes. Similarly, we say a divided power thickening $(U, T, \delta)$ | |
is a divided power thickening over $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ | |
if $T$ comes endowed with a morphism $T \to S$ of divided power | |
schemes. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-divided-power-thickening-X} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item A {\it divided power thickening of $X$ relative to | |
$(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$} is given by a divided power thickening | |
$(U, T, \delta)$ over $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ | |
and an $S$-morphism $U \to X$. | |
\item A {\it morphism of divided power thickenings of $X$ | |
relative to $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$} is defined in the obvious | |
manner. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
The category of divided power thickenings of $X$ relative to | |
$(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ is denoted $\text{CRIS}(X/S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ | |
or simply $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
For any $(U, T, \delta)$ in $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$ | |
we have that $p$ is locally nilpotent on $T$, see discussion preceding | |
Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
A good way to visualize all the data associated to $(U, T, \delta)$ | |
is the commutative diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
T \ar[dd] & U \ar[l] \ar[d] \\ | |
& X \ar[d] \\ | |
S & S_0 \ar[l] | |
} | |
$$ | |
where $S_0 = V(\mathcal{I}) \subset S$. Morphisms of $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$ | |
can be similarly visualized as huge commutative diagrams. In particular, | |
there is a canonical forgetful functor | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-forget} | |
\text{CRIS}(X/S) \longrightarrow \Sch/X,\quad | |
(U, T, \delta) \longmapsto U | |
\end{equation} | |
as well as its one sided inverse (and left adjoint) | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-endow-trivial} | |
\Sch/X \longrightarrow \text{CRIS}(X/S),\quad | |
U \longmapsto (U, U, \emptyset) | |
\end{equation} | |
which is sometimes useful. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divided-power-thickening-fibre-products} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
The category $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$ has all finite nonempty limits, | |
in particular products of pairs and fibre products. | |
The functor (\ref{equation-forget}) commutes with limits. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Omitted. Hint: See Lemma \ref{lemma-affine-thickenings-colimits} | |
for the affine case. See also | |
Divided Power Algebra, Remark \ref{dpa-remark-forgetful}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-divided-power-thickening-base-change-flat} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(U_3, T_3, \delta_3) \ar[d] \ar[r] & (U_2, T_2, \delta_2) \ar[d] \\ | |
(U_1, T_1, \delta_1) \ar[r] & (U, T, \delta) | |
} | |
$$ | |
be a fibre square in the category of divided power thickenings of | |
$X$ relative to $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$. If $T_2 \to T$ is | |
flat and $U_2 = T_2 \times_T U$, then $T_3 = T_1 \times_T T_2$ (as schemes). | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
This is true because a divided power structure extends uniquely | |
along a flat ring map. See | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-gamma-extends}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
The lemma above means that the base change of a flat morphism | |
of divided power thickenings is another flat morphism, and in | |
fact is the ``usual'' base change of the morphism. This implies | |
that the following definition makes sense. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-big-crystalline-site} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item A family of morphisms $\{(U_i, T_i, \delta_i) \to (U, T, \delta)\}$ | |
of divided power thickenings of $X/S$ is a | |
{\it Zariski, \'etale, smooth, syntomic, or fppf covering} | |
if and only if | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $U_i = U \times_T T_i$ for all $i$ and | |
\item $\{T_i \to T\}$ is a Zariski, \'etale, smooth, syntomic, or fppf covering. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\item The {\it big crystalline site} of $X$ over $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$, | |
is the category $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$ endowed with the Zariski topology. | |
\item The topos of sheaves on $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$ is denoted | |
$(X/S)_{\text{CRIS}}$ or sometimes | |
$(X/S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)_{\text{CRIS}}$\footnote{This clashes with | |
our convention to denote the topos associated to a site $\mathcal{C}$ | |
by $\Sh(\mathcal{C})$.}. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
There are some obvious functorialities concerning these topoi. | |
\begin{remark}[Functoriality] | |
\label{remark-functoriality-big-cris} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. | |
Let $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma) \to (S', \mathcal{I}', \gamma')$ be a | |
morphism of divided power schemes over $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$. | |
Set $S_0 = V(\mathcal{I})$ and $S'_0 = V(\mathcal{I}')$. | |
Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
X \ar[r]_f \ar[d] & Y \ar[d] \\ | |
S_0 \ar[r] & S'_0 | |
} | |
$$ | |
be a commutative diagram of morphisms of schemes and assume $p$ is | |
locally nilpotent on $X$ and $Y$. Then we get a continuous and | |
cocontinuous functor | |
$$ | |
\text{CRIS}(X/S) \longrightarrow \text{CRIS}(Y/S') | |
$$ | |
by letting $(U, T, \delta)$ correspond to $(U, T, \delta)$ | |
with $U \to X \to Y$ as the $S'$-morphism from $U$ to $Y$. | |
Hence we get a morphism of topoi | |
$$ | |
f_{\text{CRIS}} : (X/S)_{\text{CRIS}} \longrightarrow (Y/S')_{\text{CRIS}} | |
$$ | |
see Sites, Section \ref{sites-section-cocontinuous-morphism-topoi}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Comparison with Zariski site] | |
\label{remark-compare-big-zariski} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
The functor (\ref{equation-forget}) is cocontinuous (details omitted) and | |
commutes with products and fibred products | |
(Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-thickening-fibre-products}). | |
Hence we obtain a morphism of topoi | |
$$ | |
U_{X/S} : (X/S)_{\text{CRIS}} \longrightarrow \Sh((\Sch/X)_{Zar}) | |
$$ | |
from the big crystalline topos of $X/S$ to the big Zariski topos of $X$. | |
See Sites, Section \ref{sites-section-cocontinuous-morphism-topoi}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Structure morphism] | |
\label{remark-big-structure-morphism} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Consider the closed subscheme $S_0 = V(\mathcal{I}) \subset S$. | |
If we assume that $p$ is locally nilpotent on $S_0$ (which is always | |
the case in practice) then we obtain a situation as in | |
Definition \ref{definition-divided-power-thickening-X} with $S_0$ instead | |
of $X$. Hence we get a site $\text{CRIS}(S_0/S)$. If $f : X \to S_0$ is | |
the structure morphism of $X$ over $S$, then we get a commutative diagram | |
of morphisms of ringed topoi | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(X/S)_{\text{CRIS}} | |
\ar[r]_{f_{\text{CRIS}}} \ar[d]_{U_{X/S}} & | |
(S_0/S)_{\text{CRIS}} \ar[d]^{U_{S_0/S}} \\ | |
\Sh((\Sch/X)_{Zar}) \ar[r]^{f_{big}} & \Sh((\Sch/S_0)_{Zar}) \ar[rd] \\ | |
& & \Sh((\Sch/S)_{Zar}) | |
} | |
$$ | |
by Remark \ref{remark-functoriality-big-cris}. We think of the composition | |
$(X/S)_{\text{CRIS}} \to \Sh((\Sch/S)_{Zar})$ as the structure morphism of | |
the big crystalline site. Even if $p$ is not locally nilpotent on $S_0$ | |
the structure morphism | |
$$ | |
(X/S)_{\text{CRIS}} \longrightarrow \Sh((\Sch/S)_{Zar}) | |
$$ | |
is defined as we can take the lower route through the diagram above. Thus it | |
is the morphism of topoi corresponding to the cocontinuous | |
functor $\text{CRIS}(X/S) \to (\Sch/S)_{Zar}$ given by the rule | |
$(U, T, \delta)/S \mapsto U/S$, see | |
Sites, Section \ref{sites-section-cocontinuous-morphism-topoi}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Compatibilities] | |
\label{remark-compatibilities-big-cris} | |
The morphisms defined above satisfy numerous compatibilities. For example, | |
in the situation of Remark \ref{remark-functoriality-big-cris} | |
we obtain a commutative diagram of ringed topoi | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(X/S)_{\text{CRIS}} \ar[d] \ar[r] & (Y/S')_{\text{CRIS}} \ar[d] \\ | |
\Sh((\Sch/S)_{Zar}) \ar[r] & \Sh((\Sch/S')_{Zar}) | |
} | |
$$ | |
where the vertical arrows are the structure morphisms. | |
\end{remark} | |
\section{The crystalline site} | |
\label{section-site} | |
\noindent | |
Since (\ref{equation-forget}) commutes with products and fibre | |
products, we see that looking at those $(U, T, \delta)$ such that | |
$U \to X$ is an open immersion defines a full | |
subcategory preserved under fibre products (and more generally | |
finite nonempty limits). Hence the following | |
definition makes sense. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-crystalline-site} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item The (small) {\it crystalline site} of $X$ over | |
$(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$, denoted $\text{Cris}(X/S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ | |
or simply $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ is the full subcategory of $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$ | |
consisting of those $(U, T, \delta)$ in $\text{CRIS}(X/S)$ such that | |
$U \to X$ is an open immersion. It comes endowed with the Zariski topology. | |
\item The topos of sheaves on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ is denoted | |
$(X/S)_{\text{cris}}$ or sometimes | |
$(X/S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)_{\text{cris}}$\footnote{This clashes with | |
our convention to denote the topos associated to a site $\mathcal{C}$ | |
by $\Sh(\mathcal{C})$.}. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
For any $(U, T, \delta)$ in $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ the morphism $U \to X$ | |
defines an object of the small Zariski site $X_{Zar}$ of $X$. Hence | |
a canonical forgetful functor | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-forget-small} | |
\text{Cris}(X/S) \longrightarrow X_{Zar},\quad | |
(U, T, \delta) \longmapsto U | |
\end{equation} | |
and a left adjoint | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-endow-trivial-small} | |
X_{Zar} \longrightarrow \text{Cris}(X/S),\quad | |
U \longmapsto (U, U, \emptyset) | |
\end{equation} | |
which is sometimes useful. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We can compare the small and big crystalline sites, just like | |
we can compare the small and big Zariski sites of a scheme, see | |
Topologies, Lemma \ref{topologies-lemma-at-the-bottom}. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-compare-big-small} | |
Assumptions as in Definition \ref{definition-divided-power-thickening-X}. | |
The inclusion functor | |
$$ | |
\text{Cris}(X/S) \to \text{CRIS}(X/S) | |
$$ | |
commutes with finite nonempty limits, is fully faithful, continuous, | |
and cocontinuous. There are morphisms of topoi | |
$$ | |
(X/S)_{\text{cris}} \xrightarrow{i} (X/S)_{\text{CRIS}} | |
\xrightarrow{\pi} (X/S)_{\text{cris}} | |
$$ | |
whose composition is the identity and of which the first is induced | |
by the inclusion functor. Moreover, $\pi_* = i^{-1}$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
For the first assertion see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-thickening-fibre-products}. | |
This gives us a morphism of topoi | |
$i : (X/S)_{\text{cris}} \to (X/S)_{\text{CRIS}}$ and a left adjoint | |
$i_!$ such that $i^{-1}i_! = i^{-1}i_* = \text{id}$, see | |
Sites, Lemmas \ref{sites-lemma-when-shriek}, | |
\ref{sites-lemma-preserve-equalizers}, and | |
\ref{sites-lemma-back-and-forth}. | |
We claim that $i_!$ is exact. If this is true, then we can define | |
$\pi$ by the rules $\pi^{-1} = i_!$ and $\pi_* = i^{-1}$ | |
and everything is clear. To prove the claim, note that we already know | |
that $i_!$ is right exact and preserves fibre products (see references | |
given). Hence it suffices to show that $i_! * = *$ where $*$ indicates | |
the final object in the category of sheaves of sets. | |
To see this it suffices to produce a set of objects | |
$(U_i, T_i, \delta_i)$, $i \in I$ of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ such that | |
$$ | |
\coprod\nolimits_{i \in I} h_{(U_i, T_i, \delta_i)} \to * | |
$$ | |
is surjective in $(X/S)_{\text{CRIS}}$ (details omitted; hint: use that | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$ has products and that the functor | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S) \to \text{CRIS}(X/S)$ commutes with them). | |
In the affine case this | |
follows from Lemma \ref{lemma-set-generators}. We omit the proof | |
in general. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{remark}[Functoriality] | |
\label{remark-functoriality-cris} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. | |
Let $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma) \to (S', \mathcal{I}', \gamma')$ | |
be a morphism of divided power schemes over $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$. | |
Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
X \ar[r]_f \ar[d] & Y \ar[d] \\ | |
S_0 \ar[r] & S'_0 | |
} | |
$$ | |
be a commutative diagram of morphisms of schemes and assume $p$ is | |
locally nilpotent on $X$ and $Y$. By analogy with | |
Topologies, Lemma \ref{topologies-lemma-morphism-big-small} we define | |
$$ | |
f_{\text{cris}} : (X/S)_{\text{cris}} \longrightarrow (Y/S')_{\text{cris}} | |
$$ | |
by the formula $f_{\text{cris}} = \pi_Y \circ f_{\text{CRIS}} \circ i_X$ | |
where $i_X$ and $\pi_Y$ are as in Lemma \ref{lemma-compare-big-small} | |
for $X$ and $Y$ and where $f_{\text{CRIS}}$ is as in | |
Remark \ref{remark-functoriality-big-cris}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Comparison with Zariski site] | |
\label{remark-compare-zariski} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
The functor (\ref{equation-forget-small}) is continuous, cocontinuous, and | |
commutes with products and fibred products. | |
Hence we obtain a morphism of topoi | |
$$ | |
u_{X/S} : (X/S)_{\text{cris}} \longrightarrow \Sh(X_{Zar}) | |
$$ | |
relating the small crystalline topos of $X/S$ with | |
the small Zariski topos of $X$. | |
See Sites, Section \ref{sites-section-cocontinuous-morphism-topoi}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-localize} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $X' \subset X$ and $S' \subset S$ be open subschemes such that | |
$X'$ maps into $S'$. Then there is a fully faithful functor | |
$\text{Cris}(X'/S') \to \text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
which gives rise to a morphism of topoi fitting into the commutative | |
diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(X'/S')_{\text{cris}} \ar[r] \ar[d]_{u_{X'/S'}} & | |
(X/S)_{\text{cris}} \ar[d]^{u_{X/S}} \\ | |
\Sh(X'_{Zar}) \ar[r] & \Sh(X_{Zar}) | |
} | |
$$ | |
Moreover, this diagram is an example of localization of morphisms of | |
topoi as in Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-localize-morphism-topoi}. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
The fully faithful functor comes from thinking of | |
objects of $\text{Cris}(X'/S')$ as divided power | |
thickenings $(U, T, \delta)$ of $X$ where $U \to X$ | |
factors through $X' \subset X$ (since then automatically $T \to S$ | |
will factor through $S'$). This functor is clearly cocontinuous | |
hence we obtain a morphism of topoi as indicated. | |
Let $h_{X'} \in \Sh(X_{Zar})$ be the representable sheaf associated | |
to $X'$ viewed as an object of $X_{Zar}$. It is clear that | |
$\Sh(X'_{Zar})$ is the localization $\Sh(X_{Zar})/h_{X'}$. | |
On the other hand, the category $\text{Cris}(X/S)/u_{X/S}^{-1}h_{X'}$ | |
(see Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-localize-topos-site}) | |
is canonically identified with $\text{Cris}(X'/S')$ by the functor above. | |
This finishes the proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{remark}[Structure morphism] | |
\label{remark-structure-morphism} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Consider the closed subscheme $S_0 = V(\mathcal{I}) \subset S$. | |
If we assume that $p$ is locally nilpotent on $S_0$ (which is always | |
the case in practice) then we obtain a situation as in | |
Definition \ref{definition-divided-power-thickening-X} with $S_0$ instead | |
of $X$. Hence we get a site $\text{Cris}(S_0/S)$. If $f : X \to S_0$ | |
is the structure morphism of $X$ over $S$, then we get a | |
commutative diagram of ringed topoi | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(X/S)_{\text{cris}} | |
\ar[r]_{f_{\text{cris}}} \ar[d]_{u_{X/S}} & | |
(S_0/S)_{\text{cris}} \ar[d]^{u_{S_0/S}} \\ | |
\Sh(X_{Zar}) \ar[r]^{f_{small}} & \Sh(S_{0, Zar}) \ar[rd] \\ | |
& & \Sh(S_{Zar}) | |
} | |
$$ | |
see Remark \ref{remark-functoriality-cris}. We think of the composition | |
$(X/S)_{\text{cris}} \to \Sh(S_{Zar})$ as the structure morphism of the | |
crystalline site. Even if $p$ is not locally nilpotent on $S_0$ | |
the structure morphism | |
$$ | |
\tau_{X/S} : (X/S)_{\text{cris}} \longrightarrow \Sh(S_{Zar}) | |
$$ | |
is defined as we can take the lower route through the diagram above. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Compatibilities] | |
\label{remark-compatibilities} | |
The morphisms defined above satisfy numerous compatibilities. For example, | |
in the situation of Remark \ref{remark-functoriality-cris} | |
we obtain a commutative diagram of ringed topoi | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
(X/S)_{\text{cris}} \ar[d] \ar[r] & (Y/S')_{\text{cris}} \ar[d] \\ | |
\Sh((\Sch/S)_{Zar}) \ar[r] & \Sh((\Sch/S')_{Zar}) | |
} | |
$$ | |
where the vertical arrows are the structure morphisms. | |
\end{remark} | |
\section{Sheaves on the crystalline site} | |
\label{section-sheaves} | |
\noindent | |
Notation and assumptions as in Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
In order to discuss the small and big crystalline sites of $X/S$ | |
simultaneously in this section we let | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{C} = \text{CRIS}(X/S) | |
\quad\text{or}\quad | |
\mathcal{C} = \text{Cris}(X/S). | |
$$ | |
A sheaf $\mathcal{F}$ on $\mathcal{C}$ gives rise to | |
a {\it restriction} $\mathcal{F}_T$ for every object $(U, T, \delta)$ | |
of $\mathcal{C}$. Namely, $\mathcal{F}_T$ is the Zariski sheaf on | |
the scheme $T$ defined by the rule | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{F}_T(W) = \mathcal{F}(U \cap W, W, \delta|_W) | |
$$ | |
for $W \subset T$ is open. Moreover, if $f : T \to T'$ is a morphism | |
between objects | |
$(U, T, \delta)$ and $(U', T', \delta')$ of $\mathcal{C}$, then there | |
is a canonical {\it comparison} map | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-comparison} | |
c_f : f^{-1}\mathcal{F}_{T'} \longrightarrow \mathcal{F}_T. | |
\end{equation} | |
Namely, if $W' \subset T'$ is open then $f$ induces a morphism | |
$$ | |
f|_{f^{-1}W'} : | |
(U \cap f^{-1}(W'), f^{-1}W', \delta|_{f^{-1}W'}) | |
\longrightarrow | |
(U' \cap W', W', \delta|_{W'}) | |
$$ | |
of $\mathcal{C}$, hence we can use the restriction mapping | |
$(f|_{f^{-1}W'})^*$ of $\mathcal{F}$ to define a map | |
$\mathcal{F}_{T'}(W') \to \mathcal{F}_T(f^{-1}W')$. | |
These maps are clearly compatible with further restriction, hence | |
define an $f$-map from $\mathcal{F}_{T'}$ to $\mathcal{F}_T$ (see | |
Sheaves, Section \ref{sheaves-section-presheaves-functorial} | |
and especially | |
Sheaves, Definition \ref{sheaves-definition-f-map}). | |
Thus a map $c_f$ as in (\ref{equation-comparison}). | |
Note that if $f$ is an open immersion, then $c_f$ is an | |
isomorphism, because in that case $\mathcal{F}_T$ is just | |
the restriction of $\mathcal{F}_{T'}$ to $T$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Conversely, given Zariski sheaves $\mathcal{F}_T$ for every object | |
$(U, T, \delta)$ of $\mathcal{C}$ and comparison maps | |
$c_f$ as above which (a) are isomorphisms for open immersions, and (b) | |
satisfy a suitable cocycle condition, we obtain a sheaf on | |
$\mathcal{C}$. This is proved exactly as in | |
Topologies, Lemma \ref{topologies-lemma-characterize-sheaf-big}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
The {\it structure sheaf} on $\mathcal{C}$ is the sheaf | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$ defined by the rule | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{O}_{X/S} : | |
(U, T, \delta) | |
\longmapsto | |
\Gamma(T, \mathcal{O}_T) | |
$$ | |
This is a sheaf by the definition of coverings in $\mathcal{C}$. | |
Suppose that $\mathcal{F}$ is a sheaf of $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. | |
In this case the comparison mappings (\ref{equation-comparison}) | |
define a comparison map | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-comparison-modules} | |
c_f : f^*\mathcal{F}_{T'} \longrightarrow \mathcal{F}_T | |
\end{equation} | |
of $\mathcal{O}_T$-modules. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Another type of example comes by starting with a sheaf | |
$\mathcal{G}$ on $(\Sch/X)_{Zar}$ or $X_{Zar}$ (depending on whether | |
$\mathcal{C} = \text{CRIS}(X/S)$ or $\mathcal{C} = \text{Cris}(X/S)$). | |
Then $\underline{\mathcal{G}}$ defined by the rule | |
$$ | |
\underline{\mathcal{G}} : | |
(U, T, \delta) | |
\longmapsto | |
\mathcal{G}(U) | |
$$ | |
is a sheaf on $\mathcal{C}$. In particular, if we take | |
$\mathcal{G} = \mathbf{G}_a = \mathcal{O}_X$, then we obtain | |
$$ | |
\underline{\mathbf{G}_a} : | |
(U, T, \delta) | |
\longmapsto | |
\Gamma(U, \mathcal{O}_U) | |
$$ | |
There is a surjective map of sheaves | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S} \to \underline{\mathbf{G}_a}$ defined by the | |
canonical maps $\Gamma(T, \mathcal{O}_T) \to \Gamma(U, \mathcal{O}_U)$ | |
for objects $(U, T, \delta)$. The kernel of this map is denoted | |
$\mathcal{J}_{X/S}$, hence a short exact sequence | |
$$ | |
0 \to | |
\mathcal{J}_{X/S} \to | |
\mathcal{O}_{X/S} \to | |
\underline{\mathbf{G}_a} \to 0 | |
$$ | |
Note that $\mathcal{J}_{X/S}$ comes equipped with a canonical | |
divided power structure. After all, for each object $(U, T, \delta)$ | |
the third component $\delta$ {\it is} a divided power structure on the | |
