Sheaf (mathematics) explained
In mathematics, a sheaf (: sheaves) is a tool for systematically tracking data (such as sets, abelian groups, rings) attached to the open sets of a topological space and defined locally with regard to them. For example, for each open set, the data could be the ring of continuous functions defined on that open set. Such data are well behaved in that they can be restricted to smaller open sets, and also the data assigned to an open set are equivalent to all collections of compatible data assigned to collections of smaller open sets covering the original open set (intuitively, every datum is the sum of its constituent data).
The field of mathematics that studies sheaves is called sheaf theory.
Sheaves are understood conceptually as general and abstract objects. Their correct definition is rather technical. They are specifically defined as sheaves of sets or as sheaves of rings, for example, depending on the type of data assigned to the open sets.
There are also maps (or morphisms) from one sheaf to another; sheaves (of a specific type, such as sheaves of abelian groups) with their morphisms on a fixed topological space form a category. On the other hand, to each continuous map there is associated both a direct image functor, taking sheaves and their morphisms on the domain to sheaves and morphisms on the codomain, and an inverse image functor operating in the opposite direction. These functors, and certain variants of them, are essential parts of sheaf theory.
Due to their general nature and versatility, sheaves have several applications in topology and especially in algebraic and differential geometry. First, geometric structures such as that of a differentiable manifold or a scheme can be expressed in terms of a sheaf of rings on the space. In such contexts, several geometric constructions such as vector bundles or divisors are naturally specified in terms of sheaves. Second, sheaves provide the framework for a very general cohomology theory, which encompasses also the "usual" topological cohomology theories such as singular cohomology. Especially in algebraic geometry and the theory of complex manifolds, sheaf cohomology provides a powerful link between topological and geometric properties of spaces. Sheaves also provide the basis for the theory of D-modules, which provide applications to the theory of differential equations. In addition, generalisations of sheaves to more general settings than topological spaces, such as Grothendieck topology, have provided applications to mathematical logic and to number theory.
Definitions and examples
(e.g., a
differentiable manifold) can be naturally
localised or
restricted to
open subsets
: typical examples include
continuous real-valued or
complex-valued functions,
-times
differentiable (real-valued or complex-valued) functions,
bounded real-valued functions,
vector fields, and
sections of any
vector bundle on the space. The ability to restrict data to smaller open subsets gives rise to the concept of presheaves. Roughly speaking, sheaves are then those presheaves, where local data can be glued to global data.
Presheaves
See also: Presheaf (category theory).
Let
be a topological space. A
presheaf
of sets on
consists of the following data:
of
, there exists a set
. This set is also denoted
. The elements in this set are called the
sections of
over
. The sections of
over
are called the
global sections of
.
- For each inclusion of open sets
, a function
\operatorname{res}V,\colonF(U) → F(V)
. In view of many of the examples below, the morphisms
are called
restriction morphisms. If
, then its restriction
is often denoted
by analogy with restriction of functions.The restriction morphisms are required to satisfy two additional (
functorial) properties:
of
, the restriction morphism
\operatorname{res}U,\colonF(U) → F(U)
is the identity morphism on
.
- If we have three open sets
, then the
composite
Informally, the second axiom says it does not matter whether we restrict to
W in one step or restrict first to
V, then to
W. A concise functorial reformulation of this definition is given further below.
Many examples of presheaves come from different classes of functions: to any
, one can assign the set
of continuous real-valued functions on
. The restriction maps are then just given by restricting a continuous function on
to a smaller open subset
, which again is a continuous function. The two presheaf axioms are immediately checked, thereby giving an example of a presheaf. This can be extended to a sheaf of holomorphic functions
and a sheaf of smooth functions
.Another common class of examples is assigning to
the set of constant real-valued functions on
. This presheaf is called the
constant presheaf associated to
and is denoted
}^.
Sheaves
Given a presheaf, a natural question to ask is to what extent its sections over an open set
are specified by their restrictions to open subsets of
. A sheaf
is a presheaf whose sections are, in a technical sense, uniquely determined by their restrictions.Axiomatically, a sheaf is a presheaf that satisfies both of the following axioms:
- (Locality) Suppose
is an open set,
is an open cover of
with
for all
, and
are sections. If
for all
, then
.
- (Gluing) Suppose
is an open set,
is an open cover of
with
for all
, and
is a family of sections. If all pairs of sections agree on the overlap of their domains, that is, if
for all
, then there exists a section
such that
for all
.
In both of these axioms, the hypothesis on the open cover is equivalent to the assumption that .
