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CURVE SINGULARITIES ARISING FROMTHE REPRESENTATIONTHEORY OF TAME HEREDITARY ALGEBRAS Helmut Lenzing I. Introduction Tameness of a finite dimensional k-algebra A, where k is a commutative field, is defined with reference to one-parameter families (Mx)x E X of A-modules, supposed to contain nearly all indecomposable A-modules. It seems therefore natural to investigate the geometry of these parametrizing curves X, and ask to which extent they determine the representation theory of A. In this paper we will restrict to the case, where A is hereditary. Assuming A additionally connected, only one parameter curve X = X(A) will be needed in order to parametrize the 'continuous part' of the representation theory of A, the category reg(A) of socalled regular A-modules. We refer to the work of V. Dlab and C. M. Ringel [8, 11]~see also [9, 31]~for a detailed investigation of some of these curves X(A) and their interrelation with the structure of regular A-modules. Here, we are presenting a formal definition for X = X(A) by specifying its category coh(X) of coherent sheaves. Moreover, we will give a general description of the geometry of X including structure sheaf OX, dualizing sheaf OX(-I), global sections F(X,F), sheaf cohomology HI(x,F) and field K(X) of rational functions on X. We also include a brief account on the divisor theory of X. As a result, the parameter curve X of A turns out to be a non-commutative projective curve with singularities. The situation is particularly simple, if additionally the base field k is assumed to be algebraically closed. Here, the singularity type of X (which counts the multiplicity of the singular points) is given by a Dynkin diagram Ap,q, D n, E6, E 7, E8, which determines X, i.e. the

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Page 1: Curve singularities arising from the representation theory ...smith/WPLSeminar/L87.pdf · 11/20/1984  · CURVE SINGULARITIES ARISING FROM THE REPRESENTATION THEORY OF TAME HEREDITARY

CURVE SINGULARITIES ARISING FROM THE REPRESENTATION THEORY OF TAME HEREDITARY

ALGEBRAS

Helmut Lenzing

I . Introduct ion

Tameness of a f i n i t e dimensional k-algebra A, where k is a commutative f i e l d , is defined with reference to one-parameter fami l ies (Mx)x E X of A-modules, supposed to contain nearly a l l indecomposable A-modules. I t seems therefore natural to invest igate the geometry of these parametrizing curves X, and ask to which extent they determine the representation theory of A.

In th is paper we w i l l r e s t r i c t to the case, where A is heredi tary. Assuming A add i t i ona l l y connected, only one parameter curve X = X(A) w i l l be needed in order to parametrize the 'continuous part ' of the representation theory of A, the category reg(A) of socalled regular A-modules. We refer to the work of V. Dlab and C. M. Ringel [8, 11]~see also [9, 31]~for a detai led invest igat ion of some of these curves X(A) and the i r i n te r re la t i on with the structure of regular A-modules.

Here, we are presenting a formal de f i n i t i on for X = X(A) by specify ing i t s category coh(X) of coherent sheaves. Moreover, we w i l l give a general descr ipt ion of the geometry of X including structure sheaf OX, dual iz ing sheaf OX(- I ) , global sections F(X,F), sheaf cohomology HI(x,F) and f i e l d K(X) of rat ional funct ions on X. We also include a b r i e f account on the d i v i so r theory of X.

As a resu l t , the parameter curve X of A turns out to be a non-commutative pro ject ive curve with s i ngu la r i t i e s . The s i tua t ion is pa r t i cu la r l y simple, i f add i t i ona l l y the base f i e l d k is assumed to be a lgebra ica l ly closed. Here, the s ingu la r i t y type of X (which counts the m u l t i p l i c i t y of the s ingular points) i s given by a Dynkin diagram Ap,q, D n, E6, E 7, E8, which determines X, i . e . the

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category coh(X), uniquely up to isomorphism (Theorem 6.2). Moreover, i f A denotes the s ingu la r i t y type of X(A), A has extended Dynkin type ~. Accordingly, the parameter curve X(A) does not depend on the 'o r ien ta t ion 'o f A(Proposition 6.1).

