Six operations

In mathematics, Grothendieck's six operations, named after Alexander Grothendieck, is a formalism in homological algebra. It originally sprang from the relations in étale cohomology that arise from a morphism of schemes f : X Y. The basic insight was that many of the elementary facts relating cohomology on X and Y were formal consequences of a small number of axioms. These axioms hold in many cases completely unrelated to the original context, and therefore the formal consequences also hold. The six operations formalism has since been shown to apply to contexts such as D-modules on algebraic varieties, sheaves on locally compact topological spaces, and motives.

The operations

The operations are six functors. Usually these are functors between derived categories and so are actually left and right derived functors.

The functors and form an adjoint functor pair, as do and .[1] Similarly, internal tensor product is left adjoint to internal Hom.

Six operations in étale cohomology

Let f : X Y be a morphism of schemes. The morphism f induces several functors. Specifically, it gives adjoint functors f* and f* between the categories of sheaves on X and Y, and it gives the functor f! of direct image with proper support. In the derived category, Rf! admits a right adjoint f!. Finally, when working with abelian sheaves, there is a tensor product functor and an internal Hom functor, and these are adjoint. The six operations are the corresponding functors on the derived category: Lf*, Rf*, Rf!, f!, L, and RHom.

Suppose that we restrict ourselves to a category of -adic torsion sheaves, where is coprime to the characteristic of X and of Y. In SGA 4 III, Grothendieck and Artin proved that if f is a smooth morphism, then Lf* is isomorphic to f!(d)[2d], where (d) denote the dth inverse Tate twist and [2d] denotes a shift in degree by 2d. Furthermore, suppose that f is separated and of finite type. If g : Y Y is another morphism of schemes, if X denotes the base change of X by g, and if f and g denote the base changes of f and g by g and f, respectively, then there exist natural isomorphisms:

Again assuming that f is separated and of finite type, for any objects M in the derived category of X and N in the derived category of Y, there exist natural isomorphisms:

If i is a closed immersion of Z into S with complementary open immersion j, then there is a distinguished triangle in the derived category:

where the first two maps are the counit and unit, respectively of the adjunctions. If Z and S are regular, then there is an isomorphism:

where 1Z and 1S are the units of the tensor product operations (which vary depending on which category of -adic torsion sheaves is under consideration).

If S is regular and g : X S, and if K is an invertible object in the derived category on S with respect to L, then define DX to be the functor RHom(—, g!K). Then, for objects M and M in the derived category on X, the canonical maps:

are isomorphisms. Finally, if f : X Y is a morphism of S-schemes, and if M and N are objects in the derived categories of X and Y, then there are natural isomorphisms:

gollark: I think this might not do what you want if someone is using it with unsigned 32-bit integers and not signed ones, but OH WELL.
gollark: Just negate the second thing, add that to the first thing, and check if the result is 0, negative (starts with 1), or positive (starts with 0).
gollark: * correction, ~ not !.
gollark: Why do you need to know which is the first bit?
gollark: You can make a value negative and thus do subtraction using + and ! then, I'm pretty sure.

See also

References

  1. Fausk, H.; P. Hu; J. P. May (2003). "Isomorphisms between left and right adjoints" (PDF). Theory Appl. Categ.: 107–131. arXiv:math/0206079. Bibcode:2002math......6079F. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
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