The section
whose existence is guaranteed by axiom 2 is called the gluing
, concatenation
, or collation
of the sections s
i
. By axiom 1 it is unique. Sections
and
satisfying the agreement precondition of axiom 2 are often called compatible
; thus axioms 1 and 2 together state that any collection of pairwise compatible sections can be uniquely glued together
. A separated presheaf
, or monopresheaf
, is a presheaf satisfying axiom 1.The presheaf consisting of continuous functions mentioned above is a sheaf. This assertion reduces to checking that, given continuous functions
which agree on the intersections
, there is a unique continuous function
whose restriction equals the
. By contrast, the constant presheaf is usually
not a sheaf as it fails to satisfy the locality axiom on the empty set (this is explained in more detail at
constant sheaf).
Presheaves and sheaves are typically denoted by capital letters,
being particularly common, presumably for the
French word for sheaf,
faisceau. Use of calligraphic letters such as
is also common.
It can be shown that to specify a sheaf, it is enough to specify its restriction to the open sets of a basis for the topology of the underlying space. Moreover, it can also be shown that it is enough to verify the sheaf axioms above relative to the open sets of a covering. This observation is used to construct another example which is crucial in algebraic geometry, namely quasi-coherent sheaves. Here the topological space in question is the spectrum of a commutative ring
, whose points are the prime ideals
in
. The open sets
Df:=\{p\subseteqR,f\notinp\}
form a basis for the
Zariski topology on this space. Given an
-module
, there is a sheaf, denoted by
on the Spec
, that satisfies
the
localization of
at
.
There is another characterization of sheaves that is equivalent to the previously discussed.A presheaf
is a sheaf if and only if for any open
and any open cover
of
,
is the fibre product
l{F}(U)\congl{F}(Ua) x l{F(Ua\capUb)}l{F}(Ub)
. This characterization is useful in construction of sheaves, for example, if
are abelian sheaves, then the kernel of sheaves morphism
is a sheaf, since projective limits commutes with projective limits. On the other hand, the cokernel is not always a sheaf because inductive limit not necessarily commutes with projective limits. One of the way to fix this is to consider Noetherian topological spaces; every open sets are compact so that the cokernel is a sheaf, since finite projective limits commutes with inductive limits.
Further examples
Sheaf of sections of a continuous map
Any continuous map
of topological spaces determines a sheaf
on
by setting
\Gamma(Y/X)(U)=\{s:U\toY,f\circs=\operatorname{id}U\}.
Any such
is commonly called a
section of
, and this example is the reason why the elements in
are generally called sections. This construction is especially important when
is the projection of a
fiber bundle onto its base space. For example, the sheaves of smooth functions are the sheaves of sections of the trivial bundle. Another example: the sheaf of sections of
\C\stackrel{\exp}\to\C\setminus\{0\}
is the sheaf which assigns to any
the set of branches of the
complex logarithm on
.
Given a point
and an abelian group
, the skyscraper sheaf
is defined as follows: if
is an open set containing
, then
. If
does not contain
, then
, the
trivial group. The restriction maps are either the identity on
, if both open sets contain
, or the zero map otherwise.
Sheaves on manifolds
On an
-dimensional
-manifold
, there are a number of important sheaves, such as the sheaf of
-times continuously differentiable functions
(with
). Its sections on some open
are the
-functions
. For
, this sheaf is called the
structure sheaf and is denoted
. The nonzero
functions also form a sheaf, denoted
.
Differential forms (of degree
) also form a sheaf
. In all these examples, the restriction morphisms are given by restricting functions or forms.
The assignment sending
to the compactly supported functions on
is not a sheaf, since there is, in general, no way to preserve this property by passing to a smaller open subset. Instead, this forms a
cosheaf, a
dual concept where the restriction maps go in the opposite direction than with sheaves. However, taking the
dual of these vector spaces does give a sheaf, the sheaf of
distributions.
Presheaves that are not sheaves
In addition to the constant presheaf mentioned above, which is usually not a sheaf, there are further examples of presheaves that are not sheaves:
be the
two-point topological space
with the discrete topology. Define a presheaf
as follows:
The restriction map
is the projection of
onto its first coordinate, and the restriction map
is the projection of
onto its second coordinate.
is a presheaf that is not separated: a global section is determined by three numbers, but the values of that section over
and
determine only two of those numbers. So while we can glue any two sections over
and
, we cannot glue them uniquely.
be the
real line, and let
be the set of
bounded continuous functions on
. This is not a sheaf because it is not always possible to glue. For example, let
be the set of all
such that
. The identity function
is bounded on each
. Consequently, we get a section
on
. However, these sections do not glue, because the function
is not bounded on the real line. Consequently
is a presheaf, but not a sheaf. In fact,
is separated because it is a sub-presheaf of the sheaf of continuous functions.
Motivating sheaves from complex analytic spaces and algebraic geometry
One of the historical motivations for sheaves have come from studying complex manifolds,[1] complex analytic geometry,[2] and scheme theory from algebraic geometry. This is because in all of the previous cases, we consider a topological space
together with a structure sheaf
giving it the structure of a complex manifold, complex analytic space, or scheme. This perspective of equipping a topological space with a sheaf is essential to the theory of locally ringed spaces (see below).
