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In mathematics, especially in
algebraic geometry Algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics, classically studying zeros of multivariate polynomials. Modern algebraic geometry is based on the use of abstract algebraic techniques, mainly from commutative algebra, for solving geometrical ...
and the theory of
complex manifold In differential geometry and complex geometry, a complex manifold is a manifold with an atlas of charts to the open unit disc in \mathbb^n, such that the transition maps are holomorphic. The term complex manifold is variously used to mean a com ...
s, coherent sheaves are a class of sheaves closely linked to the geometric properties of the underlying space. The definition of coherent sheaves is made with reference to a
sheaf of rings In mathematics, a ringed space is a family of (commutative) rings parametrized by open subsets of a topological space together with ring homomorphisms that play roles of restrictions. Precisely, it is a topological space equipped with a sheaf of ...
that codifies this geometric information. Coherent sheaves can be seen as a generalization of vector bundles. Unlike vector bundles, they form an abelian category, and so they are closed under operations such as taking kernels, images, and cokernels. The quasi-coherent sheaves are a generalization of coherent sheaves and include the locally free sheaves of infinite rank. Coherent sheaf cohomology is a powerful technique, in particular for studying the sections of a given coherent sheaf.


Definitions

A quasi-coherent sheaf on a ringed space (X, \mathcal O_X) is a sheaf \mathcal F of \mathcal O_X- modules which has a local presentation, that is, every point in X has an open neighborhood U in which there is an exact sequence :\mathcal_X^, _ \to \mathcal_X^, _ \to \mathcal, _ \to 0 for some (possibly infinite) sets I and J. A coherent sheaf on a ringed space (X, \mathcal O_X) is a sheaf \mathcal F satisfying the following two properties: # \mathcal F is of ''finite type'' over \mathcal O_X, that is, every point in X has an open neighborhood U in X such that there is a surjective morphism \mathcal_X^n, _ \to \mathcal, _ for some natural number n; # for any open set U\subseteq X, any natural number n, and any morphism \varphi: \mathcal_X^n, _ \to \mathcal, _ of \mathcal O_X-modules, the kernel of \varphi is of finite type. Morphisms between (quasi-)coherent sheaves are the same as morphisms of sheaves of \mathcal O_X-modules.


The case of schemes

When X is a scheme, the general definitions above are equivalent to more explicit ones. A sheaf \mathcal F of \mathcal O_X-modules is quasi-coherent if and only if over each open affine subscheme U=\operatorname A the restriction \mathcal F, _U is isomorphic to the sheaf \tilde associated to the module M=\Gamma(U, \mathcal F) over A. When X is a locally Noetherian scheme, \mathcal F is coherent if and only if it is quasi-coherent and the modules M above can be taken to be finitely generated. On an affine scheme U = \operatorname A, there is an equivalence of categories from A-modules to quasi-coherent sheaves, taking a module M to the associated sheaf \tilde. The inverse equivalence takes a quasi-coherent sheaf \mathcal F on U to the A-module \mathcal F(U) of global sections of \mathcal F. Here are several further characterizations of quasi-coherent sheaves on a scheme.


Properties

On an arbitrary ringed space quasi-coherent sheaves do not necessarily form an abelian category. On the other hand, the quasi-coherent sheaves on any scheme form an abelian category, and they are extremely useful in that context.. On any ringed space X, the coherent sheaves form an abelian category, a full subcategory of the category of \mathcal O_X-modules.. (Analogously, the category of coherent modules over any ring A is a full abelian subcategory of the category of all A-modules.) So the kernel, image, and cokernel of any map of coherent sheaves are coherent. The
direct sum The direct sum is an operation between structures in abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics. It is defined differently, but analogously, for different kinds of structures. To see how the direct sum is used in abstract algebra, consider a more ...
of two coherent sheaves is coherent; more generally, an \mathcal O_X-module that is an extension of two coherent sheaves is coherent. A submodule of a coherent sheaf is coherent if it is of finite type. A coherent sheaf is always an \mathcal O_X-module of ''finite presentation'', meaning that each point x in X has an open neighborhood U such that the restriction \mathcal F, _U of \mathcal F to U is isomorphic to the cokernel of a morphism \mathcal O_X^n, _U \to \mathcal O_X^m, _U for some natural numbers n and m. If \mathcal O_X is coherent, then, conversely, every sheaf of finite presentation over \mathcal O_X is coherent. The sheaf of rings \mathcal O_X is called coherent if it is coherent considered as a sheaf of modules over itself. In particular, the Oka coherence theorem states that the sheaf of holomorphic functions on a complex analytic space X is a coherent sheaf of rings. The main part of the proof is the case X = \mathbf C^n. Likewise, on a locally Noetherian scheme X, the structure sheaf \mathcal O_X is a coherent sheaf of rings.


