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In algebraic geometry, a derived scheme is a pair (X, \mathcal) consisting of a
topological space In mathematics, a topological space is, roughly speaking, a geometrical space in which closeness is defined but cannot necessarily be measured by a numeric distance. More specifically, a topological space is a set whose elements are called po ...
''X'' and a
sheaf Sheaf may refer to: * Sheaf (agriculture), a bundle of harvested cereal stems * Sheaf (mathematics), a mathematical tool * Sheaf toss, a Scottish sport * River Sheaf, a tributary of River Don in England * ''The Sheaf'', a student-run newspaper se ...
\mathcal either of simplicial commutative rings or of commutative ring spectra on ''X'' such that (1) the pair (X, \pi_0 \mathcal) is a scheme and (2) \pi_k \mathcal is a quasi-coherent \pi_0 \mathcal-
module Module, modular and modularity may refer to the concept of modularity. They may also refer to: Computing and engineering * Modular design, the engineering discipline of designing complex devices using separately designed sub-components * Mo ...
. The notion gives a
homotopy In topology, a branch of mathematics, two continuous functions from one topological space to another are called homotopic (from grc, ὁμός "same, similar" and "place") if one can be "continuously deformed" into the other, such a defor ...
-theoretic generalization of a scheme. A derived stack is a stacky generalization of a derived scheme.


Differential graded scheme

Over a field of characteristic zero, the theory is closely related to that of a differential graded scheme. By definition, a differential graded scheme is obtained by gluing affine differential graded schemes, with respect to
étale topology In algebraic geometry, the étale topology is a Grothendieck topology on the category of schemes which has properties similar to the Euclidean topology, but unlike the Euclidean topology, it is also defined in positive characteristic. The étale ...
. It was introduced by
Maxim Kontsevich Maxim Lvovich Kontsevich (russian: Макси́м Льво́вич Конце́вич, ; born 25 August 1964) is a Russian and French mathematician and mathematical physicist. He is a professor at the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques an ...
"as the first approach to derived algebraic geometry." and was developed further by Mikhail Kapranov and Ionut Ciocan-Fontanine.


Connection with differential graded rings and examples

Just as
affine Affine may describe any of various topics concerned with connections or affinities. It may refer to: * Affine, a relative by marriage in law and anthropology * Affine cipher, a special case of the more general substitution cipher * Affine comb ...
algebraic geometry is equivalent (in categorical sense) to the theory of commutative rings (commonly called
commutative algebra Commutative algebra, first known as ideal theory, is the branch of algebra that studies commutative rings, their ideals, and modules over such rings. Both algebraic geometry and algebraic number theory build on commutative algebra. Prom ...
), affine
derived algebraic geometry Derived algebraic geometry is a branch of mathematics that generalizes algebraic geometry to a situation where commutative rings, which provide local charts, are replaced by either differential graded algebras (over \mathbb), simplicial commutati ...
over characteristic zero is equivalent to the theory of commutative differential graded rings. One of the main example of derived schemes comes from the derived intersection of subschemes of a scheme, giving the
Koszul complex In mathematics, the Koszul complex was first introduced to define a cohomology theory for Lie algebras, by Jean-Louis Koszul (see Lie algebra cohomology). It turned out to be a useful general construction in homological algebra. As a tool, its ...
. For example, let f_1, \ldots, f_k \in \Complex _1,\ldots, x_n= R, then we can get a derived scheme :(X,\mathcal_\bullet) = \mathbf \left (R/(f_1) \otimes_R^\mathbf \cdots \otimes_R^\mathbf R/(f_k) \right ) where :\textbf:(\textbf_\Complex)^ \to \textbf is the
étale spectrum In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, the étale spectrum of a commutative ring or an E∞-ring, denoted by Specét or Spét, is an analog of the prime spectrum Spec of a commutative ring that is obtained by replacing Zariski topology ...
. Since we can construct a resolution :\begin 0 \to & R & \xrightarrow & R &\to 0 \\ &\downarrow&&\downarrow& \\ 0\to &0& \to&R/(f_i) & \to 0 \end the derived ring R/(f_1) \otimes_R^\mathbf \cdots \otimes_R^\mathbf R/(f_k) is the koszul complex K_R(f_1,\ldots, f_k). The truncation of this derived scheme to amplitude 1,0/math> provides a classical model motivating derived algebraic geometry. Notice that if we have a projective scheme :\operatorname\left( \frac \right) where \deg(f_i) = d_i we can construct the derived scheme (\mathbb^n, \mathcal^\bullet,(f_1,\ldots, f_k)) where :\mathcal^\bullet = mathcal(-d_1)\oplus\cdots\oplus\mathcal(-d_k) \xrightarrow \mathcal/math> with amplitude 1,0/math>


Cotangent complex


Construction

Let (A_\bullet,d) be a fixed differential graded algebra defined over a field of characteristic 0. Then a A_\bullet-differential graded algebra (R_\bullet,d_R) is called semi-free if the following conditions hold: # The underlying graded algebra R_\bullet is a polynomial algebra over A_\bullet, meaning it is isomorphic to A_\bullet _/math> # There exists a filtration \varnothing = I_0 \subseteq I_1 \subseteq \cdots on the indexing set I where \cup_ I_n = I and s(x_i) \in A_\bullet _/math> for any x_i \in I_. It turns out that every A_\bullet differential graded algebra admits a surjective quasi-isomorphism from a semi-free (A_\bullet,d) differential graded algebra, called a semi-free resolution. These are unique up to homotopy equivalence in a suitable model category. The (relative) cotangent complex of an (A_\bullet,d)-differential graded algebra (B_\bullet, d_B) can be constructed using a semi-free resolution (R_\bullet,d_R) \to (B_\bullet, d_B): it is defined as :\mathbb_ := \Omega_\otimes_ B_\bullet Many examples can be constructed by taking the algebra B representing a variety over a field of characteristic 0, finding a presentation of R as a quotient of a polynomial algebra and taking the Koszul complex associated to this presentation. The Koszul complex acts as a semi-free resolution of the differential graded algebra (B_\bullet,0) where B_\bullet is the graded algebra with the non-trivial graded piece in degree 0.


