1 Introduction
This note is a sequel to our note [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7], and we refer to that paper for a general introduction and motivation. In part I, we were mainly concerned with the construction of what we call analytic K-theory of Tate rings and a comparison with continuous K-theory as proposed by Morrow [Reference Morrow12]. The main result there was a weak equivalence between continuous and analytic K-theory for regular Noetherian Tate rings admitting a ring of definition satisfying a certain weak resolution of singularities property. Negative continuous K-theory was studied by Dahlhausen in [Reference Dahlhausen1].
The goal here is to study more closely the properties of analytic K-theory. It turns out that analytic K-theory has good formal properties, similar to Weibel’s homotopy K-theory, without any regularity assumption. However, we have to restrict to Tate rings admitting a Noetherian, finite-dimensional ring of definition. In particular, for such Tate rings, we establish the analytic Bass fundamental theorem (Corollary 2.6), pro-homotopy invariance (Corollary 2.7), Milnor excision (Theorem 3.2), and descent for rational coverings of the associated adic space (Theorem 4.1). The latter allows us to globalize the definition of analytic K-theory to adic spaces satisfying a finiteness condition. In addition, we use our results to prove that analytic K-theory of such Tate rings is in fact weakly equivalent to the “ ${\mathbb A}^{1}$ -localization” of Morrow’s continuous K-theory (see [Reference Morrow12]; see also Corollary 2.9). We thank the referee for suggesting to do so.
Our main tool is a fiber sequence relating the continuous K-theory of a ring of definition, or more generally a Raynaud type model, with the analytic K-theory of a Tate ring (Theorems 2.4 and 2.10).
1.1 Notation and conventions
By a $\pi $ -adic (or just adic) ring, we mean a topological ring $A_{0}$ whose topology is the $\pi $ -adic one for an element $\pi \in A_{0}$ . We usually assume that $A_{0}$ is complete. A topological ring A is called a Tate ring if it admits an open subring $A_{0} \subseteq A$ and an element $\pi \in A_{0}$ such that the subspace topology on $A_{0}$ is the $\pi $ -adic one, and $\pi $ is invertible in A. Such an $A_{0}$ is called a ring of definition, and $\pi $ is called a pseudo-uniformizer. We have $A = A_{0}[\tfrac {1}{\pi }]$ . If A is Tate, then a subring $A_{0} \subseteq A$ is a ring of definition if and only if it is open and bounded. The basic reference is [Reference Huber4, §1].
We denote by $\mathbf {Spc}$ and $\mathbf {Sp}$ the $\infty $ -categories of spaces and spectra, respectively. $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ denotes the $\infty $ -category of pro-spectra (see, e.g., [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, §2]). A map of pro-spectra f is a weak equivalence, if its level-wise truncation $\tau _{\leq n}f$ is an equivalence of pro-spectra for every integer n (see [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, §2.2] for a discussion and equivalent characterizations). Similarly, a sequence $X \to Y \to Z$ of pro-spectra is a weak fiber sequence if it is weakly equivalent to a fiber sequence.
The letter K denotes the nonconnective algebraic K-theory functor for rings and quasi-compact, quasi-separated schemes. Its connective covering is denoted by k. For the following notations, we refer to the corresponding definitions in [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7]:
-
- $K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ for an adic ring: Definition 5.1.
-
- $K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ for a Tate ring: Definition 5.3.
-
- $k^{\mathrm {an}}$ for an adic ring: Defintion 6.5.
-
- $k^{\mathrm {an}}$ for a Tate ring: Definition 6.11. (Warning: in general, this is not the connective cover of $K^{\mathrm {an}}$ .)
-
- $K^{\mathrm {an}}$ for a Tate ring: Definition 6.15.
2 Recollections from part I, and complements
2.1 Pro-homotopy algebraic K-theory
In this subsection, we introduce a variant of Weibel’s homotopy algebraic K-theory, which will be an important tool to compare the analytic K-theory of a Tate ring with the continuous K-theory of a ring of definition without assuming any regularity condition (see [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, §6.1] for similar constructions in the setting of complete Tate rings).
Let R be a ring, and let $\pi \in R$ be any element. For nonnegative integers p, j, we define
For fixed j and varying p, the $R[\Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{j}}]$ form a simplicial ring, which we denote by $R[\Delta _{\pi ^{j}}]$ . Multiplication of the coordinates $t_{i}$ by $\pi $ induces maps of simplicial rings $R[\Delta _{\pi ^{j}}] \to R[\Delta _{\pi ^{j-1}}]$ , and in this way we obtain the pro-simplicial ring
Let $\mathbf {Sch}_{R}$ denote the category of quasi-compact, quasi-separated (qcqs) R-schemes. Let F be a functor $F \colon \mathbf {Sch}_{R}^{op} \to \mathbf {Sp}$ . We define a new functor $F^{\pi ^{\infty }} \colon \mathbf {Sch}_{R}^{op} \to \operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ as follows. We let $F^{\pi ^{j}}(X)$ be the geometric realization of the simplicial spectrum $[p] \mapsto F(X \otimes _{R} R[\Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{j}}])$ and define
Definition 2.1. Let X be a qcqs R-scheme. We define its pro-homotopy algebraic K-theory (with respect to $\pi \in R$ ) as the pro-spectrum
Similarly we define a version with support on $X/(\pi ) = X \otimes _{R} R/(\pi )$ :
For an R-scheme X, we write $X[t] = X \otimes _{R} R[t]$ . By construction, $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}$ satisfies the following form of pro-homotopy invariance.