Basic constructions of coherent sheaves

* An \mathcal O_X-module \mathcal F on a ringed space X is called locally free of finite rank, or a vector bundle, if every point in X has an open neighborhood U such that the restriction \mathcal F, _U is isomorphic to a finite direct sum of copies of \mathcal O_X, _U. If \mathcal F is free of the same rank n near every point of X, then the vector bundle \mathcal F is said to be of rank n. :Vector bundles in this sheaf-theoretic sense over a scheme X are equivalent to vector bundles defined in a more geometric way, as a scheme E with a morphism \pi: E\to X and with a covering of X by open sets U_\alpha with given isomorphisms \pi^(U_\alpha) \cong \mathbb A^n \times U_\alpha over U_\alpha such that the two isomorphisms over an intersection U_\alpha \cap U_\beta differ by a linear automorphism. (The analogous equivalence also holds for complex analytic spaces.) For example, given a vector bundle E in this geometric sense, the corresponding sheaf \mathcal F is defined by: over an open set U of X, the \mathcal O(U)-module \mathcal F(U) is the set of sections of the morphism \pi^(U) \to U. The sheaf-theoretic interpretation of vector bundles has the advantage that vector bundles (on a locally Noetherian scheme) are included in the abelian category of coherent sheaves. *Locally free sheaves come equipped with the standard \mathcal O_X-module operations, but these give back locally free sheaves. *Let X = \operatorname(R), R a Noetherian ring. Then vector bundles on X are exactly the sheaves associated to finitely generated
projective module In mathematics, particularly in algebra, the class of projective modules enlarges the class of free modules (that is, modules with basis vectors) over a ring, by keeping some of the main properties of free modules. Various equivalent characterizati ...
s over R, or (equivalently) to finitely generated flat modules over R.. *Let X = \operatorname(R), R a Noetherian \N-graded ring, be a projective scheme over a Noetherian ring R_0. Then each \Z-graded R-module M determines a quasi-coherent sheaf \mathcal F on X such that \mathcal F, _ is the sheaf associated to the R ^0-module M ^0, where f is a homogeneous element of R of positive degree and \ = \operatorname R ^0 is the locus where f does not vanish. *For example, for each integer n, let R(n) denote the graded R-module given by R(n)_l =R_. Then each R(n) determines the quasi-coherent sheaf \mathcal O_X(n) on X. If R is generated as R_0-algebra by R_1, then \mathcal O_X(n) is a line bundle (invertible sheaf) on X and \mathcal O_X(n) is the n-th tensor power of \mathcal O_X(1). In particular, \mathcal O_(-1) is called the
tautological line bundle In mathematics, the tautological bundle is a vector bundle occurring over a Grassmannian in a natural tautological way: for a Grassmannian of k-dimensional subspaces of V, given a point in the Grassmannian corresponding to a k-dimensional vector ...
on the projective n-space. *A simple example of a coherent sheaf on \mathbb^2 which is not a vector bundle is given by the cokernel in the following sequence ::\mathcal(1) \xrightarrow \mathcal(3)\oplus \mathcal(4) \to \mathcal \to 0 :this is because \mathcal restricted to the vanishing locus of the two polynomials has two-dimensional fibers, and has one-dimensional fibers elsewhere. * Ideal sheaves: If Z is a closed subscheme of a locally Noetherian scheme X, the sheaf \mathcal I_ of all regular functions vanishing on Z is coherent. Likewise, if Z is a closed analytic subspace of a complex analytic space X, the ideal sheaf \mathcal I_ is coherent. * The structure sheaf \mathcal O_Z of a closed subscheme Z of a locally Noetherian scheme X can be viewed as a coherent sheaf on X. To be precise, this is the direct image sheaf i_*\mathcal O_Z, where i: Z \to X is the inclusion. Likewise for a closed analytic subspace of a complex analytic space. The sheaf i_*\mathcal O_Z has fiber (defined below) of dimension zero at points in the open set X-Z, and fiber of dimension 1 at points in Z. There is a short exact sequence of coherent sheaves on X: ::0\to \mathcal I_ \to \mathcal O_X \to i_*\mathcal O_Z \to 0. *Most operations of linear algebra preserve coherent sheaves. In particular, for coherent sheaves \mathcal F and \mathcal G on a ringed space X, the tensor product sheaf \mathcal F \otimes_\mathcal G and the sheaf of homomorphisms \mathcal Hom_(\mathcal F, \mathcal G) are coherent. *A simple non-example of a quasi-coherent sheaf is given by the extension by zero functor. For example, consider i_!\mathcal_X for ::X = \operatorname(\Complex ,x^ \xrightarrow \operatorname(\Complex =Y :Since this sheaf has non-trivial stalks, but zero global sections, this cannot be a quasi-coherent sheaf. This is because quasi-coherent sheaves on an affine scheme are equivalent to the category of modules over the underlying ring, and the adjunction comes from taking global sections.