Examples

The cotangent complex of a hypersurface X = \mathbb(f) \subset \mathbb^n_\Complex can easily be computed: since we have the dga K_R(f) representing the derived enhancement of X, we can compute the cotangent complex as :0 \to R\cdot ds \xrightarrow \bigoplus_i R \cdot dx_i \to 0 where \Phi(gds) = g\cdot df and d is the usual universal derivation. If we take a complete intersection, then the koszul complex :R^\bullet = \frac \otimes^\mathbf_ \cdots \otimes^\mathbf_ \frac is quasi-isomorphic to the complex :\frac 0 This implies we can construct the cotangent complex of the derived ring R^\bullet as the tensor product of the cotangent complex above for each f_i.


Remarks

Please note that the cotangent complex in the context of derived geometry differs from the cotangent complex of classical schemes. Namely, if there was a singularity in the hypersurface defined by f then the cotangent complex would have infinite amplitude. These observations provide motivation for the hidden smoothness philosophy of derived geometry since we are now working with a complex of finite length.


Tangent complexes


Polynomial functions

Given a polynomial function f:\mathbb^n \to \mathbb^m, then consider the (homotopy) pullback diagram :\begin Z & \to & \mathbb^n \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow f \\ \ & \xrightarrow & \mathbb^m \end where the bottom arrow is the inclusion of a point at the origin. Then, the derived scheme Z has tangent complex at x\in Z is given by the morphism :\mathbf_x = T_x\mathbb^n \xrightarrow T_0\mathbb^m where the complex is of amplitude 1,0/math>. Notice that the tangent space can be recovered using H^0 and the H^ measures how far away x \in Z is from being a smooth point.


Stack quotients

Given a stack /G/math> there is a nice description for the tangent complex: : \mathbf_x = \mathfrak_x \to T_xX If the morphism is not injective, the H^ measures again how singular the space is. In addition, the Euler characteristic of this complex yields the correct (virtual) dimension of the quotient stack. In particular, if we look at the moduli stack of principal G-bundles, then the tangent complex is just \mathfrak 1/math>.


Derived schemes in complex Morse theory

Derived schemes can be used for analyzing topological properties of affine varieties. For example, consider a smooth affine variety M \subset \mathbb^n. If we take a regular function f:M \to \Complex and consider the section of \Omega_M :\begin \Gamma_: M \to \Omega_M \\ x \mapsto (x,df(x)) \end Then, we can take the derived pullback diagram :\begin X & \to & M \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow 0 \\ M & \xrightarrow & \Omega_M \end where 0 is the zero section, constructing a derived critical locus of the regular function f.


Example

Consider the affine variety :M = \operatorname (\Complex ,y and the regular function given by f(x,y) = x^2 + y^3. Then, :\Gamma_(a,b) = (a,b,2a,3b^2) where we treat the last two coordinates as dx, dy. The derived critical locus is then the derived scheme :\textbf\left( \frac \otimes_^ \frac \right) Note that since the left term in the derived intersection is a complete intersection, we can compute a complex representing the derived ring as :K_^\bullet(\Complex ,y,dx,dy\otimes_ \frac where K_^\bullet(\Complex ,y,dx,dy is the koszul complex.


Derived critical locus

Consider a smooth function f:M \to \Complex where M is smooth. The derived enhancement of \operatorname(f), the derived critical locus, is given by the differential graded scheme (M,\mathcal^\bullet, Q) where the underlying graded ring are the polyvector fields :\mathcal^ = \wedge^i T_M and the differential Q is defined by contraction by df.


Example

For example, if :\begin f:\Complex^2 \to \Complex \\ f(x,y) = x^2 + y^3 \end we have the complex : R\cdot \partial x\wedge \partial y \xrightarrow R \cdot \partial x \oplus R \cdot \partial y \xrightarrow R representing the derived enhancement of \operatorname(f).


Notes

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References


Reaching Derived Algebraic Geometry - Mathoverflow
* M. Anel
The Geometry of Ambiguity
* K. Behrend
On the Virtual Fundamental Class
* P. Goerss
Topological_Modular_Forms_[after_Hopkins,_Miller,_and_Lurie
/nowiki>.html" ;"title="fter Hopkins, Miller, and Lurie">Topological Modular Forms [after Hopkins, Miller, and Lurie
/nowiki>">fter Hopkins, Miller, and Lurie">Topological Modular Forms [after Hopkins, Miller, and Lurie
/nowiki>* B. Toën
Introduction to derived algebraic geometry
* M. Manetti
The cotangent complex in characteristic 0
* G. Vezzosi
The derived critical locus I - basics
Algebraic geometry Topology