For each coherent sheaf F E coh(X), both global sections ?(X,F) and cohomology HI(x,F) are f i n i t e dimensional l e f t A-modules. Moreover, F is uniquely determined (up to isomorphism) by th is pair (F(X,F), HI(x,F)) of A-modules. As a resu l t , the categories cob(X) and mod(A) determine each other completely (Theorem 4.10). Here, mod(A) denotes the category of a l l f i n i t e dimensional l e f t A-modules. I t is convenient to express th is resul t in the language of t i l t i n g theory [7, 19, 6, 34, 18]: the structure sheaf 0 X serves as a ' t i l t i n g module', and the category mod(A) emerges from coh(X) by t i l t i n g with Ox(cf. of the functor 'global sections' the category sheaves is equivalent to the category reg(A) remaining indecomposable coherent sheaves F

4.11). To be more speci f ic , by means COho(X) of a l l f i n i t e length coherent of a l l regular A-modules. Al l the

are loca l l y project ive (Proposition 5.7) , determined e i ther by the A-module of global sections r(X,F), necessarily pre- project ive, or else the cohomology module HI(x,F), which is a prein ject ive A-module. From the c lass i f i ca t ion of these modules (see [9]) i t is possible to construct indecomposable loca l l y project ive sheaves on X of rank 2,3,4,6 i f the base f i e l d is a lgebra ica l ly closed, and X has s ingu lar i t y type D n, E6, E 7, E8, respect ively.

The parameter curve of the Kronecker algebra Z, the path algebra of the quiver • ~ . , is the project ive l ine P1(k) (Proposition 6.3). Hence the category coh(P1(k)) is completely control led by the representation theory of Z, i . e . by the c lass i f i ca t ion of pairs of rectangular matrices up to simultaneous conjugation, effected by L. Kronecker in 1890. In th is way, the c lass i f i ca t ion of vector bundles on the project ive l ine becomes a corol lary of Kronecker's c lass i f i ca t ion (cf . Corollary

6.4). For the history of th is theorem, see [38].

I t is shown in [27] that for the base f i e l d ~ of complex numbers the parameter curves of type Ap,p, D n (n > 4), E 6, E 7, E 8 are just F.Kleins simple curve s ingu la r i t ies [23] PI(C)/G ar is ing from the action of the polyhedral groups on the project ive l ine PI(C). Another poss ib i l i t y - which holds true for each a lgebra ica l ly closed base f i e l d k - is to consider the parameter curves for tame hereditary algebras as the project ive l ine P1(k) together with a configuration of singular points control led by a Dynkin diagram. For a detai led account on th is point of view we refer to [35].

Section 2 introduces the category coh(X) as the quotient category ~(A)/~Fo(A) of a l l f i n i t e l y presented abelian group valued functors on preprojective r ight A-modules modulo f i n i t e length functors. We note that the de f in i t ion of X and the in terpretat ion of F/~ o as a category of sheaves is postponed unt i l Section 5.

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Theorem 2.1 establishes a fact fami l ia r from sheaf theory [ I ] , namely cob(X) is a Krull-Schmidt category moreover has morphism spaces which a l l are f i n i t e dimensional over k. Section 3 establishes that F/IF ° = coh(X) has Auslander-Reiten sequences (Theorem 3.1). Section 4 contains the i n te r re la t i on between coh(X) and mod(A) discussed before (Theorem 4.10). We want to point out that also A. H. Schofield deserves f u l l c red i t for most of the results presented in th is Section.

Section 5 gives the sheaf theoret ic explanation of ~ o based mainly on the results of j o i n t work with D. Baer and W. Geigle [5]. For instance the f i e l d of rat ional functions K(X) of X is determined by mod(K(X)) = coh(X)/COho(X), where - as before - COho(X) denotes the category of a l l f i n i t e length (coherent) sheaves on X. A l te rna t i ve ly , K(X) arises as the endomorphism ring of the unique inde- composable tors ion- f ree d i v i s i b l e A-module [31] or as a sui table ring of f ract ions ( in the sense of [14]) of morphisms between preproject ive A-modules [5].

