The Stacks project

Comments 1 to 20 out of 10573 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 thesnakefromthelemma left comment #11590 on Section 10.20 in Commutative Algebra

Nice. The condition that has an inclusion-minimal generating set is only used to ensure that either is trivial or has a nontrivial cyclic quotient (hence a simple quotient), no?

One way to understand the geometric content of Nakayama's lemma is as saying that (1) the support of a finite module is the vanishing locus of its annihilator and (2) the support of a (finitary) tensor product of finite modules is the intersection of their supports. From that perspective, the finiteness hypothesis arises naturally from that finite modules are precisely those which can be built up via extensions from cyclic modules (the proof of (1) and (2) proceeding inductively along such extensions).

It's not mine to say whether your proposed generalization is within the scope of Stacks. That said, it's interesting to note that neither (1) nor (2) above remains valid in the generality of merely having an inclusion-minimal generating set.

(A counterexample to (1) is and ; a counterexample to (2) is and , with but .)


On left comment #11589 on Section 65.14 in Algebraic Spaces

After the proof of Lemma 65.14.3 and after Definition 65.14.4 it is claimed that condition (*) from the statement of Lemma 65.14.3 is equivalent to Groupoids, Definition 39.10.2. For the record, this is proven in #11588.


On left comment #11588 on Section 39.10 in Groupoid Schemes

Another tentative addition to this section:

Lemma. Let be a group. Let be an -scheme equipped with a -action . Then the action is free if and only if the following condition holds:

(*) For any point and , if and induces the trivial automorphism on , then is the identity.

Proof. We will use the identification of with explained in #11587.

(). It's done in the proof of Algebraic Spaces, Lemma 65.14.3.

(). Let and be as in the statement and consider the morphisms given by the canonical morphism followed by the insertion into the -th and -th components. These two morphisms become equal after postcomposition by . But the latter morphism is monic (Lemma 39.10.3), hence .


On left comment #11587 on Section 39.10 in Groupoid Schemes

Maybe the following is worth to mention as a comment/remark/lemma. Let be a group. Let be a scheme. Let be an -scheme. There is a bijective correspondence between -actions on and group homomorphisms . Namely, since , giving a morphism is the same as giving a morphism over , and the latter is the same as giving a map . It is not difficult to see that commutativity of the diagrams 39.10.1.1 amounts to the induced map defining a group homomorphism .


On left comment #11586 on Section 65.14 in Algebraic Spaces

In the comments after the proof of Lemma 65.14.3, to give a reference for the notation one could maybe link Groupoids, Example 39.5.6.


On left comment #11585 on Lemma 65.16.1 in Algebraic Spaces

Regarding the terminology "localization functor" (appearing once in the statement and once in the proof): This is not used (nor defined) anywhere else, right? I don't know if "morphism of topoi" would be preferred. With the identification of Sites, Lemma 7.25.8 the most similar thing that comes up is "localization morphism" of Sites, Definition 7.25.1.


On left comment #11584 on Section 7.25 in Sites and Sheaves

In the introduction, after reading "hence by the results of the previous sections we obtain a morphism of topoi given by and as well as a functor " it took me a while to find out which are such results. Maybe one could say something like "see Lemma 7.21.5"? This is (I think) the first time lower shriek appears.


On Peng Du left comment #11583 on Lemma 41.21.7 in Étale Morphisms of Schemes

then the following are equivalent


On left comment #11582 on Remark 7.13.6 in Sites and Sheaves

If we assume condition (2) holds, then condition (1') is equivalent to " sends sheaves into sheaves." See SGA 4, Exp. III, Proposition 1.6.


On left comment #11581 on Definition 7.14.1 in Sites and Sheaves

One could also mention that by Lemma 7.13.3 the condition is equivalent to being left exact.


On left comment #11580 on Definition 7.14.1 in Sites and Sheaves

I agree with Haohao Liu one could insert a link to Categories, Definition 4.23.1.