Lemma 2.2. For $X \in \mathbf {Sch}_{R}$ , the canonical map
is an equivalence of pro-spectra. Similarly for $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(- \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ .
The proof is the same as that of [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Prop. 6.3]. We will use the following easy observation.
Lemma 2.3. If $\pi $ is invertible on X, there is a natural equivalence
where $KH(X)$ denotes Weibel’s homotopy K-theory spectrum. In particular, for any X, there is a fiber sequence of pro-spectra
Proof. If $\pi $ is invertible on X, then the transition map $R[\Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{j}}] \to R[\Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{0}}] = R[\Delta ^{p}]$ induces an isomorphism $X\otimes _{R} R[\Delta ^{p}] \to X \otimes _{R} R[\Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{j}}]$ . Thus, the pro-system defining $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(X)$ is constant with value $KH(X)$ . The second claim follows from the first one together with the localization sequence associated with the identity map $X \to X[\frac {1}{\pi }]$ .
2.2 The fundamental fiber sequence
The following weak fiber sequence and its generalization to non-affine models in Theorem 2.10 are our fundamental tool to control the analytic K-theory of Tate rings. For a $\pi $ -adic ring $A_0$ , we denote by $K^{\mathrm {cont}}(A_0)$ the pro-spectrum $ \underset {n}{\operatorname {"}\lim \operatorname {"} \hspace {.2ex} } K(A_0/(\pi ^n))$ .
Theorem 2.4. Let $A_{0}$ be a complete $\pi $ -adic ring, and let $A=A_{0}[1/\pi ]$ be the associated Tate ring. Assume that $A_{0}$ is Noetherian and of finite Krull dimension. Then there is a weak fiber sequence of pro-spectra
Before entering the proof, we recall the analytic Bass construction, referring to [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, §4.4] for details. For a functor E defined on the category of adic or Tate rings and with values in a cocomplete stable $\infty $ -category (such as $\mathbf {Sp}$ or $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ ), we define the functor $\Lambda E$ by
If E has the structure of a module over connective algebraic K-theory, then there is a natural map $\lambda \colon E(A) \to \Lambda E(A)$ given as the composite
If $\lambda $ is an equivalence, then E satisfies an analytic version of the Bass fundamental theorem (see [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Prop. 4.13]). The analytic Bass construction $E^{B}$ of E is then given by
Example 2.5. Let $k^{\mathrm {cont}}$ be the functor from adic rings to pro-spectra that assigns to $A_{0}$ the connective continuous K-theory
As a rule, we write k for the connective algebraic K-theory $\tau _{\geq 0}K$ . Then $k^{\mathrm {cont}, B}$ is canonically equivalent to nonconnective continuous K-theory $K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ . Indeed, using the isomorphisms $A_{0}\langle t \rangle / (\pi ^{n}) \cong A_{0}/(\pi ^{n})[t]$ and similarly for t and $t^{-1}$ , the classical Bass fundamental theorem [Reference Thomason and Trobaugh14, Th. 6.6] implies that $\lambda \colon K^{\mathrm {cont}} \to \Lambda K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ is an equivalence, hence $K^{\mathrm {cont}} \simeq K^{\mathrm {cont}, B}$ . Moreover, by nil-invariance of negative K-groups, the fiber of the canonical map $k^{\mathrm {cont}} \to K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ has values in constant, coconnective pro-spectra. Hence, this fiber vanishes upon applying the analytic Bass construction (see [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Lem. 4.15]).
Proof of Theorem 2.4
As in [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, §3.1], we denote by $A_{0}\langle \Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{j}}\rangle $ the $\pi $ -adic completion of the ring $A_{0}[\Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{j}}]$ . In [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Def. 6.5], we defined the pro-spectrum
where $ k(A_{0}\langle \Delta _{\pi ^{j}}\rangle )$ is the geometric realization of the simplicial spectrum $[p] \mapsto k(A_{0}\langle \Delta ^{p}_{\pi ^{j}}\rangle )$ . Similarly, we setFootnote 1
where $k(- \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ is the connective covering of $K(-\,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ . There is a natural map $k^{\mathrm {an}}(A_{0} \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ) ) \to k^{\mathrm {an}}(A_{0} )$ and the pro-spectrum $\tilde k^{\mathrm {an}}(A;A_{0})$ is defined to fit in the cofiber sequence
By [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Th. 6.9], we have a natural weak equivalence $k^{\mathrm {an}}(A_{0}) \simeq k^{\mathrm {cont}}(A_{0})$ , and thus we have a natural weak fiber sequence
We claim that applying the analytic Bass construction $(-)^{B}$ yields the asserted weak fiber sequence. Note that $(-)^{B}$ preserves weak equivalences and weak fiber sequences of functors as its construction only involves colimits.
First, by [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Lem. 6.18(i)], there is a natural weak equivalence $(\tilde k^{\mathrm {an}})^{B}(A;A_{0}) \simeq K^{\mathrm {an}}(A)$ . Second, by Example 2.5, there is an equivalence $k^{\mathrm {cont}, B}(A_{0}) \cong K^{\mathrm {cont}}(A_{0})$ . It thus remains to prove that the analytic Bass construction of $k^{\mathrm {an}}(- \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ evaluated on $A_{0}$ is weakly equivalent to $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(A_{0} \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ .
