Semiorthogonal decomposition explained
In mathematics, a semiorthogonal decomposition is a way to divide a triangulated category into simpler pieces. One way to produce a semiorthogonal decomposition is from an exceptional collection, a special sequence of objects in a triangulated category. For an algebraic variety X, it has been fruitful to study semiorthogonal decompositions of the bounded derived category of coherent sheaves,
.
Semiorthogonal decomposition
Alexei Bondal and Mikhail Kapranov (1989) defined a semiorthogonal decomposition of a triangulated category
to be a sequence
of
strictly full triangulated subcategories such that:
and all objects
and
, every morphism from
to
is zero. That is, there are "no morphisms from right to left".
is generated by
. That is, the smallest strictly full triangulated subcategory of
containing
is equal to
.The notation
l{T}=\langlel{A}1,\ldots,l{A}n\rangle
is used for a semiorthogonal decomposition.
Having a semiorthogonal decomposition implies that every object of
has a canonical "filtration" whose graded pieces are (successively) in the subcategories
. That is, for each object
T of
, there is a sequence
of morphisms in
such that the cone of
is in
, for each
i. Moreover, this sequence is unique up to a unique isomorphism.
One can also consider "orthogonal" decompositions of a triangulated category, by requiring that there are no morphisms from
to
for any
. However, that property is too strong for most purposes. For example, for an (irreducible)
smooth projective variety X over a
field, the bounded
derived category
of
coherent sheaves never has a nontrivial orthogonal decomposition, whereas it may have a semiorthogonal decomposition, by the examples below.
A semiorthogonal decomposition of a triangulated category may be considered as analogous to a finite filtration of an abelian group. Alternatively, one may consider a semiorthogonal decomposition
l{T}=\langlel{A},l{B}\rangle
as closer to a
split exact sequence, because the exact sequence
0\tol{A}\tol{T}\tol{T}/l{A}\to0
of triangulated categories is split by the subcategory
, mapping isomorphically to
.
Using that observation, a semiorthogonal decomposition
l{T}=\langlel{A}1,\ldots,l{A}n\rangle
implies a
direct sum splitting of
Grothendieck groups:
K0(l{T})\congK0(l{A}1) ⊕ … ⊕ K0(l{An}).
For example, when
is the bounded derived category of coherent sheaves on a smooth projective variety
X,
can be identified with the Grothendieck group
of algebraic vector bundles on
X. In this geometric situation, using that
comes from a
dg-category, a semiorthogonal decomposition actually gives a splitting of all the
algebraic K-groups of
X:
Ki(X)\congKi(l{A}1) ⊕ … ⊕ Ki(l{An})
for all
i.
Admissible subcategory
One way to produce a semiorthogonal decomposition is from an admissible subcategory. By definition, a full triangulated subcategory
is
left admissible if the inclusion functor
has a left
adjoint functor, written
. Likewise,
is
right admissible if the inclusion has a right adjoint, written
, and it is
admissible if it is both left and right admissible.
A right admissible subcategory
determines a semiorthogonal decomposition
l{T}=\langlel{B}\perp,l{B}\rangle
,where
l{B}\perp:=\{T\inl{T}:\operatorname{Hom}(l{B},T)=0\}
is the
right orthogonal of
in
. Conversely, every semiorthogonal decomposition
l{T}=\langlel{A},l{B}\rangle
arises in this way, in the sense that
is right admissible and
. Likewise, for any semiorthogonal decomposition
l{T}=\langlel{A},l{B}\rangle
, the subcategory
is left admissible, and
, where
{}\perpl{A}:=\{T\inl{T}:\operatorname{Hom}(T,l{A})=0\}
is the
left orthogonal of
.
If
is the bounded derived category of a smooth projective variety over a field
k, then every left or right admissible subcategory of
is in fact admissible. By results of Bondal and
Michel Van den Bergh, this holds more generally for
any regular proper triangulated category that is
idempotent-complete.
Moreover, for a regular proper idempotent-complete triangulated category
, a full triangulated subcategory is admissible if and only if it is regular and idempotent-complete. These properties are intrinsic to the subcategory. For example, for
X a smooth projective variety and
Y a subvariety not equal to
X, the subcategory of
of objects supported on
Y is not admissible.
