The Stacks project

Lemma 10.137.5. Let $k$ be a field. Let $S$ be a smooth $k$-algebra. Then $S$ is a local complete intersection.

Proof. By Lemmas 10.137.4 and 10.135.11 it suffices to prove this when $k$ is algebraically closed. Choose a presentation $\alpha : k[x_1, \ldots , x_ n] \to S$ with kernel $I$. Let $\mathfrak m$ be a maximal ideal of $S$, and let $\mathfrak m' \supset I$ be the corresponding maximal ideal of $k[x_1, \ldots , x_ n]$. We will show that condition (5) of Lemma 10.135.4 holds (with $\mathfrak m$ instead of $\mathfrak q$). We may write $\mathfrak m' = (x_1 - a_1, \ldots , x_ n - a_ n)$ for some $a_ i \in k$, because $k$ is algebraically closed, see Theorem 10.34.1. By our assumption that $k \to S$ is smooth the $S$-module map $\text{d} : I/I^2 \to \bigoplus _{i = 1}^ n S \text{d}x_ i$ is a split injection. Hence the corresponding map $I/\mathfrak m' I \to \bigoplus \kappa (\mathfrak m') \text{d}x_ i$ is injective. Say $\dim _{\kappa (\mathfrak m')}(I/\mathfrak m' I) = c$ and pick $f_1, \ldots , f_ c \in I$ which map to a $\kappa (\mathfrak m')$-basis of $I/\mathfrak m' I$. By Nakayama's Lemma 10.20.1 we see that $f_1, \ldots , f_ c$ generate $I_{\mathfrak m'}$ over $k[x_1, \ldots , x_ n]_{\mathfrak m'}$. Consider the commutative diagram

\[ \xymatrix{ I \ar[r] \ar[d] & I/I^2 \ar[rr] \ar[d] & & I/\mathfrak m'I \ar[d] \\ \Omega _{k[x_1, \ldots , x_ n]/k} \ar[r] & \bigoplus S\text{d}x_ i \ar[rr]^{\text{d}x_ i \mapsto x_ i - a_ i} & & \mathfrak m'/(\mathfrak m')^2 } \]

(proof commutativity omitted). The middle vertical map is the one defining the naive cotangent complex of $\alpha $. Note that the right lower horizontal arrow induces an isomorphism $\bigoplus \kappa (\mathfrak m') \text{d}x_ i \to \mathfrak m'/(\mathfrak m')^2$. Hence our generators $f_1, \ldots , f_ c$ of $I_{\mathfrak m'}$ map to a collection of elements in $k[x_1, \ldots , x_ n]_{\mathfrak m'}$ whose classes in $\mathfrak m'/(\mathfrak m')^2$ are linearly independent over $\kappa (\mathfrak m')$. Therefore they form a regular sequence in the ring $k[x_1, \ldots , x_ n]_{\mathfrak m'}$ by Lemma 10.106.3. This verifies condition (5) of Lemma 10.135.4 hence $S_ g$ is a global complete intersection over $k$ for some $g \in S$, $g \not\in \mathfrak m$. As this works for any maximal ideal of $S$ we conclude that $S$ is a local complete intersection over $k$. $\square$


Comments (3)

Comment #721 by Keenan Kidwell on

In the third line of the proof, the containment goes the other way.

Comment #6688 by WhatJiaranEatsTonight on

I think the commutativity has an intuitive explanation. Let f be a polynomial that represents an element in . The composition of the left and the bottom takes f to .

Notice that the Taylor expansion of f has vanishing constant since . And the higher items lie in . Thus f is equal to the first order items of its Taylor expansion, which is exactly the form as above.

Comment #6894 by on

@#6688: I sort of agree, but I am not sure it is worth editing what we have now. Can somebody suggest a better way of writing the argument?


Post a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked.

In your comment you can use Markdown and LaTeX style mathematics (enclose it like $\pi$). A preview option is available if you wish to see how it works out (just click on the eye in the toolbar).

Unfortunately JavaScript is disabled in your browser, so the comment preview function will not work.

All contributions are licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.




In order to prevent bots from posting comments, we would like you to prove that you are human. You can do this by filling in the name of the current tag in the following input field. As a reminder, this is tag 00T5. Beware of the difference between the letter 'O' and the digit '0'.