Note that by Thomason’s excision (see [Reference Thomason and Trobaugh14, Prop. 3.19]), we have equivalences
and similarly for $t^{-1}$ and $t,t^{-1}$ . By Weibel’s K-dimension conjecture, proven in [Reference Kerz, Strunk and Tamme8], all these spectra are $(-d-1)$ -connective for $d=\dim (A_{0})$ . The classical Bass fundamental theorem and excision thus imply that
for all p and j and every $n> d$ . As finite limits and finite colimits in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ are computed level wise and as geometric realizations in $\mathbf {Sp}$ commute with finite limits and colimits this shows that
for $n> d$ . So the diagram in the definition of the analytic Bass construction for $E\,{=}\,k^{\mathrm {an}}(- \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ) )$ , evaluated on $A_{0}$ , is eventually constant with value $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}( A_{0} \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ . This concludes the proof.
We record the following applications.
Corollary 2.6. (Bass fundamental theorem for analytic K-theory) Let A be a complete Tate ring which admits a finite-dimensional, Noetherian ring of definition. Then the map λ: K an (A) →ΛK an (A) is a weak equivalence of pro-spectra, and hence the Bass fundamental theorem holds. That is, for every integer i, we have an exact sequence
and the right-hand map has a splitting given by multiplication with the class of ${t \in K_{1}(A\langle t, t^{-1} \rangle )}$ .
Proof. Let $A_{0}$ be a finite-dimensional Noetherian ring of definition. As in Example 2.5, the map $\lambda \colon K^{\mathrm {cont}}(A_{0}) \to \Lambda K^{\mathrm {cont}}(A_{0})$ is an equivalence. Using again Thomason’s excision and the classical Bass fundamental theorem, we see that also $\lambda \colon K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(A_{0} \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ) ) \to \Lambda K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(A_{0} \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ) )$ is an equivalence. By Theorem 2.4, this implies that $\lambda \colon K^{\mathrm {an}}(A) \to \Lambda K^{\mathrm {an}}(A)$ is a weak equivalence. The rest now follows from [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Prop. 4.13].
Corollary 2.7. (Pro-homotopy invariance) Let A be a complete Tate ring which admits a finite-dimensional, Noetherian ring of definition. Then the map
is a weak equivalence.
Proof. Both other terms in the fundamental fiber sequence of Theorem 2.4 satisfy this type of pro-homotopy invariance (see [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Lem. 5.13] for $K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ and Lemmas 2.2 and 2.3 for $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(- \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ ).
We want to compare analytic K-theory of Tate rings to the “ ${\mathbb A}^{1}$ -localization” of Morrow’s continuous K-theory [Reference Morrow12] (see [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Def. 5.3]), similarly as Weibel’s homotopy K-theory is the ${\mathbb A}^{1}$ -localization of algebraic K-theory. Recall that the $\infty $ -category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ is cocomplete, so it admits geometric realizations of simplicial objects. Note also that general colimits in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ cannot be computed level wise. However, up to weak equivalence, this is the case for geometric realizations of bounded below simplicial objects, as we prove in the following lemma. Let $X_{\bullet } = \operatorname {"}\lim_{\lambda }\operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} X_{\bullet }^{(\lambda )}$ be a pro-object of simplicial spectra, that is, an object of $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\operatorname {\mathrm {Fun}}(\Delta ^{\mathrm {op}}, \mathbf {Sp}))$ . We can view $X_{\bullet }$ as a simplicial object in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ and form its geometric realization $|X_{\bullet }|$ there, or we can form the level-wise geometric realizations $|X_{\bullet }^{(\lambda )}|$ in spectra and consider the pro-spectrum $\operatorname {"}\lim_{\lambda }\operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} |X_{\bullet }^{(\lambda )}|$ .
Lemma 2.8. In the above situation, assume that $X_{\bullet }$ is uniformly bounded below, that is, that there exists an integer N such that $X_{p}^{(\lambda )} \in \mathbf {Sp}_{\geq N}$ for all $p\in \Delta $ and all $\lambda \in \Lambda $ . Then the evident map
is a weak equivalence.
Proof. It is easy to check that the $\infty $ -category $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ admits a t-structure whose connective part $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})_{\geq 0}$ is given by the essential image of the evident functor $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp}_{\geq 0}) \to \operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ and whose coconnective part $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})_{\leq 0}$ is the essential image of the functor $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp}_{\leq 0}) \to \operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ . Its heart is the category of pro-abelian groups $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Ab})$ . The homotopy group functors of the t-structure $\pi _{n} \colon \operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp}) \to \operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Ab})$ are just the level-wise homotopy group functors $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\pi _{n})$ , which we previously also denoted by $\pi _{n}$ .
