The torsion component of the Picard scheme
This post is a continuation of Sean Cotner’s most recent post [see An example of a non-reduced Picard scheme]. Since writing that post, Bogdan Zavyalov shared some notes of his proving the following strengthened version of the results described there.
Main Theorem. Let  be a noetherian local ring and let 
 be a finite flat commutative group scheme over 
. There exists a smooth projective scheme 
 over 
 with geometrically connected 
-dimensional fibers such that 
. If the Cartier dual 
 is etale (i.e., 
 is of multiplicative type), then we may take 
 to have 
-dimensional fibers instead. Moreover, 
 can be taken to be the quotient of a complete intersection under the free action of 
.
A major motivation for the Main Theorem is that it can be used to construct examples of smooth projective schemes over a DVR of equicharacteristic  such that the Hodge numbers of the special and generic fibers are not equal; for this phenomenon, see the final section. This answers a question asked in the Stanford Number Theory Learning Seminar in a way not easily findable in the literature.
The basic construction of  as in the Main Theorem will be very similar to the one given in Cotner’s previous post, but there are a few major simplifications owing to the use of descent techniques, as well as some technical difficulties to overcome coming from the new relative setting. For example, there are some small intermediate arguments with algebraic spaces owing to the fact that certain Picard functors are not obviously representable (though all the relevant ones for us are a posteriori representable). We also remove all mention of Igusa’s theorem from the previous post. Our basic strategy in the general case is as follows. (See the rest of the post for notation and definitions.)
- Show that any complete intersection of dimension has trivial . 
- Show that if is a -torsor, then the pullback map has kernel , the Cartier dual of . 
- Construct a projective space over on which acts, freely outside of a codimension closed subset. 
- Use Bertini’s theorem to slice the quotient by hypersurfaces to obtain a smooth projective scheme of dimension so that the pullback of in is a complete intersection on which acts freely. 
- Conclude that is a -torsor and thus by points 1 and 2. 
1. Complete intersections and Picard schemes
Definition. Let  be a scheme and let 
 be a closed subscheme of 
. We say that 
 is a complete intersection of dimension 
 if it is a flat finitely presented 
-scheme with fibers of pure dimension 
 which are complete intersections.
Lemma 1.1. Let  be a complete intersection of dimension 
 over a field 
 and let 
 be an integer. We have 
 for all 
, 
, and 
 for all 
. In particular, 
 is geometrically connected. Moreover, if 
 is smooth and 
 then 
.
Proof. We induct on the codimension  of 
 inside 
. If 
, then this follows from the familiar computations of the cohomology of projective space. In general, by the definition of a complete intersection there is some complete intersection 
 and hyperplane 
 of degree 
 such that 
 and moreover there is a short exact sequence
where  is the natural inclusion. Tensoring by 
 and passing to cohomology gives exact sequences
By induction, if  then the two outside terms vanish. If 
, then we have the exact sequence
If , this shows 
. If 
, then again 
. Since 
, it follows from the Stein factorization that 
 is geometrically connected.
Now suppose that  is smooth and 
. To compute 
, recall first the Euler exact sequence for 
-dimensional projective space:
From this, we see that . In general, if a smooth 
 is the intersection of hypersurfaces whose degrees sum to 
, then we look at the conormal exact sequence
for  the natural inclusion. Passing to cohomology gives the short exact sequence
and it suffices by the above to show that . This now follows from the short exact sequence
since  and 
. This completes the cohomology calculations.
Recall the definition of the Picard functor: if  is a morphism of schemes then we define 
 to be the fppf sheafification of the functor sending an 
-scheme 
 to 
. The formation of this sheaf commutes with base change on S, i.e., 
 for all 
-schemes 
. In this generality, this functor is essentially useless, but Grothendieck and Artin proved the following remarkable representability theorems, see FGA Explained, Theorem 9.4.8, and Artin, Algebraization of Formal Moduli: I, Theorem 7.3.
Theorem 1.2. (i) (Grothendieck) Suppose that  is flat, finitely presented, projective Zariski-locally on 
, with geometrically integral fibers. Then 
 is represented by a separated, locally finitely presented 
-scheme. If 
, then 
 naturally for all 
-schemes 
.
