Fiber product of schemes
In mathematics, specifically in algebraic geometry, the fiber product of schemes is a fundamental construction. It has many interpretations and special cases. For example, the fiber product describes how an algebraic variety over one field determines a variety over a bigger field, or the pullback of a family of varieties, or a fiber of a family of varieties. Base change is a closely related notion.
Definition
The category of schemes is a broad setting for algebraic geometry. A fruitful philosophy is that much of algebraic geometry should be developed for a morphism of schemes X → Y, rather than for a single scheme X. For example, rather than simply studying algebraic curves, one can study families of curves over any base scheme Y. Indeed, the two approaches enrich each other.In particular, a scheme over a commutative ring R means a scheme X together with a morphism X → Spec. The older notion of an algebraic variety over a field k is equivalent to a scheme over k with certain properties.
In general, a morphism of schemes X → Y can be imagined as a family of schemes parametrized by the points of Y. Given a morphism from some other scheme Z to Y, there should be a "pullback" family of schemes over Z. This is exactly the fiber product X ×Y Z → Z.
Formally: it is a useful property of the category of schemes that the fiber product always exists. That is, for any morphisms of schemes X → Y and Z → Y, there is a scheme X ×Y Z with morphisms to X and Z, making the diagram
commutative, and which is universal with that property. That is, for any scheme W with morphisms to X and Z whose compositions to Y are equal, there is a unique morphism from W to X ×Y Z that makes the diagram commute. As always with universal properties, this condition determines the scheme X ×Y Z up to a unique isomorphism, if it exists. The proof that fiber products of schemes always do exist reduces the problem to the [tensor product of algebras|tensor product of commutative rings]. In particular, when X, Y, and Z are all affine schemes, so X = Spec, Y = Spec, and Z = Spec for some commutative rings A,''B,C'', the fiber product is the affine scheme
The morphism X ×Y Z → Z is called the base change or pullback of the morphism X → Y via the morphism Z → Y.
In some cases, the fiber product of schemes has a right adjoint, the restriction of scalars.
Interpretations and special cases
- In the category of schemes over a field k, the product X × Y means the fiber product X ×k Y. For example, the product of affine spaces Am and An over a field k is the affine space Am+''n over k''.
- For a scheme X over a field k and any field extension E of k, the base change XE means the fiber product X ×Spec Spec. Here XE is a scheme over E. For example, if X is the curve in the projective plane P over the real numbers R defined by the equation xy2 = 7z3, then XC is the complex curve in P defined by the same equation. Many properties of an algebraic variety over a field k can be defined in terms of its base change to the algebraic closure of k, which makes the situation simpler.
- Let f: X → Y be a morphism of schemes, and let y be a point in Y. Then there is a morphism Spec → Y with image y, where k is the residue field of y. The fiber of f over y is defined as the fiber product X ×Y Spec; this is a scheme over the field k. This concept helps to justify the rough idea of a morphism of schemes X → Y as a family of schemes parametrized by Y.
- Let X, Y, and Z be schemes over a field k, with morphisms X → Y and Z → Y over k. Then the set of k-rational points of the fiber product X ×Y Z is easy to describe:
- If X and Z are closed subschemes of a scheme Y, then the fiber product X ×Y Z is exactly the intersection X ∩ Z, with its natural scheme structure. The same goes for open subschemes.
Base change and descent
Some important properties P of morphisms of schemes are preserved under arbitrary base change. That is, if X → Y has property P and Z → Y is any morphism of schemes, then the base change X xY Z → Z has property P. For example, flat morphisms, smooth morphisms, proper morphisms, and many other classes of morphisms are preserved under arbitrary base change.The word descent refers to the reverse question: if the pulled-back morphism X xY Z → Z has some property P, must the original morphism X → Y have property P? Clearly this is impossible in general: for example, Z might be the empty scheme, in which case the pulled-back morphism loses all information about the original morphism. But if the morphism Z → Y is flat and surjective and quasi-compact, then many properties do descend from Z to Y. Properties that descend include flatness, smoothness, properness, and many other classes of morphisms. These results form part of Grothendieck's theory of faithfully flat descent.
Example: for any field extension k ⊂ E, the morphism Spec → Spec is faithfully flat and quasi-compact. So the descent results mentioned imply that a scheme X over k is smooth over k if and only if the base change XE is smooth over E. The same goes for properness and many other properties.