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| Tags: direct, free, image, locally, sheaf |
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#1
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Hi!
Does anybody know is this statement right or wrong? f: Y-X - flat projective morphism E - locally free sheaf on Y Then f_* (E) is locally free. Zhenya |
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#2
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Zhenya in litteris scripsit: Does anybody know is this statement right or wrong? f: Y-X - flat projective morphism E - locally free sheaf on Y Then f_* (E) is locally free. I assume that "locally free" means "locall y free coherent" and that everything is noetherian. Then f_*(E) is flat because E is flat and f is (see Hartshorne, *Algebraic Geometry*, proposition III.9.2(c)). But f_*(E) is coherent because E is and f is projective (op. cit. III.8.8(b)). Now this implies that f_*(E) is locally free (op. cit. III.9.2(e)). -- David A. Madore , http://www.madore.org/~david/ ) |
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#3
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On 16.05.2008 11:15, David Madore wrote: Zhenya in litteris scripsit: Does anybody know is this statement right or wrong? f: Y-X - flat projective morphism E - locally free sheaf on Y Then f_* (E) is locally free. I assume that "locally free" means "locall y free coherent" and that everything is noetherian. Then f_*(E) is flat because E is flat and f is (see Hartshorne, *Algebraic Geometry*, proposition III.9.2(c)). I can see that the cited proposition gives that _E_ is flat over X. I am wondering how you deduce that f_*(E) is flat over X with that. Considering the natural morphism of O_Y-modules f^*f_*(E) - E there seems more work to be done here. (*) But f_*(E) is coherent because E is and f is projective (op. cit. III.8.8(b)). Note that f_*(E) can be seen to be coherent, too, if f is assumed to be proper. I think that the strong assumption that f be projective needs to be invested somehow to get a result. Now this implies that f_*(E) is locally free (op. cit. III.9.2(e)). Honestly I doubt that the claim is true as stated although I do not have any counterexample at hand at the moment. Note that f_*(E(n)) is locally free for n0 where E(n) is the n-th twist of E with respect to a f-ample line bundle L on Y if X is integral (cf. http://groups.google.com/group/sci.m...4a3dfe05992be0, too). This appears to be the best result which is possible in the light of Hartshorne, Thm. III.9.9 and the equivalent assertions in its proof. .... but I am keen on seeing some elaboration on (*). ![]() -- Best wishes, J. |
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#4
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Jannick Asmus in litteris scripsit: On 16.05.2008 11:15, David Madore wrote: Then f_*(E) is flat because E is flat and f is (see Hartshorne, *Algebraic Geometry*, proposition III.9.2(c)). I can see that the cited proposition gives that _E_ is flat over X. I am wondering how you deduce that f_*(E) is flat over X with that. Considering the natural morphism of O_Y-modules f^*f_*(E) - E there seems more work to be done here. (*) By Zeus, you're right. I was confused by Hartshorne's wording of example III.9.7.1, where he writes that some morphism f:Y-X is not flat, for "if it were, then f_*(O_Y) would be a flat sheaf of O_X-modules" [note: I inverted X's and Y's w.r.t. Hartshorne's notation, for consistency with the original poster's notation]. At the very least, Hartshorne is horribly confusing here, because never up to that point is the direct image of a sheaf under a flat morphism mentioned, and suddenly it pops up without explanation. What did he have in mind? In truth, I find it very annoying that this question is not mentioned in standard texts on algebraic geometry and commutative algebra. If you have the affine case and quasi-coherent sheaves in mind, the direct image of a quasi-coherent sheaf by a morphism Spec(B)-Spec(A) corresponds to viewing a B-module as the induced A-module; so it's pretty natural to think that if a morphism is flat then direct image by it will take flat sheaves to flat sheaves (see below). A decent book on the subject should contain some explanation as to the relation between "f_*(E) is flat" and "E is f-flat": either my expectations are too high or there are no decent textbooks on the subject. :-) Note that f_*(E) can be seen to be coherent, too, if f is assumed to be proper. I think that the strong assumption that f be projective needs to be invested somehow to get a result. I don't think the distinction between "projective" and "proper" is the issue here, but I may be wrong, of course. Honestly I doubt that the claim is true as stated although I do not have any counterexample at hand at the