Geometric quotient

In algebraic geometry, a geometric quotient of an algebraic variety X with the action of an algebraic group G is a morphism of varieties π : X Y {\displaystyle \pi :X\to Y} such that[1]

(i) The map π {\displaystyle \pi } is surjective, and its fibers are exactly the G-orbits in X.
(ii) The topology of Y is the quotient topology: a subset U Y {\displaystyle U\subset Y} is open if and only if π 1 ( U ) {\displaystyle \pi ^{-1}(U)} is open.
(iii) For any open subset U Y {\displaystyle U\subset Y} , π # : k [ U ] k [ π 1 ( U ) ] G {\displaystyle \pi ^{\#}:k[U]\to k[\pi ^{-1}(U)]^{G}} is an isomorphism. (Here, k is the base field.)

The notion appears in geometric invariant theory. (i), (ii) say that Y is an orbit space of X in topology. (iii) may also be phrased as an isomorphism of sheaves O Y π ( O X G ) {\displaystyle {\mathcal {O}}_{Y}\simeq \pi _{*}({\mathcal {O}}_{X}^{G})} . In particular, if X is irreducible, then so is Y and k ( Y ) = k ( X ) G {\displaystyle k(Y)=k(X)^{G}} : rational functions on Y may be viewed as invariant rational functions on X (i.e., rational-invariants of X).

For example, if H is a closed subgroup of G, then G / H {\displaystyle G/H} is a geometric quotient. A GIT quotient may or may not be a geometric quotient: but both are categorical quotients, which is unique; in other words, one cannot have both types of quotients (without them being the same).

Relation to other quotients

A geometric quotient is a categorical quotient. This is proved in Mumford's geometric invariant theory.

A geometric quotient is precisely a good quotient whose fibers are orbits of the group.

Examples

  • The canonical map A n + 1 0 P n {\displaystyle \mathbb {A} ^{n+1}\setminus 0\to \mathbb {P} ^{n}} is a geometric quotient.
  • If L is a linearized line bundle on an algebraic G-variety X, then, writing X ( 0 ) s {\displaystyle X_{(0)}^{s}} for the set of stable points with respect to L, the quotient
X ( 0 ) s X ( 0 ) s / G {\displaystyle X_{(0)}^{s}\to X_{(0)}^{s}/G}  
is a geometric quotient.

References

  1. ^ Brion, M. "Introduction to actions of algebraic groups" (PDF). Definition 1.18.