Lemma 15.6.9. Let $A, A', B, B', I$ be as in Situation 15.6.1. The category of finite projective $B'$-modules is equivalent to the full subcategory of $\text{Mod}_ B \times _{\text{Mod}_ A} \text{Mod}_{A'}$ consisting of triples $(N, M', \varphi )$ with $N$ finite projective over $B$ and $M'$ finite projective over $A'$.
Proof. Recall that a module is finite projective if and only if it is finitely presented and flat, see Algebra, Lemma 10.78.2. Using Lemmas 15.6.8 and 15.6.7 we reduce to showing that $N' = N \times _{\varphi , M} M'$ is a $B'$-module of finite presentation if $N$ finite projective over $B$ and $M'$ finite projective over $A'$.
By Lemma 15.6.7 the module $N'$ is finite over $B'$. Choose a surjection $(B')^{\oplus n} \to N'$ with kernel $K'$. By base change we obtain maps $B^{\oplus n} \to N$, $(A')^{\oplus n} \to M'$, and $A^{\oplus n} \to M$ with kernels $K_ B$, $K_{A'}$, and $K_ A$. There is a canonical map
On the other hand, since $N' = N \times _{\varphi , M} M'$ and $B' = B \times _ A A'$ there is also a canonical map $K_ B \times _{K_ A} K_{A'} \to K'$ inverse to the displayed arrow. Hence the displayed map is an isomorphism. By Algebra, Lemma 10.5.3 the modules $K_ B$ and $K_{A'}$ are finite. We conclude from Lemma 15.6.7 that $K'$ is a finite $B'$-module provided that $K_ B \to K_ A$ and $K_{A'} \to K_ A$ induce isomorphisms $K_ B \otimes _ B A = K_ A = K_{A'} \otimes _{A'} A$. This is true because the flatness assumptions implies the sequences
stay exact upon tensoring, see Algebra, Lemma 10.39.12. $\square$
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Your email address will not be published.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)