Grothendieck's six operations
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In mathematics, Grothendieck's six operations, named after Alexander Grothendieck, is a formalism in homological algebra, also known as the six-functor formalism. It originally sprang from the relations in
étale cohomology In mathematics, the étale cohomology groups of an algebraic variety or scheme are algebraic analogues of the usual cohomology groups with finite coefficients of a topological space, introduced by Grothendieck in order to prove the Weil conjectur ...
that arise from a morphism of schemes . The basic insight was that many of the elementary facts relating cohomology on ''X'' and ''Y'' were formal consequences of a small number of axioms. These axioms hold in many cases completely unrelated to the original context, and therefore the formal consequences also hold. The six operations formalism has since been shown to apply to contexts such as ''D''-modules on algebraic varieties, sheaves on locally compact topological spaces, and motives.


The operations

The operations are six functors. Usually these are functors between derived categories and so are actually left and right
derived functor In mathematics, certain functors may be ''derived'' to obtain other functors closely related to the original ones. This operation, while fairly abstract, unifies a number of constructions throughout mathematics. Motivation It was noted in vari ...
s. * the
direct image In mathematics, the direct image functor is a construction in sheaf theory that generalizes the global sections functor to the relative case. It is of fundamental importance in topology and algebraic geometry. Given a sheaf ''F'' defined on a topolo ...
f_* * the
inverse image In mathematics, the image of a function is the set of all output values it may produce. More generally, evaluating a given function f at each element of a given subset A of its domain produces a set, called the "image of A under (or through) ...
f^* * the proper (or extraordinary) direct image f_! * the proper (or extraordinary) inverse image f^! * internal
tensor product In mathematics, the tensor product V \otimes W of two vector spaces and (over the same field) is a vector space to which is associated a bilinear map V\times W \to V\otimes W that maps a pair (v,w),\ v\in V, w\in W to an element of V \otime ...
*
internal Hom In mathematics, specifically in category theory, hom-sets (i.e. sets of morphisms between objects) give rise to important functors to the category of sets. These functors are called hom-functors and have numerous applications in category theory ...
The functors f^* and f_* form an
adjoint functor In mathematics, specifically category theory, adjunction is a relationship that two functors may exhibit, intuitively corresponding to a weak form of equivalence between two related categories. Two functors that stand in this relationship are kno ...
pair, as do f_! and f^!. Similarly, internal tensor product is left adjoint to internal Hom.


Six operations in étale cohomology

Let be a morphism of schemes. The morphism ''f'' induces several functors. Specifically, it gives
adjoint functors In mathematics, specifically category theory, adjunction is a relationship that two functors may exhibit, intuitively corresponding to a weak form of equivalence between two related categories. Two functors that stand in this relationship are kno ...
''f''* and ''f''* between the categories of sheaves on ''X'' and ''Y'', and it gives the functor ''f''! of direct image with proper support. In the
derived category In mathematics, the derived category ''D''(''A'') of an abelian category ''A'' is a construction of homological algebra introduced to refine and in a certain sense to simplify the theory of derived functors defined on ''A''. The construction pr ...
, ''Rf''! admits a right adjoint ''f''!. Finally, when working with abelian sheaves, there is a tensor product functor ⊗ and an internal Hom functor, and these are adjoint. The six operations are the corresponding functors on the derived category: , , , , , and . Suppose that we restrict ourselves to a category of \ell-adic torsion sheaves, where \ell is coprime to the characteristic of ''X'' and of ''Y''. In SGA 4 III, Grothendieck and Artin proved that if ''f'' is smooth of relative dimension ''d'', then ''Lf''* is isomorphic to , where denote the ''d''th inverse
Tate twist In number theory and algebraic geometry, the Tate twist, 'The Tate Twist', https://ncatlab.org/nlab/show/Tate+twist named after John Tate, is an operation on Galois modules. For example, if ''K'' is a field, ''GK'' is its absolute Galois group, ...
and denotes a shift in degree by . Furthermore, suppose that ''f'' is separated and of finite type. If is another morphism of schemes, if denotes the base change of ''X'' by ''g'', and if ''f''′ and ''g''′ denote the base changes of ''f'' and ''g'' by ''g'' and ''f'', respectively, then there exist natural isomorphisms: :Lg^* \circ Rf_! \to Rf'_! \circ Lg'^*, :Rg'_* \circ f'^! \to f^! \circ Rg_*. Again assuming that ''f'' is separated and of finite type, for any objects ''M'' in the derived category of ''X'' and ''N'' in the derived category of ''Y'', there exist natural isomorphisms: :(Rf_!M) \otimes_Y N \to Rf_!(M \otimes_X Lf^*N), :\operatorname_Y(Rf_! M, N) \to Rf_*\operatorname_X(M, f^!N), :f^!\operatorname_Y(M, N) \to \operatorname_X(Lf^*M, f^!N). If ''i'' is a closed immersion of ''Z'' into ''S'' with complementary open immersion ''j'', then there is a distinguished triangle in the derived category: :Rj_!j^! \to 1 \to Ri_*i^* \to Rj_!j^! where the first two maps are the counit and unit, respectively of the adjunctions. If ''Z'' and ''S'' are regular, then there is an isomorphism: :1_Z(-c) 2c\to i^!1_S, where and are the units of the tensor product operations (which vary depending on which category of \ell-adic torsion sheaves is under consideration). If ''S'' is regular and , and if ''K'' is an invertible object in the derived category on ''S'' with respect to , then define ''D''''X'' to be the functor . Then, for objects ''M'' and ''M''′ in the derived category on ''X'', the canonical maps: :M \to D_X(D_X(M)), :D_X(M \otimes D_X(M')) \to \operatorname(M, M'), are isomorphisms. Finally, if is a morphism of ''S''-schemes, and if ''M'' and ''N'' are objects in the derived categories of ''X'' and ''Y'', then there are natural isomorphisms: :D_X(f^*N) \cong f^!(D_Y(N)), :D_X(f^!N) \cong f^*(D_Y(N)), :D_Y(f_!M) \cong f_*(D_X(M)), :D_Y(f_*M) \cong f_!(D_X(M)).


See also

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Coherent duality In mathematics, coherent duality is any of a number of generalisations of Serre duality, applying to coherent sheaves, in algebraic geometry and complex manifold theory, as well as some aspects of commutative algebra that are part of the 'local' the ...
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Grothendieck local duality In commutative algebra, Grothendieck local duality is a duality theorem for cohomology of modules over local rings, analogous to Serre duality of coherent sheaves. Statement Suppose that ''R'' is a Cohen–Macaulay local ring of dimension ''d'' ...
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Image functors for sheaves In mathematics, especially in sheaf theory—a domain applied in areas such as topology, logic and algebraic geometry—there are four image functors for sheaves that belong together in various senses. Given a continuous mapping ''f'': ''X'' → ...
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Verdier duality In mathematics, Verdier duality is a cohomological duality in algebraic topology that generalizes Poincaré duality for manifolds. Verdier duality was introduced in 1965 by as an analog for locally compact topological spaces of Alexander Groth ...
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Change of rings In algebra, given a ring homomorphism f: R \to S, there are three ways to change the coefficient ring of a module; namely, for a left ''R''-module ''M'' and a left ''S''-module ''N'', *f_! M = S\otimes_R M, the induced module. *f_* M = \operatorn ...


References

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External links

*{{nlab, id=six+operations, title=six operations
What (if anything) unifies stable homotopy theory and Grothendieck's six functors formalism?
Sheaf theory Homological algebra Duality theories