The Stacks project

Comments 1 to 20 out of 10065 in reverse chronological order.

\begin{equation*} \DeclareMathOperator\Coim{Coim} \DeclareMathOperator\Coker{Coker} \DeclareMathOperator\Ext{Ext} \DeclareMathOperator\Hom{Hom} \DeclareMathOperator\Im{Im} \DeclareMathOperator\Ker{Ker} \DeclareMathOperator\Mor{Mor} \DeclareMathOperator\Ob{Ob} \DeclareMathOperator\Sh{Sh} \DeclareMathOperator\SheafExt{\mathcal{E}\mathit{xt}} \DeclareMathOperator\SheafHom{\mathcal{H}\mathit{om}} \DeclareMathOperator\Spec{Spec} \newcommand\colim{\mathop{\mathrm{colim}}\nolimits} \newcommand\lim{\mathop{\mathrm{lim}}\nolimits} \newcommand\Qcoh{\mathit{Qcoh}} \newcommand\Sch{\mathit{Sch}} \newcommand\QCohstack{\mathcal{QC}\!\mathit{oh}} \newcommand\Cohstack{\mathcal{C}\!\mathit{oh}} \newcommand\Spacesstack{\mathcal{S}\!\mathit{paces}} \newcommand\Quotfunctor{\mathrm{Quot}} \newcommand\Hilbfunctor{\mathrm{Hilb}} \newcommand\Curvesstack{\mathcal{C}\!\mathit{urves}} \newcommand\Polarizedstack{\mathcal{P}\!\mathit{olarized}} \newcommand\Complexesstack{\mathcal{C}\!\mathit{omplexes}} \newcommand\Pic{\mathop{\mathrm{Pic}}\nolimits} \newcommand\Picardstack{\mathcal{P}\!\mathit{ic}} \newcommand\Picardfunctor{\mathrm{Pic}} \newcommand\Deformationcategory{\mathcal{D}\!\mathit{ef}} \end{equation*}

On Branislav Sobot left comment #11016 on Lemma 31.21.8 in Divisors

Sorry, I just can't see how to use lemma 061R. It seems to me that you need to know that is locally around cut by inside , which doesn't have to hold if is not assumed to be locally of finite presentation.


On left comment #11015 on Definition 87.4.7 in Formal Algebraic Spaces

Reference: EGA, Chapter 0, Sect. 7.7.


On left comment #11014 on Section 15.36 in More on Algebra

From the second paragraph, regarding “we say the topology on is linear if there exists a fundamental system of neighbourhoods of consisting of subgroups. If so then these subgroups are also open.” They are actually clopen. Quoting Atiyah, Macdonald, Introduction to Commutative Algebra, pp. 102-103:

[Let be a topological abelian group that has a fundamental system of open neighborhoods of given by subgroups ]. The subgroups of are both open and closed. In fact if then is a neighborhood of ; since this shows is open. Hence for any the coset is open and therefore is open; since this is the complement of in it follows that is closed.


On left comment #11013 on Section 15.36 in More on Algebra

Regarding "we leave it to the reader to check that this condition is independent of the choice of fundamental system of open subgroups chosen above" and "in fact the topological abelian group is independent of this choice."

One can show for another fundamental system of open subgroups in the following way: replacing by , we may assume . Then is an initial functor of cofiltered posetal categories (by the dual of 4.19.3), so the result follows from 4.17.4.


On Branislav Sobot left comment #11012 on Lemma 31.20.1 in Divisors

The image of the sequence in the ring might not be regular since these elements could generated the unit ideal, but it is "weakly regular" (just forget this condition) and these are Koszul regular.


On Byeonghak Ko left comment #11011 on Lemma 33.20.3 in Varieties

I think the sequence of (9-d) should be .


On left comment #11010 on Lemma 39.7.13 in Groupoid Schemes

I suggest making the first paragraph more transparent by the following adjustment.

Suppose that for every we have found affine open such that . As is a continuous map of profinite topological spaces, is a closed subset of that does not contain . Hence its complement is an open neighborhood of . Thus the 's form an open covering of . Moreover, by construction . As is profinite, this open covering admits a refinement by a finite covering of disjoint sets that are simultaneously closed and open. For every pick such that . As is closed and affine, is affine as well. Hence replacing by we have . As the 's cover , the 's cover and so . Being the disjoint union of finitely many affine opens, is an affine open.


On Byeonghak Ko left comment #11009 on Lemma 33.34.2 in Varieties

Ah, never mind. Since it asks about its irreducible component, there will be nothing to do if is empty. I should notice the statement more carefully... Have a nice day!