Technical challenges with complex manifolds
One of the main historical motivations for introducing sheaves was constructing a device which keeps track of holomorphic functions on complex manifolds. For example, on a compact complex manifold
(like
complex projective space or the vanishing locus in projective space of a
homogeneous polynomial), the
only holomorphic functions
are the constant functions.
[3] [4] This means there exist two compact complex manifolds
which are not isomorphic, but nevertheless their rings of global holomorphic functions, denoted
, are isomorphic. Contrast this with smooth manifolds where every manifold
can be embedded inside some
, hence its ring of smooth functions
comes from restricting the smooth functions from
. Another complexity when considering the ring of holomorphic functions on a complex manifold
is given a small enough open set
, the holomorphic functions will be isomorphic to
. Sheaves are a direct tool for dealing with this complexity since they make it possible to keep track of the holomorphic structure on the underlying topological space of
on arbitrary open subsets
. This means as
becomes more complex topologically, the ring
can be expressed from gluing the
. Note that sometimes this sheaf is denoted
or just
, or even
when we want to emphasize the space the structure sheaf is associated to.
Tracking submanifolds with sheaves
Another common example of sheaves can be constructed by considering a complex submanifold
. There is an associated sheaf
which takes an open subset
and gives the ring of holomorphic functions on
. This kind of formalism was found to be extremely powerful and motivates a lot of
homological algebra such as
sheaf cohomology since an
intersection theory can be built using these kinds of sheaves from the Serre intersection formula.
Operations with sheaves
Morphisms
Morphisms of sheaves are, roughly speaking, analogous to functions between them. In contrast to a function between sets, which is simply an assignment of outputs to inputs, morphisms of sheaves are also required to be compatible with the local–global structures of the underlying sheaves. This idea is made precise in the following definition.
Let
and
be two sheaves of sets (respectively abelian groups, rings, etc.) on
. A
morphism
consists of a morphism
of sets (respectively abelian groups, rings, etc.) for each open set
of
, subject to the condition that this morphism is compatible with restrictions. In other words, for every open subset
of an open set
, the following diagram is
commutative.
\begin{array}{rcl}
F(U)&\xrightarrow{ \varphiU }&G(U)\\
rV,Ul\downarrow&&l\downarrowr'V,U\\
F(V)&\xrightarrow[{ \varphiV }]{}&G(V)
\end{array}
For example, taking the derivative gives a morphism of sheaves on
:
Indeed, given an (
-times continuously differentiable) function
(with
in
open), the restriction (to a smaller open subset
) of its derivative equals the derivative of
.
With this notion of morphism, sheaves of sets (respectively abelian groups, rings, etc.) on a fixed topological space
form a
category. The general categorical notions of
mono-,
epi- and
isomorphisms can therefore be applied to sheaves.
A morphism
of sheaves on
is an isomorphism (respectively monomorphism) if and only if there exists an open cover
of
such that
\colonF(U\alpha) → G(U\alpha)
are isomorphisms (respectively injective morphisms) of sets (respectively abelian groups, rings, etc.) for all
. These statements give examples of how to work with sheaves using local information, but it's important to note that we cannot check if a morphism of sheaves is an epimorphism in the same manner. Indeed the statement that maps on the level of open sets
\varphiU\colonF(U) → G(U)
are not always surjective for epimorphisms of sheaves is equivalent to non-exactness of the global sections functor—or equivalently, to non-triviality of
sheaf cohomology.
Stalks of a sheaf
See main article: Stalk (sheaf).
The stalk
of a sheaf
captures the properties of a sheaf "around" a point
, generalizing the
germs of functions.Here, "around" means that, conceptually speaking, one looks at smaller and smaller
neighborhoods of the point. Of course, no single neighborhood will be small enough, which requires considering a limit of some sort. More precisely, the stalk is defined by
l{F}x=\varinjlimU\nil{F}(U),
the
direct limit being over all open subsets of
containing the given point
. In other words, an element of the stalk is given by a section over some open neighborhood of
, and two such sections are considered equivalent if their restrictions agree on a smaller neighborhood.
The natural morphism
takes a section
in
to its
germ at
. This generalises the usual definition of a
germ.
In many situations, knowing the stalks of a sheaf is enough to control the sheaf itself. For example, whether or not a morphism of sheaves is a monomorphism, epimorphism, or isomorphism can be tested on the stalks. In this sense, a sheaf is determined by its stalks, which are a local data. By contrast, the global information present in a sheaf, i.e., the global sections, i.e., the sections
on the whole space
, typically carry less information. For example, for a
compact complex manifold
, the global sections of the sheaf of holomorphic functions are just
, since any holomorphic function
is constant by
Liouville's theorem.