Exceptional collection
Let k be a field, and let
be a
k-linear triangulated category. An object
E of
is called
exceptional if Hom(
E,
E) =
k and Hom(
E,
E[''t'']) = 0 for all nonzero integers
t, where [''t''] is the shift functor in
. (In the derived category of a smooth
complex projective variety
X, the first-order
deformation space of an object
E is
| 1 |
\operatorname{Ext} | |
| X(E,E)\cong |
\operatorname{Hom}(E,E[1])
, and so an exceptional object is in particular rigid. It follows, for example, that there are at most
countably many exceptional objects in
, up to isomorphism. That helps to explain the name.)
The triangulated subcategory generated by an exceptional object E is equivalent to the derived category
of finite-dimensional
k-vector spaces, the simplest triangulated category in this context. (For example, every object of that subcategory is isomorphic to a finite direct sum of shifts of
E.)
Alexei Gorodentsev and Alexei Rudakov (1987) defined an exceptional collection to be a sequence of exceptional objects
such that
\operatorname{Hom}(Ej,Ei[t])=0
for all
i <
j and all integers
t. (That is, there are "no morphisms from right to left".) In a proper triangulated category
over
k, such as the bounded derived category of coherent sheaves on a smooth projective variety, every exceptional collection generates an admissible subcategory, and so it determines a semiorthogonal decomposition:
l{T}=\langlel{A},E1,\ldots,Em\rangle,
where
, and
denotes the full triangulated subcategory generated by the object
. An exceptional collection is called
full if the subcategory
is zero. (Thus a full exceptional collection breaks the whole triangulated category up into finitely many copies of
.)
In particular, if X is a smooth projective variety such that
has a full exceptional collection
, then the
Grothendieck group of algebraic vector bundles on
X is the
free abelian group on the classes of these objects:
K0(X)\cong\Z\{E1,\ldots,Em\}.
A smooth complex projective variety X with a full exceptional collection must have trivial Hodge theory, in the sense that
for all
; moreover, the cycle class map
must be an isomorphism.
Examples
The original example of a full exceptional collection was discovered by Alexander Beilinson (1978): the derived category of projective space over a field has the full exceptional collection
Db(Pn)=\langleO,O(1),\ldots,O(n)\rangle
,where O(
j) for integers
j are the line bundles on projective space. Full exceptional collections have also been constructed on all smooth projective
toric varieties,
del Pezzo surfaces, many
projective homogeneous varieties, and some other
Fano varieties.
More generally, if X is a smooth projective variety of positive dimension such that the coherent sheaf cohomology groups
are zero for
i > 0, then the object
in
is exceptional, and so it induces a nontrivial semiorthogonal decomposition
. This applies to every
Fano variety over a field of
characteristic zero, for example. It also applies to some other varieties, such as
Enriques surfaces and some surfaces of general type.
A source of examples is Orlov's blowup formula concerning the blowup
of a scheme
at a codimension
locally complete intersection subscheme
with exceptional locus
\iota:E\simeqPZ(NZ/Y)\toX
. There is a semiorthogonal decomposition
Db(X)=\langle\Phi1-k(Db(Z)),\ldots,\Phi-1(Db(Z)),\pi*(Db(Y))\rangle
where
is the functor
\Phii(-)=\iota*(l{O}E(k)) ⊗ p*(-))
with
is the natural map.
[1]
is basepoint-free, every semiorthogonal decomposition
Db(X)=\langlel{A},l{B}\rangle
is trivial in the sense that
or
must be zero. For example, this applies to every variety which is
Calabi–Yau in the sense that its canonical bundle is trivial.
See also
Notes and References
- Orlov . D O . 1993-02-28 . PROJECTIVE BUNDLES, MONOIDAL TRANSFORMATIONS, AND DERIVED CATEGORIES OF COHERENT SHEAVES . Russian Academy of Sciences. Izvestiya Mathematics . 41 . 1 . 133–141 . 10.1070/im1993v041n01abeh002182 . 1064-5632.