Definition

Let and be irreducible algebraic sets. A map is called a morphism if there exists such that for any .

Example. Define prime ideals and . Consider -value functions on

Note that iff iff . Therefore, .

-Valued Functions and Coordinate Rings

  • A -valued function on an algebraic set (as defined in the notes) is indeed a morphism from to .
  • The coordinate ring can be viewed as the algebraic structure (a ring) formed by all such -valued morphisms from to , where morphisms that agree on are considered equivalent.

Equivalence of Categories: Irreducible Algebraic Sets and Coordinate Rings

Proposition

If and are two irreducible algebraic sets, then the set of morphisms from to and the set of -homomorphisms from to are canonically isomorphic, that is, .

\begin{proof} For any morphism and any -value function , their composition is a -valued function on , as . Now we have a “pull back”

Since , we have

where and . Notice that is a -homomorphism of rings, because and for any .

Conversely, we claim that for some -homomorphism of rings , there exists such that . If the claim holds, then . Hence, define , and define

We can verify that

  • is well-defined, because iff iff for all ;
  • for any , there is :
    • it suffices to show for any , ;
    • as is a -homomorphism of ring;
    • since , we have and so ;
    • thus, . \end{proof}

Remark. This proposition tells us the functor is fully faithful.

Proposition

The assignment

extends to a contravariant functor :

which is an equivalence of categories.

\begin{proof} ^23e635 shows that is a fully faithful factor, so it remains to check every finite generated integral domain over occurs as for some . Since is finitely generated, it can be written as and then . \end{proof}

Corollary

For a morphism between affine varieties and its induced map , if is injective, then is dense in .

\begin{proof} \end{proof}

Topology on

If is continuous under this topology, then is closed. Define Zariski topology of consists of closed sets . For algebraic set , Zariski topology on is the induced topology from , that is, its closed sets are defined as

It coincides with

For any , consider . Hence with .

A basis of Zariski topology is

because any open set .

Definition

A topological space is Noetherian if its closed sets satisfy the DCC, that is, there does not exist infinite sequence of closed sets .

Notice that corresponds to , then Zariski topology is Noetherian as is Noetherian and ideals is ACC.

Definition

In ,

  • Zariski closed sets = ;
  • For projective algebraic set , we use the induced topology;
  • is a topological basis;
  • For a homogeneous coordinate on , is a homeomorphism.

Recall in affine algebraic set, we have

We cannot use it to define functions on projective algebraic set. For example, is homogeneous of degree , and it has no definition on .