[3] Turning a presheaf into a sheaf
It is frequently useful to take the data contained in a presheaf and to express it as a sheaf. It turns out that there is a best possible way to do this. It takes a presheaf
and produces a new sheaf
called the
sheafification or
sheaf associated to the presheaf
. For example, the sheafification of the constant presheaf (see above) is called the
constant sheaf. Despite its name, its sections are
locally constant functions.
The sheaf
can be constructed using the étalé space of
, namely as the sheaf of sections of the map
Another construction of the sheaf
proceeds by means of a functor
from presheaves to presheaves that gradually improves the properties of a presheaf: for any presheaf
,
is a separated presheaf, and for any separated presheaf
,
is a sheaf. The associated sheaf
is given by
.
[5] The idea that the sheaf
is the best possible approximation to
by a sheaf is made precise using the following
universal property: there is a natural morphism of presheaves
so that for any sheaf
and any morphism of presheaves
, there is a unique morphism of sheaves
such that
. In fact
is the left
adjoint functor to the inclusion functor (or
forgetful functor) from the category of sheaves to the category of presheaves, and
is the unit of the adjunction. In this way, the category of sheaves turns into a
Giraud subcategory of presheaves. This categorical situation is the reason why the sheafification functor appears in constructing cokernels of sheaf morphisms or tensor products of sheaves, but not for kernels, say.
Subsheaves, quotient sheaves
If
is a
subsheaf of a sheaf
of abelian groups, then the
quotient sheaf
is the sheaf associated to the presheaf
; in other words, the quotient sheaf fits into an exact sequence of sheaves of abelian groups;
(this is also called a sheaf extension.)
Let
be sheaves of abelian groups. The set
of morphisms of sheaves from
to
forms an abelian group (by the abelian group structure of
). The
sheaf hom of
and
, denoted by,
is the sheaf of abelian groups
U\mapsto\operatorname{Hom}(F|U,G|U)
where
is the sheaf on
given by
(note sheafification is not needed here). The direct sum of
and
is the sheaf given by
, and the tensor product of
and
is the sheaf associated to the presheaf
.
; the above is the special case when
is the
constant sheaf
}.
Basic functoriality
See main article: Image functors for sheaves.
Since the data of a (pre-)sheaf depends on the open subsets of the base space, sheaves on different topological spaces are unrelated to each other in the sense that there are no morphisms between them. However, given a continuous map
between two topological spaces, pushforward and pullback relate sheaves on
to those on
and vice versa.
Direct image
The pushforward (also known as direct image) of a sheaf
on
is the sheaf defined by
Here
is an open subset of
, so that its preimage is open in
by the continuity of
. This construction recovers the skyscraper sheaf
mentioned above:
where
is the inclusion, and
is regarded as a sheaf on the
singleton (by
S(\{*\})=S,S(\emptyset)=\emptyset
.
For a map between locally compact spaces, the direct image with compact support is a subsheaf of the direct image. By definition,
consists of those
whose
support is
proper map over
. If
is proper itself, then
, but in general they disagree.
Inverse image
The pullback or inverse image goes the other way: it produces a sheaf on
, denoted
out of a sheaf
on
. If
is the inclusion of an open subset, then the inverse image is just a restriction, i.e., it is given by
for an open
in
. A sheaf
(on some space
) is called
locally constant if
by some open subsets
such that the restriction of
to all these open subsets is constant. On a wide range of topological spaces
, such sheaves are
equivalent to
representations of the
fundamental group
.
For general maps
, the definition of
is more involved; it is detailed at
inverse image functor. The stalk is an essential special case of the pullback in view of a natural identification, where
is as above:
More generally, stalks satisfy
.
Extension by zero
For the inclusion
of an open subset, the
extension by zero
(pronounced "j lower shriek of F") of a sheaf
of abelian groups on
is the sheafification of the presheaf defined by
if
and
otherwise.For a sheaf
on
, this construction is in a sense complementary to
, where
is the inclusion of the complement of
:
for
in
, and the stalk is zero otherwise, while
for
in
, and equals
otherwise.
More generally, if
is a locally closed subset, then there exists an open
of
containing
such that
is closed in
. Let
and
be the natural inclusions. Then the
extension by zero of a sheaf
on
is defined by
.
Due to its nice behavior on stalks, the extension by zero functor is useful for reducing sheaf-theoretic questions on
to ones on the strata of a
stratification, i.e., a decomposition of
into smaller, locally closed subsets.
Complements
Sheaves in more general categories
In addition to (pre-)sheaves as introduced above, where
is merely a set, it is in many cases important to keep track of additional structure on these sections. For example, the sections of the sheaf of continuous functions naturally form a real
vector space, and restriction is a
linear map between these vector spaces.
Presheaves with values in an arbitrary category
are defined by first considering the category of open sets on
to be the
posetal category
whose objects are the open sets of
and whose morphisms are inclusions. Then a
-valued presheaf on
is the same as a contravariant functor from
to
. Morphisms in this category of functors, also known as
natural transformations, are the same as the morphisms defined above, as can be seen by unraveling the definitions.
