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