kernel of $\mathcal{O}_T \to \mathcal{O}_U$. Hence the (big) | |
crystalline topos is a divided power topos. | |
\section{Crystals in modules} | |
\label{section-crystals} | |
\noindent | |
It turns out that a crystal is a very general gadget. However, the | |
definition may be a bit hard to parse, so we first give the definition | |
in the case of modules on the crystalline sites. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-modules} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $\mathcal{C} = \text{CRIS}(X/S)$ or $\mathcal{C} = \text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a sheaf of $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules on $\mathcal{C}$. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item We say $\mathcal{F}$ is {\it locally quasi-coherent} if for every | |
object $(U, T, \delta)$ of $\mathcal{C}$ the restriction $\mathcal{F}_T$ | |
is a quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_T$-module. | |
\item We say $\mathcal{F}$ is {\it quasi-coherent} if it is quasi-coherent | |
in the sense of | |
Modules on Sites, Definition \ref{sites-modules-definition-site-local}. | |
\item We say $\mathcal{F}$ is a {\it crystal in $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules} | |
if all the comparison maps (\ref{equation-comparison-modules}) are | |
isomorphisms. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
It turns out that we can relate these notions as follows. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-crystal-quasi-coherent-modules} | |
With notation $X/S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma, \mathcal{C}, \mathcal{F}$ | |
as in Definition \ref{definition-modules}. The following are equivalent | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\mathcal{F}$ is quasi-coherent, and | |
\item $\mathcal{F}$ is locally quasi-coherent and a crystal in | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Assume (1). Let $f : (U', T', \delta') \to (U, T, \delta)$ be an object of | |
$\mathcal{C}$. We have to prove (a) $\mathcal{F}_T$ is a quasi-coherent | |
$\mathcal{O}_T$-module and (b) $c_f : f^*\mathcal{F}_T \to \mathcal{F}_{T'}$ | |
is an isomorphism. The assumption means that we can find a covering | |
$\{(T_i, U_i, \delta_i) \to (T, U, \delta)\}$ and for each $i$ | |
the restriction of $\mathcal{F}$ to $\mathcal{C}/(T_i, U_i, \delta_i)$ | |
has a global presentation. Since it suffices to prove (a) and (b) | |
Zariski locally, we may replace $f : (T', U', \delta') \to (T, U, \delta)$ | |
by the base change to $(T_i, U_i, \delta_i)$ and assume that $\mathcal{F}$ | |
restricted to $\mathcal{C}/(T, U, \delta)$ has a global | |
presentation | |
$$ | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{j \in J} | |
\mathcal{O}_{X/S}|_{\mathcal{C}/(U, T, \delta)} \longrightarrow | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{i \in I} | |
\mathcal{O}_{X/S}|_{\mathcal{C}/(U, T, \delta)} \longrightarrow | |
\mathcal{F}|_{\mathcal{C}/(U, T, \delta)} | |
\longrightarrow 0 | |
$$ | |
It is clear that this gives a presentation | |
$$ | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{j \in J} \mathcal{O}_T \longrightarrow | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{i \in I} \mathcal{O}_T \longrightarrow | |
\mathcal{F}_T | |
\longrightarrow 0 | |
$$ | |
and hence (a) holds. Moreover, the presentation restricts to $T'$ | |
to give a similar presentation of $\mathcal{F}_{T'}$, whence (b) holds. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume (2). Let $(U, T, \delta)$ be an object of $\mathcal{C}$. | |
We have to find a covering of $(U, T, \delta)$ such that $\mathcal{F}$ has a | |
global presentation when we restrict to the localization of $\mathcal{C}$ | |
at the members of the covering. Thus we may assume that $T$ is affine. | |
In this case we can choose a presentation | |
$$ | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{j \in J} \mathcal{O}_T \longrightarrow | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{i \in I} \mathcal{O}_T \longrightarrow | |
\mathcal{F}_T | |
\longrightarrow 0 | |
$$ | |
as $\mathcal{F}_T$ is assumed to be a quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_T$-module. | |
Then by the crystal property of $\mathcal{F}$ we see that this pulls back | |
to a presentation of $\mathcal{F}_{T'}$ for any morphism | |
$f : (U', T', \delta') \to (U, T, \delta)$ of $\mathcal{C}$. | |
Thus the desired presentation of $\mathcal{F}|_{\mathcal{C}/(U, T, \delta)}$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-crystal-quasi-coherent-modules} | |
If $\mathcal{F}$ satisfies the equivalent conditions of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-crystal-quasi-coherent-modules}, then | |
we say that $\mathcal{F}$ is a | |
{\it crystal in quasi-coherent modules}. | |
We say that $\mathcal{F}$ is a {\it crystal in finite locally free modules} | |
if, in addition, $\mathcal{F}$ is finite locally free. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
Of course, as Lemma \ref{lemma-crystal-quasi-coherent-modules} shows, this | |
notation is somewhat heavy since a quasi-coherent module is always a crystal. | |
But it is standard terminology in the literature. | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-crystal} | |
To formulate the general notion of a crystal we use the language | |
of stacks and strongly cartesian morphisms, see | |
Stacks, Definition \ref{stacks-definition-stack} and | |
Categories, Definition \ref{categories-definition-cartesian-over-C}. | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global} let | |
$p : \mathcal{C} \to \text{Cris}(X/S)$ be a stack. | |
A {\it crystal in objects of $\mathcal{C}$ on $X$ relative to $S$} | |
is a {\it cartesian section} $\sigma : \text{Cris}(X/S) \to \mathcal{C}$, | |
i.e., a functor $\sigma$ such that $p \circ \sigma = \text{id}$ | |
and such that $\sigma(f)$ is strongly cartesian for all | |
morphisms $f$ of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. Similarly for the big crystalline site. | |
\end{remark} | |
\section{Sheaf of differentials} | |
\label{section-differentials-sheaf} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we will stick with the (small) crystalline site | |
as it seems more natural. We globalize | |
Definition \ref{definition-derivation} as follows. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-global-derivation} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global} let | |
$\mathcal{F}$ be a sheaf of $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules on | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$. An | |
{\it $S$-derivation $D : \mathcal{O}_{X/S} \to \mathcal{F}$} | |
is a map of sheaves such that for every object $(U, T, \delta)$ of | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$ the map | |
$$ | |
D : \Gamma(T, \mathcal{O}_T) \longrightarrow \Gamma(T, \mathcal{F}) | |
$$ | |
is a divided power $\Gamma(V, \mathcal{O}_V)$-derivation where $V \subset S$ | |
is any open such that $T \to S$ factors through $V$. | |
\end{definition} | |
\noindent | |
This means that $D$ is additive, satisfies the Leibniz rule, annihilates | |
functions coming from $S$, and satisfies $D(f^{[n]}) = f^{[n - 1]}D(f)$ | |
for a local section $f$ of the divided power ideal $\mathcal{J}_{X/S}$. | |
This is a special case of a very general notion which we now describe. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Please compare the following discussion with | |
Modules on Sites, Section \ref{sites-modules-section-differentials}. Let | |
$\mathcal{C}$ be a site, let $\mathcal{A} \to \mathcal{B}$ be a | |
map of sheaves of rings on $\mathcal{C}$, let $\mathcal{J} \subset \mathcal{B}$ | |
be a sheaf of ideals, let $\delta$ be a divided power structure on | |
$\mathcal{J}$, and let $\mathcal{F}$ be a sheaf of $\mathcal{B}$-modules. | |
Then there is a notion of a {\it divided power $\mathcal{A}$-derivation} | |
$D : \mathcal{B} \to \mathcal{F}$. This means that $D$ is $\mathcal{A}$-linear, | |
satisfies the Leibniz rule, and satisfies | |
$D(\delta_n(x)) = \delta_{n - 1}(x)D(x)$ for local sections $x$ of | |
$\mathcal{J}$. In this situation there exists a | |
{\it universal divided power $\mathcal{A}$-derivation} | |
$$ | |
\text{d}_{\mathcal{B}/\mathcal{A}, \delta} : | |
\mathcal{B} | |
\longrightarrow | |
\Omega_{\mathcal{B}/\mathcal{A}, \delta} | |
$$ | |
Moreover, $\text{d}_{\mathcal{B}/\mathcal{A}, \delta}$ is the composition | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{B} | |
\longrightarrow | |
\Omega_{\mathcal{B}/\mathcal{A}} | |
\longrightarrow | |
\Omega_{\mathcal{B}/\mathcal{A}, \delta} | |
$$ | |
where the first map is the universal derivation constructed in the proof | |
of Modules on Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-modules-lemma-universal-module} | |
and the second arrow is the quotient by the submodule generated by | |
the local sections | |
$\text{d}_{\mathcal{B}/\mathcal{A}}(\delta_n(x)) - | |
\delta_{n - 1}(x)\text{d}_{\mathcal{B}/\mathcal{A}}(x)$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We translate this into a relative notion as follows. Suppose | |
$(f, f^\sharp) : (\Sh(\mathcal{C}), \mathcal{O}) \to | |
(\Sh(\mathcal{C}'), \mathcal{O}')$ is a morphism of ringed topoi, | |
$\mathcal{J} \subset \mathcal{O}$ a sheaf of ideals, $\delta$ a | |
divided power structure on $\mathcal{J}$, and $\mathcal{F}$ a sheaf | |
of $\mathcal{O}$-modules. In this situation we say | |
$D : \mathcal{O} \to \mathcal{F}$ is a divided power $\mathcal{O}'$-derivation | |
if $D$ is a divided power $f^{-1}\mathcal{O}'$-derivation as defined above. | |
Moreover, we write | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{\mathcal{O}/\mathcal{O}', \delta} = | |
\Omega_{\mathcal{O}/f^{-1}\mathcal{O}', \delta} | |
$$ | |
which is the receptacle of the universal divided power | |
$\mathcal{O}'$-derivation. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Applying this to the structure morphism | |
$$ | |
(X/S)_{\text{Cris}} \longrightarrow \Sh(S_{Zar}) | |
$$ | |
(see Remark \ref{remark-structure-morphism}) we recover the notion of | |
Definition \ref{definition-global-derivation} above. | |
In particular, there is a universal divided power derivation | |
$$ | |
d_{X/S} : \mathcal{O}_{X/S} \to \Omega_{X/S} | |
$$ | |
Note that we omit from the notation the decoration indicating the | |
module of differentials is compatible with divided powers (it seems | |
unlikely anybody would ever consider the usual module of differentials | |
of the structure sheaf on the crystalline site). | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-module-differentials-divided-power-scheme} | |
Let $(T, \mathcal{J}, \delta)$ be a divided power scheme. | |
Let $T \to S$ be a morphism of schemes. | |
The quotient $\Omega_{T/S} \to \Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ | |
described above is a quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_T$-module. | |
For $W \subset T$ affine open mapping into $V \subset S$ affine open | |
we have | |
$$ | |
\Gamma(W, \Omega_{T/S, \delta}) = | |
\Omega_{\Gamma(W, \mathcal{O}_W)/\Gamma(V, \mathcal{O}_V), \delta} | |
$$ | |
where the right hand side is | |
as constructed in Section \ref{section-differentials}. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Omitted. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-module-of-differentials} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
For $(U, T, \delta)$ in $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ the restriction | |
$(\Omega_{X/S})_T$ to $T$ is $\Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ and the restriction | |
$\text{d}_{X/S}|_T$ is equal to $\text{d}_{T/S, \delta}$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Omitted. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-module-of-differentials-on-affine} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
For any affine object $(U, T, \delta)$ of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
mapping into an affine open $V \subset S$ we have | |
$$ | |
\Gamma((U, T, \delta), \Omega_{X/S}) = | |
\Omega_{\Gamma(T, \mathcal{O}_T)/\Gamma(V, \mathcal{O}_V), \delta} | |
$$ | |
where the right hand side is | |
as constructed in Section \ref{section-differentials}. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Combine Lemmas \ref{lemma-module-differentials-divided-power-scheme} and | |
\ref{lemma-module-of-differentials}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-describe-omega-small} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $(U, T, \delta)$ be an object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
Let | |
$$ | |
(U(1), T(1), \delta(1)) = (U, T, \delta) \times (U, T, \delta) | |
$$ | |
in $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. Let $\mathcal{K} \subset \mathcal{O}_{T(1)}$ | |
be the quasi-coherent sheaf of ideals corresponding to the closed | |
immersion $\Delta : T \to T(1)$. Then | |
$\mathcal{K} \subset \mathcal{J}_{T(1)}$ is preserved by the | |
divided structure on $\mathcal{J}_{T(1)}$ and we have | |
$$ | |
(\Omega_{X/S})_T = \mathcal{K}/\mathcal{K}^{[2]} | |
$$ | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Note that $U = U(1)$ as $U \to X$ is an open immersion and as | |
(\ref{equation-forget-small}) commutes with products. Hence we see that | |
$\mathcal{K} \subset \mathcal{J}_{T(1)}$. Given this fact the lemma follows | |
by working affine locally on $T$ and using | |
Lemmas \ref{lemma-module-of-differentials-on-affine} and | |
\ref{lemma-diagonal-and-differentials-affine-site}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
It turns out that $\Omega_{X/S}$ is not a crystal in quasi-coherent | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. But it does satisfy two closely | |
related properties (compare with | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-crystal-quasi-coherent-modules}). | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-omega-locally-quasi-coherent} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
The sheaf of differentials $\Omega_{X/S}$ has the following two | |
properties: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\Omega_{X/S}$ is locally quasi-coherent, and | |
\item for any morphism $(U, T, \delta) \to (U', T', \delta')$ | |
of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ where $f : T \to T'$ is a closed immersion | |
the map $c_f : f^*(\Omega_{X/S})_{T'} \to (\Omega_{X/S})_T$ is surjective. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Part (1) follows from a combination of | |
Lemmas \ref{lemma-module-differentials-divided-power-scheme} and | |
\ref{lemma-module-of-differentials}. | |
Part (2) follows from the fact that | |
$(\Omega_{X/S})_T = \Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ | |
is a quotient of $\Omega_{T/S}$ and that $f^*\Omega_{T'/S} \to \Omega_{T/S}$ | |
is surjective. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Two universal thickenings} | |
\label{section-universal-thickenings} | |
\noindent | |
The constructions in this section will help us define a connection on | |
a crystal in modules on the crystalline site. In some sense the constructions | |
here are the ``sheafified, universal'' versions of the constructions in | |
Section \ref{section-explicit-thickenings}. | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-first-order-thickening} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $(U, T, \delta)$ be an object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
Write $\Omega_{T/S, \delta} = (\Omega_{X/S})_T$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-module-of-differentials}. | |
We explicitly describe a first order thickening $T'$ of | |
$T$. Namely, set | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{O}_{T'} = \mathcal{O}_T \oplus \Omega_{T/S, \delta} | |
$$ | |
with algebra structure such that $\Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ is an | |
ideal of square zero. Let $\mathcal{J} \subset \mathcal{O}_T$ | |
be the ideal sheaf of the closed immersion $U \to T$. Set | |
$\mathcal{J}' = \mathcal{J} \oplus \Omega_{T/S, \delta}$. | |
Define a divided power structure on $\mathcal{J}'$ by setting | |
$$ | |
\delta_n'(f, \omega) = (\delta_n(f), \delta_{n - 1}(f)\omega), | |
$$ | |
see Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-first-order-thickening}. | |
There are two ring maps | |
$$ | |
p_0, p_1 : \mathcal{O}_T \to \mathcal{O}_{T'} | |
$$ | |
The first is given by $f \mapsto (f, 0)$ and the second by | |
$f \mapsto (f, \text{d}_{T/S, \delta}f)$. Note that both are compatible | |
with the divided power structures on $\mathcal{J}$ and $\mathcal{J}'$ | |
and so is the quotient map $\mathcal{O}_{T'} \to \mathcal{O}_T$. | |
Thus we get an object $(U, T', \delta')$ of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
and a commutative diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
& T \ar[ld]_{\text{id}} \ar[d]^i \ar[rd]^{\text{id}} \\ | |
T & T' \ar[l]_{p_0} \ar[r]^{p_1} & T | |
} | |
$$ | |
of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ such that $i$ is a first order thickening whose ideal | |
sheaf is identified with $\Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ and such that | |
$p_1^* - p_0^* : \mathcal{O}_T \to \mathcal{O}_{T'}$ | |
is identified with the universal derivation $\text{d}_{T/S, \delta}$ | |
composed with the inclusion $\Omega_{T/S, \delta} \to \mathcal{O}_{T'}$. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-second-order-thickening} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $(U, T, \delta)$ be an object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
Write $\Omega_{T/S, \delta} = (\Omega_{X/S})_T$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-module-of-differentials}. | |
We also write $\Omega^2_{T/S, \delta}$ for its second exterior | |
power. We explicitly describe a second order thickening $T''$ of $T$. | |
Namely, set | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{O}_{T''} = | |
\mathcal{O}_T \oplus \Omega_{T/S, \delta} \oplus \Omega_{T/S, \delta} | |
\oplus \Omega^2_{T/S, \delta} | |
$$ | |
with algebra structure defined in the following way | |
$$ | |
(f, \omega_1, \omega_2, \eta) \cdot | |
(f', \omega_1', \omega_2', \eta') = | |
(ff', f\omega_1' + f'\omega_1, f\omega_2' + f'\omega_2, | |
f\eta' + f'\eta + \omega_1 \wedge \omega_2' + \omega_1' \wedge \omega_2). | |
$$ | |
Let $\mathcal{J} \subset \mathcal{O}_T$ | |
be the ideal sheaf of the closed immersion $U \to T$. Let | |
$\mathcal{J}''$ be the inverse image of $\mathcal{J}$ under the | |
projection $\mathcal{O}_{T''} \to \mathcal{O}_T$. | |
Define a divided power structure on $\mathcal{J}''$ by setting | |
$$ | |
\delta_n''(f, \omega_1, \omega_2, \eta) = | |
(\delta_n(f), \delta_{n - 1}(f)\omega_1, \delta_{n - 1}(f)\omega_2, | |
\delta_{n - 1}(f)\eta + \delta_{n - 2}(f)\omega_1 \wedge \omega_2) | |
$$ | |
see Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-second-order-thickening}. | |
There are three ring maps | |
$q_0, q_1, q_2 : \mathcal{O}_T \to \mathcal{O}_{T''}$ | |
given by | |
\begin{align*} | |
q_0(f) & = (f, 0, 0, 0), \\ | |
q_1(f) & = (f, \text{d}f, 0, 0), \\ | |
q_2(f) & = (f, \text{d}f, \text{d}f, 0) | |
\end{align*} | |
where $\text{d} = \text{d}_{T/S, \delta}$. | |
Note that all three are compatible with the divided power structures | |
on $\mathcal{J}$ and $\mathcal{J}''$. There are three ring maps | |
$q_{01}, q_{12}, q_{02} : \mathcal{O}_{T'} \to \mathcal{O}_{T''}$ | |
where $\mathcal{O}_{T'}$ is as in Remark \ref{remark-first-order-thickening}. | |
Namely, set | |
\begin{align*} | |
q_{01}(f, \omega) & = (f, \omega, 0, 0), \\ | |
q_{12}(f, \omega) & = | |
(f, \text{d}f, \omega, \text{d}\omega), \\ | |
q_{02}(f, \omega) & = (f, \omega, \omega, 0) | |
\end{align*} | |
These are also compatible with the given divided power | |
structures. Let's do the verifications for $q_{12}$: Note | |
that $q_{12}$ is a ring homomorphism as | |
\begin{align*} | |
q_{12}(f, \omega)q_{12}(g, \eta) & = | |
(f, \text{d}f, \omega, \text{d}\omega)(g, \text{d}g, \eta, \text{d}\eta) \\ | |
& = | |
(fg, f\text{d}g + g \text{d}f, f\eta + g\omega, | |
f\text{d}\eta + g\text{d}\omega + \text{d}f \wedge \eta + | |
\text{d}g \wedge \omega) \\ | |
& = q_{12}(fg, f\eta + g\omega) = q_{12}((f, \omega)(g, \eta)) | |
\end{align*} | |
Note that $q_{12}$ is compatible with divided powers because | |
\begin{align*} | |
\delta_n''(q_{12}(f, \omega)) & = | |
\delta_n''((f, \text{d}f, \omega, \text{d}\omega)) \\ | |
& = | |
(\delta_n(f), \delta_{n - 1}(f)\text{d}f, \delta_{n - 1}(f)\omega, | |
\delta_{n - 1}(f)\text{d}\omega + \delta_{n - 2}(f)\text{d}(f) \wedge \omega) | |
\\ | |
& = q_{12}((\delta_n(f), \delta_{n - 1}(f)\omega)) = | |
q_{12}(\delta'_n(f, \omega)) | |
\end{align*} | |
The verifications for $q_{01}$ and $q_{02}$ are easier. | |
Note that $q_0 = q_{01} \circ p_0$, $q_1 = q_{01} \circ p_1$, | |
$q_1 = q_{12} \circ p_0$, $q_2 = q_{12} \circ p_1$, | |
$q_0 = q_{02} \circ p_0$, and $q_2 = q_{02} \circ p_1$. | |
Thus $(U, T'', \delta'')$ is an object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
and we get morphisms | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
T'' | |
\ar@<2ex>[r] | |
\ar@<0ex>[r] | |
\ar@<-2ex>[r] | |
& | |
T' | |
\ar@<1ex>[r] | |
\ar@<-1ex>[r] | |
& | |
T | |
} | |
$$ | |
of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ satisfying the relations described above. | |
In applications we will use $q_i : T'' \to T$ and | |
$q_{ij} : T'' \to T'$ to denote the morphisms associated to the | |
ring maps described above. | |
\end{remark} | |
\section{The de Rham complex} | |
\label{section-de-Rham} | |
\noindent | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Working on the (small) crystalline site, we define | |
$\Omega^i_{X/S} = \wedge^i_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega_{X/S}$ | |
for $i \geq 0$. The universal $S$-derivation $\text{d}_{X/S}$ gives | |
rise to the {\it de Rham complex} | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{O}_{X/S} \to \Omega^1_{X/S} \to \Omega^2_{X/S} \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-module-of-differentials-on-affine} and | |
Remark \ref{remark-divided-powers-de-rham-complex}. | |
\section{Connections} | |
\label{section-connections} | |
\noindent | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Given an $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-module $\mathcal{F}$ on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
a {\it connection} is a map of abelian sheaves | |
$$ | |
\nabla : | |
\mathcal{F} | |
\longrightarrow | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega_{X/S} | |
$$ | |
such that $\nabla(f s) = f\nabla(s) + s \otimes \text{d}f$ | |
for local sections $s, f$ of $\mathcal{F}$ and $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$. | |
Given a connection there are canonical maps | |
$ | |
\nabla : | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^i_{X/S} | |