If the target category
admits all
limits, a
-valued presheaf is a sheaf if the following diagram is an
equalizer for every open cover
of any open set
:
F(U) → \prodiF(Ui){{{}\atop\longrightarrow}\atop{\longrightarrow\atop{}}}\prodi,F(Ui\capUj).
Here the first map is the product of the restriction maps
and the pair of arrows the products of the two sets of restrictions
\operatorname{res} | |
| Ui\capUj,Ui |
\colonF(Ui) → F(Ui\capUj)
and
\operatorname{res} | |
| Ui\capUj,Uj |
\colonF(Uj) → F(Ui\capUj).
If
is an
abelian category, this condition can also be rephrased by requiring that there is an
exact sequence0\toF(U)\to\prodiF(Ui)
\xrightarrow{\operatorname{res} | |
| Ui\capUj,Ui |
-
\operatorname{res} | |
| Ui\capUj,Uj |
} \prod_ F(U_i \cap U_j).
A particular case of this sheaf condition occurs for
being the empty set, and the index set
also being empty. In this case, the sheaf condition requires
to be the
terminal object in
.
Ringed spaces and sheaves of modules
See main article: Ringed space and Sheaf of modules.
In several geometrical disciplines, including algebraic geometry and differential geometry, the spaces come along with a natural sheaf of rings, often called the structure sheaf and denoted by
. Such a pair
is called a
ringed space. Many types of spaces can be defined as certain types of ringed spaces. Commonly, all the stalks
of the structure sheaf are
local rings, in which case the pair is called a
locally ringed space. For example, an
-dimensional
manifold
is a locally ringed space whose structure sheaf consists of
-functions on the open subsets of
. The property of being a
locally ringed space translates into the fact that such a function, which is nonzero at a point
, is also non-zero on a sufficiently small open neighborhood of
. Some authors actually
define real (or complex) manifolds to be locally ringed spaces that are locally isomorphic to the pair consisting of an open subset of
(respectively
) together with the sheaf of
(respectively holomorphic) functions. Similarly,
schemes, the foundational notion of spaces in algebraic geometry, are locally ringed spaces that are locally isomorphic to the
spectrum of a ring.
Given a ringed space, a sheaf of modules is a sheaf
such that on every open set
of
,
is an
-module and for every inclusion of open sets
, the restriction map
is compatible with the restriction map
: the restriction of
fs is the restriction of
times that of
for any
in
and
in
.
Most important geometric objects are sheaves of modules. For example, there is a one-to-one correspondence between vector bundles and locally free sheaves of
-modules. This paradigm applies to real vector bundles, complex vector bundles, or vector bundles in algebraic geometry (where
consists of smooth functions, holomorphic functions, or regular functions, respectively). Sheaves of solutions to differential equations are
-modules, that is, modules over the sheaf of
differential operators. On any topological space, modules over the constant sheaf
} are the same as
sheaves of abelian groups in the sense above.
There is a different inverse image functor for sheaves of modules over sheaves of rings. This functor is usually denoted
and it is distinct from
. See
inverse image functor.
Finiteness conditions for sheaves of modules
Finiteness conditions for module over commutative rings give rise to similar finiteness conditions for sheaves of modules:
is called
finitely generated (respectively
finitely presented) if, for every point
of
, there exists an open neighborhood
of
, a natural number
(possibly depending on
), and a surjective morphism of sheaves
(respectively, in addition a natural number
, and an exact sequence
.) Paralleling the notion of a
coherent module,
is called a
coherent sheaf if it is of finite type and if, for every open set
and every morphism of sheaves
(not necessarily surjective), the kernel of
is of finite type.
is
coherent if it is coherent as a module over itself. Like for modules, coherence is in general a strictly stronger condition than finite presentation. The
Oka coherence theorem states that the sheaf of holomorphic functions on a
complex manifold is coherent.
The étalé space of a sheaf
In the examples above it was noted that some sheaves occur naturally as sheaves of sections. In fact, all sheaves of sets can be represented as sheaves of sections of a topological space called the étalé space, from the French word étalé in French pronounced as /etale/, meaning roughly "spread out". If
is a sheaf over
, then the
étalé space (sometimes called the
étale space) of
is a topological space
together with a
local homeomorphism
such that the sheaf of sections
of
is
. The space
is usually very strange, and even if the sheaf
arises from a natural topological situation,
may not have any clear topological interpretation. For example, if
is the sheaf of sections of a continuous function
, then
if and only if
is a
local homeomorphism.