Functoriality

Let f: X\to Y be a morphism of ringed spaces (for example, a morphism of schemes). If \mathcal F is a quasi-coherent sheaf on Y, then the inverse image \mathcal O_X-module (or pullback) f^*\mathcal F is quasi-coherent on X.. For a morphism of schemes f: X\to Y and a coherent sheaf \mathcal F on Y, the pullback f^*\mathcal F is not coherent in full generality (for example, f^*\mathcal O_Y = \mathcal O_X, which might not be coherent), but pullbacks of coherent sheaves are coherent if X is locally Noetherian. An important special case is the pullback of a vector bundle, which is a vector bundle. If f: X\to Y is a
quasi-compact In mathematics, specifically general topology, compactness is a property that seeks to generalize the notion of a closed and bounded subset of Euclidean space by making precise the idea of a space having no "punctures" or "missing endpoints", i ...
quasi-separated In algebraic geometry, a morphism of schemes from to is called quasi-separated if the diagonal map from to is quasi-compact (meaning that the inverse image of any quasi-compact open set is quasi-compact). A scheme is called quasi-separated if ...
morphism of schemes and \mathcal F is a quasi-coherent sheaf on X, then the direct image sheaf (or pushforward) f_*\mathcal F is quasi-coherent on Y. The direct image of a coherent sheaf is often not coherent. For example, for a field k, let X be the affine line over k, and consider the morphism f: X\to \operatorname(k); then the direct image f_*\mathcal O_X is the sheaf on \operatorname(k) associated to the polynomial ring k /math>, which is not coherent because k /math> has infinite dimension as a k-vector space. On the other hand, the direct image of a coherent sheaf under a proper morphism is coherent, by results of Grauert and Grothendieck.


Local behavior of coherent sheaves

An important feature of coherent sheaves \mathcal F is that the properties of \mathcal F at a point x control the behavior of \mathcal F in a neighborhood of x, more than would be true for an arbitrary sheaf. For example,
Nakayama's lemma In mathematics, more specifically abstract algebra and commutative algebra, Nakayama's lemma — also known as the Krull–Azumaya theorem — governs the interaction between the Jacobson radical of a ring (typically a commutative ring) and ...
says (in geometric language) that if \mathcal F is a coherent sheaf on a scheme X, then the fiber \mathcal F_x\otimes_ k(x) of F at a point x (a vector space over the residue field k(x)) is zero if and only if the sheaf \mathcal F is zero on some open neighborhood of x. A related fact is that the dimension of the fibers of a coherent sheaf is upper-semicontinuous. Thus a coherent sheaf has constant rank on an open set, while the rank can jump up on a lower-dimensional closed subset. In the same spirit: a coherent sheaf \mathcal F on a scheme X is a vector bundle if and only if its
stalk Stalk or stalking may refer to: Behaviour * Stalk, the stealthy approach (phase) of a predator towards its prey * Stalking, an act of intrusive behaviour or unwanted attention towards a person * Deer stalking, the pursuit of deer for sport Biol ...
\mathcal F_x is a
free module In mathematics, a free module is a module that has a basis – that is, a generating set consisting of linearly independent elements. Every vector space is a free module, but, if the ring of the coefficients is not a division ring (not a field in t ...
over the local ring \mathcal O_ for every point x in X. On a general scheme, one cannot determine whether a coherent sheaf is a vector bundle just from its fibers (as opposed to its stalks). On a reduced locally Noetherian scheme, however, a coherent sheaf is a vector bundle if and only if its rank is locally constant.