By shifting $X_{\bullet }$ , we may assume that $N=0$ so that $X_{\bullet }$ determines a simplicial object of $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})_{\geq 0}$ . In this situation, there is a convergent first quadrant spectral sequence of pro-abelian groups $E^{1}_{p,q} \Rightarrow \pi _{p+q}(|X_{\bullet }|)$ where $E^{1}_{*,q}$ is the normalized chain complex associated with the simplicial pro-abelian group $\pi _{q}(X_{\bullet })$ (see [Reference Lurie11, Prop. 1.2.4.5]). On the other hand, for each $\lambda $ , we have a convergent spectral sequence of abelian groups ${E^{1,(\lambda )}_{p,q} \Rightarrow \pi _{p+q}(|X^{(\lambda )}_{\bullet }|)}$ where again the $E^{1}$ -terms are given by the normalized chain complexes associated with the simplicial abelian group $\pi _{q}(X^{(\lambda )}_{\bullet })$ . As finite limits and finite colimits in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Ab})$ are computed level wise, the pro-system of these spectral sequences yields a convergent spectral sequence $\operatorname {"}\lim_{\lambda }\operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} E^{1,(\lambda )}_{p,q} \Rightarrow \operatorname {"}\lim_{\lambda }\operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} \pi _{p+q}(|X_{\bullet }^{(\lambda )}|)$ . By the same reason, and as $\pi _{q}(X_{p}) = \operatorname {"}\lim_{\lambda }\operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} \pi _{q}(X_{p}^{(\lambda )})$ , the canonical map of spectral sequences $E^{*}_{*,*} \to \operatorname {"}\lim_{\lambda }\operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} E^{*,(\lambda )}_{*,*}$ is an isomorphism on $E^{1}$ -pages. Hence, $\pi _{n}(|X_{\bullet }|) \to \operatorname {"}\lim_{\lambda }\operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} \pi _{n}(|X_{\bullet }^{(\lambda )}|)$ is an isomorphism of pro-abelian groups, as was to be shown.
Now, let A be a Tate ring with ring of definition $A_{0}$ and pseudo-uniformizer $\pi $ . Recall that the continuous K-theory of A with respect to the ring of definition $A_{0}$ is given by
and this pro-spectrum is independent of the choice of $A_{0}$ up to weak equivalence (see [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Def. 5.3 and Prop. 5.4]). As this definition is clearly functorial in the pair $(A_{0},\pi )$ , we get a well-defined simplicial pro-spectrum $K^{\mathrm {cont}}(A\langle \Delta _{\pi ^{j}}^{\bullet } \rangle; A_{0}\langle \Delta _{\pi ^{j}}^{\bullet } \rangle )$ (which can also be realized as a pro-simplicial spectrum) and we define $K^{\mathrm {cont}}(A\langle \Delta _{\pi ^{j}} \rangle; A_{0}\langle \Delta _{\pi ^{j}} \rangle )$ to be its geometric realization. As weak equivalences are preserved under colimits, this definition does not depend on the choice of $A_{0}$ up to weak equivalence. Taking the colimit over all rings of definition $A_{0}$ gives the well-defined pro-spectrum $K^{\mathrm {cont}}(A\langle \Delta _{\pi ^{j}} \rangle )$ . The “ ${\mathbb A}^{1}$ -localization” of continuous K-theory at the Tate ring A is then the pro-spectrum
Corollary 2.9. ( ${\mathbb A}^{1}$ -localization) Suppose the Tate ring A admits a Noetherian, finite-dimensional ring of definition. Then there is a canonical weak equivalence of pro-spectra
Proof. Let $A_{0} \subseteq A$ be a Noetherian, finite-dimensional ring of definition, and let $\pi \in A_{0}$ be a pseudo-uniformizer. By the discussion above, we have a weak fiber sequence of pro-simplicial spectra
As in the proof of Theorem 2.4, the first two and hence the third pro-simplicial spectrum in this fiber sequence are uniformly bounded below by $-\dim (A_{0})$ . Passing to geometric realizations and then to the limit $\operatorname {"}\lim{}_{j} \operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} $ , the first term gets identified with $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(A_{0} \text { on } (\pi ))$ . For the second term, we compute
Here, the equivalence (*) follows from the isomorphism of pro-simplicial rings $\operatorname {"}\lim{}_{j} \operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} A_{0}\langle \Delta ^{\bullet }_{\pi ^{j}} \rangle /(\pi ^{n}) \cong A_{0}/(\pi ^{n})$ , where we view the right-hand term as a constant pro-simplicial ring. Thus, the weak fiber sequence (1) gives rise to the weak fiber sequence
Comparing with the weak fiber sequence of Theorem 2.4, we obtain the requested weak equivalence.
There is a more general version of the fundamental fiber sequence involving a Raynaud model X of the Tate ring $A =A_{0}[\frac {1}{\pi }]$ . We use this to prove descent for analytic K-theory in §4. Let $p\colon X \to \operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}}(A_{0})$ be an admissible morphism, that is, a proper morphism of schemes which is an isomorphism over $\operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}}(A)$ . Let
Theorem 2.10. Let $A_{0}$ be a complete $\pi $ -adic ring which is Noetherian and of finite Krull dimension, and let $A = A_{0}[\frac {1}{\pi }]$ . Let $p\colon X \to \operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}}(A_{0})$ be an admissible morphism. Then there is a weak fiber sequence of pro-spectra
Proof. Thanks to Theorem 2.4, it suffices to show that in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ there is a weakly Cartesian square
We have a commutative diagram
where the rows are fiber sequences in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ provided by Lemma 2.3. Since the right vertical map is an equivalence, the left-hand square is Cartesian. Write $X/(\pi ^m)=X\otimes _{A_{0}} A_{0}/(\pi ^m)$ . We claim that the square
in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ is weakly Cartesian. For this, let $Q(p,j,m)$ be the square of spectra
and denote by $F(p,j,m)$ its total fiber. So the square (4) is
By pro cdh descent [Reference Kerz, Strunk and Tamme8, Th. A], the square of pro-spectra $\operatorname {"}\lim \operatorname {"} \hspace {-1.9ex} {}_{m} \hspace {.5ex} Q(p,j,m)$ is weakly Cartesian for every p and every j, that is, $\operatorname {"}\lim \operatorname {"} \hspace {-1.9ex} {}_{m} \hspace {.5ex} F(p,j,m) \simeq 0$ . Note also that by Weibel’s K-dimension conjecture [Reference Kerz, Strunk and Tamme8, Th. B], all spectra in $Q(p,j,m)$ are $(-d)$ -connective for $d=\dim (A_{0})$ , and hence $F(p,j,m)$ is $(-d-2)$ -connective. The spectral sequence computing the homotopy groups of the geometric realization of a simplicial spectrum now implies that the pro-spectrum
is weakly contractible for every j. Taking $\operatorname {"}\lim{}_{j} \operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} $ implies that (4) is weakly Cartesian.
