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
4 - Change of rings
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
The main results of this chapter concern a homomorphism of commutative Noetherian rings f : R → R′. More precisely, we shall prove two fundamental comparison results for local cohomology modules in this context. The first of these, which we shall call the ‘Independence Theorem’, compares, for an R′ module M′ and an i ∈ ℕ0, the local cohomology modules and: to form the first of these, we consider M′ as an R-module by restriction of scalars using f; also, aR′ denotes the extension of a to R′ under f. Our second main result, which we shall refer to as the ‘Flat Base Change Theorem’, compares the local cohomology modules and for i ∈ ℕ0 and an arbitrary R-module M under the additional assumption that the ring homomorphism f is flat.
Our main results rely on the fact that certain modules are acyclic with respect to torsion functors. We say that an R-module A is Γa-acyclic precisely when for all i > 0. As was explained in 1.2.2, the most basic method for calculation, for an R-module M and an i ∈ ℕ0, of is to take an injective resolution I* of M, apply Γa to I* to obtain the complex Γa(I*), and take the i-th cohomology module of this complex: we have. However, it is an easy exercise in homological algebra to show that a resolution of M by Γa-acyclic R-modules will serve this purpose just as well.
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- Local CohomologyAn Algebraic Introduction with Geometric Applications, pp. 66 - 81Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998