The Stacks project

Comments 1 to 20 out of 10090 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 left comment #11041 on Lemma 13.33.9 in Derived Categories

The whole proof could just be "By Lemma 13.4.2, this is a particular case of Lemma 13.33.8."


On left comment #11040 on Lemma 13.33.9 in Derived Categories

In the proof, instead of "cohomological functor " it should be "homological" (that is how it is stated in Lemma 13.4.2).


On left comment #11039 on Definition 13.33.1 in Derived Categories

The morphism corresponds to , right? I haven't been able to find in the Stacks Project what's the convention to denote systems of objects over the natural numbers. In Categories, Sect. 4.21, only systems over preordered sets are considered. From the equation in Remark 13.33.2 one inferes it must be .


On left comment #11038 on Definition 13.33.1 in Derived Categories

TeX style comment: I'm seeing that throughout derived.tex the homotopy colimit is TeX'ed as \text{hocolim}. However, for better spacing, I think \operatorname{hocolim} should be preferable: the former gives and the latter .


On left comment #11037 on Lemma 15.30.17 in More on Algebra

This book revolutionizes the learning of Algebra by going straight to the fundamentals. It starts with the basics, which is a good understanding of number systems and a good grasp of arithmetic notions like complex fractions, simplifications, and decomposition of numbers. Once thoroughly explored, this part tackles the transition from arithmetic expressions to algebraic expressions and equations, which, in turn, are abundantly described.


On left comment #11036 on Section 13.36 in Derived Categories

I want to point out that Lemmas 13.36.1, 13.36.2 and Remark 13.36.7 may be generalized by replacing every instance of the symbol by , where the latter is some full subcategory of . The proofs of all three tags stay the same by just replacing by . This is because these proofs rely only on results from Sect. 13.35 (all stated for full subcategories) and induction, and the base case in the induction never uses that consists of a single object.

At the beginning of the section, we just need to define and and in Remark 13.36.7, the last condition is replaced by (4) holds for every and every .


On left comment #11035 on Lemma 13.36.1 in Derived Categories

Since Remark 13.35.6, invoked in the proof, requires , maybe one could add this fact to the statement (it follows easily by induction).


On left comment #11034 on Lemma 13.35.3 in Derived Categories

Sorry for the too many comments (#11032 and #11033 may be deleted). Just to spell it out, the lemma can be generalized to: and are closed under finite direct sums if are.


On left comment #11033 on Lemma 13.35.3 in Derived Categories

@#11032: for any *additive subcategory of .


On left comment #11032 on Lemma 13.35.3 in Derived Categories

The subcategory is always closed under finite direct sums for any subcategory of .


On Will Chen left comment #11031 on Lemma 15.30.7 in More on Algebra

I think we need to assume that the f_i's are nonunits. Otherwise it can be Koszul-regular without being regular.


On thesnakefromthelemma left comment #11030 on Section 10.52 in Commutative Algebra

Consider the following lemma, a stronger form of Jordan-Holder for modules over commutative rings (but not in general; there are easy counterexamples) whereby every module of finite length (naturally) decomposes as a direct sum of modules having only one isomorphism class of simple module in their composition series. Is it worth including here?

Lemma ???4. Given ring and -module satisfying , there exists natural and (pairwise distinct) -tuple of maximal ideals such that


Here's one way to prove it, depending externally only on two basic facts (I don't know whether said basic facts are worth citing, and in the case that they are haven't checked where/if they occur in the Stacks Project; I've omitted their proofs in the interest of concision):

Basic fact ???0. Given ring , distinct maximal ideals of , and naturals ,

Basic fact ???1. Given ring , maximal ideals of , and natural ,

Lemma ???2: Given ring , -module , natural , pairwise distinct -tuple of maximal ideals of , and -tuple of naturals satisfying ,

Proof of Lemma ???2. Clearly iff . By Basic fact ???0, Lemma 00DT (lemma-chinese-remainder), and Basic fact ???1,

(I apologize for the bizarre formatting; I'm not sure whether align mode works in comments.)

