Étale fundamental group

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The étale or algebraic fundamental group is an analogue in algebraic geometry, for schemes, of the usual fundamental group of topological spaces.

Topological analogue/informal discussion edit

In algebraic topology, the fundamental group   of a pointed topological space   is defined as the group of homotopy classes of loops based at  . This definition works well for spaces such as real and complex manifolds, but gives undesirable results for an algebraic variety with the Zariski topology.

In the classification of covering spaces, it is shown that the fundamental group is exactly the group of deck transformations of the universal covering space. This is more promising: finite étale morphisms of algebraic varieties are the appropriate analogue of covering spaces of topological spaces. Unfortunately, an algebraic variety   often fails to have a "universal cover" that is finite over  , so one must consider the entire category of finite étale coverings of  . One can then define the étale fundamental group as an inverse limit of finite automorphism groups.

Formal definition edit

Let   be a connected and locally noetherian scheme, let   be a geometric point of   and let   be the category of pairs   such that   is a finite étale morphism from a scheme   Morphisms   in this category are morphisms   as schemes over   This category has a natural functor to the category of sets, namely the functor:

 

geometrically this is the fiber of   over   and abstractly it is the Yoneda functor represented by   in the category of schemes over  . The functor   is typically not representable in  ; however, it is pro-representable in  , in fact by Galois covers of  . This means that we have a projective system   in  , indexed by a directed set   where the   are Galois covers of  , i.e., finite étale schemes over   such that  .[1] It also means that we have given an isomorphism of functors:

 .

In particular, we have a marked point   of the projective system.

For two such   the map   induces a group homomorphism   which produces a projective system of automorphism groups from the projective system  . We then make the following definition: the étale fundamental group   of   at   is the inverse limit:

 

with the inverse limit topology.

The functor   is now a functor from   to the category of finite and continuous  -sets and establishes an equivalence of categories between   and the category of finite and continuous  -sets.[2]

Examples and theorems edit

The most basic example of is  , the étale fundamental group of a field  . Essentially by definition, the fundamental group of   can be shown to be isomorphic to the absolute Galois group  . More precisely, the choice of a geometric point of   is equivalent to giving a separably closed extension field  , and the étale fundamental group with respect to that base point identifies with the Galois group  . This interpretation of the Galois group is known as Grothendieck's Galois theory.

More generally, for any geometrically connected variety   over a field   (i.e.,   is such that   is connected) there is an exact sequence of profinite groups:

 

Schemes over a field of characteristic zero edit

For a scheme   that is of finite type over  , the complex numbers, there is a close relation between the étale fundamental group of   and the usual, topological, fundamental group of  , the complex analytic space attached to  . The algebraic fundamental group, as it is typically called in this case, is the profinite completion of  . This is a consequence of the Riemann existence theorem, which says that all finite étale coverings of   stem from ones of  . In particular, as the fundamental group of smooth curves over   (i.e., open Riemann surfaces) is well understood; this determines the algebraic fundamental group. More generally, the fundamental group of a proper scheme over any algebraically closed field of characteristic zero is known, because an extension of algebraically closed fields induces isomorphic fundamental groups.

Schemes over a field of positive characteristic and the tame fundamental group edit

For an algebraically closed field   of positive characteristic, the results are different, since Artin–Schreier coverings exist in this situation. For example, the fundamental group of the affine line   is not topologically finitely generated. The tame fundamental group of some scheme U is a quotient of the usual fundamental group of   which takes into account only covers that are tamely ramified along  , where   is some compactification and   is the complement of   in  .[3][4] For example, the tame fundamental group of the affine line is zero.

Affine schemes over a field of characteristic p edit

It turns out that every affine scheme   is a  -space, in the sense that the etale homotopy type of   is entirely determined by its etale homotopy group.[5] Note   where   is a geometric point.

Further topics edit

From a category-theoretic point of view, the fundamental group is a functor:

{Pointed algebraic varieties} → {Profinite groups}.

The inverse Galois problem asks what groups can arise as fundamental groups (or Galois groups of field extensions). Anabelian geometry, for example Grothendieck's section conjecture, seeks to identify classes of varieties which are determined by their fundamental groups.[6]

Friedlander (1982) studies higher étale homotopy groups by means of the étale homotopy type of a scheme.


The pro-étale fundamental group edit

Bhatt & Scholze (2015, §7) have introduced a variant of the étale fundamental group called the pro-étale fundamental group. It is constructed by considering, instead of finite étale covers, maps which are both étale and satisfy the valuative criterion of properness. For geometrically unibranch schemes (e.g., normal schemes), the two approaches agree, but in general the pro-étale fundamental group is a finer invariant: its profinite completion is the étale fundamental group.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ J. S. Milne, Lectures on Étale Cohomology, version 2.21: 26-27
  2. ^ Grothendieck, Alexandre; Raynaud, Michèle (2003) [1971], Séminaire de Géométrie Algébrique du Bois Marie - 1960-61 - Revêtements étales et groupe fondamental - (SGA 1) (Documents Mathématiques 3), Paris: Société Mathématique de France, pp. xviii+327, see Exp. V, IX, X, arXiv:math.AG/0206203, ISBN 978-2-85629-141-2
  3. ^ Grothendieck, Alexander; Murre, Jacob P. (1971), The tame fundamental group of a formal neighbourhood of a divisor with normal crossings on a scheme, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, Vol. 208, Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag
  4. ^ Schmidt, Alexander (2002), "Tame coverings of arithmetic schemes", Mathematische Annalen, 322 (1): 1–18, arXiv:math/0005310, doi:10.1007/s002080100262, S2CID 29899627
  5. ^ Achinger, Piotr (November 2017). "Wild ramification and K(pi, 1) spaces". Inventiones Mathematicae. 210 (2): 453–499. arXiv:1701.03197. doi:10.1007/s00222-017-0733-5. ISSN 0020-9910. S2CID 119146164.
  6. ^ (Tamagawa 1997)

References edit