Picard group
A group of classes of invertible sheaves (or line bundles). More precisely, let be a ringed space. A sheaf of
-modules
is called invertible if it is locally isomorphic to the structure sheaf
. The set of classes of isomorphic invertible sheaves on
is denoted by
. The tensor product
defines an operation on the set
, making it an Abelian group called the Picard group of
. The group
is naturally isomorphic to the cohomology group
, where
is the sheaf of invertible elements in
.
For a commutative ring , the Picard group
is the group of classes of invertible
-modules;
. For a Krull ring, the group
is closely related to the divisor class group for this ring.
The Picard group of a complete normal algebraic variety has a natural algebraic structure (see Picard scheme). The reduced connected component of the zero of
is denoted by
and is called the Picard variety for
; it is an algebraic group (an Abelian variety if
is a complete non-singular variety). The quotient group
is called the Néron–Severi group and it has a finite number of generators; its rank is called the Picard number. In the complex case, where
is a smooth projective variety over
, the group
is isomorphic to the quotient group of the space
of holomorphic
-forms on
by the lattice
.
References
[1] | D. Mumford, "Lectures on curves on an algebraic surface" , Princeton Univ. Press (1966) |
Comments
References
[a1] | R. Hartshorne, "Algebraic geometry" , Springer (1977) pp. 91 |
Picard group. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Picard_group&oldid=17920