Proper base change Proper base change theorems for
quasi-coherent sheaves apply in the following situation: f: X \to S is a
proper morphism between
noetherian schemes, and \mathcal{F} is a
coherent sheaf which is
flat over
S (i.e., \mathcal F_x is
flat over \mathcal O_{S, f(x)}). In this situation, the following statements hold: • "Semicontinuity theorem": • For each p \ge 0, the function s \mapsto \dim_{k(s)} H^p (X_s, \mathcal{F}_s): S \to \mathbb{Z} is upper
semicontinuous. • The function s \mapsto \chi(\mathcal{F}_s) is locally constant, where \chi(\mathcal{F}) denotes the
Euler characteristic. • "
Grauert's theorem": if
S is reduced and
connected, then for each p \ge 0 the following are equivalent • s \mapsto \dim_{k(s)} H^p (X_s, \mathcal{F}_s) is constant. • R^p f_* \mathcal{F} is locally free and the natural map ::R^p f_* \mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_S} k(s) \to H^p(X_s, \mathcal{F}_s) :is an isomorphism for all s \in S. :Furthermore, if these conditions hold, then the natural map ::R^{p-1} f_* \mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_S} k(s) \to H^{p-1}(X_s, \mathcal{F}_s) :is an isomorphism for all s \in S. • If, for some
p, H^p(X_s, \mathcal{F}_s) = 0 for all s \in S, then the natural map ::R^{p-1} f_* \mathcal{F} \otimes_{\mathcal{O}_S} k(s) \to H^{p-1}(X_s, \mathcal{F}_s) :is an isomorphism for all s \in S. As the
stalk of the sheaf R^p f_* \mathcal F is closely related to the cohomology of the fiber of the point under
f, this statement is paraphrased by saying that "cohomology commutes with base extension". These statements are proved using the following fact, where in addition to the above assumptions S = \operatorname{Spec} A: there is a finite complex 0 \to K^0 \to K^1 \to \cdots \to K^n \to 0 of
finitely generated projective A-modules and a natural isomorphism of functors :H^p(X \times_S \operatorname{Spec} -, \mathcal{F} \otimes_A -) \to H^p(K^\bullet \otimes_A -), p \ge 0 on the category of A-algebras.
Flat base change The base change map :g^*(R^r f_* \mathcal{F}) \to R^r f'_*(g'^*\mathcal{F}) is an isomorphism for a
quasi-coherent sheaf \mathcal F (on X), provided that the map g: S' \rightarrow S is
flat (together with a number of technical conditions:
f needs to be a
separated morphism of finite type, the schemes involved need to be Noetherian).
Flat base change in the derived category A far reaching extension of flat base change is possible when considering the base change map :Lg^* Rf_* (\mathcal{F}) \to Rf'_*(Lg'^*\mathcal{F}) in the derived category of sheaves on ''S','' similarly as mentioned above. Here Lg^* is the (total) derived functor of the pullback of \mathcal O-modules (because g^* \mathcal G = \mathcal O_X \otimes_{g^{-1} \mathcal O_S} g^{-1} \mathcal G involves a tensor product, g^* is not exact when is not flat and therefore is not equal to its derived functor Lg^*). This map is a quasi-isomorphism provided that the following conditions are satisfied: • S is quasi-compact and f is quasi-compact and quasi-separated, • \mathcal F is an object in D^b(\mathcal{O}_X\text{-mod}), the bounded derived category of \mathcal{O}_X-modules, and its cohomology sheaves are quasi-coherent (for example, \mathcal F could be a bounded complex of quasi-coherent sheaves) • X and S' are
Tor-independent over S, meaning that if x \in X and s' \in S' satisfy f(x) = s = g(s'), then for all integers p \ge 1, :\operatorname{Tor}_p^{\mathcal{O}_{S,s}}(\mathcal{O}_{X,x}, \mathcal{O}_{S',s'}) = 0. • One of the following conditions is satisfied: • \mathcal F has finite flat amplitude relative to f, meaning that it is quasi-isomorphic in D^-(f^{-1}\mathcal O_S\text{-mod}) to a complex \mathcal F' such that (\mathcal F')^i is f^{-1}\mathcal O_S-flat for all i outside some bounded interval [m, n]; equivalently, there exists an interval [m, n] such that for any complex \mathcal G in D^-(f^{-1}\mathcal O_S\text{-mod}), one has \operatorname{Tor}_i(\mathcal F, \mathcal G) = 0 for all i outside [m, n]; or • g has finite Tor-dimension, meaning that \mathcal{O}_{S'} has finite flat amplitude relative to g. One advantage of this formulation is that the flatness hypothesis has been weakened. However, making concrete computations of the cohomology of the left- and right-hand sides now requires the
Grothendieck spectral sequence.
Base change in derived algebraic geometry Derived algebraic geometry provides a means to drop the flatness assumption, provided that the pullback X' is replaced by the
homotopy pullback. In the easiest case when
X,
S, and S' are affine (with the notation as above), the homotopy pullback is given by the
derived tensor product :X' = \operatorname{Spec} (B' \otimes^L_B A) Then, assuming that the schemes (or, more generally, derived schemes) involved are quasi-compact and quasi-separated, the natural transformation :L g^* R f_* \mathcal{F} \to Rf'_* Lg'^* \mathcal{F} is a
quasi-isomorphism for any quasi-coherent sheaf, or more generally a
complex of quasi-coherent sheaves. The afore-mentioned flat base change result is in fact a special case since for
g flat the homotopy pullback (which is locally given by a derived tensor product) agrees with the ordinary pullback (locally given by the underived tensor product), and since the pullback along the flat maps
g and ''g' ''are automatically derived (i.e., Lg^* = g^*). The auxiliary assumptions related to the Tor-independence or Tor-amplitude in the preceding base change theorem also become unnecessary. In the above form, base change has been extended by to the situation where
X,
S, and ''S'
are (possibly derived) stacks, provided that the map f
is a perfect map (which includes the case that f
is a quasi-compact, quasi-separated map of schemes, but also includes more general stacks, such as the classifying stack BG'' of an
algebraic group in characteristic zero).
Variants and applications Proper base change also holds in the context of
complex manifolds and
complex analytic spaces. The
theorem on formal functions is a variant of the proper base change, where the pullback is replaced by a
completion operation. The
see-saw principle and the
theorem of the cube, which are foundational facts in the theory of
abelian varieties, are a consequence of proper base change. A base-change also holds for
D-modules: if
X,
S, ''X',
and S'
are smooth varieties (but f
and g'' need not be flat or proper etc.), there is a quasi-isomorphism :g^\dagger \int_f \mathcal F \to \int_{f'} g'^\dagger \mathcal F, where -^\dagger and \int denote the inverse and direct image functors for
D-modules. ==Base change for étale sheaves==