Quasi-finite morphism
In algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics, a morphism f : X → Y of schemes is quasi-finite if it is of [Morphism of finite extension|finite type|finite type] and satisfies any of the following equivalent conditions:
- Every point x of X is isolated in its fiber f−1. In other words, every fiber is a discrete set.
- For every point x of X, the scheme is a finite κ-scheme.
- For every point x of X, is finitely generated over.
For a general morphism and a point x in X, f is said to be quasi-finite at x if there exist open affine neighborhoods U of x and V of f such that f is contained in V and such that the restriction is quasi-finite. f is locally quasi-finite if it is quasi-finite at every point in X. A quasi-compact locally quasi-finite morphism is quasi-finite.
Properties
For a morphism f, the following properties are true.- If f is quasi-finite, then the induced map fred between reduced schemes is quasi-finite.
- If f is a closed immersion, then f is quasi-finite.
- If X is noetherian and f is an immersion, then f is quasi-finite.
- If, and if is quasi-finite, then f is quasi-finite if any of the following are true:
- #g is separated,
- #X is noetherian,
- # is locally noetherian.
If f is unramified at a point x, then f is quasi-finite at x. Conversely, if f is quasi-finite at x, and if also, the local ring of x in the fiber f−1, is a field and a finite separable extension of κ, then f is unramified at x.
Finite morphisms are quasi-finite. A quasi-finite proper morphism locally of finite presentation is finite. Indeed, a morphism is finite if and only if it is proper and locally quasi-finite. Since proper morphisms are of finite type and finite type morphisms are quasi-compact one may omit the qualification locally, i.e., a morphism is finite if and only if it is proper and quasi-finite.
A generalized form of Zariski Main Theorem is the following: Suppose Y is quasi-compact and quasi-separated. Let f be quasi-finite, separated and of finite presentation. Then f factors as where the first morphism is an open immersion and the second is finite.