moment. I also thought this statement was fishy, but I couldn't find a counterexample, so I was confused as explained above. But this confusing being cleared away, I agree with you that the statement is probably wrong without further hypotheses. However, I can see more clearly the reason why finding a counterexample is not obvious. Let f:Y-X be a morphism of finite type between noetherian schemes, and assume X = Spec A is affine (which we can do, because our problem is local on the target). Consider a finite covering of Y by affine subschemes V_i = Spec(B_i), each B_i being an A-algebra (of finite type). If E is a quasi-coherent sheaf on Y, the restriction E|V_i of E to each V_i is some (M_i)~ with M_i a B_i-module; the direct image f_*(E|V_i) is ([A]M_i)~ where [A]M_i is M_i seen as an A-module; if we assume that E and f are flat (or more generally that E is flat over X), then the [A]M_i are flat, so the f_*(E|V_i) are (this is essentially what Hartshorne says around II.5 and III.9). Now this does not imply that f_*(E) is flat as I was too quick to believe, but it is true that f_*(E) injects in the direct sum sum of the f_*(E|V_i) which are flat (so f_*(E) is, e.g., torsion free). Now it is not true in general that a subsheaf (submodule) of a flat sheaf (module) is flat, but it is true if, say, X is a smooth curve. So my attempts to find a counterexample with X = A^1 were doomed. I need to think further about this... -- David A. Madore , http://www.madore.org/~david/ ) |
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#5
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On 17.05.2008 16:15, David Madore wrote: Jannick Asmus in litteris scripsit: On 16.05.2008 11:15, David Madore wrote: Then f_*(E) is flat because E is flat and f is (see Hartshorne, *Algebraic Geometry*, proposition III.9.2(c)). I can see that the cited proposition gives that _E_ is flat over X. I am wondering how you deduce that f_*(E) is flat over X with that. Considering the natural morphism of O_Y-modules f^*f_*(E) - E there seems more work to be done here. (*) By Zeus, you're right. I was confused by Hartshorne's wording of example III.9.7.1, where he writes that some morphism f:Y-X is not flat, for "if it were, then f_*(O_Y) would be a flat sheaf of O_X-modules" [note: I inverted X's and Y's w.r.t. Hartshorne's notation, for consistency with the original poster's notation]. At the very least, Hartshorne is horribly confusing here, because never up to that point is the direct image of a sheaf under a flat morphism mentioned, and suddenly it pops up without explanation. What did he have in mind? The subtle point in example III.9.7.1 is that the morphism stems from the normalization process, so it is affine - and everything is fine since things can be easily considered under one single affine chart such that the tool-kit of commutative algebra can be applied. But our morphism in the original problem is complete or projective. They are not affine in general. The direct image is thoroughly examined in terms of the cohomology groups H^i(X,F) or higher direct images R^i(f_*)(F). This might be a bit disguised, but basically direct images are considered by cohomological tools noted before. In truth, I find it very annoying that this question is not mentioned in standard texts on algebraic geometry and commutative algebra. I understand. I would expect some remarks on that, too, together with examples in chapters on flat complete morphisms. If you have the affine case and quasi-coherent sheaves in mind, the direct image of a quasi-coherent sheaf by a morphism Spec(B)-Spec(A) corresponds to viewing a B-module as the induced A-module; so it's pretty natural to think that if a morphism is flat then direct image by it will take flat sheaves to flat sheaves (see below). A decent book on the subject should contain some explanation as to the relation between "f_*(E) is flat" and "E is f-flat": either my expectations are too high or there are no decent textbooks on the subject. :-) Note that things get a bit more complicated if a fibre is not contained in a single _affine_ subset. In general this is the case when complete morphisms are considered. Note that f_*(E) can be seen to be coherent, too, if f is assumed to be proper. I think that the strong assumption that f be projective needs to be invested somehow to get a result. I don't think the distinction between "projective" and "proper" is the issue here, but I may be wrong, of course. I agree, but I think the assumption on f to be projective needs to be thoroughly used at this point to get a decent result. As it is the properness of f which guarantees that the direct image of a coherent sheaf is coherent I was wondering where some ample line bundle should show up in the argument. Honestly I doubt that the claim is true as stated although I do not have any