Chow group

In algebraic geometry, the Chow groups (named after W. L. Chow by Chevalley (1958)) of an algebraic variety over any field are algebro-geometric analogs of the homology of a topological space. The elements of the Chow group are formed out of subvarieties (so-called algebraic cycles) in a similar way to how simplicial or cellular homology groups are formed out of subcomplexes. When the variety is smooth, the Chow groups can be interpreted as cohomology groups (compare Poincare duality) and have a multiplication called the intersection product. The Chow groups carry rich information about an algebraic variety, and they are correspondingly hard to compute in general.

Rational equivalence and Chow groups

For what follows, define a variety over a field k to be an integral scheme of finite type over k. For any scheme X of finite type over k, an algebraic cycle on X means a finite linear combination of subvarieties of X with integer coefficients. (Here and below, subvarieties are understood to be closed in X, unless stated otherwise.) For a natural number i, the group Zi(X) of i-dimensional cycles (or i-cycles, for short) on X is the free abelian group on the set of i-dimensional subvarieties of X.

For a variety W of dimension i + 1 and any rational function f on W which is not identically zero, the divisor of f is the i-cycle

where the sum runs over all i-dimensional subvarieties Z of W and the integer ordZ(f) denotes the order of vanishing of f along Z. (Thus ordZ(f) is negative if f has a pole along Z.) The definition of the order of vanishing requires some care for W singular.[1]

For a scheme X of finite type over k, the group of i-cycles rationally equivalent to zero is the subgroup of Zi(X) generated by the cycles (f) for all (i+1)-dimensional subvarieties W of X and all nonzero rational functions f on W. The Chow group CHi(X) of i-dimensional cycles on X is the quotient group of Zi(X) by the subgroup of cycles rationally equivalent to zero. Sometimes one writes [Z] for the class of a subvariety Z in the Chow group.

For example, when X is a variety of dimension n, the Chow group CHn-1(X) is the divisor class group of X. When X is smooth over k, this is isomorphic to the Picard group of line bundles on X.

The Chow ring

When the scheme X is smooth over a field k, the Chow groups form a ring, not just a graded abelian group. Namely, when X is smooth over k, define CHi(X) to be the Chow group of codimension-i cycles on X. (When X is a variety of dimension n, this just means that CHi(X) = CHni(X).) Then the groups CH*(X) form a commutative graded ring, with a product:

The product arises from intersecting algebraic cycles. For example, if Y and Z are smooth subvarieties of X of codimension i and j respectively, and if Y and Z intersect transversely, then the product [Y][Z] in CHi+j(X) is the sum of the irreducible components of the intersection YZ, which all have codimension i + j.

More generally, in various cases, intersection theory constructs an explicit cycle that represents the product [Y][Z] in the Chow ring. For example, if Y and Z are subvarieties of complementary dimension (meaning that their dimensions sum to the dimension of X) whose intersection has dimension zero, then [Y][Z] is equal to the sum of the points of the intersection with coefficients called intersection numbers. For any subvarieties Y and Z of a smooth scheme X over k, with no assumption on the dimension of the intersection, FultonMacPherson's intersection theory constructs a canonical element of the Chow groups of YZ whose image in the Chow groups of X is the product [Y][Z].[2]

Examples

The Chow ring of projective space Pn over any field k is the ring

where H is the class of any hyperplane (the zero locus of a single linear function). Furthermore, any subvariety Y of degree a and codimension r in projective space is rationally equivalent to aHr. It follows that for any two subvarieties Y and Z of complementary dimension in Pn and degrees a, b respectively, their product in the Chow ring is simply

where Hn is the class of a k-rational point in Pn. For example, if Y and Z intersect transversely, it follows that YZ is a zero-cycle of degree ab. If the base field k is algebraically closed, this means that there are exactly ab points of intersection; this is a version of Bézout's theorem, a classic result of enumerative geometry.

For other algebraic varieties, Chow groups can have richer behavior. For example, let X be an elliptic curve over a field k. Then the Chow group of zero-cycles on X fits into an exact sequence

Thus the Chow group of an elliptic curve X is closely related to the group X(k) of k-rational points of X. When k is a number field, X(k) is called the Mordell–Weil group of X, and some of the deepest problems in number theory are attempts to understand this group. When k is the complex numbers, the example of an elliptic curve shows that Chow groups can be uncountable abelian groups.

Functoriality

For a proper morphism f: XY of schemes over k, there is a pushforward homomorphism f*: CHi(X) → CHi(Y) for each integer i. For example, for a proper scheme X over k, this gives a homomorphism CH0(X) → Z, which takes a closed point in X to its degree over k. (A closed point in X has the form Spec(E) for a finite extension field E of k, and its degree means the degree of the field E over k.)

For a flat morphism f: XY of schemes over k with fibers of dimension r (possibly empty), there is a pullback homomorphism f*: CHi(Y) → CHi+r(X).

A key computational tool for Chow groups is the localization sequence, as follows. For a scheme X over a field k and a closed subscheme Z of k, there is an exact sequence

where the first homomorphism is the pushforward associated to the proper morphism ZX, and the second homomorphism is pullback with respect to the flat morphism XZX.[3] The localization sequence can be extended to the left using a generalization of Chow groups, (Borel–Moore) motivic homology groups, also known as higher Chow groups.[4]

For any morphism f: XY of smooth schemes over k, there is a pullback homomorphism f*: CHi(Y) → CHi(X), which is in fact a ring homomorphism CH*(Y) → CH*(X).

