One of the useful and readily computable areas of deformation theory comes from the deformation theory of germs of complex spaces, such as
Stein manifolds,
complex manifolds, or
complex analytic varieties. Note that this theory can be
globalized to complex manifolds and complex analytic spaces by considering the sheaves of germs of holomorphic functions, tangent spaces, etc. Such algebras are of the formA \cong \frac{\mathbb{C}\{z_1,\ldots, z_n\}}{I} where \mathbb{C}\{z_1,\ldots,z_n \} is the ring of convergent power-series and I is an ideal. For example, many authors study the germs of functions of a singularity, such as the algebraA \cong \frac{\mathbb{C}\{x,y\}}{(y^2 - x^n)}representing a plane-curve singularity. A
germ of analytic algebras is then an object in the opposite category of such algebras. Then, a
deformation of a germ of analytic algebras X_0 is given by a flat map of germs of analytic algebras f:X \to S where S has a distinguished point 0 such that the X_0 fits into the pullback square\begin{matrix} X_0 & \to & X \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow \\ • & \xrightarrow[0]{} & S \end{matrix}These deformations have an
equivalence relation given by commutative squares\begin{matrix} X'& \to & X \\ \downarrow & & \downarrow \\ S' & \to & S \end{matrix}where the horizontal arrows are isomorphisms. For example, there is a deformation of the
plane curve singularity given by the opposite diagram of the
commutative diagram of analytic algebras\begin{matrix} \frac{\mathbb {C} \{x,y\}}{(y^{2}-x^{n})} & \leftarrow & \frac{\mathbb {C} \{x,y, s\}}{(y^{2}-x^{n} + s)} \\ \uparrow & & \uparrow \\ \mathbb{C} & \leftarrow & \mathbb{C}\{s\} \end{matrix}In fact, Milnor studied such deformations, where a singularity is deformed by a constant, hence the fiber over a non-zero s is called the
Milnor fiber.
Cohomological Interpretation of deformations It should be clear there could be many deformations of a single germ of analytic functions. Because of this, there are some book-keeping devices required to organize all of this information. These organizational devices are constructed using tangent cohomology. This is formed by using the
Koszul–Tate resolution, and potentially modifying it by adding additional generators for non-regular algebras A. In the case of analytic algebras these resolutions are called the
Tjurina resolution for the mathematician who first studied such objects,
Galina Tyurina. This is a graded-commutative differential graded algebra (R_\bullet, s) such that R_0 \to A is a surjective map of analytic algebras, and this map fits into an exact sequence\cdots \xrightarrow{s} R_{-2} \xrightarrow{s} R_{-1} \xrightarrow{s} R_0 \xrightarrow{p} A \to 0Then, by taking the differential graded module of derivations (\text{Der}(R_\bullet), d), its cohomology forms the
tangent cohomology of the germ of analytic algebras A. These cohomology groups are denoted T^k(A). The T^1(A) contains information about all of the deformations of A and can be readily computed using the exact sequence0 \to T^0(A) \to \text{Der}(R_0) \xrightarrow{d} \text{Hom}_{R_0}(I,A) \to T^1(A) \to 0If A is isomorphic to the algebra\frac{\mathbb{C}\{z_1,\ldots,z_n\}}{(f_1,\ldots, f_m)}then its deformations are equal toT^1(A) \cong \frac{A^m}{df \cdot A^n}were df is the jacobian matrix of f = (f_1,\ldots, f_m): \mathbb{C}^n \to \mathbb{C}^m. For example, a hypersurface given by f has the deformationsT^1(A) \cong \frac{A^n}{\left( \frac{\partial f}{\partial z_1}, \ldots, \frac{\partial f}{\partial z_n} \right)}In the case of the plane-curve singularity y^2 - x^3, this is the module\frac{A^2}{(y, x^2)}hence the only deformations are given by adding constants or linear factors, so a general deformation of f(x,y) = y^2 - x^3 is F(x,y,a_1,a_2) = y^2 - x^3 + a_1 + a_2x where the a_i are deformation parameters. ==Functorial description==