Section 6 deals with the case of an a lgebra ica l ly closed base f i e l d k. Based on

the c lass i f i ca t ion of indecomposable A-modules by Nazarova [36J and Donovan, Fre is l ich [37], see also Dlab, Ringel [9] we characterize the parameter curves

X(A) by means of the i r s ingu lar i ty type A(X) , which is always a Dynkin diagram

(Theorem 6.2). Section 7 contains an account on the d iv isor theory of X" for

the case of an a lgebra ica l ly closed base f i e l d . As a resul t , a complete system

of preproject ive A-modules of defect - I together with a complete system of

pre in ject ive A-modules of defect I forms an abelian group, the Picard group

Pic(X) , which describes the extensions of preproject ive by regular modules and

turns out to be isomorphic to the d iv isor class group of X (Proposit ion 7.4).

Pic(X) is abelian of rank one and general ly has torsion elements.

For a general account on noncommutative algebraic geometry we refer to [28]. We have t r ied however to fo l low the classical ' (commutative) treatment - as exposed for instance in [20] - quite c losely. In our judgement the reader w i l l f ind no d i f f i c u l t i e s to apply the classical notions sheaves, cohomology, d iv isor theory etc. to the present context. Only minor modif ications w i l l be needed. On the other hand, the notion of a quotient category, developed by J.-P. Serre, A. Grothendieck, P. Gabriel [12, 29] is an indispensable tool for the present treatment. In fact , a main motivation for th is research was to 'expla in ' the resul t due to W. Geigle [15] that , for A tame heredi tary, the category of a l l f i n i t e l y presented abelian group valued functors on mod(A) has Krull dimension two, where Krull dimensic, n, in a sense near to [12], is defined with reference to quotient categories.

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2. Indecomposable coherent sheaves

Throughout th is section A is a hereditary Ar t in algebra, assumed to be connected and not of f i n i t e representation type. Let

F (A) = f .p . (prep(A°P),Ab) ,

resp. ~o(A) = f . l . (prep(A°P),Ab) , denote the category of a l l addi t ive functors, which are f i n i t e l y presented, respec- t i v e l y of f i n i t e length, from the category of preproject ive r i gh t A-modules to the category of abelian groups. We note that prep(A °p) has internal cokernels, thus is

coherent. Hence ~(A) is an abelian category. Due to the existence of Auslander-

Reiten sequences in prep(A°P), Fo(A) is contained in F(A). Moreover, Fo(A) is

closed in F(A) under the formation of subobjects, quotients and extensions, i .e .

Fo(A) is a Serre subcategory of F(A). We are now going to invest igate the quot ient category (cf . [12])

m ~ o = F(A)~Fo(A)

which - in the tame case - has the nice in terpre ta t ion as the category coh(X) of coherent sheaves on the parameter curve X = X(A) of A (see section 5).

We recal l that F/F o is an abelian k-category, again. Moreover, there is a canonical exact functor

~: F - - , F / F o , F ~ F

which is a b i jec t ion on objects. Morphisms in fo rmu I a

HO~F/Fo(F,G) = I im F/F ' , G' E F °

This formula also explains how ~ acts on morphisms of IF. For fu r ther information on quot ient categories we refer to [12,29].

F/F o are defined by means of the

Hon~(F',G/G').

In the previous de f in i t i ons i t is often convenient to replace prep(A °p) by the f u l l subcategory P(A °p) of a complete system of pairwise nonisomorphic indecompo- sable preproject ive r i gh t A-modules. For instance, for P preproject ive, the functor Ex t (P , - ] , the res t r i c t i on of Ext , (P, - ) to prep(A°P), has f i n i t e support in P(A°P), since DExtI(p'x)A = HomA(X,DTrP) 7 3 ] . Hence E~'t(P,-] -- 0 in F ~ o . S im i la r l y , for A in mod(A°P), Hom(A,-] w i l l denote the res t r i c t i on of HomA(A,-) to preproject ive modules. Clear ly , Hom(A,-] = 0 i f A has no preproject ive d i rec t summand [ 2].