counterexample at hand at the moment. I also thought this statement was fishy, but I couldn't find a counterexample, so I was confused as explained above. But this confusing being cleared away, I agree with you that the statement is probably wrong without further hypotheses. However, I can see more clearly the reason why finding a counterexample is not obvious. Let f:Y-X be a morphism of finite type between noetherian schemes, and assume X = Spec A is affine (which we can do, because our problem is local on the target). Consider a finite covering of Y by affine subschemes V_i = Spec(B_i), each B_i being an A-algebra (of finite type). If E is a quasi-coherent sheaf on Y, the restriction E|V_i of E to each V_i is some (M_i)~ with M_i a B_i-module; the direct image f_*(E|V_i) is ([A]M_i)~ where [A]M_i is M_i seen as an A-module; if we assume that E and f are flat (or more generally that E is flat over X), then the [A]M_i are flat, so the f_*(E|V_i) are (this is essentially what Hartshorne says around II.5 and III.9). Now this does not imply that f_*(E) is flat as I was too quick to believe, but it is true that f_*(E) injects in the direct sum sum of the f_*(E|V_i) which are flat (so f_*(E) is, e.g., torsion free). Now it is not true in general that a subsheaf (submodule) of a flat sheaf (module) is flat, but it is true if, say, X is a smooth curve. So my attempts to find a counterexample with X = A^1 were doomed. Basically your argument can be extended by having a look at the Cech complex C^i of E and some affine covering of Y. By assumption C^i are flat A-modules, but C^i is not exact in general. Taking some twist of E high enough (w.r.t. an ample line bundle L on Y) then C^*(E(n)) is exact such that it is a flat resolution of finite length of M:=H^0(Y,E(n)). This implies that the A-module M is flat. By properness the A-module is finitely generated, hence locally free. (This is the idea of one of the implications proven in Hartshorne, Thm. III.9.9.) I need to think further about this... .... looking forward to seeing a counterexample on this. :-) If I can find some more time I will try to find a counterexample as well. -- Best wishes, J. |
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#6
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Zhenya wrote: Hi! Does anybody know is this statement right or wrong? f: Y-X - flat projective morphism E - locally free sheaf on Y Then f_* (E) is locally free. Zhenya If I am not mistaken in the following conclusions, the statement is wrong. To find a counterexample I refer to the article D. Eisenbud, F.-O. Schreyer, Relative Beilinson Monad and Direct Image for Families of Coherent Sheaves, arXiv:math.AG/0506391 v2 27 Sep 2006 The articles cites the following lemma, which is also in Hartshorne(III,Lemma 12.3): If f:X-Y, Y=spec A, is a projective morphism and F a Y-flat sheaf on X, then there exists a complex AA^* AA^*: 0 - A^h0 - A^h1 - A^h2 - ... - A^hn - 0 whose cohomologies are h^i(AA^*) = R^i f_* F(Y) The abovementioned article gives a kind of converse of this lemma as Theorem 0.4: Let A be a noetherian ring and let AA^* a complex like the above. Then a vector bundle F on P^n_A exists, such that h^i(AA^*)=R^i f_*(Y) Therefore f_*F can correspond to an arbitrary kernel ker(A^h0 - A^h1) and need not be a flat (=locally free) sheaf on Y. I constructed a counterexample (more or less by trial and error) with Macaulay2 by choosing A=k[a,b,c,d] and S=A[x,y], therefore X=Proj S=P^1_A, and a certain matrix m : S^5(-1) - S^7. So there is a sequence S^5(-1) - S^7 - M' - 0 Let M be M' ** S^(-2) Let I3 the ideal in k[a,b,c,d], where there are points x,y, so that the matrix m doesn't have the full rank 5, it can be computed by taking the 5x5 minors of m in k[a,b,c,d,x,y] and eliminating x, setting y=1 intersect eliminate y, setting x=1. Above Y-V(I3) F=M^\tilde is a vector bundle. Using the command directImageComplex(M) one computes a complex of A modules of the abovementioned kind, whose cohomologies are the (higher) direct image sheaves of M^\tilde. In the case I considered, it took the form 0 - A^6 - A^3 - 0 with 0 - K - A^6 - A^3 - 0 exact and phi 0 - A^1 ----- A^4 - K - 0 exact (and K=f_*(M^\tilde)(Y)) Let I4 be the ideal of k[a,b,c,d], where the map A^1 - A^4 vanishes. It can be checked, that rad(I4) \not\supseteq rad(I3), so there are points P in spec A, above which F=M^\tilde is a vector-bundle, but on tensoring with k(P) the map phi ** k(P) vanishes, so Tor_1^(A_P)(k(p),K_P) 0, so K_P = (f_* M^\tilde)_P is not projective. If there is interest, I can post the script doing the calculation for further experimenting. Greetings Jurgen -- Jurgen Bohm www.aviduratas.de "At a time when so many scholars in the world are calculating, is it not desirable that some, who can, dream ?" R. Thom |
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