Finally, consider the commutative square in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ :
The horizontal maps in the above diagram are equivalences by the fact that the map $A_{0}/(\pi ^{m}) \to \operatorname {"}\lim{}_{j} \operatorname {"} \hspace {.5ex} A_{0} / (\pi ^{m})[\Delta _{\pi ^j}]$ is an isomorphism of pro-simplicial rings and a similar fact with $A_{0}$ replaced by X.
Composing the left-hand square in (3), (4), and the horizontal inverse of (5), we obtain the desired weakly Cartesian square (2).
3 Excision for analytic K-theory
The goal of this section is to establish excision for Milnor squares for analytic K-theory for Tate rings that admit a finite-dimensional, Noetherian ring of definition.
Recall that a Milnor square is a Cartesian square of rings of the form
in which the horizontal maps are surjective. By a Milnor square of complete Tate rings, we mean a Milnor square in which all rings are complete Tate rings and all homomorphisms are continuous.
Lemma 3.1. Assume that (6) is a Milnor square of complete Tate rings. Then there exist rings of definition $A_{0}$ , $B_{0}$ , $\overline {A}_{0}$ , and $\overline {B}_{0}$ such that (6) restricts to a Milnor square
If A and B admit finite-dimensional Noetherian rings of definition, one can choose these rings of definition to be Noetherian and finite-dimensional as well.
Proof. First note that if A admits the Noetherian ring of definition $A_{0}$ and $A_{1}$ is another ring of definition containing $A_{0}$ , then $A_{1}$ is finite over $A_{0}$ and in particular Noetherian with $\dim (A_{0}) = \dim (A_{1})$ . Indeed, if $\pi \in A_{0}$ is a pseudo-uniformizer, then by boundedness $A_{1}$ is contained in the free $A_{0}$ -module $\pi ^{-n}A_{0}$ for n big enough. Keeping this in mind, the second claim will be clear from the following construction.
Choose rings of definition $A_{0}$ and $B_{0}$ of A and B, respectively. Replacing $B_{0}$ by $B_{0}\cdot \phi (A_{0})$ if necessary, we may assume that $\phi $ restricts to a map $A_{0} \to B_{0}$ . Now, let $\overline {A}_{0}$ be the image of $A_{0}$ in $\overline {A}$ , and let $\overline {B}_{0}$ be the image of $B_0$ in $\overline {B}$ . Define $A_{1} \subseteq A$ as the pullback
By Banach’s open mapping theorem (see [Reference Henkel2] for a version for Tate rings), the continuous isomorphism $A \to B \times _{\overline {B}} \overline {A}$ is a homeomorphism. As $B_{0} \subseteq B$ and $\overline {A}_{0} \subseteq \overline {A}$ are bounded, this implies that $A_{1} \subseteq A$ is bounded. As it also contains $A_{0}$ , it is open and hence a ring of definition. Replacing $A_{0}$ by $A_{1}$ , we have constructed the desired rings of definition.
Theorem 3.2. Let (6) be a Milnor square of complete Tate rings. Assume that A and B admit Noetherian rings of definition that are finite-dimensional. Then the induced square of pro-spectra
is weakly Cartesian.
Proof. Using nil-invariance of $K^{\mathrm {an}}$ , we will reduce this to pro-excision for $K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ and $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}$ of adic rings, using Theorem 2.4.
Choose Noetherian, finite-dimensional rings of definition as in Lemma 3.1, and let $I_{0} = \ker (A_{0} \to \overline {A}_{0})$ , $J_{0} = \ker (B_{0} \to \overline {B}_{0})$ , so that $I_{0} \cong J_{0}$ via $\phi $ . For every $m\geq 1$ ,
is then a nilpotent extension of Tate rings, and hence
is a weak equivalence by [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Prop. 6.17]. From Theorem 2.4, we therefore deduce a weak fiber sequence
and similarly for $B_{0}$ , $J_{0}$ . So we get a weak fiber sequence of squares of pro-spectra
The theorem thus follows from the following two pro-excision Claims 3.3 and 3.4.
Claim 3.3. The square of pro-spectra
is weakly Cartesian.
Claim 3.4. The square of pro-spectra
is weakly Cartesian.