(ii) (Artin) If  is flat, proper, finitely presented, and cohomologically flat in dimension 
 (i.e., 
 holds universally), then 
 is a quasi-separated algebraic space locally of finite presentation over 
.
Algebraic spaces only intervene for us in a rather technical way, as one can see in the proof of Lemma 1.3; ultimately everything we discuss will be a scheme, but to apply geometric methods we will need to know a priori that  is an algebraic space.
There are two further important notions for us: the identity component  and the torsion component 
. The identity component is defined as the subfunctor of 
 whose set of 
-points consists of those 
-points 
 of 
 such that for every 
 there exists an algebraically closed extension 
 of 
, a connected 
-scheme 
, points 
 such that 
 is an extension of 
, and a 
-point 
 of 
 such that 
 in 
 and 
. Note that if 
 is representable then this is the same as the set-theoretic union 
, where 
 is the identity component of the locally finite type 
-group scheme 
. The torsion component is defined as 
, where 
 denotes the multiplication by 
 map; this is also a subgroup functor of 
.
For our purposes,  will not be a very useful functor: in general, when 
 has non-reduced geometric fibers, 
 need not be an open subscheme of 
, though it is on fibers. (We will see examples of this phenomenon later.) However, the morphism of functors 
 is always representable by open immersions when 
 is proper over 
; if 
 is projective over 
 then this morphism is also representable by closed immersions. For both of these assertions, see SGA6, Exp. XIII, Thm. 4.7.
Lemma 1.3. Let  be a complete intersection of dimension 
 over a scheme 
. If 
 is smooth or 
 then 
. (In particular, 
 is representable.)
Proof. First suppose  for an algebraically closed field 
. By Theorem 1.2(ii) and Lemma 1.1, 
 is a quasi-separated algebraic space locally of finite type over 
. By Lemma 4.2 of Artin’s paper cited above, it follows in this case that in fact 
 is a 
-group scheme. (Note that quasi-separatedness is part of the definition of an algebraic space in Artin’s paper.) As 
, we see that 
 by Lemma 1.1. So it suffices to show that 
 has no torsion. If 
, then a Lefschetz theorem (see SGA2, Exp. XII, Cor. 3.7, and note that no smoothness hypotheses on 
 are necessary) states that 
, so indeed 
 is torsion-free in this case. Now suppose 
 is smooth. Recall that 
 for all 
 since 
 is algebraically closed. If 
 does not divide 
 then 
, so we have
By a Lefschetz theorem (see SGA2, Exp. XII, Cor. 3.5, and note again the lack of smoothness hypotheses), we have , so that this Hom set is trivial. To prove that there is no 
-torsion, note that there is an exact sequence of Zariski sheaves
where the first map is given by  and the second map is given by 
. The 
th power map is clearly injective since 
 is reduced, and the composition of the two maps is evidently 
. Exactness in the middle is more involved: the idea is to use normality and local freeness of 
 to reduce to proving that for a finitely generated field extension 
 and 
, 
 implies that 
 is a 
th power. After checking this for purely transcendental extensions, one uses the existence of a separating transcendence basis to deduce the general case. Since the complete argument is rather long, we omit it.
Now let  be the image of the map 
 in the exact sequence above, so there is a corresponding short exact sequence for 
 and we obtain, passing to cohomology, an exact sequence
where the right map is multiplication by . Since 
 by Lemma 1.1, it follows that 
, and indeed 
.
Now we work in the case of general . Using Lemma 1.1, a simple argument using cohomology and base change shows that 
 is cohomologically flat in dimension 
, so 
 is an algebraic space by Theorem 1.2(ii) and 
 is also an algebraic space since 
 is representable by open immersions. Since formation of 
 commutes with arbitrary base change, we see that 
 for all 
 by the first paragraph. Thus the identity section 
 is an isomorphism on fibers, and since 
 is trivially flat over itself, the fibral isomorphism theorem (see EGA IV, Cor. 17.9.5) implies that 
. (Note that the fibral isomorphism criterion holds for a morphism from a scheme to an algebraic space: morphisms may be checked to be isomorphisms after etale base change, so this follows immediately from the fact that algebraic spaces admit etale covers which are schemes and the relative diagonal of an algebraic space is representable.) This completes the proof.