\longrightarrow | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^{i + 1}_{X/S} | |
$ | |
defined by the rule $\nabla(s \otimes \omega) = | |
\nabla(s) \wedge \omega + s \otimes \text{d}\omega$ | |
as in Remark \ref{remark-connection}. We say the connection is | |
{\it integrable} if $\nabla \circ \nabla = 0$. If $\nabla$ is integrable | |
we obtain the {\it de Rham complex} | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{F} \to | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^1_{X/S} \to | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^2_{X/S} \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. It turns out that any crystal in | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules comes equipped with a canonical | |
integrable connection. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-automatic-connection} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules | |
on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. Then $\mathcal{F}$ comes equipped with a | |
canonical integrable connection. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Say $(U, T, \delta)$ is an object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
Let $(U, T', \delta')$ be the infinitesimal thickening of $T$ | |
by $(\Omega_{X/S})_T = \Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ | |
constructed in Remark \ref{remark-first-order-thickening}. | |
It comes with projections $p_0, p_1 : T' \to T$ | |
and a diagonal $i : T \to T'$. By assumption we get | |
isomorphisms | |
$$ | |
p_0^*\mathcal{F}_T \xrightarrow{c_0} | |
\mathcal{F}_{T'} \xleftarrow{c_1} | |
p_1^*\mathcal{F}_T | |
$$ | |
of $\mathcal{O}_{T'}$-modules. Pulling $c = c_1^{-1} \circ c_0$ | |
back to $T$ by $i$ we obtain the identity map | |
of $\mathcal{F}_T$. Hence if $s \in \Gamma(T, \mathcal{F}_T)$ | |
then $\nabla(s) = p_1^*s - c(p_0^*s)$ is a section of | |
$p_1^*\mathcal{F}_T$ which vanishes on pulling back by $i$. Hence | |
$\nabla(s)$ is a section of | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{F}_T | |
\otimes_{\mathcal{O}_T} | |
\Omega_{T/S, \delta} | |
$$ | |
because this is the kernel of $p_1^*\mathcal{F}_T \to \mathcal{F}_T$ | |
as $\mathcal{O}_{T'} = \mathcal{O}_T \oplus \Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ | |
by construction. It is easily verified that $\nabla(fs) = | |
f\nabla(s) + s \otimes \text{d}(f)$ using the description of | |
$\text{d}$ in Remark \ref{remark-first-order-thickening}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
The collection of maps | |
$$ | |
\nabla : \Gamma(T, \mathcal{F}_T) \to | |
\Gamma(T, \mathcal{F}_T \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_T} \Omega_{T/S, \delta}) | |
$$ | |
so obtained is functorial in $T$ because the construction of $T'$ | |
is functorial in $T$. Hence we obtain a connection. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
To show that the connection is integrable we consider the | |
object $(U, T'', \delta'')$ constructed in | |
Remark \ref{remark-second-order-thickening}. | |
Because $\mathcal{F}$ is a sheaf we see that | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
q_0^*\mathcal{F}_T \ar[rr]_{q_{01}^*c} \ar[rd]_{q_{02}^*c} & & | |
q_1^*\mathcal{F}_T \ar[ld]^{q_{12}^*c} \\ | |
& q_2^*\mathcal{F}_T | |
} | |
$$ | |
is a commutative diagram of $\mathcal{O}_{T''}$-modules. For | |
$s \in \Gamma(T, \mathcal{F}_T)$ we have | |
$c(p_0^*s) = p_1^*s - \nabla(s)$. Write | |
$\nabla(s) = \sum p_1^*s_i \cdot \omega_i$ where $s_i$ is a local section | |
of $\mathcal{F}_T$ and $\omega_i$ is a local section of $\Omega_{T/S, \delta}$. | |
We think of $\omega_i$ as a local section of the structure | |
sheaf of $\mathcal{O}_{T'}$ and hence we write product instead of tensor | |
product. On the one hand | |
\begin{align*} | |
q_{12}^*c \circ q_{01}^*c(q_0^*s) & = | |
q_{12}^*c(q_1^*s - \sum q_1^*s_i \cdot q_{01}^*\omega_i) \\ | |
& = | |
q_2^*s - \sum q_2^*s_i \cdot q_{12}^*\omega_i - | |
\sum q_2^*s_i \cdot q_{01}^*\omega_i + | |
\sum q_{12}^*\nabla(s_i) \cdot q_{01}^*\omega_i | |
\end{align*} | |
and on the other hand | |
$$ | |
q_{02}^*c(q_0^*s) = q_2^*s - \sum q_2^*s_i \cdot q_{02}^*\omega_i. | |
$$ | |
From the formulae of Remark \ref{remark-second-order-thickening} we see | |
that | |
$q_{01}^*\omega_i + q_{12}^*\omega_i - q_{02}^*\omega_i = \text{d}\omega_i$. | |
Hence the difference of the two expressions above is | |
$$ | |
\sum q_2^*s_i \cdot \text{d}\omega_i - | |
\sum q_{12}^*\nabla(s_i) \cdot q_{01}^*\omega_i | |
$$ | |
Note that | |
$q_{12}^*\omega \cdot q_{01}^*\omega' = \omega' \wedge \omega = | |
- \omega \wedge \omega'$ by the definition of the multiplication on | |
$\mathcal{O}_{T''}$. Thus the expression above is $\nabla^2(s)$ viewed | |
as a section of the subsheaf $\mathcal{F}_T \otimes \Omega^2_{T/S, \delta}$ of | |
$q_2^*\mathcal{F}$. Hence we get the integrability condition. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Cosimplicial algebra} | |
\label{section-cosimplicial} | |
\noindent | |
This section should be moved somewhere else. A | |
{\it cosimplicial ring} is a cosimplicial object | |
in the category of rings. Given a ring $R$, a | |
{\it cosimplicial $R$-algebra} is a cosimplicial object in the | |
category of $R$-algebras. A {\it cosimplicial ideal} in a cosimplicial | |
ring $A_*$ is given by an ideal $I_n \subset A_n$ for all $n$ such | |
that $A(f)(I_n) \subset I_m$ for all $f : [n] \to [m]$ in $\Delta$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $A_*$ be a cosimplicial ring. Let $\mathcal{C}$ be the category | |
of pairs $(A, M)$ where $A$ is a ring and $M$ is a module over $A$. | |
A morphism $(A, M) \to (A', M')$ consists of a ring map $A \to A'$ and | |
an $A$-module map $M \to M'$ where $M'$ is viewed as an $A$-module | |
via $A \to A'$ and the $A'$-module structure on $M'$. Having said this | |
we can define a {\it cosimplicial module $M_*$ over $A_*$} as a cosimplicial | |
object $(A_*, M_*)$ of $\mathcal{C}$ whose first entry is equal to $A_*$. | |
A {\it homomorphism $\varphi_* : M_* \to N_*$ of cosimplicial modules over | |
$A_*$} is a morphism $(A_*, M_*) \to (A_*, N_*)$ of cosimplicial objects | |
in $\mathcal{C}$ whose first component is $1_{A_*}$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
A {\it homotopy} between homomorphisms $\varphi_*, \psi_* : M_* \to N_*$ | |
of cosimplicial modules over $A_*$ is a homotopy between the associated | |
maps $(A_*, M_*) \to (A_*, N_*)$ whose first component is the | |
trivial homotopy (dual to | |
Simplicial, Example \ref{simplicial-example-trivial-homotopy}). | |
We spell out what this means. Such a homotopy is a homotopy | |
$$ | |
h : M_* \longrightarrow \Hom(\Delta[1], N_*) | |
$$ | |
between $\varphi_*$ and $\psi_*$ as homomorphisms of cosimplicial abelian | |
groups such that for each $n$ the map | |
$h_n : M_n \to \prod_{\alpha \in \Delta[1]_n} N_n$ is $A_n$-linear. | |
The following lemma is a version of | |
Simplicial, Lemma \ref{simplicial-lemma-functorial-homotopy} | |
for cosimplicial modules. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-homotopy-tensor} | |
Let $A_*$ be a cosimplicial ring. Let $\varphi_*, \psi_* : K_* \to M_*$ | |
be homomorphisms of cosimplicial $A_*$-modules. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item | |
\label{item-tensor} | |
If $\varphi_*$ and $\psi_*$ are homotopic, then | |
$$ | |
\varphi_* \otimes 1, \psi_* \otimes 1 : | |
K_* \otimes_{A_*} L_* \longrightarrow M_* \otimes_{A_*} L_* | |
$$ | |
are homotopic for any cosimplicial $A_*$-module $L_*$. | |
\item | |
\label{item-wedge} | |
If $\varphi_*$ and $\psi_*$ are homotopic, then | |
$$ | |
\wedge^i(\varphi_*), \wedge^i(\psi_*) : | |
\wedge^i(K_*) \longrightarrow \wedge^i(M_*) | |
$$ | |
are homotopic. | |
\item | |
\label{item-base-change} | |
If $\varphi_*$ and $\psi_*$ are homotopic, and $A_* \to B_*$ | |
is a homomorphism of cosimplicial rings, then | |
$$ | |
\varphi_* \otimes 1, \psi_* \otimes 1 : | |
K_* \otimes_{A_*} B_* \longrightarrow M_* \otimes_{A_*} B_* | |
$$ | |
are homotopic as homomorphisms of cosimplicial $B_*$-modules. | |
\item | |
\label{item-completion} | |
If $I_* \subset A_*$ is a cosimplicial ideal, then the induced | |
maps | |
$$ | |
\varphi^\wedge_*, \psi^\wedge_* : | |
K_*^\wedge \longrightarrow M_*^\wedge | |
$$ | |
between completions are homotopic. | |
\item Add more here as needed, for example symmetric powers. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $h : M_* \longrightarrow \Hom(\Delta[1], N_*)$ be the given | |
homotopy. In degree $n$ we have | |
$$ | |
h_n = (h_{n, \alpha}) : | |
K_n \longrightarrow | |
\prod\nolimits_{\alpha \in \Delta[1]_n} K_n | |
$$ | |
see Simplicial, Section \ref{simplicial-section-homotopy-cosimplicial}. | |
In order for a collection of $h_{n, \alpha}$ to form a homotopy, | |
it is necessary and sufficient if for every $f : [n] \to [m]$ we | |
have | |
$$ | |
h_{m, \alpha} \circ M_*(f) = N_*(f) \circ h_{n, \alpha \circ f} | |
$$ | |
see | |
Simplicial, Equation (\ref{simplicial-equation-property-homotopy-cosimplicial}). | |
We also should have that $\psi_n = h_{n, 0 : [n] \to [1]}$ and | |
$\varphi_n = h_{n, 1 : [n] \to [1]}$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
In each of the cases of the lemma we can produce the corresponding maps. | |
Case (\ref{item-tensor}). We can use the homotopy $h \otimes 1$ defined | |
in degree $n$ by setting | |
$$ | |
(h \otimes 1)_{n, \alpha} = h_{n, \alpha} \otimes 1_{L_n} : | |
K_n \otimes_{A_n} L_n | |
\longrightarrow | |
M_n \otimes_{A_n} L_n. | |
$$ | |
Case (\ref{item-wedge}). We can use the homotopy $\wedge^ih$ defined | |
in degree $n$ by setting | |
$$ | |
\wedge^i(h)_{n, \alpha} = \wedge^i(h_{n, \alpha}) : | |
\wedge_{A_n}(K_n) | |
\longrightarrow | |
\wedge^i_{A_n}(M_n). | |
$$ | |
Case (\ref{item-base-change}). We can use the homotopy $h \otimes 1$ defined | |
in degree $n$ by setting | |
$$ | |
(h \otimes 1)_{n, \alpha} = h_{n, \alpha} \otimes 1 : | |
K_n \otimes_{A_n} B_n | |
\longrightarrow | |
M_n \otimes_{A_n} B_n. | |
$$ | |
Case (\ref{item-completion}). We can use the homotopy $h^\wedge$ defined | |
in degree $n$ by setting | |
$$ | |
(h^\wedge)_{n, \alpha} = h_{n, \alpha}^\wedge : | |
K_n^\wedge | |
\longrightarrow | |
M_n^\wedge. | |
$$ | |
This works because each $h_{n, \alpha}$ is $A_n$-linear. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Crystals in quasi-coherent modules} | |
\label{section-quasi-coherent-crystals} | |
\noindent | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
Set $X = \Spec(C)$ and $S = \Spec(A)$. We are going to | |
classify crystals in quasi-coherent modules on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
Before we do so we fix some notation. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Choose a polynomial ring $P = A[x_i]$ over $A$ and a surjection $P \to C$ | |
of $A$-algebras with kernel $J = \Ker(P \to C)$. Set | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-D} | |
D = \lim_e D_{P, \gamma}(J) / p^eD_{P, \gamma}(J) | |
\end{equation} | |
for the $p$-adically completed divided power envelope. | |
This ring comes with a divided power ideal $\bar J$ and divided power | |
structure $\bar \gamma$, see Lemma \ref{lemma-list-properties}. | |
Set $D_e = D/p^eD$ and denote $\bar J_e$ the image of $\bar J$ in $D_e$. | |
We will use the short hand | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-omega-D} | |
\Omega_D = \lim_e \Omega_{D_e/A, \bar\gamma} = | |
\lim_e \Omega_{D/A, \bar\gamma}/p^e\Omega_{D/A, \bar\gamma} | |
\end{equation} | |
for the $p$-adic completion of the module of divided power differentials, | |
see Lemma \ref{lemma-differentials-completion}. | |
It is also the $p$-adic completion of | |
$\Omega_{D_{P, \gamma}(J)/A, \bar\gamma}$ | |
which is free on $\text{d}x_i$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-module-differentials-divided-power-envelope}. | |
Hence any element of $\Omega_D$ can be written uniquely as a sum | |
$\sum f_i\text{d}x_i$ with for all $e$ only finitely many $f_i$ | |
not in $p^eD$. Moreover, the maps | |
$\text{d}_{D_e/A, \bar\gamma} : D_e \to \Omega_{D_e/A, \bar\gamma}$ | |
fit together to define a divided power $A$-derivation | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-derivation-D} | |
\text{d} : D \longrightarrow \Omega_D | |
\end{equation} | |
on $p$-adic completions. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We will also need the ``products $\Spec(D(n))$ of $\Spec(D)$'', see | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology} and its proof for an | |
explanation. Formally these are defined as follows. For $n \geq 0$ let | |
$J(n) = \Ker(P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P \to C)$ where | |
the tensor product has $n + 1$ factors. We set | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-Dn} | |
D(n) = \lim_e | |
D_{P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P, \gamma}(J(n))/ | |
p^eD_{P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P, \gamma}(J(n)) | |
\end{equation} | |
equal to the $p$-adic completion of the divided power envelope. | |
We denote $\bar J(n)$ its divided power ideal and $\bar \gamma(n)$ | |
its divided powers. We also introduce $D(n)_e = D(n)/p^eD(n)$ as well | |
as the $p$-adically completed module of differentials | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-omega-Dn} | |
\Omega_{D(n)} = \lim_e \Omega_{D(n)_e/A, \bar\gamma} = | |
\lim_e \Omega_{D(n)/A, \bar\gamma}/p^e\Omega_{D(n)/A, \bar\gamma} | |
\end{equation} | |
and derivation | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-derivation-Dn} | |
\text{d} : D(n) \longrightarrow \Omega_{D(n)} | |
\end{equation} | |
Of course we have $D = D(0)$. Note that the rings $D(0), D(1), D(2), \ldots$ | |
form a cosimplicial object in the category of divided power rings. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-structure-Dn} | |
Let $D$ and $D(n)$ be as in (\ref{equation-D}) and (\ref{equation-Dn}). | |
The coprojection $P \to P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P$, | |
$f \mapsto f \otimes 1 \otimes \ldots \otimes 1$ | |
induces an isomorphism | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-structure-Dn} | |
D(n) = \lim_e D\langle \xi_i(j) \rangle/p^eD\langle \xi_i(j) \rangle | |
\end{equation} | |
of algebras over $D$ with | |
$$ | |
\xi_i(j) = x_i \otimes 1 \otimes \ldots \otimes 1 - | |
1 \otimes \ldots \otimes 1 \otimes x_i \otimes 1 \otimes \ldots \otimes 1 | |
$$ | |
for $j = 1, \ldots, n$ where the second $x_i$ is placed in the $j + 1$st | |
slot; recall that $D(n)$ is constructed starting with the | |
$n + 1$-fold tensor product of $P$ over $A$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We have | |
$$ | |
P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P = P[\xi_i(j)] | |
$$ | |
and $J(n)$ is generated by $J$ and the elements $\xi_i(j)$. | |
Hence the lemma follows from | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-envelope-add-variables}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-property-Dn} | |
Let $D$ and $D(n)$ be as in (\ref{equation-D}) and (\ref{equation-Dn}). | |
Then $(D, \bar J, \bar\gamma)$ and $(D(n), \bar J(n), \bar\gamma(n))$ | |
are objects of $\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$, see | |
Remark \ref{remark-completed-affine-site}, and | |
$$ | |
D(n) = \coprod\nolimits_{j = 0, \ldots, n} D | |
$$ | |
in $\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
The first assertion is clear. For the second, if $(B \to C, \delta)$ is an | |
object of $\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$, then we have | |
$$ | |
\Mor_{\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)}(D, B) = | |
\Hom_A((P, J), (B, \Ker(B \to C))) | |
$$ | |
and similarly for $D(n)$ replacing $(P, J)$ by | |
$(P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P, J(n))$. The property on coproducts follows | |
as $P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P$ is a coproduct. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
In the lemma below we will consider pairs $(M, \nabla)$ satisfying the | |
following conditions | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item | |
\label{item-complete} | |
$M$ is a $p$-adically complete $D$-module, | |
\item | |
\label{item-connection} | |
$\nabla : M \to M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega_D$ is a connection, i.e., | |
$\nabla(fm) = m \otimes \text{d}f + f\nabla(m)$, | |
\item | |
\label{item-integrable} | |
$\nabla$ is integrable | |
(see Remark \ref{remark-connection}), and | |
\item | |
\label{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent} | |
$\nabla$ is {\it topologically quasi-nilpotent}: If we write | |
$\nabla(m) = \sum \theta_i(m)\text{d}x_i$ for some operators | |
$\theta_i : M \to M$, then for any $m \in M$ there are only finitely | |
many pairs $(i, k)$ such that $\theta_i^k(m) \not \in pM$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
The operators $\theta_i$ are sometimes denoted | |
$\nabla_{\partial/\partial x_i}$ in the literature. | |
In the following lemma we construct a functor from crystals in quasi-coherent | |
modules on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ to the category of such pairs. We will show | |
this functor is an equivalence in | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine}. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-crystals-on-affine} | |
In the situation above there is a functor | |
$$ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\text{crystals in quasi-coherent} \\ | |
\mathcal{O}_{X/S}\text{-modules on }\text{Cris}(X/S) | |
\end{matrix} | |
\longrightarrow | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\text{pairs }(M, \nabla)\text{ satisfying} \\ | |
\text{(\ref{item-complete}), (\ref{item-connection}), | |
(\ref{item-integrable}), and (\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent})} | |
\end{matrix} | |
$$ | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in quasi-coherent modules on $X/S$. | |
Set $T_e = \Spec(D_e)$ so that $(X, T_e, \bar\gamma)$ is an object | |
of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ for $e \gg 0$. We have morphisms | |
$$ | |
(X, T_e, \bar\gamma) \to (X, T_{e + 1}, \bar\gamma) \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
which are closed immersions. We set | |
$$ | |
M = | |
\lim_e \Gamma((X, T_e, \bar\gamma), \mathcal{F}) = | |
\lim_e \Gamma(T_e, \mathcal{F}_{T_e}) = \lim_e M_e | |
$$ | |
Note that since $\mathcal{F}$ is locally quasi-coherent we have | |
$\mathcal{F}_{T_e} = \widetilde{M_e}$. Since $\mathcal{F}$ is a | |
crystal we have $M_e = M_{e + 1}/p^eM_{e + 1}$. Hence we see that | |
$M_e = M/p^eM$ and that $M$ is $p$-adically complete, see | |
Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-limit-complete}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-automatic-connection} we know that $\mathcal{F}$ | |
comes endowed with a canonical integrable connection | |
$\nabla : \mathcal{F} \to \mathcal{F} \otimes \Omega_{X/S}$. | |
If we evaluate this connection on the objects $T_e$ constructed above | |
we obtain a canonical integrable connection | |
$$ | |
\nabla : M \longrightarrow M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega_D | |
$$ | |
To see that this is topologically nilpotent we work out what this means. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Now we can do the same procedure for the rings $D(n)$. | |
This produces a $p$-adically complete $D(n)$-module $M(n)$. Again using | |
the crystal property of $\mathcal{F}$ we obtain isomorphisms | |
$$ | |
M \otimes^\wedge_{D, p_0} D(1) \rightarrow M(1) | |
\leftarrow M \otimes^\wedge_{D, p_1} D(1) | |
$$ | |
compare with the proof of Lemma \ref{lemma-automatic-connection}. | |
Denote $c$ the composition from left to right. Pick $m \in M$. | |
Write $\xi_i = x_i \otimes 1 - 1 \otimes x_i$. | |
Using (\ref{equation-structure-Dn}) we can write uniquely | |
$$ | |
c(m \otimes 1) = \sum\nolimits_K \theta_K(m) \otimes \prod \xi_i^{[k_i]} | |
$$ | |
for some $\theta_K(m) \in M$ where the sum is over multi-indices | |
$K = (k_i)$ with $k_i \geq 0$ and $\sum k_i < \infty$. Set | |
$\theta_i = \theta_K$ where $K$ has a $1$ in the $i$th spot and | |
zeros elsewhere. We have | |
$$ | |
\nabla(m) = \sum \theta_i(m) \text{d}x_i. | |
$$ | |
as can be seen by comparing with the definition of | |
$\nabla$. Namely, the defining equation is | |
$p_1^*m = \nabla(m) - c(p_0^*m)$ in Lemma \ref{lemma-automatic-connection} | |
but the sign works out because in the Stacks project we consistently use | |
$\text{d}f = p_1(f) - p_0(f)$ modulo the ideal of the diagonal squared, | |
and hence $\xi_i = x_i \otimes 1 - 1 \otimes x_i$ maps to $-\text{d}x_i$ | |
modulo the ideal of the diagonal squared. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Denote $q_i : D \to D(2)$ and $q_{ij} : D(1) \to D(2)$ the coprojections | |
corresponding to the indices $i, j$. As in the last paragraph of the proof of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-automatic-connection} | |
we see that | |
$$ | |
q_{02}^*c = q_{12}^*c \circ q_{01}^*c. | |
$$ | |
This means that | |
$$ | |
\sum\nolimits_{K''} \theta_{K''}(m) \otimes \prod {\zeta''_i}^{[k''_i]} | |
= | |
\sum\nolimits_{K', K} \theta_{K'}(\theta_K(m)) | |
\otimes \prod {\zeta'_i}^{[k'_i]} \prod \zeta_i^{[k_i]} | |
$$ | |
in $M \otimes^\wedge_{D, q_2} D(2)$ where | |
\begin{align*} | |
\zeta_i & = x_i \otimes 1 \otimes 1 - 1 \otimes x_i \otimes 1,\\ | |
\zeta'_i & = 1 \otimes x_i \otimes 1 - 1 \otimes 1 \otimes x_i,\\ | |
\zeta''_i & = x_i \otimes 1 \otimes 1 - 1 \otimes 1 \otimes x_i. | |
\end{align*} | |
In particular $\zeta''_i = \zeta_i + \zeta'_i$ and we have that | |
$D(2)$ is the $p$-adic completion of the divided power polynomial | |
ring in $\zeta_i, \zeta'_i$ over $q_2(D)$, see Lemma \ref{lemma-structure-Dn}. | |
Comparing coefficients in the expression above it follows immediately that | |
$\theta_i \circ \theta_j = \theta_j \circ \theta_i$ | |
(this provides an alternative proof of the integrability of $\nabla$) and that | |
$$ | |
\theta_K(m) = (\prod \theta_i^{k_i})(m). | |
$$ | |
In particular, as the sum expressing $c(m \otimes 1)$ above has to converge | |
$p$-adically we conclude that for each $i$ and each $m \in M$ only a finite | |
number of $\theta_i^k(m)$ are allowed to be nonzero modulo $p$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{proposition} | |
\label{proposition-crystals-on-affine} | |
The functor | |
$$ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\text{crystals in quasi-coherent} \\ | |
\mathcal{O}_{X/S}\text{-modules on }\text{Cris}(X/S) | |
\end{matrix} | |
\longrightarrow | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\text{pairs }(M, \nabla)\text{ satisfying} \\ | |
\text{(\ref{item-complete}), (\ref{item-connection}), | |
(\ref{item-integrable}), and (\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent})} | |
\end{matrix} | |
$$ | |
of Lemma \ref{lemma-crystals-on-affine} | |