Proof of Claim 3.3
As $I_{0} \xrightarrow {\sim } J_{0}$ via $\phi $ , also $I_{0}^{m} \xrightarrow {\sim } J_{0}^{m}$ . As $\pi $ is a nonzero divisor on $A_{0}/I_{0}$ , it is also a nonzero divisor on $A_{0}/I_{0}^{m}$ for all m, and similarly on $B_{0}/J_{0}^{m}$ . It follows from these two observations that for every pair of positive integers n, m, we have a Milnor square
Pro-excision for Noetherian rings (see [Reference Morrow13, Cor. 0.4]; see also [Reference Land and Tamme9, §2.4] for an account) implies that the square of K-theory pro-spectra
is weakly contractible for every n. Taking the limit over n gives the claim.
Proof of Claim 3.4
From pro-excision for Noetherian rings, applied to the Milnor squares
we deduce that for fixed p and j, the square of pro-spectra
is weakly Cartesian. As in the proof of Theorem 2.10, using finite dimensionality and Weibel’s conjecture, we deduce that we can pass to geometric realizations, and deduce the claim.
4 Descent and applications
4.1 Descent for analytic K-theory
Let $(A, A^{+})$ be an affinoid ring in the sense of [Reference Huber4, §3], and let $X = \operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(A,A^{+})$ . We assume that A is Tate and that it admits a Noetherian, finite-dimensional ring of definition $A_{0}$ . If $U \subseteq X$ is a rational subdomain, then the same conditions hold for the affinoid ring $(\mathcal {O}_{X}(U), \mathcal {O}_{X}(U)^{+})$ . We fix a pseudo-uniformizer $\pi $ of A. Then (the image of) $\pi $ is also a pseudo-unifomizer for every Tate ring $\mathcal {O}_{X}(U)$ . For ease of notation, we set
Let $f_{1}, \dots , f_{n} \in A$ be elements generating A as an ideal. These give rise to the standard rational covering ${\mathcal U} = (U_i)_{1\leq i\leq n}$ of X, where
Write
where ${\mathcal U}_{\bullet }$ is the Čech nerve of the covering ${\mathcal U}$ .
Theorem 4.1. In the above situation, the natural map
is a weak equivalence of pro-spectra.
Proof. Fix a finite-dimensional, Noetherian ring of definition $A_{0}$ of A. Multiplying by a power of $\pi $ , we may assume that the $f_{i}$ belong to $A_{0}$ . Let $I \subseteq A_{0}$ be the ideal generated by $f_{1}, \dots , f_{n}$ , and let
be the blowup of $\operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}}(A_{0})$ along the ideal I. Then $Y \to \operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}}(A_{0})$ is an admissible morphism. Let $V_{i} = D_{+}(f_{i}) \subseteq Y$ . Then $\mathcal {V} = (V_{i})_{1\leq i\leq n}$ is an affine open covering of Y. The $\pi $ -adic completion $\mathcal {O}_{Y}(V_{i})^{\wedge }$ can be canonically identified with a ring of definition of the Tate ring $\mathcal {O}_{X}(U_{i})$ , and similarly for the higher intersections $V_{i_{0}} \cap \dots \cap V_{i_{p}}$ .
Consider the following diagram of pro-spectra
where $K^{\mathrm {cont}}(|\mathcal {V}_{\bullet }|)$ and $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(|\mathcal {V}_{\bullet }|\,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ are defined as in (9). The top line is a weak fiber sequence by Theorem 2.10. Note that the coverings ${\mathcal U}$ and $\mathcal {V}$ consist of n open subsets of X and Y, respectively, and thus their Čech nerves are n-skeletal. This implies that the limit
in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp})$ can be computed level-wise (see, e.g., [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Lem. 2.1]) and similarly for $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(|\mathcal {V}_{\bullet }| \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ . From Zariski descent for nonconnective K-theory (see [Reference Thomason and Trobaugh14, Th. 8.1]), we thus deduce that the left two vertical maps in (10) are equivalences of pro-spectra.
Let
and similarly for the higher intersections. By Thomason’s excision [Reference Thomason and Trobaugh14, Prop. 3.19], we have an equivalence
and we clearly also have $K^{\mathrm {cont}}(|\mathcal {V}_{\bullet }|) \simeq K^{\mathrm {cont}}(|\mathcal {V}^{\prime }_{\bullet }|)$ . Hence, we deduce from Theorem 2.4 that the lower horizontal line in (10) is also a fiber sequence. We conclude that the right vertical map is a weak equivalence, as was to be shown.
4.2 Globalization
In order to globalize the construction of analytic K-theory, we first recall some sheaf theory. Let C be a small category. We denote by
the $\infty $ -category of presheaves of spaces on C and by $y \colon C \to \mathbf {PSh}(C)$ the Yoneda embedding. If F and U are presheaves, we write
Note that by the Yoneda lemma, we have $F(X) = F(y(X))$ for every object X of C.
If $\mathbf {D}$ is any complete $\infty $ -category, then composition with the Yoneda embedding induces an equivalence
where $\operatorname {\mathrm {Fun}}^{lim}(\mathbf {PSh}(C)^{op}, \mathbf {D}) \subseteq \operatorname {\mathrm {Fun}}(\mathbf {PSh}(C)^{op}, \mathbf {D})$ denotes the full subcategory spanned by the limit preserving functors (see [Reference Lurie10, Th. 5.1.5.6]).