Cycle maps

There are several homomorphisms (known as cycle maps) from Chow groups to more computable theories.

First, for a scheme X over the complex numbers, there is a homomorphism from Chow groups to Borel–Moore homology:[5]

The factor of 2 appears because an i-dimensional subvariety of X has real dimension 2i. When X is smooth over the complex numbers, this cycle map can be rewritten using Poincaré duality as a homomorphism

In this case (X smooth over C), these homomorphisms form a ring homomorphism from the Chow ring to the cohomology ring. Intuitively, this is because the products in both the Chow ring and the cohomology ring describe the intersection of cycles.

For a smooth complex projective variety, the cycle map from the Chow ring to ordinary cohomology factors through a richer theory, Deligne cohomology.[6] This incorporates the Abel–Jacobi map from cycles homologically equivalent to zero to the intermediate Jacobian. The exponential sequence shows that CH1(X) maps isomorphically to Deligne cohomology, but that fails for CHj(X) with j > 1.

For a scheme X over an arbitrary field k, there is an analogous cycle map from Chow groups to (Borel–Moore) etale homology. When X is smooth over k, this homomorphism can be identified with a ring homomorphism from the Chow ring to etale cohomology.[7]

Relation to K-theory

An (algebraic) vector bundle E on a smooth scheme X over a field has Chern classes ci(E) in CHi(X), with the same formal properties as in topology.[8] The Chern classes give a close connection between vector bundles and Chow groups. Namely, let K0(X) be the Grothendieck group of vector bundles on X. As part of the Grothendieck–Riemann–Roch theorem, Grothendieck showed that the Chern character gives an isomorphism

This isomorphism shows the importance of rational equivalence, compared to any other adequate equivalence relation on algebraic cycles.

Conjectures

Some of the deepest conjectures in algebraic geometry and number theory are attempts to understand Chow groups. For example:

For example, let X be a smooth complex projective surface. The Chow group of zero-cycles on X maps onto the integers by the degree homomorphism; let K be the kernel. If the geometric genus h0(X, Ω2) is not zero, Mumford showed that K is "infinite-dimensional" (not the image of any finite-dimensional family of zero-cycles on X).[10] The Bloch–Beilinson conjecture would imply a satisfying converse, Bloch's conjecture on zero-cycles: for a smooth complex projective surface X with geometric genus zero, K should be finite-dimensional; more precisely, it should map isomorphically to the group of complex points of the Albanese variety of X.[11]

Variants

Fulton and MacPherson extended the Chow ring to singular varieties by defining the "operational Chow ring" and more generally a bivariant theory associated to any morphism of schemes.[12] This is in a sense the most elementary extension of the Chow ring to singular varieties; other theories such as motivic cohomology map to the operational Chow ring.[13]

Arithmetic Chow groups are an amalgamation of Chow groups of varieties over Q together with a component encoding Arakelov-theoretical information, that is, differential forms on the associated complex manifold.

There is also the notion of Chow group of a stack, which is needed in particular to make sense of a virtual fundamental class.

History

Rational equivalence of divisors (known as linear equivalence) was studied in various forms during the 19th century, leading to the ideal class group in number theory and the Jacobian variety in the theory of algebraic curves. For higher-codimension cycles, rational equivalence was introduced by Severi in the 1930s. In 1956, Wei-Liang Chow gave an influential proof that the intersection product is well-defined on cycles modulo rational equivalence for a smooth quasi-projective variety, using Chow's moving lemma. Starting in the 1970s, Fulton and MacPherson gave the current standard foundation for Chow groups, working with singular varieties wherever possible. In their theory, the intersection product for smooth varieties is constructed by deformation to the normal cone.[14]

References

  1. Fulton. Intersection Theory, section 1.2 and Appendix A.3.
  2. Fulton, Intersection Theory, section 8.1.
  3. Fulton, Intersection Theory, Proposition 1.8.
  4. Bloch, Algebraic cycles and higher K-groups; Voevodsky, Triangulated categories of motives over a field, section 2.2 and Proposition 4.2.9.
  5. Fulton, Intersection Theory, section 19.1
  6. Voisin, Hodge Theory and Complex Algebraic Geometry, v. 1, section 12.3.3; v. 2, Theorem 9.24.
  7. Deligne, Cohomologie Etale (SGA 4 1/2), Expose 4.
  8. Fulton, Intersection Theory, section 3.2 and Example 8.3.3.
  9. Voisin, Hodge Theory and Complex Algebraic Geometry, v. 2, Conjecture 11.21.
  10. Voisin, Hodge Theory and Complex Algebraic Geometry, v. 2, Theorem 10.1.
  11. Voisin, Hodge Theory and Complex Algebraic Geometry, v. 2, Ch. 11.
  12. Fulton, Intersection Theory, Chapter 17.
  13. B. Totaro, Chow groups, Chow cohomology and linear varieties
  14. Fulton, Intersection Theory, Chapters 5, 6, 8.
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