In algebraic geometry, a Deligne–Mumford stack is a stack F such that
Pierre Deligne and David Mumford introduced this notion in 1969 when they proved that moduli spaces of stable curves of fixed arithmetic genus are proper smooth Deligne–Mumford stacks.
If the "étale" is weakened to "smooth", then such a stack is called an algebraic stack (also called an Artin stack, after Michael Artin). An algebraic space is Deligne–Mumford.
A key fact about a Deligne–Mumford stack F is that any X in
F(B)
Deligne–Mumford stacks are typically constructed by taking the stack quotient of some variety where the stabilizers are finite groups. For example, consider the action of the cyclic group
Cn=\langlea\midan=1\rangle
C2
2/C | |
[C | |
n] |
(Sch/C)fppf
S\toC
A2\inSch/Spec(Z[\zetan])
Non-affine examples come up when taking the stack quotient for weighted projective space/varieties. For example, the space
P(2,3)
[C2-\{0\}/C*]
C*
(x,y)=(λ2x,λ3y)
x=0
y=0
λ=\zeta3
λ=\zeta2
See main article: Stacky curve.
One simple non-example of a Deligne–Mumford stack is
[pt/C*]