is an equivalence of categories. | |
\end{proposition} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Let $(M, \nabla)$ be given. We are going to construct | |
a crystal in quasi-coherent modules $\mathcal{F}$. | |
Write $\nabla(m) = \sum \theta_i(m)\text{d}x_i$. | |
Then $\theta_i \circ \theta_j = \theta_j \circ \theta_i$ and we | |
can set $\theta_K(m) = (\prod \theta_i^{k_i})(m)$ for any multi-index | |
$K = (k_i)$ with $k_i \geq 0$ and $\sum k_i < \infty$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Let $(U, T, \delta)$ be any object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ with $T$ affine. | |
Say $T = \Spec(B)$ and the ideal of $U \to T$ is $J_B \subset B$. | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-set-generators} there exists an integer $e$ and a morphism | |
$$ | |
f : (U, T, \delta) \longrightarrow (X, T_e, \bar\gamma) | |
$$ | |
where $T_e = \Spec(D_e)$ as in the proof of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-crystals-on-affine}. | |
Choose such an $e$ and $f$; denote $f : D \to B$ also the corresponding | |
divided power $A$-algebra map. We will set $\mathcal{F}_T$ equal to the | |
quasi-coherent sheaf of $\mathcal{O}_T$-modules associated to the $B$-module | |
$$ | |
M \otimes_{D, f} B. | |
$$ | |
However, we have to show that this is independent of the choice of $f$. | |
Suppose that $g : D \to B$ is a second such morphism. Since $f$ and $g$ | |
are morphisms in $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ we see that the image of | |
$f - g : D \to B$ is contained in the divided power ideal $J_B$. | |
Write $\xi_i = f(x_i) - g(x_i) \in J_B$. By analogy with the proof | |
of Lemma \ref{lemma-crystals-on-affine} we define an isomorphism | |
$$ | |
c_{f, g} : M \otimes_{D, f} B \longrightarrow M \otimes_{D, g} B | |
$$ | |
by the formula | |
$$ | |
m \otimes 1 \longmapsto | |
\sum\nolimits_K \theta_K(m) \otimes \prod \xi_i^{[k_i]} | |
$$ | |
which makes sense by our remarks above and the fact that $\nabla$ | |
is topologically quasi-nilpotent (so the sum is finite!). | |
A computation shows that | |
$$ | |
c_{g, h} \circ c_{f, g} = c_{f, h} | |
$$ | |
if given a third morphism | |
$h : (U, T, \delta) \longrightarrow (X, T_e, \bar\gamma)$. | |
It is also true that $c_{f, f} = 1$. | |
Hence these maps are all isomorphisms and we see that | |
the module $\mathcal{F}_T$ is independent of the choice of $f$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
If $a : (U', T', \delta') \to (U, T, \delta)$ is a morphism of affine objects | |
of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$, then choosing $f' = f \circ a$ it is clear | |
that there exists a canonical isomorphism | |
$a^*\mathcal{F}_T \to \mathcal{F}_{T'}$. We omit the verification that this | |
map is independent of the choice of $f$. Using these maps as the restriction | |
maps it is clear that we obtain a crystal in quasi-coherent modules | |
on the full subcategory of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ consisting of affine objects. | |
We omit the proof that this extends to a crystal on all of | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$. We also omit the proof that this procedure is a functor | |
and that it is quasi-inverse to the functor constructed in | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-crystals-on-affine}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-crystals-on-affine-smooth} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
Let $A \to P' \to C$ be ring maps with $A \to P'$ smooth and $P' \to C$ | |
surjective with kernel $J'$. Let $D'$ be the $p$-adic completion of | |
$D_{P', \gamma}(J')$. There are homomorphisms of divided power $A$-algebras | |
$$ | |
a : D \longrightarrow D',\quad b : D' \longrightarrow D | |
$$ | |
compatible with the maps $D \to C$ and $D' \to C$ such that | |
$a \circ b = \text{id}_{D'}$. These maps induce | |
an equivalence of categories of pairs $(M, \nabla)$ satisfying | |
(\ref{item-complete}), (\ref{item-connection}), | |
(\ref{item-integrable}), and (\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent}) | |
over $D$ and pairs $(M', \nabla')$ satisfying | |
(\ref{item-complete}), (\ref{item-connection}), | |
(\ref{item-integrable}), and | |
(\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent})\footnote{This condition | |
is tricky to formulate for $(M', \nabla')$ over $D'$. See proof.} over $D'$. | |
In particular, the equivalence of categories of | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine} | |
also holds for the corresponding functor towards pairs over $D'$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
First, suppose that $P' = A[y_1, \ldots, y_m]$ is a polynomial algebra | |
over $A$. In this case, we can find ring maps $P \to P'$ and $P' \to P$ | |
compatible with the maps to $C$ which induce maps $a : D \to D'$ and | |
$b : D' \to D$ as in the lemma. Using completed base change along $a$ | |
and $b$ we obtain functors between the categories of modules with connection | |
satisfying properties (\ref{item-complete}), (\ref{item-connection}), | |
(\ref{item-integrable}), and (\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent}) | |
simply because these these categories are equivalent to the category | |
of quasi-coherent crystals by Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine} | |
(and this equivalence is compatible with the base change operation as shown | |
in the proof of the proposition). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Proof for general smooth $P'$. | |
By the first paragraph of the proof we may assume $P = A[y_1, \ldots, y_m]$ | |
which gives us a surjection $P \to P'$ compatible with the map to $C$. | |
Hence we obtain a surjective map $a : D \to D'$ by functoriality of | |
divided power envelopes and completion. Pick $e$ large enough so that | |
$D_e$ is a divided power | |
thickening of $C$ over $A$. Then $D_e \to C$ is a surjection whose kernel | |
is locally nilpotent, see Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-nil}. | |
Setting $D'_e = D'/p^eD'$ | |
we see that the kernel of $D_e \to D'_e$ is locally nilpotent. | |
Hence by Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-smooth-strong-lift} | |
we can find a lift $\beta_e : P' \to D_e$ of the map $P' \to D'_e$. | |
Note that $D_{e + i + 1} \to D_{e + i} \times_{D'_{e + i}} D'_{e + i + 1}$ | |
is surjective with square zero kernel for any $i \geq 0$ because | |
$p^{e + i}D \to p^{e + i}D'$ is surjective. Applying the usual lifting | |
property (Algebra, Proposition \ref{algebra-proposition-smooth-formally-smooth}) | |
successively to the diagrams | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
P' \ar[r] & D_{e + i} \times_{D'_{e + i}} D'_{e + i + 1} \\ | |
A \ar[u] \ar[r] & D_{e + i + 1} \ar[u] | |
} | |
$$ | |
we see that we can find an $A$-algebra map $\beta : P' \to D$ whose | |
composition with $a$ is the given map $P' \to D'$. | |
By the universal property of the divided power envelope we obtain a | |
map $D_{P', \gamma}(J') \to D$. As $D$ is $p$-adically complete we | |
obtain $b : D' \to D$ such that $a \circ b = \text{id}_{D'}$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Consider the base change functors | |
$$ | |
F : (M, \nabla) \longmapsto | |
(M \otimes^\wedge_{D, a} D', \nabla') | |
\quad\text{and}\quad | |
G : (M', \nabla') \longmapsto | |
(M' \otimes^\wedge_{D', b} D, \nabla) | |
$$ | |
on modules with connections satisfying (\ref{item-complete}), | |
(\ref{item-connection}), and (\ref{item-integrable}). | |
See Remark \ref{remark-base-change-connection}. | |
Since $a \circ b = \text{id}_{D'}$ we see that | |
$F \circ G$ is the identity functor. Let us say that $(M', \nabla')$ | |
has property (\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent}) if this | |
is true for $G(M', \nabla')$. A formal argument now shows that to finish | |
the proof it suffices to show that $G(F(M, \nabla))$ is isomorphic | |
to $(M, \nabla)$ in the case that $(M, \nabla)$ satisfies all four | |
conditions (\ref{item-complete}), (\ref{item-connection}), | |
(\ref{item-integrable}), and (\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent}). | |
For this we use the functorial isomorphism | |
$$ | |
c_{\text{id}_D, b \circ a} : | |
M \otimes_{D, \text{id}_D} D | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes_{D, b \circ a} D | |
$$ | |
of the proof of Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine} | |
(which requires the topological quasi-nilpotency of $\nabla$ | |
which we have assumed). | |
It remains to prove that this map is horizontal, i.e., | |
compatible with connections, which we omit. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
The last statement of the proof now follows. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-equivalence-more-general} | |
The equivalence of Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine} | |
holds if we start with a surjection $P \to C$ where $P/A$ satisfies the | |
strong lifting property of | |
Algebra, Lemma \ref{algebra-lemma-smooth-strong-lift}. | |
To prove this we can argue as in the proof of | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-crystals-on-affine-smooth}. | |
(Details will be added here if we ever need this.) | |
Presumably there is also a direct proof of this result, but the advantage | |
of using polynomial rings is that the rings $D(n)$ are $p$-adic completions | |
of divided power polynomial rings and the algebra is simplified. | |
\end{remark} | |
\section{General remarks on cohomology} | |
\label{section-cohomology-lqc} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we do a bit of work to translate the cohomology | |
of modules on the cristalline site of an affine scheme into | |
an algebraic question. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-vanishing-lqc} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a locally quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-module | |
on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. Then we have | |
$$ | |
H^p((U, T, \delta), \mathcal{F}) = 0 | |
$$ | |
for all $p > 0$ and all $(U, T, \delta)$ with $T$ or $U$ affine. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
As $U \to T$ is a thickening we see that $U$ is affine if and only if $T$ | |
is affine, see Limits, Lemma \ref{limits-lemma-affine}. | |
Having said this, let us apply | |
Cohomology on Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-cohomology-lemma-cech-vanish-collection} | |
to the collection $\mathcal{B}$ of affine objects $(U, T, \delta)$ and the | |
collection $\text{Cov}$ of affine open coverings | |
$\mathcal{U} = \{(U_i, T_i, \delta_i) \to (U, T, \delta)\}$. The | |
{\v C}ech complex | |
${\check C}^*(\mathcal{U}, \mathcal{F})$ for such a covering is simply | |
the {\v C}ech complex of the quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_T$-module | |
$\mathcal{F}_T$ | |
(here we are using the assumption that $\mathcal{F}$ is locally quasi-coherent) | |
with respect to the affine open covering $\{T_i \to T\}$ of the | |
affine scheme $T$. Hence the {\v C}ech cohomology is zero by | |
Cohomology of Schemes, Lemma | |
\ref{coherent-lemma-cech-cohomology-quasi-coherent} and | |
\ref{coherent-lemma-quasi-coherent-affine-cohomology-zero}. | |
Thus the hypothesis of | |
Cohomology on Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-cohomology-lemma-cech-vanish-collection} | |
are satisfied and we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-compare} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Assume moreover $X$ and $S$ are affine schemes. | |
Consider the full subcategory $\mathcal{C} \subset \text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
consisting of divided power thickenings $(X, T, \delta)$ | |
endowed with the chaotic topology (see | |
Sites, Example \ref{sites-example-indiscrete}). | |
For any locally quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-module $\mathcal{F}$ | |
we have | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{F}|_\mathcal{C}) = | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) | |
$$ | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Denote $\text{AffineCris}(X/S)$ the fully subcategory of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
consisting of those objects $(U, T, \delta)$ with $U$ and $T$ affine. | |
We turn this into a site by saying a family of morphisms | |
$\{(U_i, T_i, \delta_i) \to (U, T, \delta)\}_{i \in I}$ of | |
$\text{AffineCris}(X/S)$ is a covering if and only if it is a covering | |
of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. With this definition the inclusion functor | |
$$ | |
\text{AffineCris}(X/S) \longrightarrow \text{Cris}(X/S) | |
$$ | |
is a special cocontinuous functor as defined in | |
Sites, Definition \ref{sites-definition-special-cocontinuous-functor}. | |
The proof of this is exactly the same as the proof of | |
Topologies, Lemma \ref{topologies-lemma-affine-big-site-Zariski}. | |
Thus we see that the topos of sheaves on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
is the same as the topos of sheaves on $\text{AffineCris}(X/S)$ | |
via restriction by the displayed inclusion functor. | |
Therefore we have to prove the corresponding statement for the | |
inclusion $\mathcal{C} \subset \text{AffineCris}(X/S)$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We will use without further mention that $\mathcal{C}$ and | |
$\text{AffineCris}(X/S)$ have products and fibre products | |
(details omitted, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-divided-power-thickening-fibre-products}). | |
The inclusion functor $u : \mathcal{C} \to \text{AffineCris}(X/S)$ | |
is fully faithful, continuous, and commutes with products and fibre products. | |
We claim it defines a morphism of ringed sites | |
$$ | |
f : | |
(\text{AffineCris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S}) | |
\longrightarrow | |
(\Sh(\mathcal{C}), \mathcal{O}_{X/S}|_\mathcal{C}) | |
$$ | |
To see this we will use Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-directed-morphism}. | |
Note that $\mathcal{C}$ has fibre products and $u$ commutes with them | |
so the categories $\mathcal{I}^u_{(U, T, \delta)}$ are disjoint unions | |
of directed categories (by Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-almost-directed} and | |
Categories, Lemma \ref{categories-lemma-split-into-directed}). Hence it | |
suffices to show that $\mathcal{I}^u_{(U, T, \delta)}$ is connected. | |
Nonempty follows from Lemma \ref{lemma-set-generators}: since $U$ and $T$ | |
are affine that lemma says there is at least one object | |
$(X, T', \delta')$ of $\mathcal{C}$ and a morphism | |
$(U, T, \delta) \to (X, T', \delta')$ of divided power thickenings. | |
Connectedness follows from the fact that $\mathcal{C}$ has products | |
and that $u$ commutes with them (compare with the proof of | |
Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-directed}). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Note that $f_*\mathcal{F} = \mathcal{F}|_\mathcal{C}$. Hence the lemma | |
follows if $R^pf_*\mathcal{F} = 0$ for $p > 0$, see | |
Cohomology on Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-cohomology-lemma-apply-Leray}. By | |
Cohomology on Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-cohomology-lemma-higher-direct-images} | |
it suffices to show that | |
$H^p(\text{AffineCris}(X/S)/(X, T, \delta), \mathcal{F}) = 0$ | |
for all $(X, T, \delta)$. | |
This follows from Lemma \ref{lemma-vanishing-lqc} because the | |
topos of the site $\text{AffineCris}(X/S)/(X, T, \delta)$ | |
is equivalent to the topos of the site | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)/(X, T, \delta)$ used in the lemma. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-complete} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. | |
Set $\mathcal{C} = (\text{Cris}(C/A))^{opp}$ and | |
$\mathcal{C}^\wedge = (\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A))^{opp}$ | |
endowed with the chaotic topology, see | |
Remark \ref{remark-completed-affine-site} for notation. | |
There is a morphism of topoi | |
$$ | |
g : \Sh(\mathcal{C}) \longrightarrow \Sh(\mathcal{C}^\wedge) | |
$$ | |
such that if $\mathcal{F}$ is a sheaf of abelian groups on | |
$\mathcal{C}$, then | |
$$ | |
R^pg_*\mathcal{F}(B \to C, \delta) = | |
\left\{ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\lim_e \mathcal{F}(B_e \to C, \delta) & \text{if }p = 0 \\ | |
R^1\lim_e \mathcal{F}(B_e \to C, \delta) & \text{if }p = 1 \\ | |
0 & \text{else} | |
\end{matrix} | |
\right. | |
$$ | |
where $B_e = B/p^eB$ for $e \gg 0$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Any functor between categories defines a morphism between chaotic | |
topoi in the same direction, for example because such a functor | |
can be considered as a cocontinuous functor between sites, see | |
Sites, Section \ref{sites-section-cocontinuous-morphism-topoi}. | |
Proof of the description of $g_*\mathcal{F}$ is omitted. | |
Note that in the statement we take $(B_e \to C, \delta)$ | |
is an object of $\text{Cris}(C/A)$ only for $e$ large enough. | |
Let $\mathcal{I}$ be an injective abelian sheaf on $\mathcal{C}$. | |
Then the transition maps | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{I}(B_e \to C, \delta) \leftarrow | |
\mathcal{I}(B_{e + 1} \to C, \delta) | |
$$ | |
are surjective as the morphisms | |
$$ | |
(B_e \to C, \delta) | |
\longrightarrow | |
(B_{e + 1} \to C, \delta) | |
$$ | |
are monomorphisms in the category $\mathcal{C}$. Hence for an injective | |
abelian sheaf both sides of the displayed formula of the lemma agree. | |
Taking an injective resolution of $\mathcal{F}$ one easily obtains | |
the result (sheaves are presheaves, so exactness is measured on the | |
level of groups of sections over objects). | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-category-with-covering} | |
Let $\mathcal{C}$ be a category endowed with the chaotic topology. | |
Let $X$ be an object of $\mathcal{C}$ such that every object of | |
$\mathcal{C}$ has a morphism towards $X$. Assume that $\mathcal{C}$ | |
has products of pairs. | |
Then for every abelian sheaf $\mathcal{F}$ on $\mathcal{C}$ | |
the total cohomology $R\Gamma(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{F})$ is represented | |
by the complex | |
$$ | |
\mathcal{F}(X) \to \mathcal{F}(X \times X) \to | |
\mathcal{F}(X \times X \times X) \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
associated to the cosimplicial abelian group $[n] \mapsto \mathcal{F}(X^n)$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Note that $H^q(X^p, \mathcal{F}) = 0$ for all $q > 0$ as any presheaf is a | |
sheaf on $\mathcal{C}$. The assumption on $X$ is that $h_X \to *$ | |
is surjective. Using that $H^q(X, \mathcal{F}) = H^q(h_X, \mathcal{F})$ and | |
$H^q(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{F}) = H^q(*, \mathcal{F})$ we see that our | |
statement is a special case of | |
Cohomology on Sites, | |
Lemma \ref{sites-cohomology-lemma-cech-to-cohomology-sheaf-sets}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Cosimplicial preparations} | |
\label{section-cohomology} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we compare crystalline cohomology with de Rham | |
cohomology. We follow \cite{Bhatt}. | |
\begin{example} | |
\label{example-cosimplicial-module} | |
Suppose that $A_*$ is any cosimplicial ring. | |
Consider the cosimplicial module $M_*$ defined by the rule | |
$$ | |
M_n = \bigoplus\nolimits_{i = 0, ..., n} A_n e_i | |
$$ | |
For a map $f : [n] \to [m]$ define $M_*(f) : M_n \to M_m$ | |
to be the unique $A_*(f)$-linear map which maps $e_i$ to $e_{f(i)}$. | |
We claim the identity on $M_*$ is homotopic to $0$. | |
Namely, a homotopy is given by a map of cosimplicial modules | |
$$ | |
h : M_* \longrightarrow \Hom(\Delta[1], M_*) | |
$$ | |
see Section \ref{section-cosimplicial}. | |
For $j \in \{0, \ldots, n + 1\}$ we let $\alpha^n_j : [n] \to [1]$ be the map | |
defined by $\alpha^n_j(i) = 0 \Leftrightarrow i < j$. Then | |
$\Delta[1]_n = \{\alpha^n_0, \ldots, \alpha^n_{n + 1}\}$ and correspondingly | |
$\Hom(\Delta[1], M_*)_n = \prod_{j = 0, \ldots, n + 1} M_n$, see | |
Simplicial, Sections \ref{simplicial-section-homotopy} and | |
\ref{simplicial-section-homotopy-cosimplicial}. Instead of using | |
this product representation, we think of an element | |
in $\Hom(\Delta[1], M_*)_n$ as a function $\Delta[1]_n \to M_n$. | |
Using this notation, we define $h$ in degree $n$ by the rule | |
$$ | |
h_n(e_i)(\alpha^n_j) = | |
\left\{ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
e_{i} & \text{if} & i < j \\ | |
0 & \text{else} | |
\end{matrix} | |
\right. | |
$$ | |
We first check $h$ is a morphism of cosimplicial modules. Namely, for | |
$f : [n] \to [m]$ we will show that | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-cosimplicial-morphism} | |
h_m \circ M_*(f) = \Hom(\Delta[1], M_*)(f) \circ h_n | |
\end{equation} | |
The left hand side of (\ref{equation-cosimplicial-morphism}) evaluated at | |
$e_i$ and then in turn evaluated at $\alpha^m_j$ is | |
$$ | |
h_m(e_{f(i)})(\alpha^m_j) = | |
\left\{ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
e_{f(i)} & \text{if} & f(i) < j \\ | |
0 & \text{else} | |
\end{matrix} | |
\right. | |
$$ | |
Note that $\alpha^m_j \circ f = \alpha^n_{j'}$ where | |
$0 \leq j' \leq n + 1$ is the unique index such that $f(i) < j$ | |
if and only if $i < j'$. Thus the right hand side of | |
(\ref{equation-cosimplicial-morphism}) evaluated at $e_i$ | |
and then in turn evaluated at $\alpha^m_j$ is | |
$$ | |
M_*(f)(h_n(e_i)(\alpha^m_j \circ f) = | |
M_*(f)(h_n(e_i)(\alpha^n_{j'})) = | |
\left\{ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
e_{f(i)} & \text{if} & i < j' \\ | |
0 & \text{else} | |
\end{matrix} | |
\right. | |
$$ | |
It follows from our description of $j'$ that the two answers are equal. | |
Hence $h$ is a map of cosimplicial modules. | |
Let $0 : \Delta[0] \to \Delta[1]$ and | |
$1 : \Delta[0] \to \Delta[1]$ be the obvious maps, and denote | |
$ev_0, ev_1 : \Hom(\Delta[1], M_*) \to M_*$ the corresponding | |
evaluation maps. The reader verifies readily that | |
the compositions | |
$$ | |
ev_0 \circ h, ev_1 \circ h : M_* \longrightarrow M_* | |
$$ | |
are $0$ and $1$ respectively, whence $h$ is the desired homotopy between | |
$0$ and $1$. | |
\end{example} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-vanishing-omega-1} | |
With notation as in (\ref{equation-omega-Dn}) the complex | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{D(0)} \to \Omega_{D(1)} \to \Omega_{D(2)} \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
is homotopic to zero as a $D(*)$-cosimplicial module. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We are going to use the principle of | |
Simplicial, Lemma \ref{simplicial-lemma-functorial-homotopy} | |
