In algebraic geometry, the dualizing sheaf on a proper scheme ''X'' of dimension ''n'' over a field ''k'' is a
coherent sheaf together with a linear functional
:
that induces a natural isomorphism of vector spaces
:
for each coherent sheaf ''F'' on ''X'' (the superscript * refers to a
dual vector space).
The linear functional
is called a trace morphism.
A pair
, if it is exists, is unique up to a natural isomorphism. In fact, in the language of
category theory,
is an
object representing the contravariant functor
from the category of coherent sheaves on ''X'' to the category of ''k''-vector spaces.
For a normal projective variety ''X'', the dualizing sheaf exists and it is in fact the
canonical sheaf:
where
is a
canonical divisor. More generally, the dualizing sheaf exists for any projective scheme.
There is the following variant of
Serre's duality theorem In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, Serre duality is a duality for the coherent sheaf cohomology of algebraic varieties, proved by Jean-Pierre Serre. The basic version applies to vector bundles on a smooth projective variety, but Alexa ...
: for a projective scheme ''X'' of pure dimension ''n'' and a
Cohen–Macaulay sheaf ''F'' on ''X'' such that
is of pure dimension ''n'', there is a natural isomorphism
:
.
In particular, if ''X'' itself is a
Cohen–Macaulay scheme, then the above duality holds for any locally free sheaf.
Relative dualizing sheaf
Given a proper finitely presented morphism of schemes
, defines the relative dualizing sheaf
or
as the sheaf such that for each open subset
and a quasi-coherent sheaf
on
, there is a canonical isomorphism
:
,
which is functorial in
and commutes with open restrictions.
Example:
If
is a
local complete intersection morphism
In algebraic geometry, a closed immersion i: X \hookrightarrow Y of schemes is a regular embedding of codimension ''r'' if each point ''x'' in ''X'' has an open affine neighborhood ''U'' in ''Y'' such that the ideal of X \cap U is generated by a re ...
between schemes of finite type over a field, then (by definition) each point of
has an open neighborhood
and a factorization
, a
regular embedding of codimension
followed by a
smooth morphism of relative dimension
. Then
:
where
is the
sheaf of relative Kähler differentials
Sheaf may refer to:
* Sheaf (agriculture), a bundle of harvested cereal stems
* Sheaf (mathematics), a mathematical tool
* Sheaf toss, a Scottish sport
* River Sheaf, a tributary of River Don in England
* ''The Sheaf'', a student-run newspaper ser ...
and
is the
normal bundle to
.
Examples
Dualizing sheaf of a nodal curve
For a smooth curve ''C'', its dualizing sheaf
can be given by the
canonical sheaf .
For a nodal curve ''C'' with a node ''p'', we may consider the normalization
with two points ''x'', ''y'' identified. Let
be the sheaf of rational 1-forms on
with possible simple poles at ''x'' and ''y'', and let
be the subsheaf consisting of rational 1-forms with the sum of residues at ''x'' and ''y'' equal to zero. Then the direct image
defines a dualizing sheaf for the nodal curve ''C''. The construction can be easily generalized to nodal curves with multiple nodes.
This is used in the construction of the
Hodge bundle on the compactified
moduli space of curves: it allows us to extend the relative canonical sheaf over the boundary which parametrizes nodal curves. The Hodge bundle is then defined as the direct image of a relative dualizing sheaf.
Dualizing sheaf of projective schemes
As mentioned above, the dualizing sheaf exists for all projective schemes. For ''X'' a closed subscheme of P
''n'' of codimension ''r'', its dualizing sheaf can be given as
. In other words, one uses the dualizing sheaf on the ambient P
''n'' to construct the dualizing sheaf on ''X''.
See also
*
coherent duality
*
reflexive sheaf In algebraic geometry, a reflexive sheaf is a coherent sheaf that is isomorphic to its second dual (as a sheaf of modules) via the canonical map. The second dual of a coherent sheaf is called the reflexive hull of the sheaf. A basic example of a r ...
*
Gorenstein ring
*
Dualizing module In abstract algebra, a dualizing module, also called a canonical module, is a module over a commutative ring that is analogous to the canonical bundle of a smooth variety. It is used in Grothendieck local duality.
Definition
A dualizing module for ...
Note
References
*
*
*
*
External links
*http://math.stanford.edu/~vakil/0506-216/216class5354.pdf
Relative dualizing sheaf (reference, behavior)
Algebraic geometry
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