Lemma 42.44.1. In the situation described just above assume $\dim _\delta (X') = n$, that $f^*\mathcal{E}$ has constant rank $r$, that $\dim _\delta (Z(s)) \leq n - r$, and that for every generic point $\xi \in Z(s)$ with $\delta (\xi ) = n - r$ the ideal of $Z(s)$ in $\mathcal{O}_{X', \xi }$ is generated by a regular sequence of length $r$. Then
\[ c_ r(\mathcal{E}) \cap [X']_ n = [Z(s)]_{n - r} \]
in $\mathop{\mathrm{CH}}\nolimits _*(X')$.
Proof.
Since $c_ r(\mathcal{E})$ is a bivariant class (Lemma 42.38.7) we may assume $X = X'$ and we have to show that $c_ r(\mathcal{E}) \cap [X]_ n = [Z(s)]_{n - r}$ in $\mathop{\mathrm{CH}}\nolimits _{n - r}(X)$. We will prove the lemma by induction on $r \geq 0$. (The case $r = 0$ is trivial.) The case $r = 1$ is handled by Lemma 42.25.4. Assume $r > 1$.
Let $\pi : P \to X$ be the projective space bundle associated to $\mathcal{E}$ and consider the short exact sequence
\[ 0 \to \mathcal{E}' \to \pi ^*\mathcal{E} \to \mathcal{O}_ P(1) \to 0 \]
By the projective space bundle formula (Lemma 42.36.2) it suffices to prove the equality after pulling back by $\pi $. Observe that $\pi ^{-1}Z(s) = Z(\pi ^*s)$ has $\delta $-dimension $\leq n - 1$ and that the assumption on regular sequences at generic points of $\delta $-dimension $n - 1$ holds by flat pullback, see Algebra, Lemma 10.68.5. Let $t \in \Gamma (P, \mathcal{O}_ P(1))$ be the image of $\pi ^*s$. We claim
\[ [Z(t)]_{n + r - 2} = c_1(\mathcal{O}_ P(1)) \cap [P]_{n + r - 1} \]
Assuming the claim we finish the proof as follows. The restriction $\pi ^*s|_{Z(t)}$ maps to zero in $\mathcal{O}_ P(1)|_{Z(t)}$ hence comes from a unique element $s' \in \Gamma (Z(t), \mathcal{E}'|_{Z(t)})$. Note that $Z(s') = Z(\pi ^*s)$ as closed subschemes of $P$. If $\xi \in Z(s')$ is a generic point with $\delta (\xi ) = n - 1$, then the ideal of $Z(s')$ in $\mathcal{O}_{Z(t), \xi }$ can be generated by a regular sequence of length $r - 1$: it is generated by $r - 1$ elements which are the images of $r - 1$ elements in $\mathcal{O}_{P, \xi }$ which together with a generator of the ideal of $Z(t)$ in $\mathcal{O}_{P, \xi }$ form a regular sequence of length $r$ in $\mathcal{O}_{P, \xi }$. Hence we can apply the induction hypothesis to $s'$ on $Z(t)$ to get $c_{r - 1}(\mathcal{E}') \cap [Z(t)]_{n + r - 2} = [Z(s')]_{n - 1}$. Combining all of the above we obtain
\begin{align*} c_ r(\pi ^*\mathcal{E}) \cap [P]_{n + r - 1} & = c_{r - 1}(\mathcal{E}') \cap c_1(\mathcal{O}_ P(1)) \cap [P]_{n + r - 1} \\ & = c_{r - 1}(\mathcal{E}') \cap [Z(t)]_{n + r - 2} \\ & = [Z(s')]_{n - 1} \\ & = [Z(\pi ^*s)]_{n - 1} \end{align*}
which is what we had to show.
Proof of the claim. This will follow from an application of the already used Lemma 42.25.4. We have $\pi ^{-1}(Z(s)) = Z(\pi ^*s) \subset Z(t)$. On the other hand, for $x \in X$ if $P_ x \subset Z(t)$, then $t|_{P_ x} = 0$ which implies that $s$ is zero in the fibre $\mathcal{E} \otimes \kappa (x)$, which implies $x \in Z(s)$. It follows that $\dim _\delta (Z(t)) \leq n + (r - 1) - 1$. Finally, let $\xi \in Z(t)$ be a generic point with $\delta (\xi ) = n + r - 2$. If $\xi $ is not the generic point of the fibre of $P \to X$ it is immediate that a local equation of $Z(t)$ is a nonzerodivisor in $\mathcal{O}_{P, \xi }$ (because we can check this on the fibre by Algebra, Lemma 10.99.2). If $\xi $ is the generic point of a fibre, then $x = \pi (\xi ) \in Z(s)$ and $\delta (x) = n + r - 2 - (r - 1) = n - 1$. This is a contradiction with $\dim _\delta (Z(s)) \leq n - r$ because $r > 1$ so this case doesn't happen.
$\square$
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