and more specifically | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-homotopy-tensor} | |
which tells us that homotopic maps between (co)simplicial objects | |
are transformed by any functor into homotopic maps. | |
The complex of the lemma is equal to the $p$-adic completion of the | |
base change of the cosimplicial module | |
$$ | |
M_* = \left( | |
\Omega_{P/A} \to | |
\Omega_{P \otimes_A P/A} \to | |
\Omega_{P \otimes_A P \otimes_A P/A} \to \ldots | |
\right) | |
$$ | |
via the cosimplicial ring map $P\otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P \to D(n)$. This | |
follows from Lemma \ref{lemma-module-differentials-divided-power-envelope}, | |
see comments following (\ref{equation-omega-D}). Hence it | |
suffices to show that the cosimplicial module $M_*$ is homotopic to zero | |
(uses base change and $p$-adic completion). | |
We can even assume $A = \mathbf{Z}$ and $P = \mathbf{Z}[\{x_i\}_{i \in I}]$ | |
as we can use base change with $\mathbf{Z} \to A$. | |
In this case $P^{\otimes n + 1}$ is the polynomial algebra on the elements | |
$$ | |
x_i(e) = 1 \otimes \ldots \otimes x_i \otimes \ldots \otimes 1 | |
$$ | |
with $x_i$ in the $e$th slot. The modules of the complex are free on the | |
generators $\text{d}x_i(e)$. Note that if $f : [n] \to [m]$ is a | |
map then we see that | |
$$ | |
M_*(f)(\text{d}x_i(e)) = \text{d}x_i(f(e)) | |
$$ | |
Hence we see that $M_*$ is a direct sum over $I$ of copies of the module | |
studied in Example \ref{example-cosimplicial-module} and we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-vanishing} | |
With notation as in (\ref{equation-Dn}) and (\ref{equation-omega-Dn}), | |
given any cosimplicial module $M_*$ over $D(*)$ and | |
$i > 0$ the cosimplicial module | |
$$ | |
M_0 \otimes^\wedge_{D(0)} \Omega^i_{D(0)} \to | |
M_1 \otimes^\wedge_{D(1)} \Omega^i_{D(1)} \to | |
M_2 \otimes^\wedge_{D(2)} \Omega^i_{D(2)} \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
is homotopic to zero, where $\Omega^i_{D(n)}$ is the $p$-adic completion | |
of the $i$th exterior power of $\Omega_{D(n)}$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-vanishing-omega-1} the endomorphisms $0$ and $1$ | |
of $\Omega_{D(*)}$ are homotopic. | |
If we apply the functor $\wedge^i$ we see that | |
the same is true for the cosimplicial module $\wedge^i\Omega_{D(*)}$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-homotopy-tensor}. | |
Another application of the same lemma shows the $p$-adic completion | |
$\Omega^i_{D(*)}$ is homotopy equivalent to zero. | |
Tensoring with $M_*$ we see that $M_* \otimes_{D(*)} \Omega^i_{D(*)}$ | |
is homotopic to zero, see Lemma \ref{lemma-homotopy-tensor} again. | |
A final application of the $p$-adic completion functor finishes the proof. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Divided power Poincar\'e lemma} | |
\label{section-poincare} | |
\noindent | |
Just the simplest possible version. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-poincare} | |
Let $A$ be a ring. Let $P = A\langle x_i \rangle$ be a divided | |
power polynomial ring over $A$. For any $A$-module $M$ the complex | |
$$ | |
0 \to M \to | |
M \otimes_A P \to | |
M \otimes_A \Omega^1_{P/A, \delta} \to | |
M \otimes_A \Omega^2_{P/A, \delta} \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
is exact. Let $D$ be the $p$-adic completion of $P$. | |
Let $\Omega^i_D$ be the $p$-adic completion of the $i$th exterior | |
power of $\Omega_{D/A, \delta}$. For any $p$-adically complete | |
$A$-module $M$ the complex | |
$$ | |
0 \to M \to | |
M \otimes^\wedge_A D \to | |
M \otimes^\wedge_A \Omega^1_D \to | |
M \otimes^\wedge_A \Omega^2_D \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
is exact. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
It suffices to show that the complex | |
$$ | |
E : | |
(0 \to A \to P \to \Omega^1_{P/A, \delta} \to | |
\Omega^2_{P/A, \delta} \to \ldots) | |
$$ | |
is homotopy equivalent to zero as a complex of $A$-modules. | |
For every multi-index $K = (k_i)$ we can consider the subcomplex $E(K)$ | |
which in degree $j$ consists of | |
$$ | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{I = \{i_1, \ldots, i_j\} \subset \text{Supp}(K)} | |
A | |
\prod\nolimits_{i \not \in I} x_i^{[k_i]} | |
\prod\nolimits_{i \in I} x_i^{[k_i - 1]} | |
\text{d}x_{i_1} \wedge \ldots \wedge \text{d}x_{i_j} | |
$$ | |
Since $E = \bigoplus E(K)$ we see that it suffices to prove each of the | |
complexes $E(K)$ is homotopic to zero. If $K = 0$, then | |
$E(K) : (A \to A)$ is homotopic to zero. If $K$ has nonempty (finite) | |
support $S$, then the complex $E(K)$ is isomorphic to the complex | |
$$ | |
0 \to A \to | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{s \in S} A \to | |
\wedge^2(\bigoplus\nolimits_{s \in S} A) \to | |
\ldots \to \wedge^{\# S}(\bigoplus\nolimits_{s \in S} A) \to 0 | |
$$ | |
which is homotopic to zero, for example by | |
More on Algebra, Lemma \ref{more-algebra-lemma-homotopy-koszul-abstract}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
An alternative (more direct) approach to the following lemma is | |
explained in Example \ref{example-integrate}. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-relative-poincare} | |
Let $A$ be a ring. Let $(B, I, \delta)$ be a divided power ring. | |
Let $P = B\langle x_i \rangle$ be a divided power polynomial | |
ring over $B$ with divided power ideal $J = IP + B\langle x_i \rangle_{+}$ | |
as usual. Let $M$ be a $B$-module endowed with an integrable connection | |
$\nabla : M \to M \otimes_B \Omega^1_{B/A, \delta}$. Then the map of | |
de Rham complexes | |
$$ | |
M \otimes_B \Omega^*_{B/A, \delta} | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes_P \Omega^*_{P/A, \delta} | |
$$ | |
is a quasi-isomorphism. Let $D$, resp.\ $D'$ be the $p$-adic completion of | |
$B$, resp.\ $P$ and let $\Omega^i_D$, resp.\ $\Omega^i_{D'}$ be the $p$-adic | |
completion of $\Omega^i_{B/A, \delta}$, | |
resp.\ $\Omega^i_{P/A, \delta}$. Let $M$ be a $p$-adically complete | |
$D$-module endowed with an integral connection | |
$\nabla : M \to M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^1_D$. | |
Then the map of de Rham complexes | |
$$ | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_{D'} | |
$$ | |
is a quasi-isomorphism. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Consider the decreasing filtration $F^*$ on $\Omega^*_{B/A, \delta}$ | |
given by the subcomplexes | |
$F^i(\Omega^*_{B/A, \delta}) = \sigma_{\geq i}\Omega^*_{B/A, \delta}$. | |
See Homology, Section \ref{homology-section-truncations}. | |
This induces a decreasing filtration $F^*$ on $\Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}$ | |
by setting | |
$$ | |
F^i(\Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}) = | |
F^i(\Omega^*_{B/A, \delta}) \wedge \Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}. | |
$$ | |
We have a split short exact sequence | |
$$ | |
0 \to \Omega^1_{B/A, \delta} \otimes_B P \to | |
\Omega^1_{P/A, \delta} \to | |
\Omega^1_{P/B, \delta} \to 0 | |
$$ | |
and the last module is free on $\text{d}x_i$. It follows from this that | |
$F^i(\Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}) \to \Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}$ is a termwise | |
split injection and that | |
$$ | |
\text{gr}^i_F(\Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}) = | |
\Omega^i_{B/A, \delta} \otimes_B \Omega^*_{P/B, \delta} | |
$$ | |
as complexes. Thus we can define a filtration $F^*$ on | |
$M \otimes_B \Omega^*_{B/A, \delta}$ by setting | |
$$ | |
F^i(M \otimes_B \Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}) = | |
M \otimes_B F^i(\Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}) | |
$$ | |
and we have | |
$$ | |
\text{gr}^i_F(M \otimes_B \Omega^*_{P/A, \delta}) = | |
M \otimes_B \Omega^i_{B/A, \delta} \otimes_B \Omega^*_{P/B, \delta} | |
$$ | |
as complexes. | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-poincare} each of these complexes is | |
quasi-isomorphic to $M \otimes_B \Omega^i_{B/A, \delta}$ placed in degree $0$. | |
Hence we see that the first displayed map of the lemma is a morphism of | |
filtered complexes which induces a quasi-isomorphism on graded pieces. This | |
implies that it is a quasi-isomorphism, for example by the spectral sequence | |
associated to a filtered complex, see | |
Homology, Section \ref{homology-section-filtered-complex}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
The proof of the second quasi-isomorphism is exactly the same. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Cohomology in the affine case} | |
\label{section-cohomology-affine} | |
\noindent | |
Let's go back to the situation studied in | |
Section \ref{section-quasi-coherent-crystals}. We | |
start with $(A, I, \gamma)$ and $A/I \to C$ and set | |
$X = \Spec(C)$ and $S = \Spec(A)$. Then we choose | |
a polynomial ring $P$ over $A$ and a surjection $P \to C$ with | |
kernel $J$. We obtain $D$ and $D(n)$ see | |
(\ref{equation-D}) and (\ref{equation-Dn}). | |
Set $T(n)_e = \Spec(D(n)/p^eD(n))$ so that | |
$(X, T(n)_e, \delta(n))$ is an object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a sheaf of $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules and set | |
$$ | |
M(n) = \lim_e \Gamma((X, T(n)_e, \delta(n)), \mathcal{F}) | |
$$ | |
for $n = 0, 1, 2, 3, \ldots$. This forms a cosimplicial module | |
over the cosimplicial ring $D(0), D(1), D(2), \ldots$. | |
\begin{proposition} | |
\label{proposition-compute-cohomology} | |
With notations as above assume that | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\mathcal{F}$ is locally quasi-coherent, and | |
\item for any morphism $(U, T, \delta) \to (U', T', \delta')$ | |
of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ where $f : T \to T'$ is a closed immersion | |
the map $c_f : f^*\mathcal{F}_{T'} \to \mathcal{F}_T$ is surjective. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Then the complex | |
$$ | |
M(0) \to M(1) \to M(2) \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
computes $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$. | |
\end{proposition} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Using assumption (1) and Lemma \ref{lemma-compare} we see that | |
$R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$ is isomorphic to | |
$R\Gamma(\mathcal{C}, \mathcal{F})$. Note that the categories | |
$\mathcal{C}$ used in Lemmas \ref{lemma-compare} and \ref{lemma-complete} | |
agree. Let $f : T \to T'$ be a closed immersion as in (2). Surjectivity | |
of $c_f : f^*\mathcal{F}_{T'} \to \mathcal{F}_T$ is equivalent to | |
surjectivity of $\mathcal{F}_{T'} \to f_*\mathcal{F}_T$. Hence, if | |
$\mathcal{F}$ satisfies (1) and (2), then we obtain a short exact sequence | |
$$ | |
0 \to \mathcal{K} \to \mathcal{F}_{T'} \to f_*\mathcal{F}_T \to 0 | |
$$ | |
of quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{T'}$-modules on $T'$, see | |
Schemes, Section \ref{schemes-section-quasi-coherent} and in particular | |
Lemma \ref{schemes-lemma-push-forward-quasi-coherent}. | |
Thus, if $T'$ is affine, then we conclude that the restriction map | |
$\mathcal{F}(U', T', \delta') \to \mathcal{F}(U, T, \delta)$ | |
is surjective by the vanishing of $H^1(T', \mathcal{K})$, see | |
Cohomology of Schemes, Lemma | |
\ref{coherent-lemma-quasi-coherent-affine-cohomology-zero}. | |
Hence the transition maps of the inverse systems in Lemma \ref{lemma-complete} | |
are surjective. We conclude that | |
$R^pg_*(\mathcal{F}|_\mathcal{C}) = 0$ for all $p \geq 1$ | |
where $g$ is as in Lemma \ref{lemma-complete}. | |
The object $D$ of the category $\mathcal{C}^\wedge$ | |
satisfies the assumption of Lemma \ref{lemma-category-with-covering} by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-generator-completion} | |
with | |
$$ | |
D \times \ldots \times D = D(n) | |
$$ | |
in $\mathcal{C}$ because $D(n)$ is the $n + 1$-fold coproduct of | |
$D$ in $\text{Cris}^\wedge(C/A)$, see Lemma \ref{lemma-property-Dn}. | |
Thus we win. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-cohomology-is-zero} | |
Assumptions and notation as in | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology}. | |
Then | |
$$ | |
H^j(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^i_{X/S}) | |
= 0 | |
$$ | |
for all $i > 0$ and all $j \geq 0$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Using Lemma \ref{lemma-omega-locally-quasi-coherent} it follows that | |
$\mathcal{H} = \mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^i_{X/S}$ | |
also satisfies assumptions (1) and (2) of | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology}. | |
Write $M(n)_e = \Gamma((X, T(n)_e, \delta(n)), \mathcal{F})$ | |
so that $M(n) = \lim_e M(n)_e$. Then | |
\begin{align*} | |
\lim_e \Gamma((X, T(n)_e, \delta(n)), \mathcal{H}) & = | |
\lim_e M(n)_e \otimes_{D(n)_e} \Omega_{D(n)}/p^e\Omega_{D(n)} \\ | |
& = \lim_e M(n)_e \otimes_{D(n)} \Omega_{D(n)} | |
\end{align*} | |
By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-vanishing} | |
the cosimplicial modules | |
$$ | |
M(0)_e \otimes_{D(0)} \Omega^i_{D(0)} \to | |
M(1)_e \otimes_{D(1)} \Omega^i_{D(1)} \to | |
M(2)_e \otimes_{D(2)} \Omega^i_{D(2)} \to \ldots | |
$$ | |
are homotopic to zero. Because the transition maps | |
$M(n)_{e + 1} \to M(n)_e$ are surjective, we see that | |
the inverse limit of the associated complexes are acyclic\footnote{Actually, | |
they are even homotopic to zero as the homotopies fit together, but we don't | |
need this. The reason for this roundabout argument is that | |
the limit $\lim_e M(n)_e \otimes_{D(n)} \Omega^i_{D(n)}$ isn't the | |
$p$-adic completion of $M(n) \otimes_{D(n)} \Omega^i_{D(n)}$ as with | |
the assumptions of the lemma we don't know that | |
$M(n)_e = M(n)_{e + 1}/p^eM(n)_{e + 1}$. If $\mathcal{F}$ is a crystal | |
then this does hold.}. | |
Hence the vanishing of cohomology of $\mathcal{H}$ by | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{proposition} | |
\label{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal} | |
Assumptions as in Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology} | |
but now assume that $\mathcal{F}$ is a crystal in quasi-coherent modules. | |
Let $(M, \nabla)$ be the corresponding module with connection over $D$, see | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine}. Then the complex | |
$$ | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D | |
$$ | |
computes $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$. | |
\end{proposition} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We will prove this using the two spectral sequences associated to the | |
double complex $K^{*, *}$ with terms | |
$$ | |
K^{a, b} = M \otimes_D^\wedge \Omega^a_{D(b)} | |
$$ | |
What do we know so far? Well, Lemma \ref{lemma-vanishing} | |
tells us that each column $K^{a, *}$, $a > 0$ is acyclic. | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology} tells us that | |
the first column $K^{0, *}$ is quasi-isomorphic to | |
$R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$. | |
Hence the first spectral sequence associated to the double complex | |
shows that there is a canonical quasi-isomorphism of | |
$R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$ with | |
$\text{Tot}(K^{*, *})$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Next, let's consider the rows $K^{*, b}$. By | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-structure-Dn} | |
each of the $b + 1$ maps $D \to D(b)$ presents $D(b)$ as the $p$-adic | |
completion of a divided power polynomial algebra over $D$. | |
Hence Lemma \ref{lemma-relative-poincare} shows that the map | |
$$ | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D\Omega^*_D | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes^\wedge_{D(b)} \Omega^*_{D(b)} = K^{*, b} | |
$$ | |
is a quasi-isomorphism. Note that each of these maps defines the {\it same} | |
map on cohomology (and even the same map in the derived category) as | |
the inverse is given by the co-diagonal map $D(b) \to D$ (corresponding | |
to the multiplication map $P \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P \to P$). | |
Hence if we look at the $E_1$ page of the second spectral sequence | |
we obtain | |
$$ | |
E_1^{a, b} = H^a(M \otimes^\wedge_D\Omega^*_D) | |
$$ | |
with differentials | |
$$ | |
E_1^{a, 0} \xrightarrow{0} | |
E_1^{a, 1} \xrightarrow{1} | |
E_1^{a, 2} \xrightarrow{0} | |
E_1^{a, 3} \xrightarrow{1} \ldots | |
$$ | |
as each of these is the alternation sum of the given identifications | |
$H^a(M \otimes^\wedge_D\Omega^*_D) = E_1^{a, 0} = E_1^{a, 1} = \ldots$. | |
Thus we see that the $E_2$ page is equal $H^a(M \otimes^\wedge_D\Omega^*_D)$ | |
on the first row and zero elsewhere. It follows that the identification | |
of $M \otimes^\wedge_D\Omega^*_D$ with the first row induces a | |
quasi-isomorphism of $M \otimes^\wedge_D\Omega^*_D$ with | |
$\text{Tot}(K^{*, *})$. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-compute-cohomology-crystal-smooth} | |
Assumptions as in Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal}. | |
Let $A \to P' \to C$ be ring maps with $A \to P'$ smooth and $P' \to C$ | |
surjective with kernel $J'$. Let $D'$ be the $p$-adic completion of | |
$D_{P', \gamma}(J')$. Let $(M', \nabla')$ be the pair over $D'$ | |
corresponding to $\mathcal{F}$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-crystals-on-affine-smooth}. Then the complex | |
$$ | |
M' \otimes^\wedge_{D'} \Omega^*_{D'} | |
$$ | |
computes $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Choose $a : D \to D'$ and $b : D' \to D$ as in | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-crystals-on-affine-smooth}. | |
Note that the base change $M = M' \otimes_{D', b} D$ with its | |
connection $\nabla$ corresponds to $\mathcal{F}$. Hence we know | |
that $M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega_D^*$ computes the crystalline | |
cohomology of $\mathcal{F}$, see | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal}. | |
Hence it suffices to show that the base change maps (induced | |
by $a$ and $b$) | |
$$ | |
M' \otimes^\wedge_{D'} \Omega^*_{D'} | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D | |
\quad\text{and}\quad | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D | |
\longrightarrow | |
M' \otimes^\wedge_{D'} \Omega^*_{D'} | |
$$ | |
are quasi-isomorphisms. Since $a \circ b = \text{id}_{D'}$ we see | |
that the composition one way around is the identity on the complex | |
$M' \otimes^\wedge_{D'} \Omega^*_{D'}$. Hence it suffices to show that | |
the map | |
$$ | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D | |
$$ | |
induced by $b \circ a : D \to D$ is a quasi-isomorphism. (Note that we | |
have the same complex on both sides as $M = M' \otimes^\wedge_{D', b} D$, | |
hence $M \otimes^\wedge_{D, b \circ a} D = | |
M' \otimes^\wedge_{D', b \circ a \circ b} D = | |
M' \otimes^\wedge_{D', b} D = M$.) In fact, we claim that for any | |
divided power $A$-algebra homomorphism $\rho : D \to D$ compatible | |
with the augmentation to $C$ the induced map | |
$M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D \to M \otimes^\wedge_{D, \rho} \Omega^*_D$ | |
is a quasi-isomorphism. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Write $\rho(x_i) = x_i + z_i$. The elements $z_i$ are in the | |
divided power ideal of $D$ because $\rho$ is compatible with the | |
augmentation to $C$. Hence we can factor the map $\rho$ | |
as a composition | |
$$ | |
D \xrightarrow{\sigma} D\langle \xi_i \rangle^\wedge \xrightarrow{\tau} D | |
$$ | |
where the first map is given by $x_i \mapsto x_i + \xi_i$ and the | |
second map is the divided power $D$-algebra map which maps $\xi_i$ to $z_i$. | |
(This uses the universal properties of polynomial algebra, divided | |
power polynomial algebras, divided power envelopes, and $p$-adic completion.) | |
Note that there exists an {\it automorphism} $\alpha$ of | |
$D\langle \xi_i \rangle^\wedge$ with $\alpha(x_i) = x_i - \xi_i$ | |
and $\alpha(\xi_i) = \xi_i$. Applying Lemma \ref{lemma-relative-poincare} | |
to $\alpha \circ \sigma$ (which maps $x_i$ to $x_i$) and using that | |
$\alpha$ is an isomorphism we conclude that $\sigma$ induces a | |
quasi-isomorphism of $M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D$ with | |
$M \otimes^\wedge_{D, \sigma} \Omega^*_{D\langle x_i \rangle^\wedge}$. | |
On the other hand the map $\tau$ has as a left inverse the | |
map $D \to D\langle x_i \rangle^\wedge$, $x_i \mapsto x_i$ | |
and we conclude (using Lemma \ref{lemma-relative-poincare} once more) | |
that $\tau$ induces a quasi-isomorphism of | |
$M \otimes^\wedge_{D, \sigma} \Omega^*_{D\langle x_i \rangle^\wedge}$ | |
with $M \otimes^\wedge_{D, \tau \circ \sigma} \Omega^*_D$. Composing these | |
two quasi-isomorphisms we obtain that $\rho$ induces a quasi-isomorphism | |
$M \otimes^\wedge_D \Omega^*_D \to M \otimes^\wedge_{D, \rho} \Omega^*_D$ | |
as desired. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Two counter examples} | |
\label{section-examples} | |
\noindent | |
Before we turn to some of the successes of crystalline cohomology, | |
let us give two examples which explain why crystalline cohomology | |
does not work very well if the schemes in question are either not | |
proper over the base, or singular. The first example can be found | |
in \cite{BO}. | |
\begin{example} | |
\label{example-torsion} | |
Let $A = \mathbf{Z}_p$ with divided power ideal $(p)$ endowed with | |
its unique divided powers $\gamma$. Let | |
$C = \mathbf{F}_p[x, y]/(x^2, xy, y^2)$. We choose the presentation | |
$$ | |
C = P/J = \mathbf{Z}_p[x, y]/(x^2, xy, y^2, p) | |
$$ | |
Let $D = D_{P, \gamma}(J)^\wedge$ with divided power ideal | |
$(\bar J, \bar \gamma)$ as in Section \ref{section-quasi-coherent-crystals}. | |
We will denote $x, y$ also the images of $x$ and $y$ in $D$. | |
Consider the element | |
$$ | |
\tau = \bar\gamma_p(x^2)\bar\gamma_p(y^2) - \bar\gamma_p(xy)^2 \in D | |
$$ | |
We note that $p\tau = 0$ as | |
$$ | |
p! \bar\gamma_p(x^2) \bar\gamma_p(y^2) = | |
x^{2p} \bar\gamma_p(y^2) = \bar\gamma_p(x^2y^2) = | |
x^py^p \bar\gamma_p(xy) = p! \bar\gamma_p(xy)^2 | |
$$ | |
in $D$. We also note that $\text{d}\tau = 0$ in $\Omega_D$ as | |
\begin{align*} | |
\text{d}(\bar\gamma_p(x^2) \bar\gamma_p(y^2)) | |
& = | |
\bar\gamma_{p - 1}(x^2)\bar\gamma_p(y^2)\text{d}x^2 + | |
\bar\gamma_p(x^2)\bar\gamma_{p - 1}(y^2)\text{d}y^2 \\ | |
& = | |
2 x \bar\gamma_{p - 1}(x^2)\bar\gamma_p(y^2)\text{d}x + | |
2 y \bar\gamma_p(x^2)\bar\gamma_{p - 1}(y^2)\text{d}y \\ | |
& = | |
2/(p - 1)!( x^{2p - 1} \bar\gamma_p(y^2)\text{d}x + | |
y^{2p - 1} \bar\gamma_p(x^2)\text{d}y ) \\ | |
& = | |
2/(p - 1)! | |
(x^{p - 1} \bar\gamma_p(xy^2)\text{d}x + | |
y^{p - 1} \bar\gamma_p(x^2y)\text{d}y) \\ | |
& = | |
2/(p - 1)! | |
(x^{p - 1}y^p \bar\gamma_p(xy)\text{d}x + | |
x^py^{p - 1} \bar\gamma_p(xy)\text{d}y) \\ | |
& = | |
2 \bar\gamma_{p - 1}(xy) \bar\gamma_p(xy)(y\text{d}x + x \text{d}y) \\ | |