We now assume that C is equipped with a (Grothendieck) topology. There is a bijection between sieves on an object $X \in C$ and subobjects $U \hookrightarrow y(X)$ of $y(X)$ in $\mathbf {PSh}(C)$ (see [Reference Lurie10, Prop. 6.2.2.5]). For simplicity, we call the latter sieves, too. By definition, a presheaf $F \in \mathbf {PSh}(C)$ is a sheaf if and only if the natural map
is an equivalence for every $X \in C$ and every covering sieve $U \hookrightarrow y(X)$ of X. We denote by
the full subcategory consisting of sheaves. The inclusion $\mathbf {Sh}(C) \hookrightarrow \mathbf {PSh}(C)$ admits a left adjoint $L\colon \mathbf {PSh}(C) \to \mathbf {Sh}(C)$ called sheafification (see [Reference Lurie10, Prop. 5.5.4.15 and Lem. 6.2.2.7]). We say that a functor $F \in \operatorname {\mathrm {Fun}}(C^{op}, \mathbf {D})$ is a ( $\mathbf {D}$ -valued) sheaf if $F(X) \to F(U)$ is an equivalence in $\mathbf {D}$ for every X and covering sieve $U\hookrightarrow y(X)$ as above. Here, $F(U)$ is defined using (11) above. By [Reference Lurie10, Prop. 5.5.4.20], composition with L induces a fully faithful functor
whose essential image consists precisely of the $\mathbf {D}$ -valued sheaves.
We now return to analytic K-theory of Tate rings. Fix a complete affinoid Tate ring $(R, R^{+})$ such that R admits a finite-dimensional, Noetherian ring of definition $R_{0}$ , and let $S = \operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(R,R^{+})$ . We denote by
the categories of affinoid adic spaces of finite type over S, of adic spaces separated and locally of finite type over S, and of adic spaces locally of finite type over S, respectively (see [Reference Huber5, §3] and [Reference Huber6, §1.2 and 1.3] for these notions). Note that for any $X \in \mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {lft}}$ and any open affinoid $U=\operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(A,A^{+}) \subseteq X$ , A admits a finite-dimensional, Noetherian ring of definition. Indeed, by [Reference Huber5, Prop. 3.6], the map $(R,R^{+}) \to (A, A^{+})$ is topologically of finite type. By Lemma 3.3(iii) there, $R \to A$ factors through a continuous open surjection $R\langle x_{1}, \dots x_{n} \rangle \to A$ , and we can take the image of $R_{0}\langle x_{1}, \dots , x_{n}\rangle $ in A as a ring of definition.
We equip the categories of adic spaces above with the usual topologies (see [Reference Huber4,§2]). We then have the following lemma.
Lemma 4.2. The inclusion $\mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {aff},\mathrm {ft}} \subseteq \mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {lft}}$ induces an equivalence
Proof. This follows by applying [Reference Hoyois3, Lem. C.3] to both inclusions $\mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {aff}, \mathrm {ft}} \subseteq \mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {sep}, \mathrm {lft}} \subseteq \mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {lft}}$ . Here, we use that every $X \in \mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {lft}}$ has a covering $\{ U_{i} \to X\}$ such that all intersections $U_{i_{0}} \cap \dots \cap U_{i_{n}}$ are separated, and any separated X has such a covering with all intersections affinoid.
Corollary 4.3. The presheaf
is a sheaf. In particular, it extends essentially uniquely to a sheaf with values in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp}^{+})$ on the category $\mathbf {Ad}^{\mathrm {lft}}_{S}$ .
In particular, we can now make sense of the analytic K-theory $K^{\mathrm {an}}(X)$ for every adic space X locally of finite type over the base S.
Proof. In view of the general discussion at the beginning of this subsection, the second assertion follows from the first one and Lemma 4.2. Now, we prove the first one. For each affinoid X, we define a family of sieves $\tau (X)$ on X as follows: a sieve $U \hookrightarrow y(X)$ belongs to $\tau (X)$ if and only if the natural map
is an equivalence in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp}^{+})$ for every morphism $X' \to X$ in $\mathbf {Ad}^{\mathrm {aff},\mathrm {ft}}_{S}$ . Then the association $X \rightsquigarrow \tau (X)$ defines a topology on $\mathbf {Ad}^{\mathrm {aff},\mathrm {ft}}_{S}$ (see [Reference Hoyois3, Prop. C.1]). Since the topology on $\mathbf {Ad}^{\mathrm {aff},\mathrm {ft}}_{S}$ is generated by rational coverings, it suffices to show that the sieve generated by a rational covering of X belongs to $\tau (X)$ . Since rational coverings are stable under pullback, it suffices to show that
is an equivalence, where $|U_{\bullet }| = \operatorname *{\mathrm {colim}}_{[p]\in \Delta ^{op}} y(U_{[p]})$ is the realization of the Čech nerve of a rational covering of X. Note here that $|U_{\bullet }| \hookrightarrow y(X)$ is precisely the sieve generated by that covering. This equivalence is a consequence of Theorem 4.1.
4.3 Properties of analytic K-theory
In this subsection, we record some immediate consequences. We keep the assumptions on the affinoid adic base space S as in the previous subsection.
Proposition 4.4. ( ${\mathbb A}^{1}$ -invariance)
Let X be an adic space locally of finite type over S, and let ${\mathbb A}^{1}_{X}$ denote the adic affine line over X. Then the natural map
is an equivalence in $\operatorname {\mathrm {Pro}}(\mathbf {Sp}^{+})$ .
