Lemma 92.11.3. Let $A \to B$ be a ring map. Then $\tau _{\geq -1}L_{B/A}$ is canonically quasi-isomorphic to the naive cotangent complex.
Proof. Consider $P = A[B] \to B$ with kernel $I$. The naive cotangent complex $\mathop{N\! L}\nolimits _{B/A}$ of $B$ over $A$ is the complex $I/I^2 \to \Omega _{P/A} \otimes _ P B$, see Algebra, Definition 10.134.1. Observe that in (92.11.1.2) we have already constructed a canonical map
Consider the distinguished triangle (92.7.0.1)
associated to the ring maps $A \to A[B] \to B$. We know that $L_{P/A} = \Omega _{P/A}[0] = \mathop{N\! L}\nolimits _{P/A}$ in $D(P)$ (Lemma 92.4.7 and Algebra, Lemma 10.134.3) and that $\tau _{\geq -1}L_{B/P} = I/I^2[1] = \mathop{N\! L}\nolimits _{B/P}$ in $D(B)$ (Lemma 92.11.2 and Algebra, Lemma 10.134.6). To show $c$ is a quasi-isomorphism it suffices by Algebra, Lemma 10.134.4 and the long exact cohomology sequence associated to the distinguished triangle to show that the maps $L_{P/A} \to L_{B/A} \to L_{B/P}$ are compatible on cohomology groups with the corresponding maps $\mathop{N\! L}\nolimits _{P/A} \to \mathop{N\! L}\nolimits _{B/A} \to \mathop{N\! L}\nolimits _{B/P}$ of the naive cotangent complex. We omit the verification. $\square$
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Your email address will not be published.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).
All contributions are licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Comments (0)