As is well known [ 2] , we may assume that A is a f in i te-d imensional algebra over some commutative f i e l d k. The main resu l t of th is section reads as fo l lows:

2.1. Theorem. For each F,G i n IF /F ° the k-vectors~ace Hon~/Fo(F,G ) fis f i n i t e

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dimensional, hence ~/F o is a Krul l-Schmidt category. Moreover the 'sheaves'

~m(P,- ] wi th P indecomposable prepro ject ive, E~t(Q,-] with Q indecomposable p re in jec t i ve , E~t(R,-] wi th R indecomposable regular

const i tu te a complete l i s t of indecomposable objects in FflF o.

For the proof of (2.1) i t is essential to know that F/~: o is not only abel ian, but carr ies the extra st ructure of a t rans la t ion category:

The Auslander-Reiten functors 'dual of the transpose' DTr and 'transpose of the dual ' TrD are inducing autoequivalences (Use Lemma 2.2 a),b) for the proof that

• , - I preserve f i n i t e l y presented functors. )

: ~ o ~ O ' ~ ~ (F o DTr) ~ - I T : F/IF o ~F / ] : O, ~ H (F o TrD) ~

of ~/@~o' which are ' inverse' to each other, see [ 4, prop. 2.1]. Guided by Riedtmann's concept of a t rans la t ion quiver [29], we refer to the pair (~/]Fo,%) as a t rans la t ion category and to T as the t rans la t ion functor of F/F o. (As we w i l l see la te r (Theorem 3.1) ~ o has, in fac t , Auslander-Reiten sequences, and serves as Auslander-Reiten t rans la t ion for F ~ o . )

By i t e ra t i on , we may define n : ~/~o ' twisted sheaves' by the formula

F(n) = T-n(F)

for each F in F ~ o.

FftF o for each integer n, and hence

2.2. Lemma. Suppose A j s indecomposable i n mod(A°P). - I

a) % H~m(A,-] ~ H~m(DTrA,-] i f A is not pro ject ive.

b) #I H~m(A,-] ~ E~t(DAt, - ] i f A is pro ject ive.

c) ~I E~t(A,-] ~ ~ t ( D T r A , - ] .

Here, A t denotes the A-dual HomA(A,A) of A. We also note that , for A inde- composable pro ject ive, DA t is the in jec t i ve hul l of the simple top A/rad A of A. Hence A ~ DA t is the Nakayama permutation (see [13]) .

Proof. Concerning a) and c) note that Hom(A,TrDP) = Hom(DTrA,P) and ExtI(A,TrP) = ExtI(DTrA,P) hold i f A is not pro ject ive (P E prep(A°P)). For A pro ject ive, assert ion b) fol lows from Hom(A,TrDP) = TrDP @ A t = Ext(DP,A t ) = Ext(DAt,p). D

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We reca l l that Kan extension e: (prep(A°P),Ab) ~ (mod(A°P),Ab) along prep(A ° p ) ~ mod(A °p) is def ined as the l e f t ad jo in t of the r e s t r i c t i o n (mod(A°P),Ab) ~ (prep(A°P),Ab). e is r i gh t exact and car r ies Hom(P,-] to Hom(P,-) fo r each prepro jec t i ve module P. Consequently eExt (A, - ] = Ext (A, - ) fo r each module A.

2.3. Lemma. Kan extension preserves exactness o f sequences 0 ~ F ~ G ~ H ~ 0 in ~ , provided H ~ H~m(P,-] i n ~/]F ° f o r some prepro jec t i ve A-module P.