Examples of vector bundles

For a morphism of schemes X\to Y, let \Delta: X\to X\times_Y X be the diagonal morphism, which is a closed immersion if X is separated over Y. Let \mathcal I be the ideal sheaf of X in X\times_Y X. Then the sheaf of differentials \Omega^1_ can be defined as the pullback \Delta^*\mathcal I of \mathcal I to X. Sections of this sheaf are called
1-forms In differential geometry, a one-form on a differentiable manifold is a smooth section of the cotangent bundle. Equivalently, a one-form on a manifold M is a smooth mapping of the total space of the tangent bundle of M to \R whose restriction to eac ...
on X over Y, and they can be written locally on X as finite sums \textstyle\sum f_j\, dg_j for regular functions f_j and g_j. If X is locally of finite type over a field k, then \Omega^1_ is a coherent sheaf on X. If X is smooth over k, then \Omega^1 (meaning \Omega^1_) is a vector bundle over X, called the
cotangent bundle In mathematics, especially differential geometry, the cotangent bundle of a smooth manifold is the vector bundle of all the cotangent spaces at every point in the manifold. It may be described also as the dual bundle to the tangent bundle. This may ...
of X. Then the tangent bundle TX is defined to be the dual bundle (\Omega^1)^*. For X smooth over k of dimension n everywhere, the tangent bundle has rank n. If Y is a smooth closed subscheme of a smooth scheme X over k, then there is a short exact sequence of vector bundles on Y: :0\to TY \to TX, _Y \to N_\to 0, which can be used as a definition of the normal bundle N_ to Y in X. For a smooth scheme X over a field k and a natural number i, the vector bundle \Omega^i of ''i''-forms on X is defined as the i-th exterior power of the cotangent bundle, \Omega^i = \Lambda^i \Omega^1. For a smooth variety X of dimension n over k, the canonical bundle K_X means the line bundle \Omega^n. Thus sections of the canonical bundle are algebro-geometric analogs of volume forms on X. For example, a section of the canonical bundle of affine space \mathbb A^n over k can be written as :f(x_1,\ldots,x_n) \; dx_1 \wedge\cdots\wedge dx_n, where f is a polynomial with coefficients in k. Let R be a commutative ring and n a natural number. For each integer j, there is an important example of a line bundle on projective space \mathbb P^n over R, called \mathcal O(j). To define this, consider the morphism of R-schemes :\pi: \mathbb A^-0\to \mathbb P^n given in coordinates by (x_0,\ldots,x_n) \mapsto _0,\ldots,x_n/math>. (That is, thinking of projective space as the space of 1-dimensional linear subspaces of affine space, send a nonzero point in affine space to the line that it spans.) Then a section of \mathcal O(j) over an open subset U of \mathbb P^n is defined to be a regular function f on \pi^(U) that is homogeneous of degree j, meaning that :f(ax)=a^jf(x) as regular functions on (\mathbb A^ - 0) \times \pi^(U). For all integers i and j, there is an isomorphism \mathcal O(i) \otimes \mathcal O(j) \cong \mathcal O(i+j) of line bundles on \mathbb P^n. In particular, every homogeneous polynomial in x_0,\ldots,x_n of degree j over R can be viewed as a global section of \mathcal O(j) over \mathbb P^n. Note that every closed subscheme of projective space can be defined as the zero set of some collection of homogeneous polynomials, hence as the zero set of some sections of the line bundles \mathcal O(j). This contrasts with the simpler case of affine space, where a closed subscheme is simply the zero set of some collection of regular functions. The regular functions on projective space \mathbb P^n over R are just the "constants" (the ring R), and so it is essential to work with the line bundles \mathcal O(j). Serre gave an algebraic description of all coherent sheaves on projective space, more subtle than what happens for affine space. Namely, let R be a Noetherian ring (for example, a field), and consider the polynomial ring S = R _0,\ldots,x_n/math> as a graded ring with each x_i having degree 1. Then every finitely generated graded S-module M has an associated coherent sheaf \tilde M on \mathbb P^n over R. Every coherent sheaf on \mathbb P^n arises in this way from a finitely generated graded S-module M. (For example, the line bundle \mathcal O(j) is the sheaf associated to the S-module S with its grading lowered by j.) But the S-module M that yields a given coherent sheaf on \mathbb P^n is not unique; it is only unique up to changing M by graded modules that are nonzero in only finitely many degrees. More precisely, the abelian category of coherent sheaves on \mathbb P^n is the quotient of the category of finitely generated graded S-modules by the Serre subcategory of modules that are nonzero in only finitely many degrees.. The tangent bundle of projective space \mathbb P^n over a field k can be described in terms of the line bundle \mathcal O(1). Namely, there is a short exact sequence, the Euler sequence: : 0\to \mathcal O_\to \mathcal O(1)^\to T\mathbb P^n\to 0. It follows that the canonical bundle K_ (the dual of the determinant line bundle of the tangent bundle) is isomorphic to \mathcal O(-n-1). This is a fundamental calculation for algebraic geometry. For example, the fact that the canonical bundle is a negative multiple of the ample line bundle \mathcal O(1) means that projective space is a Fano variety. Over the complex numbers, this means that projective space has a Kähler metric with positive Ricci curvature.