The étalé space
is constructed from the stalks of
over
. As a set, it is their disjoint union and
is the obvious map that takes the value
on the stalk of
over
. The topology of
is defined as follows. For each element
and each
, we get a germ of
at
, denoted
or
. These germs determine points of
. For any
and
, the union of these points (for all
) is declared to be open in
. Notice that each stalk has the discrete topology as subspace topology. Two morphisms between sheaves determine a continuous map of the corresponding étalé spaces that is compatible with the projection maps (in the sense that every germ is mapped to a germ over the same point). This makes the construction into a functor.The construction above determines an equivalence of categories between the category of sheaves of sets on
and the category of étalé spaces over
. The construction of an étalé space can also be applied to a presheaf, in which case the sheaf of sections of the étalé space recovers the sheaf associated to the given presheaf.This construction makes all sheaves into representable functors on certain categories of topological spaces. As above, let
be a sheaf on
, let
be its étalé space, and let
be the natural projection. Consider the overcategory
of topological spaces over
, that is, the category of topological spaces together with fixed continuous maps to
. Every object of this category is a continuous map
, and a morphism from
to
is a continuous map
that commutes with the two maps to
. There is a functor
sending an object
to
. For example, if
is the inclusion of an open subset, then\Gamma(i)=f-1F(U)=F(U)=\Gamma(F,U)
and for the inclusion of a point
, then\Gamma(i)=f-1F(\{x\})=F|x
is the stalk of
at
. There is a natural isomorphism(f-1F)(Y)\cong\operatorname{Hom}Top/X(f,\pi)
,
which shows that
(for the étalé space) represents the functor
.
is constructed so that the projection map
is a covering map. In algebraic geometry, the natural analog of a covering map is called an étale morphism. Despite its similarity to "étalé", the word étale in French pronounced as /etal/ has a different meaning in French. It is possible to turn
into a scheme and
into a morphism of schemes in such a way that
retains the same universal property, but
is not
in general an étale morphism because it is not quasi-finite. It is, however, formally étale.The definition of sheaves by étalé spaces is older than the definition given earlier in the article. It is still common in some areas of mathematics such as mathematical analysis.
Sheaf cohomology
See main article: Sheaf cohomology.
In contexts where the open set
is fixed, and the sheaf is regarded as a variable, the set
is also often denoted
As was noted above, this functor does not preserve epimorphisms. Instead, an epimorphism of sheaves
is a map with the following property: for any section
there is a covering
where
of open subsets, such that the restriction
are in the image of
. However,
itself need not be in the image of
. A concrete example of this phenomenon is the exponential map
between the sheaf of
holomorphic functions and non-zero holomorphic functions. This map is an epimorphism, which amounts to saying that any non-zero holomorphic function
(on some open subset in
, say), admits a
complex logarithm locally, i.e., after restricting
to appropriate open subsets. However,
need not have a logarithm globally.
Sheaf cohomology captures this phenomenon. More precisely, for an exact sequence of sheaves of abelian groups
(i.e., an epimorphism
whose kernel is
), there is a long exact sequence
By means of this sequence, the first cohomology group
is a measure for the non-surjectivity of the map between sections of
and
.
There are several different ways of constructing sheaf cohomology. introduced them by defining sheaf cohomology as the derived functor of
. This method is theoretically satisfactory, but, being based on
injective resolutions, of little use in concrete computations.
Godement resolutions are another general, but practically inaccessible approach.
Computing sheaf cohomology
Especially in the context of sheaves on manifolds, sheaf cohomology can often be computed using resolutions by soft sheaves, fine sheaves, and flabby sheaves (also known as flasque sheaves from the French flasque meaning flabby). For example, a partition of unity argument shows that the sheaf of smooth functions on a manifold is soft. The higher cohomology groups
for
vanish for soft sheaves, which gives a way of computing cohomology of other sheaves. For example, the
de Rham complex is a resolution of the constant sheaf
} on any smooth manifold, so the sheaf cohomology of
} is equal to its
de Rham cohomology.
A different approach is by Čech cohomology. Čech cohomology was the first cohomology theory developed for sheaves and it is well-suited to concrete calculations, such as computing the coherent sheaf cohomology of complex projective space
.
[6] It relates sections on open subsets of the space to cohomology classes on the space. In most cases, Čech cohomology computes the same cohomology groups as the derived functor cohomology. However, for some pathological spaces, Čech cohomology will give the correct
but incorrect higher cohomology groups. To get around this,
Jean-Louis Verdier developed
hypercoverings. Hypercoverings not only give the correct higher cohomology groups but also allow the open subsets mentioned above to be replaced by certain morphisms from another space. This flexibility is necessary in some applications, such as the construction of
Pierre Deligne's
mixed Hodge structures.
Many other coherent sheaf cohomology groups are found using an embedding
of a space
into a space with known cohomology, such as
, or some
weighted projective space. In this way, the known sheaf cohomology groups on these ambient spaces can be related to the sheaves
, giving
. For example, computing the coherent sheaf cohomology of projective plane curves is easily found. One big theorem in this space is the
Hodge decomposition found using a
spectral sequence associated to sheaf cohomology groups, proved by Deligne.