On thesnakefromthelemma left comment #11008 on Lemma 19.14.1 in Injectives

Adding on to Comment #11001, a few remarks on the second proof given of Lemma 0F5S:

  1. Is it worth inserting a sentence or so clarifying that/how the application of to the map (of which is presented as the cokernel) is well-defined in terms of the canonical coproduct inclusions of the domain and codomain by virtue of 's commuting with coproducts? This is a separate question from the functoriality/presentation-independence of , and as far as I can tell not quite trivial—any argument I can think of implicitly uses that is a compact object of , or at least its consequence that for any map there exists a finite subset such that the former factors through the evident inclusion . (This subtlety is common to various instances of the Eilenberg-Watts argument.)

  2. Relatedly, is it worth specifying how acts on morphisms of ? Imho this is the actual meat of the argument (specifically in that the equivalence of two presentations of the morphism is witnessed by a "chain homotopy", which then carries into ).

  3. In the case as hand, we don't actually need to quantify/choose over generic presentations and then verify well-definition: Instead we can for each construct the specific presentation where (I) is the set of elements of , (II) is the set of elements of the kernel of the evident map , (III) is the evident insertion of kernel elements, and (IV) it's evident how each morphism should be presented. It's easy to see that this construction yields a functor (here denotes the arrow category), which can in turn be composed with the cokernel functor to give a functor , no further verification of well-definition required.

If any of these ideas are worth implementing at this time I'm happy to try to help...


On Byeonghak Ko left comment #11007 on Lemma 33.34.2 in Varieties

Hi, what if is empty?


On Dat Minh Ha left comment #11006 on Definition 37.2.1 in More on Morphisms

In (3), should it not have been that " is a closed subscheme of " ?


On Matthew Emerton left comment #11005 on Lemma 4.22.10 in Categories

Hi Johan, there is a typo in the subscript of the colim in part (4). It should be something like j geq i. (Cf. with the statement of part (4) in the lemma preceding.)


On Branislav Sobot left comment #11004 on Lemma 15.51.4 in More on Algebra

I believe we also need property (B) here to make the conclusion in the second to last sentence?


On Branislav Sobot left comment #11003 on Lemma 15.51.3 in More on Algebra

I guess in the formulation of part (1) there is a completion missing for .


On Branislav Sobot left comment #11002 on Lemma 15.51.13 in More on Algebra

Typos: It should be instead of in a couple of places, and you switched the notation for into at one point.


On Leonard left comment #11001 on Section 19.14 in Injectives

In the second proof of Lemma 19.14.1, does the independence of the definition of of the choice of free presentation of , as well as the functoriality of , follow from any result in this website?


On left comment #11000 on Lemma 39.7.10 in Groupoid Schemes

The proof of the "claim" inside the proof of the Lemma will be more transparent if it is mentioned that the open immersion is a quasicompact morphism, as is quasicompact and is separated (Lemma 047L).


On Branislav Sobot left comment #10999 on Proposition 15.50.10 in More on Algebra

Typo: In the second to last paragraph it should be


On KDD left comment #10998 on Section 98.1 in Artin's Axioms

Small question: doesn't Artins' Axioms typically do more and show that is an algebraic stack locally of finite type?


On thesnakefromthelemma left comment #10997 on Lemma 10.53.4 in Commutative Algebra

The reference to Lemma 00DV (Nakayama's lemma) in the proof here strikes me as a red herring. I think(!) one can excise it from the proof at zero cost:

Lemma 00J8. Let be Artinian. The Jacobson radical of is a nilpotent ideal.

Proof. Let be the Jacobson radical. Note that is a descending sequence. Thus for some . Set . We have to show . Suppose otherwise; by the Artinian property then has a minimal proper superideal . In particular, is simple, so by Lemma 00J2 isomorphic to for some maximal . We conclude that whence , contradiction.


P.s. (feel free to ignore what follows unless something is wrong!):

I was initially a little baffled what the motivation could be for considering 's annihilator. Perhaps this is banal/well-known, but it strikes me that the annihilators of products of maximal ideals of are precisely what arise in succession as one attempts to iteratively "build-up" from via those elements currently minimal above the current ideal with some particular (maximal) denominator (just as one built upon in the above proof).

I.e., having by Lemma 00J7 that has finitely many maximal ideals , this view leads us naturally to the observation that (as the former cannot have a minimal proper superideal) where is the minimal exponent for which ; this is essentially the statement/proof of Lemma 00J8 above.

Moreover the quotients of the obvious (size-) filtration of are each -modules for some suitable (variable) choice of , and as each must have finite vector space dimension in order to maintain the Artinian property of we see that must have finite length over itself; this is essentially (half) the statement/proof of Lemma 00JB.