Étale morphism

From Citizendium
Revision as of 17:24, 3 January 2008 by imported>Giovanni Antonio DiMatteo (The section heading "applications" is not to be understood in the colloquial sense; it refers to applications of the cohomology theory.)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.

Template:TOC-right

Definition

The following conditions are equivalent for a morphism of schemes :

  1. is flat and unramified.
  2. is flat and the sheaf of Kähler differentials is zero; .
  3. is smooth of relative dimension 0.

and is said to be étale when this is the case.

The small étale site

The category of étale -schemes becomes a Grothendieck topology, if one defines the sets of coverings to be jointly-surjective collections of -morphisms ; i.e., such that the union of images covers . That this forms a grothendieck essentially follows from the following three facts:

  1. Open immersions are étale.
  2. The étale property lifts by base change: that is, if is an étale morphism, and is any morphism, then the canonical fibered projection is again étale.
  3. If and are such that is étale, then is étale as well.

Étale cohomology

One begins by defining a presheaf to be a contravariant functor from the underlying category of a small étale site into an abelian category . Am étale sheaf (or just sheaf if the étale site is implicit) on is then a presheaf such that for all coverings , the diagram is exact.

-adic cohomology

Applications

Deligne proved the Weil-Riemann hypothesis using étale cohomology.