Zariski–Riemann Space
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In algebraic geometry, a Zariski–Riemann space or Zariski space of a subring ''k'' of a
field Field may refer to: Expanses of open ground * Field (agriculture), an area of land used for agricultural purposes * Airfield, an aerodrome that lacks the infrastructure of an airport * Battlefield * Lawn, an area of mowed grass * Meadow, a grass ...
''K'' is a locally ringed space whose points are
valuation ring In abstract algebra, a valuation ring is an integral domain ''D'' such that for every element ''x'' of its field of fractions ''F'', at least one of ''x'' or ''x''−1 belongs to ''D''. Given a field ''F'', if ''D'' is a subring of ''F'' suc ...
s containing ''k'' and contained in ''K''. They generalize the
Riemann surface In mathematics, particularly in complex analysis, a Riemann surface is a connected one-dimensional complex manifold. These surfaces were first studied by and are named after Bernhard Riemann. Riemann surfaces can be thought of as deformed ver ...
of a complex curve. Zariski–Riemann spaces were introduced by who (rather confusingly) called them Riemann manifolds or Riemann surfaces. They were named Zariski–Riemann spaces after
Oscar Zariski , birth_date = , birth_place = Kobrin, Russian Empire , death_date = , death_place = Brookline, Massachusetts, United States , nationality = American , field = Mathematics , work_institutions = ...
and Bernhard Riemann by who used them to show that algebraic varieties can be embedded in
complete Complete may refer to: Logic * Completeness (logic) * Completeness of a theory, the property of a theory that every formula in the theory's language or its negation is provable Mathematics * The completeness of the real numbers, which implies t ...
ones. Local uniformization (proved in characteristic 0 by Zariski) can be interpreted as saying that the Zariski–Riemann space of a variety is nonsingular in some sense, so is a sort of rather weak resolution of singularities. This does not solve the problem of resolution of singularities because in dimensions greater than 1 the Zariski–Riemann space is not locally affine and in particular is not a scheme.


Definition

The Zariski–Riemann space of a
field Field may refer to: Expanses of open ground * Field (agriculture), an area of land used for agricultural purposes * Airfield, an aerodrome that lacks the infrastructure of an airport * Battlefield * Lawn, an area of mowed grass * Meadow, a grass ...
''K'' over a base field ''k'' is a locally ringed space whose points are the
valuation ring In abstract algebra, a valuation ring is an integral domain ''D'' such that for every element ''x'' of its field of fractions ''F'', at least one of ''x'' or ''x''−1 belongs to ''D''. Given a field ''F'', if ''D'' is a subring of ''F'' suc ...
s containing ''k'' and contained in ''K''. Sometimes the valuation ring ''K'' itself is excluded, and sometimes the points are restricted to the zero-dimensional valuation rings (those whose residue field has transcendence degree zero over ''k''). If ''S'' is the Zariski–Riemann space of a subring ''k'' of a field ''K'', it has a topology defined by taking a basis of open sets to be the valuation rings containing a given finite subset of ''K''. The space ''S'' is quasi-compact. It is made into a locally ringed space by assigning to any open subset the intersection of the valuation rings of the points of the subset. The local ring at any point is the corresponding valuation ring. The Zariski–Riemann space of a function field can also be constructed as the inverse limit of all complete (or projective) models of the function field.


Examples


The Riemann–Zariski space of a curve

The Riemann–Zariski space of a curve over an algebraically closed field ''k'' with function field ''K'' is the same as the nonsingular projective model of it. It has one generic non-closed point corresponding to the trivial valuation with valuation ring ''K'', and its other points are the rank 1 valuation rings in ''K'' containing ''k''. Unlike the higher-dimensional cases, the Zariski–Riemann space of a curve is a scheme.


The Riemann–Zariski space of a surface

The valuation rings of a surface ''S'' over ''k'' with function field ''K'' can be classified by the dimension (the transcendence degree of the residue field) and the rank (the number of nonzero convex subgroups of the valuation group). gave the following classification: *Dimension 2. The only possibility is the trivial valuation with rank 0, valuation group 0 and valuation ring ''K''. *Dimension 1, rank 1. These correspond to divisors on some blowup of ''S'', or in other words to divisors and infinitely near points of ''S''. They are all discrete. The center in ''S'' can be either a point or a curve. The valuation group is Z. *Dimension 0, rank 2. These correspond to germs of algebraic curves through a point on a normal model of ''S''. The valuation group is isomorphic to Z+Z with the lexicographic order. *Dimension 0, rank 1, discrete. These correspond to germs of non-algebraic curves (given for example by ''y''= a non-algebraic formal power series in ''x'') through a point of a normal model. The valuation group is Z. *Dimension 0, rank 1, non-discrete, value group has incommensurable elements. These correspond to germs of transcendental curves such as ''y''=''x''π through a point of a normal model. The value group is isomorphic to an ordered group generated by 2 incommensurable real numbers. *Dimension 0, rank 1, non-discrete, value group elements are commensurable. The value group can be isomorphic to any dense subgroup of the rational numbers. These correspond to germs of curves of the form ''y''=Σ''a''''n''''x''''b''''n'' where the numbers ''b''''n'' are rational with unbounded denominators.


References

* * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Zariski-Riemann space Algebraic geometry Bernhard Riemann