& = | |
\text{d}(\bar\gamma_p(xy)^2) | |
\end{align*} | |
Finally, we claim that $\tau \not = 0$ in $D$. To see this it suffices to | |
produce an object $(B \to \mathbf{F}_p[x, y]/(x^2, xy, y^2), \delta)$ | |
of $\text{Cris}(C/S)$ such that $\tau$ does not map to zero in $B$. | |
To do this take | |
$$ | |
B = \mathbf{F}_p[x, y, u, v]/(x^3, x^2y, xy^2, y^3, xu, yu, xv, yv, u^2, v^2) | |
$$ | |
with the obvious surjection to $C$. Let $K = \Ker(B \to C)$ and | |
consider the map | |
$$ | |
\delta_p : K \longrightarrow K,\quad | |
ax^2 + bxy + cy^2 + du + ev + fuv \longmapsto a^pu + c^pv | |
$$ | |
One checks this satisfies the assumptions (1), (2), (3) of | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-need-only-gamma-p} | |
and hence defines a divided power structure. Moreover, | |
we see that $\tau$ maps to $uv$ which is not zero in $B$. | |
Set $X = \Spec(C)$ and $S = \Spec(A)$. | |
We draw the following conclusions | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $H^0(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S})$ has $p$-torsion, and | |
\item pulling back by Frobenius $F^* : H^0(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S}) | |
\to H^0(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S})$ is not injective. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Namely, $\tau$ defines a nonzero torsion element of | |
$H^0(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S})$ by | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal}. | |
Similarly, $F^*(\tau) = \sigma(\tau)$ where $\sigma : D \to D$ is the | |
map induced by any lift of Frobenius on $P$. If we choose $\sigma(x) = x^p$ | |
and $\sigma(y) = y^p$, then an easy computation shows that $F^*(\tau) = 0$. | |
\end{example} | |
\noindent | |
The next example shows that even for affine $n$-space crystalline | |
cohomology does not give the correct thing. | |
\begin{example} | |
\label{example-affine-n-space} | |
Let $A = \mathbf{Z}_p$ with divided power ideal $(p)$ endowed with | |
its unique divided powers $\gamma$. Let | |
$C = \mathbf{F}_p[x_1, \ldots, x_r]$. We choose the presentation | |
$$ | |
C = P/J = P/pP\quad\text{with}\quad P = \mathbf{Z}_p[x_1, \ldots, x_r] | |
$$ | |
Note that $pP$ has divided powers by | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-gamma-extends}. | |
Hence setting $D = P^\wedge$ with divided power ideal $(p)$ we obtain a | |
situation as in Section \ref{section-quasi-coherent-crystals}. | |
We conclude that $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S})$ | |
is represented by the complex | |
$$ | |
D \to \Omega^1_D \to \Omega^2_D \to \ldots \to \Omega^r_D | |
$$ | |
see Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal}. | |
Assuming $r > 0$ we conclude the following | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item The cristalline cohomology of the cristalline structure sheaf | |
of $X = \mathbf{A}^r_{\mathbf{F}_p}$ over $S = \Spec(\mathbf{Z}_p)$ | |
is zero except in degrees $0, \ldots, r$. | |
\item We have $H^0(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S}) = \mathbf{Z}_p$. | |
\item The cohomology group $H^r(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S})$ | |
is infinite and is not a torsion abelian group. | |
\item The cohomology group $H^r(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{O}_{X/S})$ | |
is not separated for the $p$-adic topology. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
While the first two statements are reasonable, parts (3) and (4) are | |
disconcerting! The truth of these statements follows immediately from | |
working out what the complex displayed above looks like. Let's just do | |
this in case $r = 1$. Then we are just looking at the two term complex | |
of $p$-adically complete modules | |
$$ | |
\text{d} : | |
D = \left( | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{n \geq 0} \mathbf{Z}_p x^n | |
\right)^\wedge | |
\longrightarrow | |
\Omega^1_D = \left( | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{n \geq 1} \mathbf{Z}_p x^{n - 1}\text{d}x | |
\right)^\wedge | |
$$ | |
The map is given by $\text{diag}(0, 1, 2, 3, 4, \ldots)$ except that | |
the first summand is missing on the right hand side. Now it is clear | |
that $\bigoplus_{n > 0} \mathbf{Z}_p/n\mathbf{Z}_p$ is a subgroup | |
of the cokernel, hence the cokernel is infinite. In fact, the element | |
$$ | |
\omega = \sum\nolimits_{e > 0} p^e x^{p^{2e} - 1}\text{d}x | |
$$ | |
is clearly not a torsion element of the cokernel. But it gets worse. | |
Namely, consider the element | |
$$ | |
\eta = \sum\nolimits_{e > 0} p^e x^{p^e - 1}\text{d}x | |
$$ | |
For every $t > 0$ the element $\eta$ is congruent to | |
$\sum_{e > t} p^e x^{p^e - 1}\text{d}x$ modulo the image of | |
$\text{d}$ which is divisible by $p^t$. But $\eta$ is not in the image of | |
$\text{d}$ because it would have to be the image of | |
$a + \sum_{e > 0} x^{p^e}$ for some $a \in \mathbf{Z}_p$ | |
which is not an element of the left hand side. In fact, $p^N\eta$ | |
is similarly not in the image of $\text{d}$ for any integer $N$. | |
This implies that $\eta$ ``generates'' a copy of $\mathbf{Q}_p$ inside | |
of $H^1_{\text{cris}}(\mathbf{A}_{\mathbf{F}_p}^1/\Spec(\mathbf{Z}_p))$. | |
\end{example} | |
\section{Applications} | |
\label{section-applications} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we collect some applications of the material in | |
the previous sections. | |
\begin{proposition} | |
\label{proposition-compare-with-de-Rham} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in quasi-coherent modules on | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$. The truncation map of complexes | |
$$ | |
(\mathcal{F} \to | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^1_{X/S} \to | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^2_{X/S} \to \ldots) | |
\longrightarrow \mathcal{F}[0], | |
$$ | |
while not a quasi-isomorphism, becomes a quasi-isomorphism after applying | |
$Ru_{X/S, *}$. In fact, for any $i > 0$, we have | |
$$ | |
Ru_{X/S, *}(\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^i_{X/S}) = 0. | |
$$ | |
\end{proposition} | |
\begin{proof} | |
By Lemma \ref{lemma-automatic-connection} we get a de Rham complex | |
as indicated in the lemma. We abbreviate | |
$\mathcal{H} = \mathcal{F} \otimes \Omega^i_{X/S}$. | |
Let $X' \subset X$ be an affine open | |
subscheme which maps into an affine open subscheme $S' \subset S$. | |
Then | |
$$ | |
(Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{H})|_{X'_{Zar}} = | |
Ru_{X'/S', *}(\mathcal{H}|_{\text{Cris}(X'/S')}), | |
$$ | |
see Lemma \ref{lemma-localize}. Thus | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-cohomology-is-zero} | |
shows that $Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{H}$ is a complex of sheaves on | |
$X_{Zar}$ whose cohomology on any affine open is trivial. | |
As $X$ has a basis for its topology consisting of affine opens | |
this implies that $Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{H}$ is quasi-isomorphic to zero. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-vanishing} | |
The proof of Proposition \ref{proposition-compare-with-de-Rham} | |
shows that the conclusion | |
$$ | |
Ru_{X/S, *}(\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega^i_{X/S}) = 0 | |
$$ | |
for $i > 0$ is true for any $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-module | |
$\mathcal{F}$ which satisfies conditions (1) and (2) of | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology}. | |
This applies to the following non-crystals: | |
$\Omega^i_{X/S}$ for all $i$, and any sheaf of the form | |
$\underline{\mathcal{F}}$, where $\mathcal{F}$ is a quasi-coherent | |
$\mathcal{O}_X$-module. In particular, it applies to the | |
sheaf $\underline{\mathcal{O}_X} = \underline{\mathbf{G}_a}$. | |
But note that we need something like Lemma \ref{lemma-automatic-connection} | |
to produce a de Rham complex which requires $\mathcal{F}$ to be a crystal. | |
Hence (currently) the collection of sheaves of modules for which the full | |
statement of Proposition \ref{proposition-compare-with-de-Rham} holds | |
is exactly the category of crystals in quasi-coherent modules. | |
\end{remark} | |
\noindent | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global}. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in quasi-coherent modules on | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$. Let $(U, T, \delta)$ be an object of | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$. Proposition \ref{proposition-compare-with-de-Rham} | |
allows us to construct a canonical map | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-restriction} | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\Gamma(T, \mathcal{F}_T \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_T} \Omega^*_{T/S, \delta}) | |
\end{equation} | |
Namely, we have $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F} \otimes \Omega^*_{X/S})$, | |
we can restrict global cohomology classes to $T$, and $\Omega_{X/S}$ | |
restricts to $\Omega_{T/S, \delta}$ by | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-module-of-differentials}. | |
\section{Some further results} | |
\label{section-missing} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we mention some results whose proof is missing. | |
We will formulate these as a series of remarks and we will convert | |
them into actual lemmas and propositions only when we add detailed | |
proofs. | |
\begin{remark}[Higher direct images] | |
\label{remark-compute-direct-image} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let | |
$(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma) \to (S', \mathcal{I}', \gamma')$ be | |
a morphism of divided power schemes over $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$. Let | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
X \ar[r]_f \ar[d] & X' \ar[d] \\ | |
S_0 \ar[r] & S'_0 | |
} | |
$$ | |
be a commutative diagram of morphisms of schemes and assume $p$ is | |
locally nilpotent on $X$ and $X'$. Let $\mathcal{F}$ be an | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-module on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$. Then | |
$Rf_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F}$ can be computed as follows. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Given an object $(U', T', \delta')$ of $\text{Cris}(X'/S')$ set | |
$U = X \times_{X'} U' = f^{-1}(U')$ (an open subscheme of $X$). Denote | |
$(T_0, T, \delta)$ the divided power scheme over $S$ such that | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
T \ar[r] \ar[d] & T' \ar[d] \\ | |
S \ar[r] & S' | |
} | |
$$ | |
is cartesian in the category of divided power schemes, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-fibre-product}. There is an | |
induced morphism $U \to T_0$ and we obtain a morphism | |
$(U/T)_{\text{cris}} \to (X/S)_{\text{cris}}$, see | |
Remark \ref{remark-functoriality-cris}. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}_U$ be the pullback of $\mathcal{F}$. | |
Let $\tau_{U/T} : (U/T)_{\text{cris}} \to T_{Zar}$ be the structure morphism. | |
Then we have | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-identify-pushforward} | |
\left(Rf_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F}\right)_{T'} = | |
R(T \to T')_*\left(R\tau_{U/T, *} \mathcal{F}_U \right) | |
\end{equation} | |
where the left hand side is the restriction (see | |
Section \ref{section-sheaves}). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: First, show that $\text{Cris}(U/T)$ is the localization (in the sense | |
of Sites, Lemma \ref{sites-lemma-localize-topos-site}) of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
at the sheaf of sets $f_{\text{cris}}^{-1}h_{(U', T', \delta')}$. Next, reduce | |
the statement to the case where $\mathcal{F}$ is an injective module | |
and pushforward of modules using that the pullback of an injective | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-module is an injective $\mathcal{O}_{U/T}$-module on | |
$\text{Cris}(U/T)$. Finally, check the result holds for plain pushforward. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Mayer-Vietoris] | |
\label{remark-mayer-vietoris} | |
In the situation of Remark \ref{remark-compute-direct-image} | |
suppose we have an open covering $X = X' \cup X''$. Denote | |
$X''' = X' \cap X''$. Let $f'$, $f''$, and $f''$ be the restriction of $f$ | |
to $X'$, $X''$, and $X'''$. Moreover, let $\mathcal{F}'$, $\mathcal{F}''$, | |
and $\mathcal{F}'''$ be the restriction of $\mathcal{F}$ to the crystalline | |
sites of $X'$, $X''$, and $X'''$. Then there exists a distinguished triangle | |
$$ | |
Rf_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F} | |
\longrightarrow | |
Rf'_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F}' \oplus Rf''_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F}'' | |
\longrightarrow | |
Rf'''_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F}''' | |
\longrightarrow | |
Rf_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F}[1] | |
$$ | |
in $D(\mathcal{O}_{X'/S'})$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: This is a formal consequence of the fact that the subcategories | |
$\text{Cris}(X'/S)$, $\text{Cris}(X''/S)$, $\text{Cris}(X'''/S)$ correspond | |
to open subobjects of the final sheaf on $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ and that the | |
last is the intersection of the first two. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[{\v C}ech complex] | |
\label{remark-cech-complex} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
ring with $A$ a $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$-algebra. Set $S = \Spec(A)$ and | |
$S_0 = \Spec(A/I)$. Let $X$ be a separated\footnote{This assumption is | |
not strictly necessary, as using hypercoverings the construction of the | |
remark can be extended to the general case.} scheme over | |
$S_0$ such that $p$ is locally nilpotent on $X$. Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a | |
crystal in quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Choose an affine open covering | |
$X = \bigcup_{\lambda \in \Lambda} U_\lambda$ of $X$. | |
Write $U_\lambda = \Spec(C_\lambda)$. Choose a polynomial algebra | |
$P_\lambda$ over $A$ and a surjection $P_\lambda \to C_\lambda$. | |
Having fixed these choices we can construct a {\v C}ech complex which | |
computes $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Given $n \geq 0$ and $\lambda_0, \ldots, \lambda_n \in \Lambda$ | |
write $U_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} = U_{\lambda_0} \cap \ldots | |
\cap U_{\lambda_n}$. This is an affine scheme by assumption. Write | |
$U_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} = \Spec(C_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n})$. | |
Set | |
$$ | |
P_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} = | |
P_{\lambda_0} \otimes_A \ldots \otimes_A P_{\lambda_n} | |
$$ | |
which comes with a canonical surjection onto $C_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$. | |
Denote the kernel $J_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ and set | |
$D_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ | |
the $p$-adically completed divided power envelope of | |
$J_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ in $P_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ | |
relative to $\gamma$. Let $M_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ be the | |
$P_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$-module corresponding | |
to the restriction of $\mathcal{F}$ to | |
$\text{Cris}(U_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}/S)$ via | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine}. | |
By construction we obtain a cosimplicial divided power ring $D(*)$ | |
having in degree $n$ the ring | |
$$ | |
D(n) = | |
\prod\nolimits_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} | |
D_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} | |
$$ | |
(use that divided power envelopes are functorial and the trivial | |
cosimplicial structure on the ring $P(*)$ defined similarly). | |
Since $M_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ is the ``value'' of $\mathcal{F}$ | |
on the objects $\Spec(D_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n})$ we see that | |
$M(*)$ defined by the rule | |
$$ | |
M(n) = \prod\nolimits_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} | |
M_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} | |
$$ | |
forms a cosimplicial $D(*)$-module. Now we claim that we have | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = s(M(*)) | |
$$ | |
Here $s(-)$ denotes the cochain complex associated to a cosimplicial | |
module (see | |
Simplicial, Section \ref{simplicial-section-dold-kan-cosimplicial}). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: The proof of this is similar to the proof of | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology} (in particular | |
the result holds for any module satisfying the assumptions of | |
that proposition). | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Alternating {\v C}ech complex] | |
\label{remark-alternating-cech-complex} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
ring with $A$ a $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$-algebra. Set $S = \Spec(A)$ and | |
$S_0 = \Spec(A/I)$. Let $X$ be a separated quasi-compact scheme | |
over $S_0$ such that $p$ is locally nilpotent on $X$. Let | |
$\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Choose a finite affine open covering | |
$X = \bigcup_{\lambda \in \Lambda} U_\lambda$ of $X$ | |
and a total ordering on $\Lambda$. | |
Write $U_\lambda = \Spec(C_\lambda)$. Choose a polynomial algebra | |
$P_\lambda$ over $A$ and a surjection $P_\lambda \to C_\lambda$. | |
Having fixed these choices we can construct an alternating | |
{\v C}ech complex which computes $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We are going to use the notation introduced in | |
Remark \ref{remark-cech-complex}. | |
Denote $\Omega_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ | |
the $p$-adically completed module of differentials of | |
$D_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ over $A$ compatible with the divided power | |
structure. Let $\nabla$ be the integrable connection on | |
$M_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}$ coming from | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine}. | |
Consider the double complex $M^{\bullet, \bullet}$ with | |
terms | |
$$ | |
M^{n, m} = | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{\lambda_0 < \ldots < \lambda_n} | |
M_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n} | |
\otimes^\wedge_{D_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}} | |
\Omega^m_{D_{\lambda_0 \ldots \lambda_n}}. | |
$$ | |
For the differential $d_1$ (increasing $n$) we use the usual | |
{\v C}ech differential and for the differential $d_2$ we use | |
the connection, i.e., the differential of the de Rham complex. | |
We claim that | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = \text{Tot}(M^{\bullet, \bullet}) | |
$$ | |
Here $\text{Tot}(-)$ denotes the total complex associated to a | |
double complex, see | |
Homology, Definition \ref{homology-definition-associated-simple-complex}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: We have | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), | |
\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega_{X/S}^\bullet) | |
$$ | |
by Proposition \ref{proposition-compare-with-de-Rham}. | |
The right hand side of the formula is simply the alternating {\v C}ech complex | |
for the covering $X = \bigcup_{\lambda \in \Lambda} U_\lambda$ | |
(which induces an open covering of the final sheaf of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$) | |
and the complex $\mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_{X/S}} \Omega_{X/S}^\bullet$, | |
see Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal}. | |
Now the result follows from a general result in cohomology on sites, | |
namely that the alternating {\v C}ech complex computes the cohomology | |
provided it gives the correct answer on all the pieces (insert future | |
reference here). | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Quasi-coherence] | |
\label{remark-quasi-coherent} | |
In the situation of Remark \ref{remark-compute-direct-image} | |
assume that $S \to S'$ is quasi-compact and quasi-separated and | |
that $X \to S_0$ is quasi-compact and quasi-separated. Then for a crystal | |
in quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules $\mathcal{F}$ | |
the sheaves $R^if_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F}$ are locally quasi-coherent. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: We have to show that the restrictions to $T'$ are quasi-coherent | |
$\mathcal{O}_{T'}$-modules, where $(U', T', \delta')$ is any object of | |
$\text{Cris}(X'/S')$. It suffices to do this when $T'$ is affine. | |
We use the formula (\ref{equation-identify-pushforward}), | |
the fact that $T \to T'$ is quasi-compact and quasi-separated (as $T$ | |
is affine over the base change of $T'$ by $S \to S'$), and | |
Cohomology of Schemes, Lemma | |
\ref{coherent-lemma-quasi-coherence-higher-direct-images} | |
to see that it suffices to show that the sheaves | |
$R^i\tau_{U/T, *}\mathcal{F}_U$ are quasi-coherent. | |
Note that $U \to T_0$ is also quasi-compact and quasi-separated, see | |
Schemes, Lemmas \ref{schemes-lemma-quasi-compact-permanence} and | |
\ref{schemes-lemma-quasi-compact-permanence}. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
This reduces us to proving that $R^i\tau_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F}$ | |
is quasi-coherent on $S$ in the case that $p$ locally nilpotent on $S$. Here | |
$\tau_{X/S}$ is the structure morphism, see | |
Remark \ref{remark-structure-morphism}. | |
We may work locally on $S$, hence we may assume $S$ affine | |
(see Lemma \ref{lemma-localize}). Induction on the number | |
of affines covering $X$ and Mayer-Vietoris | |
(Remark \ref{remark-mayer-vietoris}) reduces the question to | |
the case where $X$ is also affine (as in the proof of | |
Cohomology of Schemes, Lemma | |
\ref{coherent-lemma-quasi-coherence-higher-direct-images}). | |
Say $X = \Spec(C)$ and $S = \Spec(A)$ so that $(A, I, \gamma)$ and | |
$A \to C$ are as | |
in Situation \ref{situation-affine}. Choose a polynomial algebra | |
$P$ over $A$ and a surjection $P \to C$ as in | |
Section \ref{section-quasi-coherent-crystals}. | |
Let $(M, \nabla)$ be the module corresponding to $\mathcal{F}$, see | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine}. | |
Applying | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal} | |
we see that $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$ is represented by | |
