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Generalities About Sheaves Sebastian Jambor, Arne Lorenz Lehrstuhl B für Mathematik RWTH Aachen summer school Kleinwalsertal 2007 Outline 1 Presheaves 2 Sheaves Examples The Sheaf Associated to a Presheaf Sequences and Cohomology Sheaf Cohomology 3 Coherent Sheaves Presheaves Definition Let X be a topological space. A presheaf F of abelian groups consists of: U ⊆ X open abelian group of sections F(U ), V ⊆ U open restriction morphism ρU V : F(U ) → F(V ), such that: F(∅) = 0, ρU U = idF (U ) , W ⊆ V ⊆ U: ρU W = ρV W ◦ ρU V . For a section s ∈ F(U ) write s|V = ρU V (s). Constructions on Presheaves stalk Fx at x ∈ X: Fx = lim F(U ) −→ U 3x sx ∈ Fx is called germ. Constructions on Presheaves stalk Fx at x ∈ X: Fx = lim F(U ) −→ U 3x sx ∈ Fx is called germ. morphism of presheaves ϕ : F → G: F(U ) ϕ(U ) ρU V F(V ) ϕ(V ) is commutative for all V ⊆ U . / G(U ) ρ0U V / G(V ) Constructions on Presheaves stalk Fx at x ∈ X: Fx = lim F(U ) −→ U 3x sx ∈ Fx is called germ. morphism of presheaves ϕ : F → G: 0 / ker(ϕ)(U ) 0 ρU V / ker(ϕ)(V ) / F(U ) ϕ(U ) / G(U ) ρU V / F(V ) ϕ(V ) ρ0U V / G(V ) is commutative for all V ⊆ U . presheaves: im(ϕ),ker(ϕ), coker(ϕ) / coker(ϕ)(U ) /0 ρ0U V / coker(ϕ)(V ) /0 Sheaves Definition Let {Vi } be an open covering of U ⊆ X (open). A presheaf F on X is a sheaf if for all i: s ∈ F(U ) and s|Vi = 0 then s = 0, given si ∈ F(Vi ) that match on the overlaps: si |Vi ∩Vj = sj |Vi ∩Vj there is a unique s ∈ F(U ) with s|Vi = si . Sheaves are defined by local data. Examples of sheaves X topological space: constant sheaves R, Z (R, Z have discrete topology) regular functions on an affine variety, e. g. An . X ⊆ Rn : continuous functions C(U ) U → R X ⊆ Rn : differentiable functions D(U ) U → R X ⊆ Cn : holomorphic functions OX (U ) U → C X ⊆ Cn : meromorphic functions Extension to varieties, complex spaces and manifolds by gluing is possible. Types of sheaves In the following, we deal with sheaves of rings OX ideals I with I(U ) E OX (U ), OX -modules M. (X, OX ) is called a ringed space with structure sheaf OX . Module constructions extend to sheaves due to their local nature: ⊕, F/G, ker, im, coker Caution: F/G, im, coker are only presheaves! The sheaf associated to a presheaf Every presheaf F defines a sheaf F + . For U ⊆ X take the sections [ s:U → Fx x∈U such that: s(x) ∈ Fx , for each x ∈ U we find: x∈V ⊆U and t ∈ F(V ) with tx = s(x). The sheaf associated to a presheaf Every presheaf F defines a sheaf F + . For U ⊆ X take the sections [ s:U → Fx x∈U such that: s(x) ∈ Fx , for each x ∈ U we find: x∈V ⊆U and t ∈ F(V ) with tx = s(x). Equivalent definition of sheaves F + via ‘espaces étales’: [ Fx Spé(F) = x∈X F + (U ) are the continuous sections U → Spé(F). Morphisms of sheaves Use F + for some sheaves related to morphisms ϕ : F → G: F 0 is a subsheaf of F if for each U ⊆ X: 0 F F 0 (U ) ⊆ F(U ) and ρF U V = ρU V |F (U ) Morphisms of sheaves Use F + for some sheaves related to morphisms ϕ : F → G: F 0 is a subsheaf of F if for each U ⊆ X: 0 F F 0 (U ) ⊆ F(U ) and ρF U V = ρU V |F (U ) ker(ϕ) is a subsheaf of F. ϕ is injective ⇐⇒ ker(ϕ) = 0. Morphisms of sheaves Use F + for some sheaves related to morphisms ϕ : F → G: F 0 is a subsheaf of F if for each U ⊆ X: 0 F F 0 (U ) ⊆ F(U ) and ρF U V = ρU V |F (U ) ker(ϕ) is a subsheaf of F. ϕ is injective ⇐⇒ ker(ϕ) = 0. The sheaf im(ϕ) is