Vector bundles on a hypersurface

Consider a smooth degree-d hypersurface X \subset \mathbb^n defined by the homogeneous polynomial f of degree d. Then, there is an exact sequence :0 \to \mathcal O_X(-d) \to i^*\Omega_ \to \Omega_X \to 0 where the second map is the pullback of differential forms, and the first map sends : \phi \mapsto d(f\cdot \phi) Note that this sequence tells us that \mathcal O(-d) is the conormal sheaf of X in \mathbb P^n. Dualizing this yields the exact sequence : 0 \to T_X \to i^*T_ \to \mathcal O(d) \to 0 hence \mathcal O(d) is the normal bundle of X in \mathbb P^n. If we use the fact that given an exact sequence :0 \to \mathcal E_1 \to \mathcal E_2 \to \mathcal E_3 \to 0 of vector bundles with ranks r_1,r_2,r_3, there is an isomorphism :\Lambda^\mathcal E_2 \cong \Lambda^\mathcal E_1\otimes \Lambda^\mathcal E_3 of line bundles, then we see that there is the isomorphism :i^*\omega_ \cong \omega_X\otimes \mathcal O_X(-d) showing that :\omega_X \cong \mathcal O_X(d - n -1)


Serre construction and vector bundles

One useful technique for constructing rank 2 vector bundles is the Serre constructionpg 3 which establishes a correspondence between rank 2 vector bundles \mathcal on a smooth projective variety X and codimension 2 subvarieties Y using a certain \text^1-group calculated on X. This is given by a cohomological condition on the line bundle \wedge^2\mathcal (see below). The correspondence in one direction is given as follows: for a section s \in \Gamma(X,\mathcal) we can associated the vanishing locus V(s) \subset X. If V(s) is a codimension 2 subvariety, then # It is a local complete intersection, meaning if we take an affine chart U_i \subset X then s, _ \in \Gamma(U_i,\mathcal) can be represented as a function s_i:U_i \to \mathbb^2, where s_i(p) = (s_i^1(p), s_i^2(p)) and V(s)\cap U_i = V(s_i^1,s_i^2) # The line bundle \omega_X\otimes \wedge^2\mathcal, _ is isomorphic to the canonical bundle \omega_ on V(s) In the other direction, for a codimension 2 subvariety Y \subset X and a line bundle \mathcal \to X such that # H^1(X,\mathcal) = H^2(X,\mathcal) = 0 # \omega_Y \cong (\omega_X\otimes\mathcal), _Y there is a canonical isomorphism
\text((\omega_X\otimes\mathcal), _Y,\omega_Y) \cong \text^1(\mathcal_Y\otimes\mathcal, \mathcal_X)
which is functorial with respect to inclusion of codimension 2 subvarieties. Moreover, any isomorphism given on the left corresponds to a locally free sheaf in the middle of the extension on the right. That is, for s \in \text((\omega_X\otimes\mathcal), _Y,\omega_Y) which is an isomorphism there is a corresponding locally free sheaf \mathcal of rank 2 which fits into a short exact sequence
0 \to \mathcal_X \to \mathcal \to \mathcal_Y\otimes\mathcal \to 0
This vector bundle can then be further studied using cohomological invariants to determine if it is stable or not. This forms the basis for studying moduli of stable vector bundles in many specific cases, such as on principally polarized abelian varieties and K3 surfaces.


