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In algebraic geometry, an affine GIT quotient, or affine geometric invariant theory quotient, of an affine scheme X = \operatorname A with an action by a
group scheme In mathematics, a group scheme is a type of object from algebraic geometry equipped with a composition law. Group schemes arise naturally as symmetries of schemes, and they generalize algebraic groups, in the sense that all algebraic groups ha ...
''G'' is the affine scheme \operatorname(A^G), the prime spectrum of the ring of invariants of ''A'', and is denoted by X /\!/ G. A GIT quotient is a categorical quotient: any invariant morphism uniquely factors through it. Taking
Proj PROJ (formerly PROJ.4) is a library for performing conversions between cartographic projections. The library is based on the work of Gerald Evenden at the United States Geological Survey (USGS), but since 2019-11-26 is an Open Source Geospatial F ...
(of a graded ring) instead of \operatorname, one obtains a projective GIT quotient (which is a quotient of the set of semistable points.) A GIT quotient is a categorical quotient of the locus of semistable points; i.e., "the" quotient of the semistable locus. Since the categorical quotient is unique, if there is a geometric quotient, then the two notions coincide: for example, one has :G / H = G /\!/ H = \operatorname\!\big(k H\big) for an
algebraic group In mathematics, an algebraic group is an algebraic variety endowed with a group structure which is compatible with its structure as an algebraic variety. Thus the study of algebraic groups belongs both to algebraic geometry and group theory. ...
''G'' over a field ''k'' and closed subgroup ''H''. If ''X'' is a complex smooth
projective variety In algebraic geometry, a projective variety over an algebraically closed field ''k'' is a subset of some projective ''n''-space \mathbb^n over ''k'' that is the zero-locus of some finite family of homogeneous polynomials of ''n'' + 1 variables ...
and if ''G'' is a reductive
complex Lie group In geometry, a complex Lie group is a Lie group over the complex numbers; i.e., it is a complex-analytic manifold that is also a group in such a way G \times G \to G, (x, y) \mapsto x y^ is holomorphic. Basic examples are \operatorname_n(\ma ...
, then the GIT quotient of ''X'' by ''G'' is homeomorphic to the symplectic quotient of ''X'' by a maximal compact subgroup of ''G'' ( Kempf–Ness theorem).


Construction of a GIT quotient

Let ''G'' be a
reductive group In mathematics, a reductive group is a type of linear algebraic group over a field. One definition is that a connected linear algebraic group ''G'' over a perfect field is reductive if it has a representation with finite kernel which is a direc ...
acting on a quasi-projective scheme ''X'' over a field and ''L'' a linearized ample line bundle on ''X''. Let :R = \bigoplus_ \Gamma(X, L^) be the section ring. By definition, the semistable locus X^ is the complement of the zero set V(R_+^G) in ''X''; in other words, it is the union of all open subsets U_s = \ for global sections ''s'' of (L^)^G, ''n'' large. By ampleness, each U_s is affine; say U_s = \operatorname(A_s) and so we can form the affine GIT quotient :\pi_s\colon U_s \to U_s /\!/ G = \operatorname(A_s^G). Note that U_s /\!/ G is of finite type by Hilbert's theorem on the ring of invariants. By universal property of categorical quotients, these affine quotients glue and result in :\pi\colon X^ \to X /\!/_L G, which is the GIT quotient of ''X'' with respect to ''L''. Note that if ''X'' is projective; i.e., it is the Proj of ''R'', then the quotient X /\!/_L G is given simply as the Proj of the ring of invariants R^G. The most interesting case is when the stable locus X^s is nonempty; X^s is the open set of semistable points that have finite stabilizers and orbits that are closed in X^. In such a case, the GIT quotient restricts to :\pi^s\colon X^s \to X^s/\!/G, which has the property: every fiber is an orbit. That is to say, \pi^s is a genuine quotient (i.e., geometric quotient) and one writes X^s/G = X^s/\!/G. Because of this, when X^s is nonempty, the GIT quotient \pi is often referred to as a "compactification" of a geometric quotient of an open subset of ''X''. A difficult and seemingly open question is: which geometric quotient arises in the above GIT fashion? The question is of a great interest since the GIT approach produces an ''explicit'' quotient, as opposed to an abstract quotient, which is hard to compute. One known partial answer to this question is the following: let X be a locally factorial algebraic variety (for example, a smooth variety) with an action of G. Suppose there are an open subset U \subset X as well as a geometric quotient \pi\colon U \to U/G such that (1) \pi is an affine morphism and (2) U/G is quasi-projective. Then U \subset X^s(L) for some linearlized line bundle ''L'' on ''X''. (An analogous question is to determine which subring is the ring of invariants in some manner.)


Examples


Finite group action by \Z/2

A simple example of a GIT quotient is given by the \Z/2-action on \Complex ,y/math> sending : \begin x \mapsto (-x) && y \mapsto (-y) \end Notice that the monomials x^2,xy,y^2 generate the ring \Complex ,y. Hence we can write the ring of invariants as :\Complex ,y = \Complex
^2,xy,y^2 Caret is the name used familiarly for the character , provided on most QWERTY keyboards by typing . The symbol has a variety of uses in programming and mathematics. The name "caret" arose from its visual similarity to the original proofreade ...
= \frac Scheme theoretically, we get the morphism :\mathbb^2 \to \text\left(\frac\right) =: \mathbb^2/(\Z/2) which is a singular subvariety of \mathbb^3 with isolated singularity at (0,0,0). This can be checked using the differentials, which are :df = \begin c & -2b & a \end hence the only point where the differential and the polynomial f both vanish is at the origin. The quotient obtained is a conical surface with an ordinary double point at the origin.


Torus action on plane

Consider the torus action of \mathbb_m on X = \mathbb^2 by t\cdot (x,y) = (tx,t^y). Note this action has a few orbits: the origin (0,0), the punctured axes, \, \, and the affine conics given by xy = a for some a \in \Complex^*. Then, the GIT quotient X//\mathbb_m has structure sheaf \mathcal_^ which is the subring of polynomials \mathbb y/math>, hence it is isomorphic to \mathbb^1. This gives the GIT quotient
\pi\colon \mathbb^2 \to \mathbb^2//\mathbb_m
Notice the inverse image of the point (0) is given by the orbits (0,0), \, \, showing the GIT quotient isn't necessarily an orbit space. If it were, there would be three origins, a non-separated space.


See also

*
quotient stack In algebraic geometry, a quotient stack is a stack (mathematics), stack that parametrizes equivariant objects. Geometrically, it generalizes a quotient of a scheme or a variety by a group: a quotient variety, say, would be a coarse approximation of ...
* character variety * Chow quotient


Notes


References


Pedagogical

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References

* * * * *{{Cite book, last1=Mumford , first1=David , author1-link=David Mumford , last2=Fogarty , first2=John , last3=Kirwan , first3=Frances , author3-link=Frances Kirwan , title=Geometric invariant theory , publisher=
Springer-Verlag Springer Science+Business Media, commonly known as Springer, is a German multinational publishing company of books, e-books and peer-reviewed journals in science, humanities, technical and medical (STM) publishing. Originally founded in 1842 ...
, location=Berlin, New York , edition=3rd , series=Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete (2) esults in Mathematics and Related Areas (2), isbn=978-3-540-56963-3 , mr=1304906 , year=1994 , volume=34 Algebraic geometry