Lemma ???3: Given ring and -module satisfying , there exists natural and -tuple of maximal ideals of such that

Proof of Lemma ???3. By hypothesis there exists a (finite) maximal filtration of , hence a natural , filtration -tuple of maximal ideals of , and -tuple of cokernel relationships In particular, given natural , element , and element it follows that . Hence (inductively from the right) for any element and -tuple of elements we have The claim follows.

Lemma ???4. Given ring and -module satisfying , there exists natural and (pairwise distinct) -tuple of maximal ideals such that

Proof of Lemma ???4. Immediate from Lemma ???2 and Lemma ???3.


As mentioned above, Lemma ???4 is essentially a stronger form of Jordan-Holder for modules over commutative rings. It essentially says that modules of finite length over commutative rings are entirely max-local entities, carrying no nontrivial non-max-local information.

Note that current Lemma 00IW, lemma-length-infinite is just a weak form of (the contrapositive of) Lemma ???3 above. As the proof of Lemma ???3 is entirely self-contained, it should be feasible to replace the former with the latter.

We can also use Lemma ???4 to give an alternative proof of Lemma 00JA, lemma-product-local in 00J4, section-artinian as Lemma 00J8, lemma-artinian-radical-nilpotent amounts to saying that any Artinian ring is annihilated by a product of maximal ideals thereof.

(As an aside, the original motivation for Lemma ???4 is that it immediately implies that any collection of pairwise commuting matrices of (common) positive dimension over an algebraically closed field has a common eigenvector. But this elementary fact is almost surely outside the scope of the Stacks Project!)


If this proposal seem worth implementing in whole or in part at this time I'm happy to write up the corresponding patch and email it :)


On Kiran Kedlaya left comment #11029 on Lemma 10.107.14 in Commutative Algebra

This lemma can be strengthened to say that is an epimorphism if and only if is fully faithful. The point is that the full faithfulness implies that the two different -module structures on coincide, and now tag 04VN implies that is epic.


On LittleBear left comment #11028 on Definition 20.26.14 in Cohomology of Sheaves

Sorry, I don't see why this definition does not depend on the choice of the K-flat resolution. For two K-flat resolutions and of , is there always a quasi-isomorphism (in order to use the Lemma 06YG above)?


On left comment #11027 on Section 26.21 in Schemes

The following result follows easily from the results that have been already included, but I think it's useful to have for reference.

Lemma. Let be a scheme. The following are equivalent: 1. is separated. 2. Every morphism of schemes is separated. 3. There is a separated morphism of schemes with affine. 4. There is a separated morphism of schemes with separated.

Moreover, one also obtains equivalent conditions if one replaces every instance of “separated” by “quasi-separated.”

Proof. 12. Apply Lemma 26.21.13 to the composition .

23. Trivial.

34. It follows from Lemma 26.21.15.

41. Apply Lemma 26.21.12 to the composition .


On DD left comment #11026 on Section 102.1 in Limits of Algebraic Stacks

Curiously, the section does not discuss when the limit of an algebraic stack is also an algebraic stack / limits of morphisms of algebraic stacks and which properties behave well with respect to limits. It would be nice to have such a section in this chapter?


On Thomas Qu left comment #11025 on Lemma 16.9.4 in Smoothing Ring Maps

Since is not assumed to be Notherian, should we revise the argument as follows: is finitely generated and is locally nilpotent?

Also, in the calculation of , should it be in place of ?


On Lecheng left comment #11024 on Lemma 35.14.1 in Descent

I think in order to check the commutativity of the last diagram, it would be better to draw a dotted line from B to C_lambda, as a bridge to show the commutativity


On left comment #11023 on Section 10.96 in Commutative Algebra

Corrections: In #10968, Point 2 of Lemma might not be true in general, and #10969 might not be true in general either. Both are nonetheless true if are Noetherian; about the non-Noetherian case I don't know, but I asked about it here.


On Branislav Sobot left comment #11022 on Lemma 31.22.12 in Divisors

In the paragraph where you assume is -regular or Koszul-regular, you put "quasi-regular" instead of Koszul-regular in a couple of places, right?