$M \otimes_D \Omega_D^*$. Note that completion isn't necessary | |
as $p$ is nilpotent in $A$! We have to show that this is compatible | |
with taking principal opens in $S = \Spec(A)$. Suppose that $g \in A$. | |
Then we conclude that similarly $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X_g/S_g), \mathcal{F})$ | |
is computed by $M_g \otimes_{D_g} \Omega_{D_g}^*$ (again this uses that | |
$p$-adic completion isn't necessary). Hence we conclude because localization | |
is an exact functor on $A$-modules. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Boundedness] | |
\label{remark-bounded-cohomology} | |
In the situation of Remark \ref{remark-compute-direct-image} | |
assume that $S \to S'$ is quasi-compact and quasi-separated and | |
that $X \to S_0$ is of finite type and quasi-separated. Then there exists | |
an integer $i_0$ such that for any crystal | |
in quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules $\mathcal{F}$ | |
we have $R^if_{\text{cris}, *}\mathcal{F} = 0$ for all $i > i_0$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: Arguing as in Remark \ref{remark-quasi-coherent} (using | |
Cohomology of Schemes, Lemma | |
\ref{coherent-lemma-quasi-coherence-higher-direct-images}) | |
we reduce to proving that $H^i(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = 0$ for $i \gg 0$ | |
in the situation of Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal} | |
when $C$ is a finite type algebra over $A$. This is clear as we can | |
choose a finite polynomial algebra and we see that $\Omega^i_D = 0$ | |
for $i \gg 0$. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Specific boundedness] | |
\label{remark-bounded-cohomology-over-point} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global} let $\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in | |
quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. Assume that $S_0$ | |
has a unique point and that $X \to S_0$ is of finite presentation. | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item If $\dim X = d$ and $X/S_0$ has embedding dimension $e$, then | |
$H^i(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = 0$ for $i > d + e$. | |
\item If $X$ is separated and can be covered by $q$ affines, and | |
$X/S_0$ has embedding dimension $e$, then | |
$H^i(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = 0$ for $i > q + e$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Hints: In case (1) we can use that | |
$$ | |
H^i(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = H^i(X_{Zar}, Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F}) | |
$$ | |
and that $Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F}$ is locally calculated by a de Rham | |
complex constructed using an embedding of $X$ into a smooth scheme | |
of dimension $e$ over $S$ | |
(see Lemma \ref{lemma-compute-cohomology-crystal-smooth}). | |
These de Rham complexes are zero in all degrees $> e$. Hence (1) | |
follows from Cohomology, Proposition | |
\ref{cohomology-proposition-vanishing-Noetherian}. | |
In case (2) we use the alternating {\v C}ech complex (see | |
Remark \ref{remark-alternating-cech-complex}) to reduce to the case | |
$X$ affine. In the affine case we prove the result using the de Rham complex | |
associated to an embedding of $X$ into a smooth scheme of dimension $e$ | |
over $S$ (it takes some work to construct such a thing). | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Base change map] | |
\label{remark-base-change} | |
In the situation of Remark \ref{remark-compute-direct-image} | |
assume $S = \Spec(A)$ and $S' = \Spec(A')$ are affine. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}'$ be an $\mathcal{O}_{X'/S'}$-module. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be the pullback of $\mathcal{F}'$. | |
Then there is a canonical base change map | |
$$ | |
L(S' \to S)^*R\tau_{X'/S', *}\mathcal{F}' | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\tau_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F} | |
$$ | |
where $\tau_{X/S}$ and $\tau_{X'/S'}$ are the structure morphisms, see | |
Remark \ref{remark-structure-morphism}. On global sections this | |
gives a base change map | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-base-change-map} | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X'/S'), \mathcal{F}') \otimes^\mathbf{L}_{A'} A | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) | |
\end{equation} | |
in $D(A)$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hint: Compose the very general base change map of | |
Cohomology on Sites, Remark \ref{sites-cohomology-remark-base-change} | |
with the canonical map | |
$Lf_{\text{cris}}^*\mathcal{F}' \to | |
f_{\text{cris}}^*\mathcal{F}' = \mathcal{F}$. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Base change isomorphism] | |
\label{remark-base-change-isomorphism} | |
The map (\ref{equation-base-change-map}) is an isomorphism provided | |
all of the following conditions are satisfied: | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $p$ is nilpotent in $A'$, | |
\item $\mathcal{F}'$ is a crystal in quasi-coherent | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X'/S'}$-modules, | |
\item $X' \to S'_0$ is a quasi-compact, quasi-separated morphism, | |
\item $X = X' \times_{S'_0} S_0$, | |
\item $\mathcal{F}'$ is a flat $\mathcal{O}_{X'/S'}$-module, | |
\item $X' \to S'_0$ is a local complete intersection morphism (see | |
More on Morphisms, Definition \ref{more-morphisms-definition-lci}; this | |
holds for example if $X' \to S'_0$ is syntomic or smooth), | |
\item $X'$ and $S_0$ are Tor independent over $S'_0$ (see | |
More on Algebra, Definition \ref{more-algebra-definition-tor-independent}; | |
this holds for example if either $S_0 \to S'_0$ or $X' \to S'_0$ is flat). | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Hints: Condition (1) means that in the arguments below $p$-adic completion | |
does nothing and can be ignored. | |
Using condition (3) and Mayer Vietoris (see | |
Remark \ref{remark-mayer-vietoris}) this reduces to the case | |
where $X'$ is affine. In fact by condition (6), after shrinking | |
further, we can assume that $X' = \Spec(C')$ and we are given a presentation | |
$C' = A'/I'[x_1, \ldots, x_n]/(\bar f'_1, \ldots, \bar f'_c)$ | |
where $\bar f'_1, \ldots, \bar f'_c$ is a Koszul-regular sequence in $A'/I'$. | |
(This means that smooth locally $\bar f'_1, \ldots, \bar f'_c$ forms | |
a regular sequence, see More on Algebra, | |
Lemma \ref{more-algebra-lemma-Koszul-regular-flat-locally-regular}.) | |
We choose a lift of | |
$\bar f'_i$ to an element $f'_i \in A'[x_1, \ldots, x_n]$. By (4) we see that | |
$X = \Spec(C)$ with $C = A/I[x_1, \ldots, x_n]/(\bar f_1, \ldots, \bar f_c)$ | |
where $f_i \in A[x_1, \ldots, x_n]$ is the image of $f'_i$. | |
By property (7) we see that $\bar f_1, \ldots, \bar f_c$ is a Koszul-regular | |
sequence in $A/I[x_1, \ldots, x_n]$. The divided power envelope of | |
$I'A'[x_1, \ldots, x_n] + (f'_1, \ldots, f'_c)$ in $A'[x_1, \ldots, x_n]$ | |
relative to $\gamma'$ is | |
$$ | |
D' = A'[x_1, \ldots, x_n]\langle \xi_1, \ldots, \xi_c \rangle/(\xi_i - f'_i) | |
$$ | |
see Lemma \ref{lemma-describe-divided-power-envelope}. Then you check that | |
$\xi_1 - f'_1, \ldots, \xi_n - f'_n$ is a Koszul-regular sequence in the | |
ring $A'[x_1, \ldots, x_n]\langle \xi_1, \ldots, \xi_c\rangle$. | |
Similarly the divided power envelope of | |
$IA[x_1, \ldots, x_n] + (f_1, \ldots, f_c)$ in $A[x_1, \ldots, x_n]$ | |
relative to $\gamma$ is | |
$$ | |
D = A[x_1, \ldots, x_n]\langle \xi_1, \ldots, \xi_c\rangle/(\xi_i - f_i) | |
$$ | |
and $\xi_1 - f_1, \ldots, \xi_n - f_n$ is a Koszul-regular sequence in the | |
ring $A[x_1, \ldots, x_n]\langle \xi_1, \ldots, \xi_c\rangle$. | |
It follows that $D' \otimes_{A'}^\mathbf{L} A = D$. Condition (2) | |
implies $\mathcal{F}'$ corresponds to a pair $(M', \nabla)$ | |
consisting of a $D'$-module with connection, see | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-crystals-on-affine}. | |
Then $M = M' \otimes_{D'} D$ corresponds to the pullback $\mathcal{F}$. | |
By assumption (5) we see that $M'$ is a flat $D'$-module, hence | |
$$ | |
M = M' \otimes_{D'} D = M' \otimes_{D'} D' \otimes_{A'}^\mathbf{L} A | |
= M' \otimes_{A'}^\mathbf{L} A | |
$$ | |
Since the modules of differentials $\Omega_{D'}$ and $\Omega_D$ | |
(as defined in Section \ref{section-quasi-coherent-crystals}) | |
are free $D'$-modules on the same generators we see that | |
$$ | |
M \otimes_D \Omega^\bullet_D = | |
M' \otimes_{D'} \Omega^\bullet_{D'} \otimes_{D'} D = | |
M' \otimes_{D'} \Omega^\bullet_{D'} \otimes_{A'}^\mathbf{L} A | |
$$ | |
which proves what we want by | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Rlim] | |
\label{remark-rlim} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
ring with $A$ an algebra over $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$ with $p$ nilpotent | |
in $A/I$. Set $S = \Spec(A)$ and $S_0 = \Spec(A/I)$. | |
Let $X$ be a scheme over $S_0$ with $p$ locally | |
nilpotent on $X$. Let $\mathcal{F}$ be any | |
$\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-module. For $e \gg 0$ we have $(p^e) \subset I$ | |
is preserved by $\gamma$, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-extend-to-completion}. | |
Set $S_e = \Spec(A/p^eA)$ for $e \gg 0$. | |
Then $\text{Cris}(X/S_e)$ is a full subcategory of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ | |
and we denote $\mathcal{F}_e$ the restriction of $\mathcal{F}$ to | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S_e)$. Then | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = | |
R\lim_e R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S_e), \mathcal{F}_e) | |
$$ | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: Suffices to prove this for $\mathcal{F}$ injective. | |
In this case the sheaves $\mathcal{F}_e$ are injective | |
modules too, the transition maps | |
$\Gamma(\mathcal{F}_{e + 1}) \to \Gamma(\mathcal{F}_e)$ are | |
surjective, and we have | |
$\Gamma(\mathcal{F}) = \lim_e \Gamma(\mathcal{F}_e)$ because | |
any object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$ is locally an object of one | |
of the categories $\text{Cris}(X/S_e)$ by definition of | |
$\text{Cris}(X/S)$. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Comparison] | |
\label{remark-comparison} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
ring with $p$ nilpotent in $A$. Set $S = \Spec(A)$ and | |
$S_0 = \Spec(A/I)$. Let $Y$ be a smooth scheme over $S$ and set | |
$X = Y \times_S S_0$. Let | |
$\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. | |
Then | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $\gamma$ extends to a divided power structure on the ideal | |
of $X$ in $Y$ so that $(X, Y, \gamma)$ is an object of $\text{Cris}(X/S)$, | |
\item the restriction $\mathcal{F}_Y$ (see Section \ref{section-sheaves}) | |
comes endowed with a canonical integrable connection | |
$\nabla : \mathcal{F}_Y \to | |
\mathcal{F}_Y \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_Y} \Omega_{Y/S}$, and | |
\item we have | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = | |
R\Gamma(Y, \mathcal{F}_Y \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_Y} \Omega^\bullet_{Y/S}) | |
$$ | |
in $D(A)$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Hints: See Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-gamma-extends} for (1). | |
See Lemma \ref{lemma-automatic-connection} for (2). | |
For Part (3) note that there is a map, see | |
(\ref{equation-restriction}). This map is an isomorphism when | |
$X$ is affine, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-compute-cohomology-crystal-smooth}. | |
This shows that $Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F}$ and | |
$\mathcal{F}_Y \otimes \Omega^\bullet_{Y/S}$ are quasi-isomorphic | |
as complexes on $Y_{Zar} = X_{Zar}$. | |
Since $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = | |
R\Gamma(X_{Zar}, Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F})$ the result follows. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Perfectness] | |
\label{remark-perfect} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
ring with $p$ nilpotent in $A$. Set $S = \Spec(A)$ and | |
$S_0 = \Spec(A/I)$. Let $X$ be a proper smooth scheme over $S_0$. | |
Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in finite locally free | |
quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. | |
Then $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$ is a | |
perfect object of $D(A)$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: By Remark \ref{remark-base-change-isomorphism} we have | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) \otimes_A^\mathbf{L} A/I | |
\cong | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S_0), \mathcal{F}|_{\text{Cris}(X/S_0)}) | |
$$ | |
By Remark \ref{remark-comparison} we have | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S_0), \mathcal{F}|_{\text{Cris}(X/S_0)}) = | |
R\Gamma(X, \mathcal{F}_X \otimes \Omega^\bullet_{X/S_0}) | |
$$ | |
Using the stupid filtration on the de Rham complex we see that | |
the last displayed complex is perfect in $D(A/I)$ as soon as the complexes | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(X, \mathcal{F}_X \otimes \Omega^q_{X/S_0}) | |
$$ | |
are perfect complexes in $D(A/I)$, see | |
More on Algebra, Lemma \ref{more-algebra-lemma-two-out-of-three-perfect}. | |
This is true by standard arguments | |
in coherent cohomology using that $\mathcal{F}_X \otimes \Omega^q_{X/S_0}$ | |
is a finite locally free sheaf and $X \to S_0$ is proper and flat | |
(insert future reference here). Applying | |
More on Algebra, Lemma \ref{more-algebra-lemma-perfect-modulo-nilpotent-ideal} | |
we see that | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) \otimes_A^\mathbf{L} A/I^n | |
$$ | |
is a perfect object of $D(A/I^n)$ for all $n$. This isn't quite enough | |
unless $A$ is Noetherian. Namely, even though $I$ is locally nilpotent | |
by our assumption that $p$ is nilpotent, see | |
Divided Power Algebra, Lemma \ref{dpa-lemma-nil}, | |
we cannot conclude that $I^n = 0$ for some $n$. A counter example | |
is $\mathbf{F}_p\langle x \rangle$. To prove it in general when | |
$\mathcal{F} = \mathcal{O}_{X/S}$ the argument of | |
\url{https://math.columbia.edu/~dejong/wordpress/?p=2227} | |
works. When the coefficients $\mathcal{F}$ are non-trivial the | |
argument of \cite{Faltings-very} seems to be as follows. Reduce to the | |
case $pA = 0$ by More on Algebra, Lemma | |
\ref{more-algebra-lemma-perfect-modulo-nilpotent-ideal}. | |
In this case the Frobenius map $A \to A$, $a \mapsto a^p$ factors | |
as $A \to A/I \xrightarrow{\varphi} A$ (as $x^p = 0$ for $x \in I$). Set | |
$X^{(1)} = X \otimes_{A/I, \varphi} A$. The absolute Frobenius morphism | |
of $X$ factors through a morphism $F_X : X \to X^{(1)}$ (a kind of | |
relative Frobenius). Affine locally if $X = \Spec(C)$ then | |
$X^{(1)} = \Spec( C \otimes_{A/I, \varphi} A)$ | |
and $F_X$ corresponds to $C \otimes_{A/I, \varphi} A \to C$, | |
$c \otimes a \mapsto c^pa$. This defines morphisms of ringed topoi | |
$$ | |
(X/S)_{\text{cris}} | |
\xrightarrow{(F_X)_{\text{cris}}} | |
(X^{(1)}/S)_{\text{cris}} | |
\xrightarrow{u_{X^{(1)}/S}} | |
\Sh(X^{(1)}_{Zar}) | |
$$ | |
whose composition is denoted $\text{Frob}_X$. One then shows that | |
$R\text{Frob}_{X, *}\mathcal{F}$ is representable by a | |
perfect complex of $\mathcal{O}_{X^{(1)}}$-modules(!) | |
by a local calculation. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Complete perfectness] | |
\label{remark-complete-perfect} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
ring with $A$ a $p$-adically complete ring and $p$ nilpotent in $A/I$. Set | |
$S = \Spec(A)$ and $S_0 = \Spec(A/I)$. Let $X$ be a proper | |
smooth scheme over $S_0$. Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a crystal in | |
finite locally free quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. | |
Then $R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$ is a | |
perfect object of $D(A)$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hints: We know that $K = R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F})$ | |
is the derived limit $K = R\lim K_e$ of the cohomologies over $A/p^eA$, | |
see Remark \ref{remark-rlim}. | |
Each $K_e$ is a perfect complex of $D(A/p^eA)$ by | |
Remark \ref{remark-perfect}. | |
Since $A$ is $p$-adically complete the result | |
follows from | |
More on Algebra, Lemma \ref{more-algebra-lemma-Rlim-perfect-gives-complete}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{remark}[Complete comparison] | |
\label{remark-complete-comparison} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(A, I, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
ring with $A$ a Noetherian $p$-adically complete ring and $p$ nilpotent | |
in $A/I$. Set $S = \Spec(A)$ and | |
$S_0 = \Spec(A/I)$. Let $Y$ be a proper smooth scheme over $S$ and set | |
$X = Y \times_S S_0$. Let $\mathcal{F}$ be a finite type crystal in | |
quasi-coherent $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules. Then | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item there exists a coherent $\mathcal{O}_Y$-module $\mathcal{F}_Y$ | |
endowed with integrable connection | |
$$ | |
\nabla : | |
\mathcal{F}_Y | |
\longrightarrow | |
\mathcal{F}_Y \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_Y} \Omega_{Y/S} | |
$$ | |
such that $\mathcal{F}_Y/p^e\mathcal{F}_Y$ is the module with connection | |
over $A/p^eA$ found in Remark \ref{remark-comparison}, and | |
\item we have | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) = | |
R\Gamma(Y, \mathcal{F}_Y \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_Y} \Omega^\bullet_{Y/S}) | |
$$ | |
in $D(A)$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
Hints: The existence of $\mathcal{F}_Y$ is Grothendieck's existence theorem | |
(insert future reference here). The isomorphism of cohomologies follows | |
as both sides are computed as $R\lim$ of the versions modulo $p^e$ | |
(see Remark \ref{remark-rlim} for the left hand side; use the theorem | |
on formal functions, see | |
Cohomology of Schemes, Theorem \ref{coherent-theorem-formal-functions} | |
for the right hand side). | |
Each of the versions modulo $p^e$ are isomorphic by | |
Remark \ref{remark-comparison}. | |
\end{remark} | |
\section{Pulling back along purely inseparable maps} | |
\label{section-pull-back-along-pth-root} | |
\noindent | |
By an $\alpha_p$-cover we mean a morphism of the form | |
$$ | |
X' = \Spec(C[z]/(z^p - c)) \longrightarrow \Spec(C) = X | |
$$ | |
where $C$ is an $\mathbf{F}_p$-algebra and $c \in C$. Equivalently, | |
$X'$ is an $\alpha_p$-torsor over $X$. An {\it iterated | |
$\alpha_p$-cover}\footnote{This is nonstandard notation.} | |
is a morphism of schemes in characteristic | |
$p$ which is locally on the target a composition of finitely many | |
$\alpha_p$-covers. In this section we prove that pullback along | |
such a morphism induces a quasi-isomorphism on crystalline cohomology | |
after inverting the prime $p$. In fact, we prove a precise version | |
of this result. We begin with a preliminary lemma whose formulation | |
needs some notation. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Assume we have a ring map $B \to B'$ and quotients $\Omega_B \to \Omega$ and | |
$\Omega_{B'} \to \Omega'$ satisfying the assumptions of | |
Remark \ref{remark-base-change-connection}. | |
Thus (\ref{equation-base-change-map-complexes}) provides a | |
canonical map of complexes | |
$$ | |
c_M^\bullet : | |
M \otimes_B \Omega^\bullet | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes_B (\Omega')^\bullet | |
$$ | |
for all $B$-modules $M$ endowed with integrable connection | |
$\nabla : M \to M \otimes_B \Omega_B$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Suppose we have $a \in B$, $z \in B'$, and a map $\theta : B' \to B'$ | |
satisfying the following assumptions | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item | |
\label{item-d-a-zero} | |
$\text{d}(a) = 0$, | |
\item | |
\label{item-direct-sum} | |
$\Omega' = B' \otimes_B \Omega \oplus B'\text{d}z$; we write | |
$\text{d}(f) = \text{d}_1(f) + \partial_z(f) \text{d}z$ | |
with $\text{d}_1(f) \in B' \otimes \Omega$ and $\partial_z(f) \in B'$ | |
for all $f \in B'$, | |
\item | |
\label{item-theta-linear} | |
$\theta : B' \to B'$ is $B$-linear, | |
\item | |
\label{item-integrate} | |
$\partial_z \circ \theta = a$, | |
\item | |
\label{item-injective} | |
$B \to B'$ is universally injective (and hence $\Omega \to \Omega'$ | |
is injective), | |
\item | |
\label{item-factor} | |
$af - \theta(\partial_z(f)) \in B$ for all $f \in B'$, | |
\item | |
\label{item-horizontal} | |
$(\theta \otimes 1)(\text{d}_1(f)) - \text{d}_1(\theta(f)) \in \Omega$ | |
for all $f \in B'$ where | |
$\theta \otimes 1 : B' \otimes \Omega \to B' \otimes \Omega$ | |
\end{enumerate} | |
These conditions are not logically independent. | |
For example, assumption (\ref{item-integrate}) implies | |
that $\partial_z(af - \theta(\partial_z(f))) = 0$. | |
Hence if the image of $B \to B'$ is the collection of | |
elements annihilated by $\partial_z$, then (\ref{item-factor}) | |
follows. A similar argument can be made for condition (\ref{item-horizontal}). | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-find-homotopy} | |
In the situation above there exists a map of complexes | |
$$ | |
e_M^\bullet : | |
M \otimes_B (\Omega')^\bullet | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes_B \Omega^\bullet | |
$$ | |
such that $c_M^\bullet \circ e_M^\bullet$ | |
and $e_M^\bullet \circ c_M^\bullet$ are homotopic to | |
multiplication by $a$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
In this proof all tensor products are over $B$. | |
Assumption (\ref{item-direct-sum}) implies that | |
$$ | |
M \otimes (\Omega')^i = | |
(B' \otimes M \otimes \Omega^i) | |
\oplus | |
(B' \text{d}z \otimes M \otimes \Omega^{i - 1}) | |
$$ | |
for all $i \geq 0$. A collection of additive generators for | |
$M \otimes (\Omega')^i$ is formed by elements of the form | |
$f \omega$ and elements of the form $f \text{d}z \wedge \eta$ | |
where $f \in B'$, $\omega \in M \otimes \Omega^i$, and | |
$\eta \in M \otimes \Omega^{i - 1}$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
For $f \in B'$ we write | |
$$ | |
\epsilon(f) = af - \theta(\partial_z(f)) | |
\quad\text{and}\quad | |
\epsilon'(f) = (\theta \otimes 1)(\text{d}_1(f)) - \text{d}_1(\theta(f)) | |
$$ | |
so that $\epsilon(f) \in B$ and $\epsilon'(f) \in \Omega$ by | |
assumptions (\ref{item-factor}) and (\ref{item-horizontal}). | |
We define $e_M^\bullet$ by the rules | |
$e^i_M(f\omega) = \epsilon(f) \omega$ and | |
$e^i_M(f \text{d}z \wedge \eta) = \epsilon'(f) \wedge \eta$. | |
We will see below that the collection of maps $e^i_M$ is a map of complexes. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
