There is a long history of comparison results between algebraic geometry and analytic geometry, beginning in the nineteenth century. Some of the more important advances are listed here in chronological order.
Riemann's existence theorem Riemann surface theory shows that a
compact Riemann surface has enough
meromorphic functions on it, making it an (smooth projective)
algebraic curve. Under the name '''Riemann's existence theorem'
a deeper result on ramified coverings of a compact Riemann surface was known: such finite'' coverings as
topological spaces are classified by
permutation representations of the
fundamental group of the complement of the
ramification points. Since the Riemann surface property is local, such coverings are quite easily seen to be coverings in the complex-analytic sense. It is then possible to conclude that they come from covering maps of algebraic curves—that is, such coverings all come from
finite extensions of the
function field.
The Lefschetz principle In the twentieth century, the
Lefschetz principle, named for
Solomon Lefschetz, was cited in algebraic geometry to justify the use of topological techniques for algebraic geometry over any
algebraically closed field K of
characteristic 0, by treating
K as if it were the complex number field. An elementary form of it asserts that true statements of the
first order theory of fields about
C are true for any algebraically closed field
K of characteristic zero. A precise principle and its proof are due to
Alfred Tarski and are based in
mathematical logic. This principle permits the carrying over of some results obtained using analytic or topological methods for algebraic varieties over
C to other algebraically closed ground fields of characteristic 0. (e.g.
Kodaira type vanishing theorem.)
Chow's theorem Chow's theorem (), proved by
Wei-Liang Chow, is an example of the most immediately useful kind of comparison available. It states that an analytic subspace of complex
projective space that is closed (in the ordinary topological sense) is an algebraic subvariety. This can be rephrased as "any analytic subspace of complex projective space that is closed in the
strong topology is closed in the
Zariski topology." This allows quite a free use of complex-analytic methods within the classical parts of algebraic geometry.
GAGA Foundations for the many relations between the two theories were put in place during the early part of the 1950s, as part of the business of laying the foundations of algebraic geometry to include, for example, techniques from
Hodge theory. The major paper consolidating the theory was by
Jean-Pierre Serre, now usually referred to as
GAGA. It proves general results that relate classes of algebraic varieties, regular morphisms and
sheaves with classes of analytic spaces, holomorphic mappings and sheaves. It reduces all of these to the comparison of categories of sheaves. Nowadays the phrase
GAGA-style result is used for any theorem of comparison, allowing passage between a category of objects from algebraic geometry, and their morphisms, to a well-defined subcategory of analytic geometry objects and holomorphic mappings.
Formal statement of GAGA • Let (X,\mathcal O_X) be a
scheme of finite type over \C. Then there is a topological space X^\mathrm{an} that consists of the closed points of X with a continuous inclusion map \lambda_X : X^\mathrm{an}\to X. The topology on X^\mathrm{an} is called the "complex topology" (and is very different from the subspace topology). • Suppose \phi:X\to Y is a
morphism of schemes of locally finite type over \C. Then there exists a continuous map \phi^\mathrm{an}:X^\mathrm{an}\to Y^\mathrm{an} such that \lambda_Y \circ \phi^\mathrm{an} = \phi \circ \lambda_X. • There is a sheaf \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an} on X^\mathrm{an} such that (X^\mathrm{an}, \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an}) is a ringed space and \lambda_X : X^\mathrm{an}\to X becomes a map of ringed spaces. The space (X^\mathrm{an}, \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an}) is called the "analytification" of (X,\mathcal O_X) and is an analytic space. For every \phi:X\to Y the map \phi^\mathrm{an} defined above is a mapping of analytic spaces. Furthermore, the map \phi\mapsto\phi^\mathrm{an} maps open immersions into open immersions. If X=\operatorname{Spec}(\C[x_1,\dots,x_n]) then X^\mathrm{an} = \C^n and \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an}(U) for every polydisc U is a suitable quotient of the space of holomorphic functions on U. • For every sheaf \mathcal F on X (called algebraic sheaf) there is a sheaf \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} on X^\mathrm{an} (called analytic sheaf) and a map of sheaves of \mathcal O_X -modules \lambda_X^*: \mathcal F\rightarrow (\lambda_X)_* \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} . The sheaf \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} is defined as \lambda_X^{-1} \mathcal F \otimes_{\lambda_X^{-1} \mathcal O_X} \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an} . The correspondence \mathcal F \mapsto \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} defines an
exact functor from the category of sheaves over (X, \mathcal O_X) to the category of sheaves of (X^\mathrm{an}, \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an}) .The following two statements are the heart of Serre's GAGA theorem (as extended by
Alexander Grothendieck,
Amnon Neeman, and others). • If f:X\to Y is an arbitrary morphism of schemes of finite type over \C and \mathcal F is coherent then the natural map (f_* \mathcal F)^\mathrm{an}\rightarrow f_*^\mathrm{an} \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} is injective. If f is proper then this map is an isomorphism. One also has isomorphisms of all higher direct image sheaves (R^i f_* \mathcal F)^\mathrm{an} \cong R^i f_*^\mathrm{an} \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} in this case. • Now assume that X^\mathrm{an} is
Hausdorff and compact. If \mathcal F, \mathcal G are two coherent algebraic sheaves on (X, \mathcal O_X) and if f\colon \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} \rightarrow \mathcal G^\mathrm{an} is a map of sheaves of \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an} -modules then there exists a unique map of sheaves of \mathcal O_X -modules \varphi: \mathcal F\rightarrow \mathcal G with f =\varphi^\mathrm{an} . If \mathcal R is a coherent analytic sheaf of \mathcal O_X^\mathrm{an} -modules over X^\mathrm{an} then there exists a coherent algebraic sheaf \mathcal F of \mathcal O_X -modules and an isomorphism \mathcal F^\mathrm{an} \cong \mathcal R . In slightly lesser generality, the GAGA theorem asserts that the category of coherent algebraic sheaves on a complex projective variety X and the category of coherent analytic sheaves on the corresponding analytic space X^\mathrm{an} are equivalent. The analytic space X^\mathrm{an} is obtained roughly by pulling back to X the complex structure from \C^n through the coordinate charts. Indeed, phrasing the theorem in this manner is closer in spirit to Serre's paper, seeing how the full scheme-theoretic language that the above formal statement uses heavily had not yet been invented by the time of GAGA's publication. == See also ==