im(ϕ) := impresheaf (ϕ)+ ϕ is surjective ⇐⇒ im(ϕ) = G. Morphisms of sheaves Use F + for some sheaves related to morphisms ϕ : F → G: F 0 is a subsheaf of F if for each U ⊆ X: 0 F F 0 (U ) ⊆ F(U ) and ρF U V = ρU V |F (U ) ker(ϕ) is a subsheaf of F. ϕ is injective ⇐⇒ ker(ϕ) = 0. The sheaf im(ϕ) is im(ϕ) := impresheaf (ϕ)+ ϕ is surjective ⇐⇒ im(ϕ) = G. ϕ is surjective ⇐⇒ ∀x ∈ X ϕx : Fx → Gx is surjective but ϕ(U ) is not necessarily surjective. Cohomology Let (X, OX ) be a ringed space. A sequence of sheaves: S: ... i−1 / Si / S i−1 d with im(di−1 ) ⊆ ker(di ). S is exact ⇐⇒ im(di−1 ) = ker(di ). di i+1 / S i+1 d / ... Cohomology Let (X, OX ) be a ringed space. A sequence of sheaves: S: ... i−1 / Si / S i−1 d di i+1 / S i+1 d / ... with im(di−1 ) ⊆ ker(di ). S is exact ⇐⇒ im(di−1 ) = ker(di ). S is exact ⇐⇒ the sequence of stalks is exact: ... i−1 / S i−1 dx / S i x x dix / S i+1 x / ... Cohomology sheaves: hi (S) = (ker(di )/ im(di−1 ))+ . ∀x ∈ X. Sheaf cohomology Do not confuse this with the sheaf cohomology of F: An injective resolution of F: /F 0 / S0 d0 / S1 d1 / ... defines a sequence: S: 0 / S0 d0 / S1 d1 / S2 d2 / ... . The category of OX -modules has enough injectives. Apply the global section functor Γ(X, ·) to S to obtain the sheaf cohomology: H q (X, F) = ker(dq (X))/ im(dq−1 (X)) H 0 (X, F) = Γ(X, F), since Γ(X, ·) is left exact. Calculation: Next talks! direct/inverse image sheaves Let f : X → Y be a continuous map of topological spaces. direct image of F on X: f∗ F(V ) = F(f −1 (V )) inverse image of G on Y : + f −1 (G)(U ) = lim G(V ) −→ V ⊇f (U ) direct/inverse image sheaves Let f : X → Y be a continuous map of topological spaces. direct image of F on X: f∗ F(V ) = F(f −1 (V )) inverse image of G on Y : + f −1 (G)(U ) = lim G(V ) −→ V ⊇f (U ) We can restrict sheaves F to subsets Z ⊆ X: Z open: F|Z (V ) = F(V ) Z closed: Use the embedding ι : Z → X: F|Z (V ) := ι−1 (F)(V ) Coherent sheaves Definition A sheaf F of OX -modules is coherent, if F is of finite type and of relation finite type. F is of finite type if for each x ∈ X there are x ∈ U ⊆ X, p ∈ N and an exact sequence p OX |U σ / F|U / 0. Coherent sheaves Definition A sheaf F of OX -modules is coherent, if F is of finite type and of relation finite type. F is of finite type if for each x ∈ X there are x ∈ U ⊆ X, p ∈ N and an exact sequence p OX |U σ / F|U / 0. F is of relation finite type if ker(σ) is of finite type. Locally, a coherent sheaf has a finite representation: q OX |U / O p |U X σ / F|U / 0. Coherent sheaves II The sheaf OX of holomorphic functions on a complex space X is coherent. The sheaf of differentiable functions D on a manifold X is coherent. For a coherent structure sheaf OX , an OX -module F is coherent ⇐⇒ F locally has a finite representation. Meromorphic functions do not form a coherent sheaf. They are not finitely generated over OX . Literature Hans Grauert and Reinhold Remmert. Coherent analytic sheaves, volume 265 of Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften. Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1984. R. Hartshorne. Algebraic geometry, volume 52 of Graduate Texts in Mathematics. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1977. F. Hirzebruch. Topological methods in algebraic geometry, volume 131 of Grundlehren der Mathematischen Wissenschaften. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., New York, 1966.