Revision as of 10:39, 1 January 2008 by imported>Giovanni Antonio DiMatteo
The theory of schemes was pioneered by Alexander Grothendieck. The foundations of scheme theory were initially organized in Grothendieck's multi-volume work Éléments de Géométrie Algébrique with the assistance of Jean Dieudonné.
Roughly speaking, a scheme is a topological space which is locally affine; that is, a scheme has the local structure of the so-called affine schemes, i.e. of spectra of rings endowed with Zariski topologies.
A number of technical definitions and procedures are outlined in the glossary of scheme theory.
The Category of Schemes
A scheme
consists of a topological space
together with a sheaf
of rings (called the structural sheaf on
) such that every point of
has an open neighborhood
such that the locally ringed space
is isomorphic to an affine scheme.
Projective Schemes constitute an important class of schemes, especially for the study of curves.
The category of schemes is defined by taking morphisms of schemes to be morphisms of locally ringed spaces. Many kinds of morphisms of schemes are characterized affine-locally, in the sense that
Gluing Properties
The notion of "gluing" is one of the central ideas in the theory of schemes. Let
be a scheme, and
a family of
-schemes. If we're given families
and
-isomorphisms
such that:
,
, and
on
for all
, then there is an
-scheme
together with
-immersions
such that
on
and so that
. This scheme
is called the gluing over
of the
along the
.
The
-scheme
is universal for the property above: i.e., for any
-scheme
and family of morphisms
such that
on
, then there is a unique morphism
such that
. Moreover, if
is a scheme, then giving a morphism
is equivalent to giving an
open covering
of
and morphisms
such that
on
.
Morphisms of Schemes