Question. The above proof shows that all complete intersections in dimension  (smooth or not) have trivial 
 and no 
-torsion for any prime 
. Do there exist (non-smooth) complete intersections 
 of dimension 
 in characteristic 
 such that 
?
Lemma 1.4. Let  be a commutative finite locally free group scheme over a scheme 
 and let 
 be an fppf 
-torsor, where 
 is cohomologically flat in dimension 
 and 
 satisfies the hypotheses of the Theorem. The pullback map 
 has kernel isomorphic to 
, the Cartier dual of 
. The same is therefore true of 
.
Proof. We work with the presheaf  defined by 
 for all 
-schemes 
. There is a pullback map 
, and we claim that it has kernel 
. After fppf sheafification, this easily gives the result. To prove this claim, it suffices by base change on 
 to show that the kernel of the map 
 can be canonically identified with the group 
, and we will do this below.
Recall that fppf descent for quasicoherent sheaves says that a line bundle on  is equivalent to the data of a line bundle 
 on 
 along with an isomorphism 
, where 
 are the two canonical projections, satisfying the cocycle condition 
, where 
 is the projection onto the 
 and 
 coordinates. Given a line bundle 
 on 
, we obtain a datum of this form (a descent datum) via taking 
 and using the canonical isomorphism of functors 
. So a line bundle on 
 which becomes trivial after pullback to 
 is the same as the datum of an isomorphism 
 satisfying the cocycle condition. Since 
 canonically, this is the same as an automorphism of 
, i.e., an element of 
, satisfying the cocycle condition. We will show below that the cocycle condition can be described more concretely in terms of 
.
Since  is a 
-torsor, there is a canonical isomorphism 
 given functorially by 
. There is also an identification 
 given functorially by 
. Under these identifications, the maps 
, 
, and 
 are identified with maps 
 via
Suppose that  is such that the cocycle condition holds. Functorially, this means
for all  and 
, where 
 ranges over the category of 
-schemes. Since 
 is cohomologically flat in dimension 
, we have 
 naturally via pullback of units, so 
 may be regarded as a morphism 
, and the cocycle condition is precisely saying that 
 is a group homomorphism, i.e., 
. This completes the proof.
2. Group actions
Let  be a scheme, 
 a finite locally free 
-group scheme, and 
 a separated 
-scheme. An action of 
 on 
 is an 
-morphism 
 such that 
 is a group action for every 
-scheme 
. (As usual, this is equivalent to the commutativity of various diagrams like those in the ordinary definition of a group action.)
Definition. If  is an 
-scheme and 
, then the stabilizer of 
 in 
 is the functor 
 sending a 
-scheme 
 to 
. The free locus of the action is the functor 
 sending an 
-scheme 
 to 
.
Lemma 2.1. If  acts on 
 and 
 for some 
-scheme 
, then 
 is representable by a closed 
-subgroup scheme of 
, and for any 
-scheme 
 we have 
. The functor 
 is represented by an open subscheme of 
, and 
 for every 
-scheme 
.
Proof. The claims about base change are simple from the functorial definition, and will be omitted. For the first representability claim, note that there is a Cartesian diagram
where  denotes the action map 
. Since 
 is separated, 
 is a closed embedding, and it follows by base change that 
 is a closed 
-subgroup of 
, hence in particular a finite 
-scheme. Now if 
 is any 
-morphism, we see that there is a Cartesian diagram
so that  is a finite 
-group scheme. The morphism 
 is a proper monomorphism, hence a closed embedding, and we obtain the claim.
Recall that if  is a finite morphism, then the function 
 is an upper semicontinuous function: this follows directly from Nakayama’s lemma. If 
 is moreover an 
-group scheme then 
 for all 
 (since there exists a section 
), and 
 is trivial if and only if the fiber 
 is trivial for all 
 (apply the fibral isomorphism criterion to the identity section). It follows from these considerations applied to 
 that if 
 then 
 is an open subscheme of 
 and 
 represents 
. This proves the lemma.
