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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 geometrica ...
, an action of a group scheme is a generalization of a group action to a group scheme. Precisely, given a group ''S''-scheme ''G'', a left action of ''G'' on an ''S''-scheme ''X'' is an ''S''-morphism :\sigma: G \times_S X \to X such that * (associativity) \sigma \circ (1_G \times \sigma) = \sigma \circ (m \times 1_X), where m: G \times_S G \to G is the group law, * (unitality) \sigma \circ (e \times 1_X) = 1_X, where e: S \to G is the identity section of ''G''. A right action of ''G'' on ''X'' is defined analogously. A scheme equipped with a left or right action of a group scheme ''G'' is called a ''G''-scheme. An equivariant morphism between ''G''-schemes is a
morphism of schemes In algebraic geometry, a morphism of schemes generalizes a morphism of algebraic varieties just as a scheme generalizes an algebraic variety. It is, by definition, a morphism in the category of schemes. A morphism of algebraic stacks generalizes a ...
that intertwines the respective ''G''-actions. More generally, one can also consider (at least some special case of) an action of a group functor: viewing ''G'' as a functor, an action is given as a natural transformation satisfying the conditions analogous to the above.In details, given a group-scheme action \sigma, for each morphism T \to S, \sigma determines a group action G(T) \times X(T) \to X(T); i.e., the group G(T) acts on the set of ''T''-points X(T). Conversely, if for each T \to S, there is a group action \sigma_T: G(T) \times X(T) \to X(T) and if those actions are compatible; i.e., they form a natural transformation, then, by the Yoneda lemma, they determine a group-scheme action \sigma: G \times_S X \to X. Alternatively, some authors study group action in the language of a groupoid; a group-scheme action is then an example of a groupoid scheme.


Constructs

The usual constructs for a group action such as orbits generalize to a group-scheme action. Let \sigma be a given group-scheme action as above. *Given a T-valued point x: T \to X, the orbit map \sigma_x: G \times_S T \to X \times_S T is given as (\sigma \circ (1_G \times x), p_2). *The orbit of ''x'' is the image of the orbit map \sigma_x. *The stabilizer of ''x'' is the fiber over \sigma_x of the map (x, 1_T): T \to X \times_S T.


Problem of constructing a quotient

Unlike a set-theoretic group action, there is no straightforward way to construct a quotient for a group-scheme action. One exception is the case when the action is free, the case of a principal fiber bundle. There are several approaches to overcome this difficulty: * Level structure - Perhaps the oldest, the approach replaces an object to classify by an object together with a level structure * Geometric invariant theory - throw away bad orbits and then take a quotient. The drawback is that there is no canonical way to introduce the notion of "bad orbits"; the notion depends on a choice of linearization. See also:
categorical quotient In algebraic geometry, given a category ''C'', a categorical quotient of an object ''X'' with action of a group ''G'' is a morphism \pi: X \to Y that :(i) is invariant; i.e., \pi \circ \sigma = \pi \circ p_2 where \sigma: G \times X \to X is the g ...
, GIT quotient. *
Borel construction In mathematics, equivariant cohomology (or ''Borel cohomology'') is a cohomology theory from algebraic topology which applies to topological spaces with a ''group action''. It can be viewed as a common generalization of group cohomology and an ord ...
- this is an approach essentially from algebraic topology; this approach requires one to work with an infinite-dimensional space. *Analytic approach, the theory of Teichmüller space * Quotient stack - in a sense, this is the ultimate answer to the problem. Roughly, a "quotient prestack" is the category of orbits and one
stackify Stackify LLC is an American software company based in Leawood, Kansas Leawood is a city in Johnson County, Kansas, United States, and is part of the Kansas City metropolitan area. As of the 2020 census, the population of the city was 33,902 ...
(i.e., the introduction of the notion of a torsor) it to get a quotient stack. Depending on applications, another approach would be to shift the focus away from a space then onto stuff on a space; e.g., topos. So the problem shifts from the classification of orbits to that of equivariant objects.


See also

* groupoid scheme *
Sumihiro's theorem In algebraic geometry, Sumihiro's theorem, introduced by , states that a normal algebraic variety with an action of a torus can be covered Cover or covers may refer to: Packaging * Another name for a lid * Cover (philately), generic term for ...
* equivariant sheaf * Borel fixed-point theorem


References

* {{algebraic-geometry-stub Algebraic geometry