Chern classes and algebraic ''K''-theory

A vector bundle E on a smooth variety X over a field has Chern classes in the Chow ring of X, c_i(E) in CH^i(X) for i\geq 0. These satisfy the same formal properties as Chern classes in topology. For example, for any short exact sequence :0\to A \to B \to C \to 0 of vector bundles on X, the Chern classes of B are given by :c_i(B) = c_i(A)+c_1(A)c_(C)+\cdots+c_(A)c_1(C)+c_i(C). It follows that the Chern classes of a vector bundle E depend only on the class of E in the
Grothendieck group In mathematics, the Grothendieck group, or group of differences, of a commutative monoid is a certain abelian group. This abelian group is constructed from in the most universal way, in the sense that any abelian group containing a homomorphic i ...
K_0(X). By definition, for a scheme X, K_0(X) is the quotient of the free abelian group on the set of isomorphism classes of vector bundles on X by the relation that = + /math> for any short exact sequence as above. Although K_0(X) is hard to compute in general, algebraic K-theory provides many tools for studying it, including a sequence of related groups K_i(X) for integers i>0. A variant is the group G_0(X) (or K_0'(X)), the
Grothendieck group In mathematics, the Grothendieck group, or group of differences, of a commutative monoid is a certain abelian group. This abelian group is constructed from in the most universal way, in the sense that any abelian group containing a homomorphic i ...
of coherent sheaves on X. (In topological terms, ''G''-theory has the formal properties of a
Borel–Moore homology In topology, Borel−Moore homology or homology with closed support is a homology theory for locally compact spaces, introduced by Armand Borel and John Moore in 1960. For reasonable compact spaces, Borel−Moore homology coincides with the usual ...
theory for schemes, while ''K''-theory is the corresponding cohomology theory.) The natural homomorphism K_0(X)\to G_0(X) is an isomorphism if X is a regular separated Noetherian scheme, using that every coherent sheaf has a finite resolution by vector bundles in that case. For example, that gives a definition of the Chern classes of a coherent sheaf on a smooth variety over a field. More generally, a Noetherian scheme X is said to have the resolution property if every coherent sheaf on X has a surjection from some vector bundle on X. For example, every quasi-projective scheme over a Noetherian ring has the resolution property.


Applications of resolution property

Since the resolution property states that a coherent sheaf \mathcal E on a Noetherian scheme is quasi-isomorphic in the derived category to the complex of vector bundles :\mathcal E_k \to \cdots \to \mathcal E_1 \to \mathcal E_0 we can compute the total Chern class of \mathcal E with :c(\mathcal E) = c(\mathcal E_0)c(\mathcal E_1)^ \cdots c(\mathcal E_k)^ For example, this formula is useful for finding the Chern classes of the sheaf representing a subscheme of X. If we take the projective scheme Z associated to the ideal (xy,xz) \subset \mathbb C ,y,z,w/math>, then :c(\mathcal O_Z) = \frac since there is the resolution :0 \to \mathcal O(-3) \to \mathcal O(-2)\oplus\mathcal O(-2) \to \mathcal O \to \mathcal O_Z \to 0 over \mathbb^3.