We will also need the following Theorem proved in SGA3, Exp. V, Thm. 4.1 and Rem. 5.1. With notation as in the first paragraph of this section, recall that a morphism of -schemes 
 is a 
-torsor if 
 acts on 
 by 
-automorphisms and the natural map 
 given by 
 is an isomorphism.
Theorem 2.2. If  is a quasi-projective 
-scheme and 
 is a finite locally free 
-group scheme acting on 
 then the ringed space quotient 
 exists as a quasi-projective 
-scheme, and the natural morphism 
 is finite and open. If 
 acts freely on 
, then 
 is a 
-torsor and 
 represents the fppf sheaf quotient for the equivalence relation on 
 defined by the action of 
. In particular, in this latter case the formation of the quotient 
 commutes with all base change on 
.
The relevance of quasi-projectivity in this statement is that it implies that any finite collection of points  lying over an affine open of 
 all lie in an affine open of 
. This permits one, using some nontrivial formal arguments, to reduce to the case that 
 and 
 are affine, in which case one proves that 
 can be formed as the spectrum of the ring of invariants for the action of 
 on 
. If 
 is an open 
-stable subscheme then 
 exists as an open subscheme of 
. If 
 is an open subscheme then also 
 naturally.
If  acts freely on 
 then many properties of 
 follow from properties of 
. For example, if 
 is flat, then 
 is flat: in general, elementary commutative algebra arguments show that it is true that flatness may be checked on any faithfully flat cover. Moreover, if 
 is smooth then 
 is also smooth: this follows from the fact that “smooth = locally finite presentation + flat with geometrically regular fibers”, reduction to the Noetherian setting, and Matsumura, Commutative Ring Theory, Thm. 23.7. It is simple to see that properness of 
 is equivalent to that of 
, so that 
 is projective whenever 
 is projective.
3. Construction
Let  be a noetherian local ring and let 
 be a finite flat commutative group scheme of rank 
 over 
, as in the Main Theorem. For any integer 
 there is a natural action of 
 on the projective space 
. The following lemma is established in Raynaud’s paper 
-torsion du schéma de Picard, paragraph preceding Lemme 4.2.2.
Lemma 3.1. The free locus  is an open subset of 
 with complementary codimension 
 on fibers.
Proof. We offer a very brief sketch of the idea and refer to loc. cit. for a detailed argument. First, pass to geometric fibers to assume that S is the spectrum of an algebraically closed field, say of characteristic . If 
 has nontrivial stabilizer, then it contains a subgroup isomorphic to one of 
, 
, or 
 for some prime number 
. One first shows that the locus fixed by any of these subgroups in 
 has large codimension. In general, 
 contains only finitely many subgroups of the form 
 or 
 for 
, but it may contain infinitely many subgroups of the form 
 and 
. However, such subgroups are determined by their Lie algebras, so the collection of subgroups of each of these forms is parameterized by some projective space. One shows then that this projective space is of relatively small dimension to obtain the lemma.
By Theorem 2.2, the ringed space quotient  exists as a projective 
-scheme, so because 
 is local it is an 
-closed subscheme of some projective space 
. By the discussion directly following Theorem 2.2, 
 is a smooth open subscheme of 
; its closed complement 
 has fibers of codimension 
 because dimension is insensitive to finite surjective maps. By Bertini’s theorem [see Poonen, Bertini theorems over finite fields, or Gabber, On space filling curves and Albanese varieties for a proof over finite fields], if 
 then there exists 
 hypersurfaces 
 in the special fiber 
 such that 
 is a smooth integral 
-dimensional closed subscheme of 
 disjoint from the image of 
. Lift each 
 to a hypersurface 
 in 
 and let 
. Let 
 be the (schematic) preimage of 
 in 
.
Lemma 3.2. The scheme  is 
-smooth with equidimensional fibers of dimension 
.
