In
mathematics, in particular in the theory of
schemes in
algebraic geometry, a flat morphism ''f'' from a scheme ''X'' to a scheme ''Y'' is a morphism such that the induced map on every
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 ...
is a flat map of rings, i.e.,
:
is a flat map for all ''P'' in ''X''. A map of rings
is called flat if it is a homomorphism that makes ''B'' a
flat ''A''-module. A morphism of schemes is called faithfully flat if it is both surjective and flat.
Two basic intuitions regarding flat morphisms are:
*flatness is a
generic property
In mathematics, properties that hold for "typical" examples are called generic properties. For instance, a generic property of a class of functions is one that is true of "almost all" of those functions, as in the statements, "A generic polyno ...
; and
*the failure of flatness occurs on the jumping set of the morphism.
The first of these comes from
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. Promi ...
: subject to some
finiteness conditions on ''f'', it can be shown that there is a non-empty open subscheme
of ''Y'', such that ''f'' restricted to ''Y''′ is a flat morphism (
generic flatness In algebraic geometry and commutative algebra, the theorems of generic flatness and generic freeness state that under certain hypotheses, a sheaf of modules on a scheme is flat or free. They are due to Alexander Grothendieck.
Generic flatness ...
). Here 'restriction' is interpreted by means of the
fiber product of schemes
In mathematics, specifically in algebraic geometry, the fiber product of schemes is a fundamental construction. It has many interpretations and special cases. For example, the fiber product describes how an algebraic variety over one field dete ...
, applied to ''f'' and the
inclusion map
In mathematics, if A is a subset of B, then the inclusion map (also inclusion function, insertion, or canonical injection) is the function \iota that sends each element x of A to x, treated as an element of B:
\iota : A\rightarrow B, \qquad \iot ...
of
into ''Y''.
For the second, the idea is that morphisms in algebraic geometry can exhibit discontinuities of a kind that are detected by flatness. For instance, the operation of
blowing down
In mathematics, blowing up or blowup is a type of geometric transformation which replaces a subspace of a given space with all the directions pointing out of that subspace. For example, the blowup of a point in a plane replaces the point with the ...
in the
birational geometry
In mathematics, birational geometry is a field of algebraic geometry in which the goal is to determine when two algebraic varieties are isomorphic outside lower-dimensional subsets. This amounts to studying mappings that are given by rationa ...
of an
algebraic surface, can give a single
fiber
Fiber or fibre (from la, fibra, links=no) is a natural or artificial substance that is significantly longer than it is wide. Fibers are often used in the manufacture of other materials. The strongest engineering materials often incorpora ...
that is of dimension 1 when all the others have dimension 0. It turns out (retrospectively) that flatness in morphisms is directly related to controlling this sort of
semicontinuity, or one-sided jumping.
Flat morphisms are used to define (more than one version of) the
flat topos In mathematics, the flat topology is a Grothendieck topology used in algebraic geometry. It is used to define the theory of flat cohomology; it also plays a fundamental role in the theory of descent (faithfully flat descent). The term ''flat'' her ...
, and
flat cohomology of sheaves from it. This is a deep-lying theory, and has not been found easy to handle. The concept of
étale morphism
In algebraic geometry, an étale morphism () is a morphism of schemes that is formally étale and locally of finite presentation. This is an algebraic analogue of the notion of a local isomorphism in the complex analytic topology. They satisfy ...
(and so
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 conject ...
) depends on the flat morphism concept: an étale morphism being flat, of finite type, and
unramified
In geometry, ramification is 'branching out', in the way that the square root function, for complex numbers, can be seen to have two ''branches'' differing in sign. The term is also used from the opposite perspective (branches coming together) ...
.
Examples/non-examples
Consider the affine scheme
:
induced from the obvious morphism of algebras
:
Since proving flatness for this morphism amounts to computing
:
we resolve the complex numbers
:
and tensor by the module representing our scheme giving the sequence of