Bundle homomorphism vs. sheaf homomorphism

When vector bundles and locally free sheaves of finite constant rank are used interchangeably, care must be given to distinguish between bundle homomorphisms and sheaf homomorphisms. Specifically, given vector bundles p: E \to X, \, q: F \to X, by definition, a bundle homomorphism \varphi: E \to F is a scheme morphism over X (i.e., p = q \circ \varphi) such that, for each geometric point x in X, \varphi_x: p^(x) \to q^(x) is a linear map of rank independent of x. Thus, it induces the sheaf homomorphism \widetilde: \mathcal E \to \mathcal F of constant rank between the corresponding locally free \mathcal O_X-modules (sheaves of dual sections). But there may be an \mathcal O_X-module homomorphism that does not arise this way; namely, those not having constant rank. In particular, a subbundle E \subset F is a subsheaf (i.e., \mathcal E is a subsheaf of \mathcal F). But the converse can fail; for example, for an effective Cartier divisor D on X, \mathcal O_X(-D) \subset \mathcal O_X is a subsheaf but typically not a subbundle (since any line bundle has only two subbundles).


The category of quasi-coherent sheaves

The quasi-coherent sheaves on any fixed scheme form an abelian category. Gabber showed that, in fact, the quasi-coherent sheaves on any scheme form a particularly well-behaved abelian category, a Grothendieck category.. A quasi-compact quasi-separated scheme X (such as an algebraic variety over a field) is determined up to isomorphism by the abelian category of quasi-coherent sheaves on X, by Rosenberg, generalizing a result of Gabriel.


Coherent cohomology

The fundamental technical tool in algebraic geometry is the cohomology theory of coherent sheaves. Although it was introduced only in the 1950s, many earlier techniques of algebraic geometry are clarified by the language of
sheaf cohomology In mathematics, sheaf cohomology is the application of homological algebra to analyze the global sections of a sheaf on a topological space. Broadly speaking, sheaf cohomology describes the obstructions to solving a geometric problem globally when i ...
applied to coherent sheaves. Broadly speaking, coherent sheaf cohomology can be viewed as a tool for producing functions with specified properties; sections of line bundles or of more general sheaves can be viewed as generalized functions. In complex analytic geometry, coherent sheaf cohomology also plays a foundational role. Among the core results of coherent sheaf cohomology are results on finite-dimensionality of cohomology, results on the vanishing of cohomology in various cases, duality theorems such as Serre duality, relations between topology and algebraic geometry such as
Hodge theory In mathematics, Hodge theory, named after W. V. D. Hodge, is a method for studying the cohomology groups of a smooth manifold ''M'' using partial differential equations. The key observation is that, given a Riemannian metric on ''M'', every cohom ...
, and formulas for
Euler characteristic In mathematics, and more specifically in algebraic topology and polyhedral combinatorics, the Euler characteristic (or Euler number, or Euler–Poincaré characteristic) is a topological invariant, a number that describes a topological space ...
s of coherent sheaves such as the Riemann–Roch theorem.


See also

* Picard group *
Divisor (algebraic geometry) In algebraic geometry, divisors are a generalization of codimension-1 subvarieties of algebraic varieties. Two different generalizations are in common use, Cartier divisors and Weil divisors (named for Pierre Cartier and André Weil by David Mum ...
* Reflexive sheaf * Quot scheme *
Twisted sheaf In mathematics, a twisted sheaf is a variant of a coherent sheaf. Precisely, it is specified by: an open covering In mathematics, and more particularly in set theory, a cover (or covering) of a set X is a collection of subsets of X whose union ...
*
Essentially finite vector bundle In mathematics, an essentially finite vector bundle is a particular type of vector bundle defined by Madhav V. Nori, as the main tool in the construction of the fundamental group scheme. Even if the definition is not intuitive there is a nice char ...
* Bundle of principal parts * Gabriel–Rosenberg reconstruction theorem * Pseudo-coherent sheaf *
Quasi-coherent sheaf on an algebraic stack In algebraic geometry, a quasi-coherent sheaf on an algebraic stack \mathfrak is a generalization of a quasi-coherent sheaf on a scheme. The most concrete description is that it is a data that consists of, for each a scheme ''S'' in the base categor ...


Notes


References

* * * * * *Sections 0.5.3 and 0.5.4 of * * * * *


External links

* *Part V of {{Citation , author1-first=Ravi , author1-last=Vakil , author1-link=Ravi Vakil , title=The Rising Sea , url=http://math.stanford.edu/~vakil/216blog/ Algebraic geometry Sheaf theory Vector bundles Topological methods of algebraic geometry Complex manifolds