Proof. We prove first that  is 
-flat. Note that the special fiber 
 is integral of dimension 
, and Chevalley’s theorem on upper-semicontinuity of fiber dimension (see EGA IV, 13.1.3 for a proof for general 
) implies that in fact every fiber of 
 over 
 has dimension at most 
. But every fiber of 
 over 
 is integral of dimension 
, and intersection with a hyperplane can cut the dimension down by at most 
; this follows from Krull’s height theorem. Since every zerodivisor in a noetherian local ring 
 is contained in a minimal prime ideal, if 
 is equidimensional and 
 is a nonunit then 
 is a nonzerodivisor if and only if 
. By induction on 
, using the above considerations and the fact that 
 has integral fibers, we see that 
 has equidimensional fibers of dimension 
. If each 
 is defined locally on 
 by some function 
, it follows that 
 is a regular sequence since this may be checked on fibers over 
. So if 
 is an affine open on which 
 is defined by 
, there is an exact sequence 
, where the first map is given by multiplication by 
. This map is injective after base change to any residue field of 
 (as we noted above), so that 
 is flat over 
: we see that 
 for all 
, so flatness follows from Stacks Project, 00M5 and a Zorn’s lemma-style argument. These same considerations show by induction on 
 that 
 is 
-flat.
Now recall that the -smooth locus in 
is open, and 
 is 
-smooth at all points of 
 since 
 is 
-smooth at a point 
 if and only if it is flat over 
 at 
 and 
 is smooth in its fiber. Since 
 is proper, it follows immediately that 
 is smooth over 
, completing the proof of the Lemma.
Now we take  in Lemmas 3.1 and 3.2. Note that 
 is cut out of 
 by the preimages of the 
 in 
, and it is easy to see from Lemma 3.2 that 
 is a complete intersection of dimension 
. So if 
 then 
 is smooth and projective over 
 with 
-dimensional geometrically integral fibers and 
 is a complete intersection of dimension 
. By Lemma 1.3 we see that 
, and it follows from Lemma 1.4 that 
. If 
 is etale and 
, then 
 is smooth, being a 
-torsor over the smooth 
, so the same argument shows again that 
. This completes the proof of the Main Theorem.
Question. If  is not of multiplicative type, then does there necessarily exist a 
-dimensional smooth projective 
 with 
? (This is related to the previous question: if the answer to this question is “no”, then the construction above will yield a 
-dimensional complete intersection with nontrivial 
-torsion in its Picard group.) What is certainly true is that the above argument can be modified in a simple way to show that if 
 is connected over a field 
 then there does exist a 
-dimensional smooth projective 
 with 
.
4. Jumping Hodge numbers
We now give two examples of “pathologies” we can deduce from the Main Theorem. Recall that if  are integers then the 
 Hodge number of a proper scheme 
 over a field 
 is defined by 
. Classically (i.e., over the complex numbers), the Hodge numbers satisfy various magical properties: for example, if 
 is smooth and projective then one always has 
. As mentioned in Cotner’s previous post, taking 
 for a field 
 of characteristic 
 and 
, we find an example of a variety in characteristic 
 which does not satisfy Hodge symmetry: namely, 
 and 
. Another magical property of Hodge numbers over 
 (or, more generally, over a field of characteristic 
) is that they are constant in smooth projective families; this is proved via analytic methods. In the following two examples, we will see that this fails away from equicharacteristic 
.
Example. Jumping Hodge numbers in mixed characteristic .
Let 
 be a DVR of mixed characteristic 
 and 
, so that the generic fiber 
 is etale and the special fiber 
 is connected. Let 
 be as in the Main Theorem, so 
 is smooth and projective over 
, and 
. Recall that for any scheme 
 over a field 
 such that 
 is representable, we have 
. Thus we have 
 and 
, i.e., “the Hodge number jumps”. Notice also that 
 has special fiber 
 and generic fiber 
, so that this is not open in 
.
Example. Jumping Hodge numbers in equicharacteristic  Let 
 be a DVR of equicharacteristic 
 and let 
 be a totally ramified generically separable extension of degree 
. Let 
 denote the Weil restriction 
, so that 
 has special fiber 
 and generic fiber 
. Let 
 denote the kernel of Frobenius on 
, so that 
 is a finite flat commutative group scheme over 
 with special fiber 
 and generic fiber 
. So if 
 is the Cartier dual of 
 then we have 
 and 
 Let 
 be the smooth projective 
-scheme whose existence guaranteed by the Main Theorem, so that 
. So as in the previous section we have 
 and 
.
Insane post.