Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Preface
- Notation and conventions
- 1 The local cohomology functors
- 2 Torsion modules and ideal transforms
- 3 The Mayer-Vietoris Sequence
- 4 Change of rings
- 5 Other approaches
- 6 Fundamental vanishing theorems
- 7 Artinian local cohomology modules
- 8 The Lichtenbaum-Hartshorne Theorem
- 9 The Annihilator and Finiteness Theorems
- 10 Matlis duality
- 11 Local duality
- 12 Foundations in the graded case
- 13 Graded versions of basic theorems
- 14 Links with projective varieties
- 15 Castelnuovo regularity
- 16 Bounds of diagonal type
- 17 Hilbert polynomials
- 18 Applications to reductions of ideals
- 19 Connectivity in algebraic varieties
- 20 Links with sheaf cohomology
- Bibliography
- Index
11 - Local duality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Dedication
- Preface
- Notation and conventions
- 1 The local cohomology functors
- 2 Torsion modules and ideal transforms
- 3 The Mayer-Vietoris Sequence
- 4 Change of rings
- 5 Other approaches
- 6 Fundamental vanishing theorems
- 7 Artinian local cohomology modules
- 8 The Lichtenbaum-Hartshorne Theorem
- 9 The Annihilator and Finiteness Theorems
- 10 Matlis duality
- 11 Local duality
- 12 Foundations in the graded case
- 13 Graded versions of basic theorems
- 14 Links with projective varieties
- 15 Castelnuovo regularity
- 16 Bounds of diagonal type
- 17 Hilbert polynomials
- 18 Applications to reductions of ideals
- 19 Connectivity in algebraic varieties
- 20 Links with sheaf cohomology
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Suppose, temporarily, that (R, m) is local, and that M is a finitely generated jR-module. In Theorem 7.1.3, we showed that is Artinian for all i ∈ ℕ0. When R is complete, Matlis duality (see 10.2.12) provides a very satisfactory correspondence between the category of Artinian R-modules and the category of Noetherian R-modules, and so it is natural to ask, in this situation, which Noetherian R-modules correspond to the local cohomology modules. Local duality provides an answer to this question, and also provides a fundamental tool for the study of local cohomology modules with respect to the maximal ideal of a local ring.
For a Gorenstein local ring (R, m) of dimension n, the Local Duality Theorem tells us that, if M is a finitely generated R-module, then, for each i ∈ ℕ0, the local cohomology module is the Matlis dual of the finitely generated R-module and, as R is Gorenstein, quite a lot is known about these ‘Ext’ modules. The Independence Theorem 4.2.1 then allows us to extend the Local Duality Theorem to any local ring which is a homomorphic image of a Gorenstein local ring, and the class of such local rings includes the local rings of points on affine and quasi-affine varieties, and, by the structure theorems for complete local rings (see [35, Theorem 29.4(ii)], for example), all complete local rings. Furthermore, the special case of the Local Duality Theorem for a Cohen-Macaulay local ring R which is a homomorphic image of a Gorenstein local ring can be formulated in terms of the canonical module ωRfor R.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Local CohomologyAn Algebraic Introduction with Geometric Applications, pp. 197 - 215Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998