[7] [8] Essentially, the
-page with terms
the sheaf cohomology of a
smooth projective variety
, degenerates, meaning
. This gives the canonical Hodge structure on the cohomology groups
. It was later found these cohomology groups can be easily explicitly computed using
Griffiths residues. See
Jacobian ideal. These kinds of theorems lead to one of the deepest theorems about the cohomology of algebraic varieties,
the decomposition theorem, paving the path for
Mixed Hodge modules.
Another clean approach to the computation of some cohomology groups is the Borel–Bott–Weil theorem, which identifies the cohomology groups of some line bundles on flag manifolds with irreducible representations of Lie groups. This theorem can be used, for example, to easily compute the cohomology groups of all line bundles on projective space and grassmann manifolds.
In many cases there is a duality theory for sheaves that generalizes Poincaré duality. See Grothendieck duality and Verdier duality.
Derived categories of sheaves
The derived category of the category of sheaves of, say, abelian groups on some space X, denoted here as
, is the conceptual haven for sheaf cohomology, by virtue of the following relation:
Hn(X,lF)=\operatorname{Hom}D(X)(Z,lF[n]).
The adjunction between
, which is the left adjoint of
(already on the level of sheaves of abelian groups) gives rise to an adjunction
f-1:D(Y)\rightleftarrowsD(X):Rf*
(for
),where
is the derived functor. This latter functor encompasses the notion of sheaf cohomology since
for
.
Like
, the direct image with compact support
can also be derived. By virtue of the following isomorphism
parametrizes the
cohomology with compact support of the
fibers of
:
This isomorphism is an example of a
base change theorem. There is another adjunction
Rf!:D(X)\rightleftarrowsD(Y):f!.
Unlike all the functors considered above, the twisted (or exceptional) inverse image functor
is in general only defined on the level of
derived categories, i.e., the functor is not obtained as the derived functor of some functor between abelian categories. If
and
X is a smooth orientable manifold of dimension
n, then
f!\underlineR\cong\underlineR[n].
This computation, and the compatibility of the functors with duality (see
Verdier duality) can be used to obtain a high-brow explanation of
Poincaré duality. In the context of quasi-coherent sheaves on schemes, there is a similar duality known as
coherent duality.
Perverse sheaves are certain objects in
, i.e., complexes of sheaves (but not in general sheaves proper). They are an important tool to study the geometry of
singularities.
Derived categories of coherent sheaves and the Grothendieck group
Another important application of derived categories of sheaves is with the derived category of coherent sheaves on a scheme
denoted
. This was used by Grothendieck in his development of
intersection theory[9] using
derived categories and
K-theory, that the intersection product of subschemes
is represented in
K-theory as
[Y1] ⋅ [Y2]=
⊗ l{O
]\inK(Coh(X))
where
are
coherent sheaves defined by the
-modules given by their
structure sheaves.
Sites and topoi
See main article: Grothendieck topology and Topos.
André Weil's Weil conjectures stated that there was a cohomology theory for algebraic varieties over finite fields that would give an analogue of the Riemann hypothesis. The cohomology of a complex manifold can be defined as the sheaf cohomology of the locally constant sheaf
} in the Euclidean topology, which suggests defining a Weil cohomology theory in positive characteristic as the sheaf cohomology of a constant sheaf. But the only classical topology on such a variety is the
Zariski topology, and the Zariski topology has very few open sets, so few that the cohomology of any Zariski-constant sheaf on an irreducible variety vanishes (except in degree zero).
Alexandre Grothendieck solved this problem by introducing
Grothendieck topologies, which axiomatize the notion of
covering. Grothendieck's insight was that the definition of a sheaf depends only on the open sets of a topological space, not on the individual points. Once he had axiomatized the notion of covering, open sets could be replaced by other objects. A presheaf takes each one of these objects to data, just as before, and a sheaf is a presheaf that satisfies the gluing axiom with respect to our new notion of covering. This allowed Grothendieck to define
étale cohomology and
ℓ-adic cohomology, which eventually were used to prove the Weil conjectures.
A category with a Grothendieck topology is called a site. A category of sheaves on a site is called a topos or a Grothendieck topos. The notion of a topos was later abstracted by William Lawvere and Miles Tierney to define an elementary topos, which has connections to mathematical logic.
History
The first origins of sheaf theory are hard to pin down – they may be co-extensive with the idea of analytic continuation. It took about 15 years for a recognisable, free-standing theory of sheaves to emerge from the foundational work on cohomology.
- 1936 Eduard Čech introduces the nerve construction, for associating a simplicial complex to an open covering.
- 1938 Hassler Whitney gives a 'modern' definition of cohomology, summarizing the work since J. W. Alexander and Kolmogorov first defined cochains.
