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1 - The local cohomology functors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2010

M. P. Brodmann
Affiliation:
Universität Zürich
R. Y. Sharp
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield
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Summary

The main objective of this chapter is to introduce the a-torsion functor Γa (throughout the book, a always denotes an ideal in a (non-trivial) commutative Noetherian ring R) and its right derived functors, referred to as the local cohomology functors with respect to a. We shall see that Γa is naturally equivalent to the functor and, indeed, that is naturally equivalent to the functor for each i ≥ 0; moreover, as Γa turns out to be left exact, the functors Γa and are naturally equivalent.

This chapter also serves notice that our approach is based on fundamental techniques of homological commutative algebra, such as ones based on connected sequences of functors (see [52, pp. 212–214]): readers familiar with such ideas, and with the local cohomology functors, might like to just glance through this chapter and to move rapidly on to Chapter 2.

Torsion functors

Definition. For each R-module M, set, the set of elements of M which are annihilated by some power of a. Note that Γa(M) is a submodule of M. For a homomorphism f : MN of R-modules, we have fa(M)) ⊆ Γa(N), and so there is a mapping Γa(f) : Γa(M)→ Γa(N) which agrees with f on each element of Γa(M).

It is clear that, if g : MN and h : NL are further homomorphisms of R-modules and rR, then Γa(h o f) = Γa(h) o Γa(f), Γa(f + g) = Γa(f) + Γa(g), Γa(rf) = r Γa(f) and Γa(IdM) = Id Γa(M).

Type
Chapter
Information
Local Cohomology
An Algebraic Introduction with Geometric Applications
, pp. 1 - 16
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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