On left comment #11579 on Section 7.5 in Sites and Sheaves

For the reader's benefit, I want to record that given functors and , the functor is the left Kan extension of along . The formula is exactly [Rie, eq. (6.2.2)], and Lemma 7.5.4 is [Rie, Proposition 6.1.6].

References

[Rie] Emily Riehl, Category Theory in Context


On left comment #11578 on Lemma 37.38.6 in More on Morphisms

This is EGA IV, 17.16.3 (ii).


On Jay Pottharst left comment #11577 on Section 55.1 in Semistable Reduction

In regards to:

Historically the first proof of the semistable reduction theorem for curves can be found in the paper [DM] by Deligne and Mumford. It proves the theorem by reducing the problem to the case of Abelian varieties which was already known at the time thanks to Grothendieck and others, see [SGA7-I] and [SGA7-II]). The semistable reduction theorem for abelian varieties uses the theory of Néron models which in turn rests on a treatment of birational group laws over a base.

This doesn' appear to be entirely accurate. The paper of Deligne–Mumford claims the result was known to Grothendieck and Mumford, but actually supplies no reference. SGA7 doesn't really do it either. The heart of the proof in SGA7-I, Exp IX, Thm 3.6, appearing at the top of p.35 (just above Cor 3.8) provides the isomorphism of the dual Tate module with étale cohomology, the latter for which "cette assertion a été prouvée dans III (en utilisant le résolution des singularités des schémas excellents de dimension 2)." This appears to me to be circling back to curves! And although Néron models are in the picture, they don't seem to be they key ingredient. FWIW, Exp III just referenced doesn't even appear in the volume, and SGA7-II does not seem to cover related material.

Is there some other known (published) argument of Grothendieck that works directly on the level of abelian varieties and does not go through curves?


On left comment #11576 on Lemma 27.19.1 in Constructions of Schemes

It would be nice if it was stated somewhere that the map coincides with the map in https://stacks.math.columbia.edu/tag/07ZG . Namely, https://stacks.math.columbia.edu/tag/01O8 gives us a canonical morphism

and https://stacks.math.columbia.edu/tag/07ZG gives us a canonical morphism

I think and it would be nice if there was a lemma saying that coincides with the composition of and the projection

It seems that this might be implicitly used in the proof of https://stacks.math.columbia.edu/tag/01VR part (4).


On Laurent Moret-Bailly left comment #11575 on Section 10.151 in Commutative Algebra

Strictly speaking, the first sentence of the section is incorrect: namely, G-unramified maps are called "unramified" in EGA.


On left comment #11574 on Lemma 29.37.18 in Morphisms of Schemes

More generally: If is étale over and is unramified over , then is étale. See Görtz, Wedhorn, Algebraic Geometry II, Springer, Remark 18.30.(2).


On Nadia left comment #11573 on Section 37.43 in More on Morphisms

In the first paragraph of the proof of Lemma 37.43.3, should “finite quasi-coherent O_X-algebras” be “finite quasi-coherent O_S-algebras”?


On Wolfgang Soergel left comment #11572 on Section 10.20 in Commutative Algebra

I think there is a shorter proof of a more general statement.

Theorem: Let be a ring. Suppose an -module admits a minimal generating set (with respect to inclusion). If for every annihilator of a simple -module, then .

Proof: By contradiction. If , the minimal generating set contains at least one element . By Zorn there exists a maximal submodule not containing but containing all other generators from our minimal generating set. The quotient has to be simple. If we let be its annihilator, then . QED


On Wolfgang Soergel left comment #11571 on Section 10.20 in Commutative Algebra

I think there is a shorter proof of a more general statement.

Theorem: Let be a ring. Suppose an -module admits a minimal generating set (with respect to inclusion). If for every annihilator of a simple -module, then .

Proof: If , the minimal generating contains at least one element . By Zorn there exists a maximal submodule not containing . The quotient has to be simple. If we let be its annihilator, then . Contradiction. QED