Base change
change of base
A category-theoretical construction; special cases are the concept of an induced fibration in topology, and extension of the ring of scalars in the theory of modules.
Let be a category with fibred products and let
be a morphism of
. A base change by means of
is a functor from the category of
-objects (i.e. the category of morphism
, where
is an object of
) to the category of
-objects, taking an
-object
to the
-object
, where
and
is projection onto the second factor. The morphism
is then called the base-change morphism. One also says that
is obtained from
by base change.
A special case of a base change is the concept of a fibre of a morphism of schemes
: The fibre of the morphism
over a point
is the scheme
![]() |
i.e. the scheme obtained from by base change via the natural morphism
. A similar definition yields the geometric fibre
; it is obtained by base change via the morphism
associated with a geometric point of
, where
is an algebraically closed field. Many properties of the
-scheme
are preserved under a base change. The inverse problem — to infer the properties of a scheme
from those of the schemes obtained from
by base change — is considered in descent theory (see also [3]).
Let be the morphism obtained from
via a morphism
, so that one has a Cartesian square
![]() |
Let be a sheaf of sets on
. Then there exists a natural sheaf mapping
. If
is a sheaf of Abelian groups, then for every
there exists a natural sheaf homomorphism
![]() |
Under these conditions, and
are also called base-change morphisms. It is usually said that the base-change theorem is valid if
(or
) is an isomorphism. In other words, the base-change theorem is a proposition about the compatibility (commutability) of the functors
with the base-change functor. In particular, if
is the imbedding of a point
, the base-change theorem states that there exists a natural isomorphism
between the fibre of the
-th direct image of the sheaf
and the
-dimensional cohomology group of the fibre of the morphism
. The base-change theorem is valid in the following situations: 1)
is a proper mapping of paracompact topological spaces,
is a locally compact space [1]; 2)
is a separable quasi-compact morphism of schemes,
is a flat morphism,
is a quasi-coherent sheaf of
-modules (the comparison theorem for the cohomology of ordinary and formal schemes — see [2] — can also be interpreted as a base-change theorem); or 3)
is a proper morphism of schemes,
is a torsion sheaf in the étale topology. Some other cases in which base-change theorems are valid are considered in [3].
References
[1] | R. Godement, "Topologie algébrique et théorie des faisceaux" , Hermann (1958) |
[2] | A. Grothendieck, J. Dieudonné, "Eléments de géometrie algébrique" Publ. Math. IHES , 11 (1961) |
[3] | "Théorie des topos et cohomologie étale des schémas" M. Artin (ed.) A. Grothendieck (ed.) J.-L. Verdier (ed.) , Sem. Geom. Alg. , 4 , Springer (1973) |
Base change. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Base_change&oldid=14478