Namespaces
Variants
Actions

Flat morphism

From Encyclopedia of Mathematics
Revision as of 21:52, 30 March 2012 by Ulf Rehmann (talk | contribs) (MR/ZBL numbers added)
Jump to: navigation, search

A morphism of schemes such that for any point the local ring is flat over (see Flat module). In general, let be a sheaf of -modules; it is called flat over at a point if is a flat module over the ring . Subject to certain (fairly weak) finiteness conditions, the set of points at which a coherent -module is flat over is open in . If, moreover, is an integral scheme, then there exists an open non-empty subset such that is a flat sheaf over at all points lying above .

A flat morphism of finite type corresponds to the intuitive concept of a continuous family of varieties. A flat morphism is open and equi-dimensional (i.e. the dimensions of the fibres are locally constant for ). For many geometric properties, the set of points at which the fibre of a flat morphism has this property is open in . If a flat morphism is proper (cf. Proper morphism), then the set of points for which the fibres over them have this property is open .

Flat morphisms are used also in descent theory. A morphism of schemes is called faithfully flat if it is flat and surjective. Then, as a rule, one may check any property of a certain object over simply by checking this property for the object obtained after a faithfully-flat base change . In this connection, interest attaches to flatness criteria for a morphism (or for the -module ); here can be regarded as a local scheme. The simplest criterion relates to the case where the base is one-dimensional and regular: A coherent -module is flat if and only if the uniformizing parameter in has a trivial annihilator in . In a certain sense the general case is reducible to the one-dimensional case. Let be a reduced Noetherian scheme and let for any morphism , where is a one-dimensional regular scheme, the base change be a flat morphism; then is a flat morphism. Another flatness criterion requires that is universally open, while and the geometric fibres are reduced.

References

[1a] A. Grothendieck, J. Dieudonné, "Eléments de géométrie algébrique" Publ. Math. IHES , 24 (1964) MR0173675 Zbl 0136.15901
[1b] A. Grothendieck, J. Dieudonné, "Eléments de géométrie algébrique" Publ. Math. IHES , 28 (1966) MR0217086 Zbl 0144.19904
[2] D. Mumford, "Lectures on curves on an algebraic surface" , Princeton Univ. Press (1966) MR0209285 Zbl 0187.42701
[3] M. Raynaud, L. Gruson, "Critères de platitude et de projectivité. Techniques de "platification" d'un module" Invent. Math. , 13 (1971) pp. 1–89 MR0308104 Zbl 0227.14010


Comments

References

[a1] R. Hartshorne, "Algebraic geometry" , Springer (1977) MR0463157 Zbl 0367.14001
How to Cite This Entry:
Flat morphism. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Flat_morphism&oldid=23832
This article was adapted from an original article by V.I. Danilov (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article