Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Invariants and moduli
- 2 Rings and polynomials
- 3 Algebraic varieties
- 4 Algebraic groups and rings of invariants
- 5 The construction of quotient varieties
- 6 The projective quotient
- 7 The numerical criterion and some applications
- 8 Grassmannians and vector bundles
- 9 Curves and their Jacobians
- 10 Stable vector bundles on curves
- 11 Moduli functors
- 12 Intersection numbers and the Verlinde formula
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
3 - Algebraic varieties
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Invariants and moduli
- 2 Rings and polynomials
- 3 Algebraic varieties
- 4 Algebraic groups and rings of invariants
- 5 The construction of quotient varieties
- 6 The projective quotient
- 7 The numerical criterion and some applications
- 8 Grassmannians and vector bundles
- 9 Curves and their Jacobians
- 10 Stable vector bundles on curves
- 11 Moduli functors
- 12 Intersection numbers and the Verlinde formula
- Bibliography
- Index
- References
Summary
In the broadest terms, a manifold means a topological space equipped with a sheaf of rings which is locally isomorphic to a given ringed space or spaces, its ‘local models’. For differentiable manifolds and complex manifolds, respectively, the local models are open sets in ℝn and ℂn, together with the sheaves of differentiable and holomorphic functions on these spaces. Algebraic manifolds, or varieties, are defined analogously. We first fix a finitely generated field extension K of the ground field k, and then take as our local models the spectra Spm R of rings having K as their field of fractions. In other words, an algebraic variety is obtained by gluing together ringed affine varieties possessing the same algebraic function field. This chapter explains these notions of affine varieties, their sheaves of rings and their gluings.
We begin by defining the n-dimensional affine space An over the complex numbers ℂ as the set ℂn equipped with the Zariski topology and elementary sheaf of rings O assigning to a basic open set D(f) ⊂ ℂn the ring of rational functions ℂ[x1, …, xn, 1/f(x)]. These constructions are easily generalised from Anto the set Spm R of maximal ideals in any finitely generated algebra R over any algebraically closed field k. One calls Spm R an affine variety, and a morphism Spm R → Spm S is the same thing as a k-algebra homomorphism S → R. An algebraic variety is then a ringed topological space obtained by gluing together affine varieties with a common function field, and in good cases are separated: the most important examples are projective varieties (Section 3.2). Many properties of affine varieties can be defined for general algebraic varieties using a covering by affine charts.
Section 3.3 explains categories and functors in elementary terms, and how an algebraic variety X determines in a natural way a functor X from the category of algebras over the ground field k to the category of sets.
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- An Introduction to Invariants and Moduli , pp. 77 - 115Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003