- 1943 Norman Steenrod publishes on homology with local coefficients.[10]
- 1945 Jean Leray publishes work carried out as a prisoner of war, motivated by proving fixed-point theorems for application to PDE theory; it is the start of sheaf theory and spectral sequences.[11]
- 1947 Henri Cartan reproves the de Rham theorem by sheaf methods, in correspondence with André Weil (see De Rham–Weil theorem). Leray gives a sheaf definition in his courses via closed sets (the later carapaces).
- 1948 The Cartan seminar writes up sheaf theory for the first time.
- 1950 The "second edition" sheaf theory from the Cartan seminar: the sheaf space (espace étalé) definition is used, with stalkwise structure. Supports are introduced, and cohomology with supports. Continuous mappings give rise to spectral sequences. At the same time Kiyoshi Oka introduces an idea (adjacent to that) of a sheaf of ideals, in several complex variables.
- 1951 The Cartan seminar proves theorems A and B, based on Oka's work.
- 1953 The finiteness theorem for coherent sheaves in the analytic theory is proved by Cartan and Jean-Pierre Serre,[12] as is Serre duality.
- 1954 Serre's paper Faisceaux algébriques cohérents (published in 1955) introduces sheaves into algebraic geometry. These ideas are immediately exploited by Friedrich Hirzebruch, who writes a major 1956 book on topological methods.
- 1955 Alexander Grothendieck in lectures in Kansas defines abelian category and presheaf, and by using injective resolutions allows direct use of sheaf cohomology on all topological spaces, as derived functors.
- 1956 Oscar Zariski's report Algebraic sheaf theory
- 1957 Grothendieck's Tohoku paper rewrites homological algebra; he proves Grothendieck duality (i.e., Serre duality for possibly singular algebraic varieties).
- 1957 onwards: Grothendieck extends sheaf theory in line with the needs of algebraic geometry, introducing: schemes and general sheaves on them, local cohomology, derived categories (with Verdier), and Grothendieck topologies. There emerges also his influential schematic idea of 'six operations' in homological algebra.
- 1958 Roger Godement's book on sheaf theory is published. At around this time Mikio Sato proposes his hyperfunctions, which will turn out to have sheaf-theoretic nature.
At this point sheaves had become a mainstream part of mathematics, with use by no means restricted to algebraic topology. It was later discovered that the logic in categories of sheaves is intuitionistic logic (this observation is now often referred to as Kripke–Joyal semantics, but probably should be attributed to a number of authors).
See also
References
- (oriented towards conventional topological applications)
- What is a perverse sheaf?. de Cataldo. Andrea Mark. Luca . Migliorini. Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 2010. 57. 5. 632–4 . 1004.2983 . 2010arXiv1004.2983D . 2664042.
- (updated edition of a classic using enough sheaf theory to show its power)
- (advanced techniques such as the derived category and vanishing cycles on the most reasonable spaces)
- (category theory and toposes emphasised)
- (pedagogic treatment)
- Book: Rosiak, Daniel . Sheaf theory through examples . 2022 . 978-0-262-37042-4 . Cambridge, Massachusetts . 10.7551/mitpress/12581.001.0001 . 253133215 . 1333708310. (introductory book with open access)
Notes and References
- Web site: Demailly. Jean-Pierre. Complex Analytic and Differential Geometry. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200828212129/https://www-fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr/~demailly/manuscripts/agbook.pdf. 28 August 2020.
- Web site: Cartan. Henri. Variétés analytiques complexes et cohomologie. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20201008164857/http://www.inp.nsk.su/~silagadz/Cartan.pdf. 8 October 2020.
- Web site: differential geometry - Holomorphic functions on a complex compact manifold are only constants. 2020-10-07. Mathematics Stack Exchange.
- 10.2307/1969438. 1969438 . Hawley . Newton S. . A Theorem on Compact Complex Manifolds . . 1950 . 52 . 3 . 637–641 .
- [Séminaire de Géométrie Algébrique du Bois Marie#SGA 4|SGA 4]
- Hartshorne (1977), Theorem III.5.1.
- Deligne. Pierre. 1971. Théorie de Hodge : II. Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS. en. 40. 5–57. 10.1007/BF02684692 . 118967613 .
- Deligne. Pierre. 1974. Théorie de Hodge : III. Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS. en. 44. 5–77. 10.1007/BF02685881 . 189777706 .
- Web site: Grothendieck. Formalisme des intersections sur les schema algebriques propres.
- 10.2307/1969099. 1969099 . Steenrod . N. E. . Homology with Local Coefficients . Annals of Mathematics . 1943 . 44 . 4 . 610–627 .
- Book: Dieudonné, Jean . Jean Dieudonné . A history of algebraic and differential topology 1900–1960 . Birkhäuser . 1989 . 123–141 . 978-0-8176-3388-2.
- Un théorème de finitude concernant les variétés analytiques compactes . 0050.17701 . Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de l'Académie des Sciences de Paris . 1953 . 237 . 128–130 . Cartan . Henri . Serre . Jean-Pierre .