We define | |
$$ | |
h^i : M \otimes_B (\Omega')^i \longrightarrow M \otimes_B (\Omega')^{i - 1} | |
$$ | |
by the rules $h^i(f \omega) = 0$ and | |
$h^i(f \text{d}z \wedge \eta) = \theta(f) \eta$ | |
for elements as above. We claim that | |
$$ | |
\text{d} \circ h + h \circ \text{d} = a - c_M^\bullet \circ e_M^\bullet | |
$$ | |
Note that multiplication by $a$ is a map of complexes | |
by (\ref{item-d-a-zero}). Hence, since $c_M^\bullet$ is an injective map | |
of complexes by assumption (\ref{item-injective}), we conclude that | |
$e_M^\bullet$ is a map of complexes. To prove the claim we compute | |
\begin{align*} | |
(\text{d} \circ h + h \circ \text{d})(f \omega) | |
& = | |
h\left(\text{d}(f) \wedge \omega + f \nabla(\omega)\right) | |
\\ | |
& = | |
\theta(\partial_z(f)) \omega | |
\\ | |
& = | |
a f\omega - \epsilon(f)\omega | |
\\ | |
& = | |
a f \omega - c^i_M(e^i_M(f\omega)) | |
\end{align*} | |
The second equality because $\text{d}z$ does not occur in $\nabla(\omega)$ | |
and the third equality by assumption (6). Similarly, we have | |
\begin{align*} | |
(\text{d} \circ h + h \circ \text{d})(f \text{d}z \wedge \eta) | |
& = | |
\text{d}(\theta(f) \eta) + | |
h\left(\text{d}(f) \wedge \text{d}z \wedge \eta - | |
f \text{d}z \wedge \nabla(\eta)\right) | |
\\ | |
& = | |
\text{d}(\theta(f)) \wedge \eta + \theta(f) \nabla(\eta) | |
- (\theta \otimes 1)(\text{d}_1(f)) \wedge \eta | |
- \theta(f) \nabla(\eta) | |
\\ | |
& = | |
\text{d}_1(\theta(f)) \wedge \eta + | |
\partial_z(\theta(f)) \text{d}z \wedge \eta - | |
(\theta \otimes 1)(\text{d}_1(f)) \wedge \eta | |
\\ | |
& = | |
a f \text{d}z \wedge \eta - \epsilon'(f) \wedge \eta \\ | |
& = a f \text{d}z \wedge \eta - c^i_M(e^i_M(f \text{d}z \wedge \eta)) | |
\end{align*} | |
The second equality because | |
$\text{d}(f) \wedge \text{d}z \wedge \eta = | |
- \text{d}z \wedge \text{d}_1(f) \wedge \eta$. | |
The fourth equality by assumption (\ref{item-integrate}). | |
On the other hand it is immediate from the definitions | |
that $e^i_M(c^i_M(\omega)) = \epsilon(1) \omega = a \omega$. | |
This proves the lemma. | |
\end{proof} | |
\begin{example} | |
\label{example-integrate} | |
A standard example of the situation above occurs when | |
$B' = B\langle z \rangle$ is the divided power polynomial ring | |
over a divided power ring $(B, J, \delta)$ with divided powers | |
$\delta'$ on $J' = B'_{+} + JB' \subset B'$. Namely, we take | |
$\Omega = \Omega_{B, \delta}$ and $\Omega' = \Omega_{B', \delta'}$. | |
In this case we can take $a = 1$ and | |
$$ | |
\theta( \sum b_m z^{[m]} ) = \sum b_m z^{[m + 1]} | |
$$ | |
Note that | |
$$ | |
f - \theta(\partial_z(f)) = f(0) | |
$$ | |
equals the constant term. It follows that in this case | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-find-homotopy} | |
recovers the crystalline Poincar\'e lemma | |
(Lemma \ref{lemma-relative-poincare}). | |
\end{example} | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-computation} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-affine}. Assume $D$ and $\Omega_D$ are as in | |
(\ref{equation-D}) and (\ref{equation-omega-D}). | |
Let $\lambda \in D$. Let $D'$ be the $p$-adic completion of | |
$$ | |
D[z]\langle \xi \rangle/(\xi - (z^p - \lambda)) | |
$$ | |
and let $\Omega_{D'}$ be the $p$-adic completion of the module of | |
divided power differentials of $D'$ over $A$. For any pair $(M, \nabla)$ | |
over $D$ satisfying (\ref{item-complete}), (\ref{item-connection}), | |
(\ref{item-integrable}), and (\ref{item-topologically-quasi-nilpotent}) | |
the canonical map of complexes (\ref{equation-base-change-map-complexes}) | |
$$ | |
c_M^\bullet : M \otimes_D^\wedge \Omega^\bullet_D | |
\longrightarrow | |
M \otimes_D^\wedge \Omega^\bullet_{D'} | |
$$ | |
has the following property: There exists a map $e_M^\bullet$ | |
in the opposite direction such that both $c_M^\bullet \circ e_M^\bullet$ | |
and $e_M^\bullet \circ c_M^\bullet$ are homotopic to multiplication by $p$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We will prove this using Lemma \ref{lemma-find-homotopy} with $a = p$. | |
Thus we have to find $\theta : D' \to D'$ and prove | |
(\ref{item-d-a-zero}), (\ref{item-direct-sum}), (\ref{item-theta-linear}), | |
(\ref{item-integrate}), (\ref{item-injective}), (\ref{item-factor}), | |
(\ref{item-horizontal}). We first collect some information about the rings | |
$D$ and $D'$ and the modules $\Omega_D$ and $\Omega_{D'}$. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Writing | |
$$ | |
D[z]\langle \xi \rangle/(\xi - (z^p - \lambda)) | |
= | |
D\langle \xi \rangle[z]/(z^p - \xi - \lambda) | |
$$ | |
we see that $D'$ is the $p$-adic completion of the free $D$-module | |
$$ | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{i = 0, \ldots, p - 1} | |
\bigoplus\nolimits_{n \geq 0} | |
z^i \xi^{[n]} D | |
$$ | |
where $\xi^{[0]} = 1$. | |
It follows that $D \to D'$ has a continuous $D$-linear section, in particular | |
$D \to D'$ is universally injective, i.e., (\ref{item-injective}) holds. | |
We think of $D'$ as a divided power algebra | |
over $A$ with divided power ideal $\overline{J}' = \overline{J}D' + (\xi)$. | |
Then $D'$ is also the $p$-adic completion of the divided power envelope | |
of the ideal generated by $z^p - \lambda$ in $D$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-describe-divided-power-envelope}. Hence | |
$$ | |
\Omega_{D'} = \Omega_D \otimes_D^\wedge D' \oplus D'\text{d}z | |
$$ | |
by Lemma \ref{lemma-module-differentials-divided-power-envelope}. | |
This proves (\ref{item-direct-sum}). Note that (\ref{item-d-a-zero}) | |
is obvious. | |
\medskip\noindent | |
At this point we construct $\theta$. (We wrote a PARI/gp script theta.gp | |
verifying some of the formulas in this proof which can be found in the | |
scripts subdirectory of the Stacks project.) Before we do so we compute | |
the derivative of the elements $z^i \xi^{[n]}$. We have | |
$\text{d}z^i = i z^{i - 1} \text{d}z$. For $n \geq 1$ we have | |
$$ | |
\text{d}\xi^{[n]} = | |
\xi^{[n - 1]} \text{d}\xi = | |
- \xi^{[n - 1]}\text{d}\lambda + p z^{p - 1} \xi^{[n - 1]}\text{d}z | |
$$ | |
because $\xi = z^p - \lambda$. For $0 < i < p$ and $n \geq 1$ we have | |
\begin{align*} | |
\text{d}(z^i\xi^{[n]}) | |
& = | |
iz^{i - 1}\xi^{[n]}\text{d}z + z^i\xi^{[n - 1]}\text{d}\xi \\ | |
& = | |
iz^{i - 1}\xi^{[n]}\text{d}z + z^i\xi^{[n - 1]}\text{d}(z^p - \lambda) \\ | |
& = | |
- z^i\xi^{[n - 1]}\text{d}\lambda + | |
(iz^{i - 1}\xi^{[n]} + pz^{i + p - 1}\xi^{[n - 1]})\text{d}z \\ | |
& = | |
- z^i\xi^{[n - 1]}\text{d}\lambda + | |
(iz^{i - 1}\xi^{[n]} + pz^{i - 1}(\xi + \lambda)\xi^{[n - 1]})\text{d}z \\ | |
& = | |
- z^i\xi^{[n - 1]}\text{d}\lambda + | |
((i + pn)z^{i - 1}\xi^{[n]} + p\lambda z^{i - 1}\xi^{[n - 1]})\text{d}z | |
\end{align*} | |
the last equality because $\xi \xi^{[n - 1]} = n\xi^{[n]}$. | |
Thus we see that | |
\begin{align*} | |
\partial_z(z^i) & = i z^{i - 1} \\ | |
\partial_z(\xi^{[n]}) & = p z^{p - 1} \xi^{[n - 1]} \\ | |
\partial_z(z^i\xi^{[n]}) & = | |
(i + pn) z^{i - 1} \xi^{[n]} + p \lambda z^{i - 1}\xi^{[n - 1]} | |
\end{align*} | |
Motivated by these formulas we define $\theta$ by the rules | |
$$ | |
\begin{matrix} | |
\theta(z^j) | |
& = & p\frac{z^{j + 1}}{j + 1} | |
& j = 0, \ldots p - 1, \\ | |
\theta(z^{p - 1}\xi^{[m]}) | |
& = & \xi^{[m + 1]} | |
& m \geq 1, \\ | |
\theta(z^j \xi^{[m]}) | |
& = & | |
\frac{p z^{j + 1} \xi^{[m]} - \theta(p\lambda z^j \xi^{[m - 1]})}{(j + 1 + pm)} | |
& 0 \leq j < p - 1, m \geq 1 | |
\end{matrix} | |
$$ | |
where in the last line we use induction on $m$ to define our choice of | |
$\theta$. Working this out we get (for $0 \leq j < p - 1$ and $1 \leq m$) | |
$$ | |
\theta(z^j \xi^{[m]}) = | |
\textstyle{\frac{p z^{j + 1} \xi^{[m]}}{(j + 1 + pm)} - | |
\frac{p^2 \lambda z^{j + 1} \xi^{[m - 1]}}{(j + 1 + pm)(j + 1 + p(m - 1))} + | |
\ldots + | |
\frac{(-1)^m p^{m + 1} \lambda^m z^{j + 1}} | |
{(j + 1 + pm) \ldots (j + 1)}} | |
$$ | |
although we will not use this expression below. It is clear that $\theta$ | |
extends uniquely to a $p$-adically continuous $D$-linear map on $D'$. | |
By construction we have (\ref{item-theta-linear}) and (\ref{item-integrate}). | |
It remains to prove (\ref{item-factor}) and (\ref{item-horizontal}). | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Proof of (\ref{item-factor}) and (\ref{item-horizontal}). | |
As $\theta$ is $D$-linear and continuous it suffices to prove that | |
$p - \theta \circ \partial_z$, | |
resp.\ $(\theta \otimes 1) \circ \text{d}_1 - \text{d}_1 \circ \theta$ | |
gives an element of $D$, resp.\ $\Omega_D$ when evaluated on the | |
elements $z^i\xi^{[n]}$\footnote{This can be done by direct computation: | |
It turns out that $p - \theta \circ \partial_z$ evaluated on | |
$z^i\xi^{[n]}$ gives zero except for $1$ which is mapped to $p$ and | |
$\xi$ which is mapped to $-p\lambda$. It turns out that | |
$(\theta \otimes 1) \circ \text{d}_1 - \text{d}_1 \circ \theta$ | |
evaluated on $z^i\xi^{[n]}$ gives zero except for $z^{p - 1}\xi$ | |
which is mapped to $-\lambda$.}. | |
Set $D_0 = \mathbf{Z}_{(p)}[\lambda]$ and | |
$D_0' = \mathbf{Z}_{(p)}[z, \lambda]\langle \xi \rangle/(\xi - z^p + \lambda)$. | |
Observe that each of the expressions above is an element of | |
$D_0'$ or $\Omega_{D_0'}$. Hence it suffices to prove the result | |
in the case of $D_0 \to D_0'$. Note that $D_0$ and $D_0'$ | |
are torsion free rings and that $D_0 \otimes \mathbf{Q} = \mathbf{Q}[\lambda]$ | |
and $D'_0 \otimes \mathbf{Q} = \mathbf{Q}[z, \lambda]$. | |
Hence $D_0 \subset D'_0$ is the subring of elements annihilated | |
by $\partial_z$ and (\ref{item-factor}) | |
follows from (\ref{item-integrate}), see the discussion directly preceding | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-find-homotopy}. Similarly, we have | |
$\text{d}_1(f) = \partial_\lambda(f)\text{d}\lambda$ hence | |
$$ | |
\left((\theta \otimes 1) \circ \text{d}_1 - \text{d}_1 \circ \theta\right)(f) | |
= | |
\left(\theta(\partial_\lambda(f)) - \partial_\lambda(\theta(f))\right) | |
\text{d}\lambda | |
$$ | |
Applying $\partial_z$ to the coefficient we obtain | |
\begin{align*} | |
\partial_z\left( | |
\theta(\partial_\lambda(f)) - \partial_\lambda(\theta(f)) | |
\right) | |
& = | |
p \partial_\lambda(f) - \partial_z(\partial_\lambda(\theta(f))) \\ | |
& = | |
p \partial_\lambda(f) - \partial_\lambda(\partial_z(\theta(f))) \\ | |
& = | |
p \partial_\lambda(f) - \partial_\lambda(p f) = 0 | |
\end{align*} | |
whence the coefficient does not depend on $z$ as desired. | |
This finishes the proof of the lemma. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
Note that an iterated $\alpha_p$-cover $X' \to X$ (as defined in the | |
introduction to this section) is finite locally free. Hence if $X$ is | |
connected the degree of $X' \to X$ is constant and is a power of $p$. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-pullback-along-p-power-cover} | |
Let $p$ be a prime number. Let $(S, \mathcal{I}, \gamma)$ be a divided power | |
scheme over $\mathbf{Z}_{(p)}$ with $p \in \mathcal{I}$. We set | |
$S_0 = V(\mathcal{I}) \subset S$. Let $f : X' \to X$ be an iterated | |
$\alpha_p$-cover of schemes over $S_0$ with constant degree $q$. Let | |
$\mathcal{F}$ be any crystal in quasi-coherent sheaves on $X$ and set | |
$\mathcal{F}' = f_{\text{cris}}^*\mathcal{F}$. | |
In the distinguished triangle | |
$$ | |
Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F} | |
\longrightarrow | |
f_*Ru_{X'/S, *}\mathcal{F}' | |
\longrightarrow | |
E | |
\longrightarrow | |
Ru_{X/S, *}\mathcal{F}[1] | |
$$ | |
the object $E$ has cohomology sheaves annihilated by $q$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
Note that $X' \to X$ is a homeomorphism hence we can identify the underlying | |
topological spaces of $X$ and $X'$. The question is clearly local on $X$, | |
hence we may assume $X$, $X'$, and $S$ affine and $X' \to X$ given as a | |
composition | |
$$ | |
X' = X_n \to X_{n - 1} \to X_{n - 2} \to \ldots \to X_0 = X | |
$$ | |
where each morphism $X_{i + 1} \to X_i$ is an $\alpha_p$-cover. | |
Denote $\mathcal{F}_i$ the pullback of $\mathcal{F}$ to $X_i$. | |
It suffices to prove that each of the maps | |
$$ | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X_i/S), \mathcal{F}_i) | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X_{i + 1}/S), \mathcal{F}_{i + 1}) | |
$$ | |
fits into a triangle whose third member has cohomology groups annihilated | |
by $p$. (This uses axiom TR4 for the triangulated category $D(X)$. Details | |
omitted.) | |
\medskip\noindent | |
Hence we may assume that $S = \Spec(A)$, $X = \Spec(C)$, $X' = \Spec(C')$ | |
and $C' = C[z]/(z^p - c)$ for some $c \in C$. Choose a polynomial algebra | |
$P$ over $A$ and a surjection $P \to C$. Let $D$ be the $p$-adically completed | |
divided power envelop of $\Ker(P \to C)$ in $P$ as in (\ref{equation-D}). | |
Set $P' = P[z]$ with surjection $P' \to C'$ mapping $z$ to the class of $z$ | |
in $C'$. Choose a lift $\lambda \in D$ of $c \in C$. Then we see that | |
the $p$-adically completed divided power envelope $D'$ of | |
$\Ker(P' \to C')$ in $P'$ is isomorphic to the $p$-adic completion of | |
$D[z]\langle \xi \rangle/(\xi - (z^p - \lambda))$, see | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-computation} and its proof. | |
Thus we see that the result follows from this lemma | |
by the computation of cohomology of crystals in quasi-coherent modules in | |
Proposition \ref{proposition-compute-cohomology-crystal}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
The bound in the following lemma is probably not optimal. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-pullback-along-p-power-cover-cohomology} | |
With notations and assumptions as in | |
Lemma \ref{lemma-pullback-along-p-power-cover} | |
the map | |
$$ | |
f^* : | |
H^i(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{F}) | |
\longrightarrow | |
H^i(\text{Cris}(X'/S), \mathcal{F}') | |
$$ | |
has kernel and cokernel annihilated by $q^{i + 1}$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
This follows from the fact that $E$ has nonzero cohomology sheaves in | |
degrees $-1$ and up, so that the spectral sequence | |
$H^a(\mathcal{H}^b(E)) \Rightarrow H^{a + b}(E)$ converges. | |
This combined with the long exact cohomology sequence associated | |
to a distinguished triangle gives the bound. | |
\end{proof} | |
\noindent | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global} assume that $p \in \mathcal{I}$. | |
Set | |
$$ | |
X^{(1)} = X \times_{S_0, F_{S_0}} S_0. | |
$$ | |
Denote $F_{X/S_0} : X \to X^{(1)}$ the relative Frobenius morphism. | |
\begin{lemma} | |
\label{lemma-pullback-relative-frobenius} | |
In the situation above, assume that $X \to S_0$ is smooth of relative | |
dimension $d$. Then $F_{X/S_0}$ is an iterated $\alpha_p$-cover | |
of degree $p^d$. Hence Lemmas \ref{lemma-pullback-along-p-power-cover} and | |
\ref{lemma-pullback-along-p-power-cover-cohomology} apply to this | |
situation. In particular, for any crystal in quasi-coherent modules | |
$\mathcal{G}$ on $\text{Cris}(X^{(1)}/S)$ the map | |
$$ | |
F_{X/S_0}^* : H^i(\text{Cris}(X^{(1)}/S), \mathcal{G}) | |
\longrightarrow | |
H^i(\text{Cris}(X/S), F_{X/S_0, \text{cris}}^*\mathcal{G}) | |
$$ | |
has kernel and cokernel annihilated by $p^{d(i + 1)}$. | |
\end{lemma} | |
\begin{proof} | |
It suffices to prove the first statement. To see this we may assume | |
that $X$ is \'etale over $\mathbf{A}^d_{S_0}$, see | |
Morphisms, Lemma \ref{morphisms-lemma-smooth-etale-over-affine-space}. | |
Denote $\varphi : X \to \mathbf{A}^d_{S_0}$ this \'etale morphism. | |
In this case the relative Frobenius of $X/S_0$ fits into a diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
X \ar[d] \ar[r] & X^{(1)} \ar[d] \\ | |
\mathbf{A}^d_{S_0} \ar[r] & \mathbf{A}^d_{S_0} | |
} | |
$$ | |
where the lower horizontal arrow is the relative frobenius morphism | |
of $\mathbf{A}^d_{S_0}$ over $S_0$. This is the morphism which raises | |
all the coordinates to the $p$th power, hence it is an iterated | |
$\alpha_p$-cover. The proof is finished by observing that the diagram | |
is a fibre square, see | |
\'Etale Morphisms, Lemma \ref{etale-lemma-relative-frobenius-etale}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\section{Frobenius action on crystalline cohomology} | |
\label{section-frobenius} | |
\noindent | |
In this section we prove that Frobenius pullback induces a quasi-isomorphism | |
on crystalline cohomology after inverting the prime $p$. But in order to | |
even formulate this we need to work in a special situation. | |
\begin{situation} | |
\label{situation-F-crystal} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-global} assume the following | |
\begin{enumerate} | |
\item $S = \Spec(A)$ for some divided power ring $(A, I, \gamma)$ | |
with $p \in I$, | |
\item there is given a homomorphism of divided power rings $\sigma : A \to A$ | |
such that $\sigma(x) = x^p \bmod pA$ for all $x \in A$. | |
\end{enumerate} | |
\end{situation} | |
\noindent | |
In Situation \ref{situation-F-crystal} the morphism | |
$\Spec(\sigma) : S \to S$ is a lift of the absolute Frobenius | |
$F_{S_0} : S_0 \to S_0$ and since the diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
X \ar[d] \ar[r]_{F_X} & X \ar[d] \\ | |
S_0 \ar[r]^{F_{S_0}} & S_0 | |
} | |
$$ | |
is commutative where $F_X : X \to X$ is the absolute Frobenius morphism | |
of $X$. Thus we obtain a morphism of crystalline topoi | |
$$ | |
(F_X)_{\text{cris}} : | |
(X/S)_{\text{cris}} | |
\longrightarrow | |
(X/S)_{\text{cris}} | |
$$ | |
see Remark \ref{remark-functoriality-cris}. Here is the terminology concerning | |
$F$-crystals following the notation of Saavedra, see | |
\cite{Saavedra}. | |
\begin{definition} | |
\label{definition-F-crystal} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-F-crystal} an {\it $F$-crystal on $X/S$ | |
(relative to $\sigma$)} is a pair $(\mathcal{E}, F_\mathcal{E})$ | |
given by a crystal in finite locally free $\mathcal{O}_{X/S}$-modules | |
$\mathcal{E}$ together with a map | |
$$ | |
F_\mathcal{E} : (F_X)_{\text{cris}}^*\mathcal{E} \longrightarrow \mathcal{E} | |
$$ | |
An $F$-crystal is called {\it nondegenerate} if there exists an integer | |
$i \geq 0$ a map $V : \mathcal{E} \to (F_X)_{\text{cris}}^*\mathcal{E}$ | |
such that $V \circ F_{\mathcal{E}} = p^i \text{id}$. | |
\end{definition} | |
\begin{remark} | |
\label{remark-F-crystal-variants} | |
Let $(\mathcal{E}, F)$ be an $F$-crystal as in | |
Definition \ref{definition-F-crystal}. | |
In the literature the nondegeneracy condition is often part of the | |
definition of an $F$-crystal. Moreover, often it is also assumed that | |
$F \circ V = p^n\text{id}$. What is needed for the result below is | |
that there exists an integer $j \geq 0$ such that $\Ker(F)$ and | |
$\Coker(F)$ are killed by $p^j$. If the rank of $\mathcal{E}$ | |
is bounded (for example if $X$ is quasi-compact), then both of these | |
conditions follow from the nondegeneracy condition as formulated in | |
the definition. Namely, suppose $R$ is a ring, $r \geq 1$ is an integer and | |
$K, L \in \text{Mat}(r \times r, R)$ are matrices with | |
$K L = p^i 1_{r \times r}$. Then $\det(K)\det(L) = p^{ri}$. | |
Let $L'$ be the adjugate matrix of $L$, i.e., | |
$L' L = L L' = \det(L)$. Set $K' = p^{ri} K$ and $j = ri + i$. | |
Then we have $K' L = p^j 1_{r \times r}$ as $K L = p^i$ and | |
$$ | |
L K' = L K \det(L) \det(M) = L K L L' \det(M) = L p^i L' \det(M) = | |
p^j 1_{r \times r} | |
$$ | |
It follows that if $V$ is as in Definition \ref{definition-F-crystal} | |
then setting $V' = p^N V$ where $N > i \cdot \text{rank}(\mathcal{E})$ | |
we get $V' \circ F = p^{N + i}$ and $F \circ V' = p^{N + i}$. | |
\end{remark} | |
\begin{theorem} | |
\label{theorem-cohomology-F-crystal} | |
In Situation \ref{situation-F-crystal} let $(\mathcal{E}, F_\mathcal{E})$ | |
be a nondegenerate $F$-crystal. Assume $A$ is a $p$-adically complete | |
Noetherian ring and that $X \to S_0$ is proper smooth. Then | |
the canonical map | |
$$ | |
F_\mathcal{E} \circ (F_X)_{\text{cris}}^* : | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{E}) \otimes^\mathbf{L}_{A, \sigma} A | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{E}) | |
$$ | |
becomes an isomorphism after inverting $p$. | |
\end{theorem} | |
\begin{proof} | |
We first write the arrow as a composition of three arrows. | |
Namely, set | |
$$ | |
X^{(1)} = X \times_{S_0, F_{S_0}} S_0 | |
$$ | |
and denote $F_{X/S_0} : X \to X^{(1)}$ the relative Frobenius morphism. | |
Denote $\mathcal{E}^{(1)}$ the base change of $\mathcal{E}$ | |
by $\Spec(\sigma)$, in other words the pullback of $\mathcal{E}$ | |
to $\text{Cris}(X^{(1)}/S)$ by the morphism of crystalline topoi | |
associated to the commutative diagram | |
$$ | |
\xymatrix{ | |
X^{(1)} \ar[r] \ar[d] & X \ar[d] \\ | |
S \ar[r]^{\Spec(\sigma)} & S | |
} | |
$$ | |
Then we have the base change map | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-base-change-sigma} | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{E}) \otimes^\mathbf{L}_{A, \sigma} A | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X^{(1)}/S), \mathcal{E}^{(1)}) | |
\end{equation} | |
see Remark \ref{remark-base-change}. Note that the composition | |
of $F_{X/S_0} : X \to X^{(1)}$ with the projection $X^{(1)} \to X$ | |
is the absolute Frobenius morphism $F_X$. Hence we see that | |
$F_{X/S_0}^*\mathcal{E}^{(1)} = (F_X)_{\text{cris}}^*\mathcal{E}$. | |
Thus pullback by $F_{X/S_0}$ is a map | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-to-prove} | |
F_{X/S_0}^* : | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X^{(1)}/S), \mathcal{E}^{(1)}) | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), (F_X)^*_{\text{cris}}\mathcal{E}) | |
\end{equation} | |
Finally we can use $F_\mathcal{E}$ to get a map | |
\begin{equation} | |
\label{equation-F-E} | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), (F_X)^*_{\text{cris}}\mathcal{E}) | |
\longrightarrow | |
R\Gamma(\text{Cris}(X/S), \mathcal{E}) | |
\end{equation} | |
The map of the theorem is the composition of the three maps | |
(\ref{equation-base-change-sigma}), (\ref{equation-to-prove}), and | |
(\ref{equation-F-E}) above. The first is a | |
quasi-isomorphism modulo all powers of $p$ by | |
Remark \ref{remark-base-change-isomorphism}. | |
Hence it is a quasi-isomorphism since the complexes involved are perfect | |
in $D(A)$ see Remark \ref{remark-complete-perfect}. | |
The third map is a quasi-isomorphism after inverting $p$ simply | |
because $F_\mathcal{E}$ has an inverse up to a power of $p$, see | |
Remark \ref{remark-F-crystal-variants}. | |
Finally, the second is an isomorphism after inverting $p$ | |
by Lemma \ref{lemma-pullback-relative-frobenius}. | |
\end{proof} | |
\input{chapters} | |
\bibliography{my} | |
\bibliographystyle{amsalpha} | |
\end{document} | |