Reduced scheme
A scheme whose local ring at any point does not contain non-zero nilpotent elements. For any scheme $\left({ X,\mathcal{O}_X }\right)$ there is a largest closed reduced subscheme $\left({ X_{\mathrm{red}},\mathcal{O}_{X_{\mathrm{red}}} }\right)$, characterized by the relations $$ \mathcal{O}_{X_{\mathrm{red}},x} = \mathcal{O}_{X,x}/r_x $$ where $r_x$ is the ideal of all nilpotent elements of the ring $\mathcal{O}_{X,x}$. A group scheme over a field of characteristic 0 is reduced [3].
References
[1] | M. Artin, "Algebraic approximation of structures over complete local rings" Publ. Math. IHES , 36 (1969) pp. 23–58 MR0268188 Zbl 0181.48802 |
[2] | A. Grothendieck, J. Dieudonné, "Eléments de géométrie algebrique I. Le langage des schémas" Publ. Math. IHES , 4 (1960) MR0217083 MR0163908 Zbl 0118.36206 |
[3] | D. Mumford, "Lectures on curves on an algebraic surface" , Princeton Univ. Press (1966) MR0209285 Zbl 0187.42701 |
Comments
That a group scheme over a field of characteristic 0 is reduced is called Cartier's theorem, cf. also [a1].
It may happen that a scheme $X \rightarrow S$ over a base scheme $S$ is reduced but that $X \times_S T$ is not reduced (even with $S$ and $T$ reduced). The classical objects of study in algebraic geometry are the algebraic schemes which are reduced and which stay reduced after extending the base field.
References
[a1] | F. Oort, "Algebraic group schemes in characteristic zero are reduced" Invent. Math. , 2 (1969) pp. 79–80 MR0206005 Zbl 0173.49002 |
[a2] | R. Hartshorne, "Algebraic geometry" , Springer (1977) MR0463157 Zbl 0367.14001 |
Reduced scheme. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Reduced_scheme&oldid=34166