Proof. It suffices to check this when $X = \operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(A, A^{+})$ is affinoid. Let $X\langle t\rangle = \operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(A\langle t\rangle , A^{+}\langle t\rangle )$ . The sheaf (of spaces) $y({\mathbb A}^{1}_{X})$ is equivalent to $\operatorname *{\mathrm {colim}}_{t \mapsto \pi t} y(X\langle t\rangle )$ . Hence,
where the second equivalence follows from Corollary 2.7.
Recall that the K-module structure of $K^{\mathrm {an}}$ as a functor on affinoids provides a natural transformation $\operatorname {\mathrm {\smallsmile }} t \colon K^{\mathrm {an}} \to \Omega K^{\mathrm {an}}(\underline {\phantom {x}}\langle t,t^{-1}\rangle )$ . It induces a natural transformation on the extension of $K^{\mathrm {an}}$ to all adic spaces in $\mathbf {Ad}_{S}^{\mathrm {lft}}$ .
Proposition 4.5. (Projective line) Let X be an adic space locally of finite type over S, and denote by ${\mathbb P}^{1}_{X}$ the adic projective line over X. We have a natural weak equivalence
Proof. We may again assume that X is affinoid. Consider the covering of ${\mathbb P}^{1}_{X}$ given by $X\langle t\rangle , X\langle t^{-1}\rangle $ . Denote the projection ${\mathbb P}^{1}_{X} \to X$ by p and let $q:=p|_{X\langle t,t^{-1}\rangle }$ . Since $K^{\mathrm {an}}$ is a sheaf, the upper line in the following diagram is a fiber sequence.
Here,
The lower line is a fiber sequence by definition of $\Gamma K^{\mathrm {an}}(X)$ . Since $p^{*}$ is split, we have an equivalence $K^{\mathrm {an}}({\mathbb P}^{1}_{X}) \simeq K^{\mathrm {an}}(X) \oplus \operatorname {\mathrm {cofib}}(p^{*})$ . From the diagram, we get a weak equivalence $\operatorname {\mathrm {cofib}}(q^{*}) \simeq \operatorname {\mathrm {cofib}}(p^{*})$ . By definition of $\Lambda K^{\mathrm {an}}$ (see §2.2), we have an equivalence $\operatorname {\mathrm {cofib}}(q^{*}) \simeq \Lambda K^{\mathrm {an}}(A)$ . By Corollary 2.6, the composite
is a weak equivalence. Thus, this map together with $p^{*}$ induces the desired weak equivalence $K^{\mathrm {an}}(X) \oplus K^{\mathrm {an}}(X) \xrightarrow {\simeq } K^{\mathrm {an}}({\mathbb P}^{1}_{X})$ .
We can globalize Theorem 2.10 as follows. Recall that $(R,R^{+})$ denotes an affinoid Tate ring such that R admits a Noetherian, finite-dimensional ring of definition $R_{0}$ , $\pi \in R_{0}$ is a pseudo-uniformizer, and $S=\operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(R,R^{+})$ . Denote by $\mathbf {Sch}_{R_{0}}^{\mathrm {ft}}$ the category of $R_{0}$ -schemes of finite type. There is a functor
which on affine schemes is given by $\operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}}(A_{0}) \mapsto \operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(A,A^{\circ })$ with $A=A_{0}^{\wedge }[\frac {1}{\pi }]$ and $A^{\circ } \subseteq A$ the subring of power-bounded elements (compose the $\pi $ -adic completion functor, the functor t from [Reference Huber5, Prop. 4.1], which sends $\operatorname {\mathrm {Spf}}(A_{0}^{\wedge })$ to $\operatorname {\mathrm {Spa}}(A_{0}^{\wedge },A_{0}^{\wedge })$ , and the functor $Y \mapsto Y(\pi \not =0)$ ).
Theorem 4.6. For X a scheme of finite type over $R_{0}$ , there is a weak fiber sequence of pro-spectra
If there exists an admissible morphism $\widetilde X \to X$ with $\widetilde X$ regular, then there is a weak fiber sequence
Proof. We equip $\mathbf {Sch}_{R_{0}}^{\mathrm {ft}}$ with the Zariski topology. Considered as functors on $\mathbf {Sch}_{R_0}^{\mathrm {ft},op}$ , all pro-spectra appearing in the statement of the theorem are sheaves (see the proof of Theorem 4.1 for the cases of $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(\underline {\phantom {x}}\;\mathrm {on}\; (\pi ))$ and $K^{\mathrm {cont}}$ ). Since every (regular) $X \in \mathbf {Sch}^{\mathrm {ft}}_{R_0}$ is a colimit of (regular) affine schemes in the category of sheaves $\mathbf {Sh}(\mathbf {Sch}^{\mathrm {ft}}_{R_0})$ , it suffices to check the first statement in the affine case. But this is Theorem 2.4.
If there exists an admissible morphism $\widetilde X \to X$ with $\widetilde X$ regular, then [Reference Kerz, Saito and Tamme7, Cor. 4.7] implies that for every p, the map
is a weak equivalence of pro-spectra. Using arguments similar to those in the proof of Theorem 2.4, Weibel’s K-dimension conjecture implies that $K^{\pi ^{\infty }}(X \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ is weakly equivalent to $K(X \,\mathrm {on}\, (\pi ))$ . This establishes the second claim.