Fundamental group scheme
In mathematics, the fundamental group scheme is a group scheme canonically associated to a scheme over a Dedekind scheme (e.g. the spectrum of a field or the spectrum of a discrete valuation ring). It is a generalisation of the étale fundamental group. Although its existence was conjectured by Alexander Grothendieck, the first construction is due to Madhav Nori,[1][2] who only worked on schemes over fields. A generalisation to schemes over Dedekind schemes is due to Carlo Gasbarri.[3]
First definition
Let be a perfect field and
a faithfully flat and proper morphism of schemes with
a reduced and connected scheme. Assume the existence of a section
, then the fundamental group scheme
of
in
is defined as the affine group scheme naturally associated to the neutral tannakian category (over
) of essentially finite vector bundles over
.
Second definition
Let be a Dedekind scheme,
any connected scheme (not necessarily reduced)[4] and
a faithfully flat morphism of finite type (not necessarily proper). Assume the existence of a section
. Once we prove that the category of isomorphism classes of torsors over
(pointed over
) under the action of finite and flat
-group schemes is cofiltered then we define the universal torsor (pointed over
) as the projective limit of all the torsors of that category. The
-group scheme acting on it is called the fundamental group scheme and denoted by
(when
is the spectrum of a perfect field the two definitions coincide so that no confusion can arise).
See also
Notes
- ↑ M. V. Nori On the Representations of the Fundamental Group, Compositio Mathematica, Vol. 33, Fasc. 1, (1976), p. 29-42
- ↑ T. Szamuely Galois Groups and Fundamental Groups. Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics, Vol. 117 (2009)
- ↑ C. Gasbarri, Heights of Vector Bundles and the Fundamental Group Scheme of a Curve, Duke Mathematical Journal, Vol. 117, No. 2, (2003) p. 287-311
- ↑ M. Antei, The fundamental group scheme of a non reduced scheme, Bulletin des Sciences Mathématiques, Volume 135, Issue 5, July–August 2011, Pages 531-539.