Proof. Let S CF be a simple functor concentrated at Po C P(A°P). The Auslander- Reiten sequence 0 ~ Po ~ PI ~ P2 ~ 0 leads to a p ro jec t i ve reso lu t ion

0 ~ Hom(P2,- ~ Hom(P1,-] ~ Hom(Po,-] ~ S ~ 0

of S. This sequence remains exact under Kan extension e, hence the l e f t der ived functors Lie o f e are zero on S fo r i > I . Hence Lie(E) = 0 i f E c o and i > I .

Turning to the general s i t u a t i o n , by the d e f i n i t i o n of morphisms in ~/F o an isomorphism H ~ H~m(P,-] comes from a morphism ~: H' ~ Hom(P,-] in F , where H/H', Ker ~, Coker m are a l l in F . (Observe that Hom(P,-] has no simple sub- o func tors) . This impl ies (Lie)(H) = 0 fo r i > I . o

The main technical step in the proof of (2.1) is the next p ropos i t ion .

2.4. Propos i t ion. For every A,B E mod(A °p) we have

= 0 . Ex ~ o (H~m(A,-], EFt(B,- ] )

Proof. Assume that the sequence

q: 0 ~ E~t(B,- ] ~ ~ ~ ~m(A , - ] ~ 0

is exact . By the d e f i n i t i o n of F/~F o, ~ is induced by a morphism f : U ~ F/F' in ~ , where Ex t (B , - ] /U , F' and Ker f are in ~o" We may assume that B has no prepro jec t i ve d i r ec t fac to r . Therefore Ext (B, - ] is exact on Auslander-Reiten se- quences in prep(A°P). Thus Ex t (B , - ] , hence to an exact sequence

~: 0 ~ U ! F / F ' ~ G ~ 0

wi th ~ isomorphic to n.

Since G ~ H~m(A,-], and app l ies . Therefore leads to a morphism

U, has no simple subfunctors. This leads

A is p repro jec t i ve wi thout loss of gene ra l i t y , Lemma 2.3 eU e ( f l e (F /F ' ) is a monomorphism. Kan extension of U ~ Ext (B, - ]

eU e ( j~ Ex t (B , - ) , which extends to h: e (F /F ' ) ~ Ext (B, - ) by

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i n j e c t i v i t y of Ext(B,-) in (mod(A°P),Ab). (Note that DExt(B,-) = Hom(-,DTrB) is pro jec t ive) . With k: F/F' ~ Ext(B,- ] denoting the res t r i c t i on of h to prep(A°P), we have k o f = j , hence ~ ° ~ is an isomorphism in ~ o ' and n s p l i t s .

We use the notat ion mo~>(A) for the f u l l subcategory of mod(A), consist ing of a l l f i n i t e dimensional A-modules without any preproject ive indecomposable d i rec t factor . (These modules have been termed ' tors ion modules' by Ringel [31]. Because of the presence of too many tors ion theories in our discussion, we are forced to avoid th is terminology, here.)

2.5. Proposit ion. (cf . [ 5]) The functor

~: mod#(A°P) °p ~ ~/~F o, A ~ E~t(A,-]

is f u l l and f a i t h f u l . Moreover ~ preserves exactness of sequences 0 ~ A' ~ A ~ A" ~ 0 with A,A',A" in mod#(A°P).

o _ _

Proof. Since Hom(A,-] = 0 for each A in moom(A°P), the exactness property in question fol lows t r i v i a l l y . For non-zero A in modm(A °p) we in fe r from DExt(A,P) = Hom(P,DTrA) that Ext(A,- ] has i n f i n i t e support in P(A°P), hence ~(A) ~ 0. In combination with the exactness of # th is proves that # is f a i t h f u l . (Observe that modm(A °p) is closed under the formation of quotients in mod(A°P)).

I t remains to prove that ~ is f u l l . Since Ext(A,- ] has no simple subfunctors, each ~: EFt(B,-] ~ ~ t ( A , - ] , with A,B in modm(A°P), is induced by some f : U ~ Ex t (A , - ] , where U is a subfunctor of Ext(B,- ] with Ext(B,- ] /U of f i n i t e length. We i n fe r from Lemma 2.3 that Kan extension to mod(A °p) preserves the inc lus ion U~ Ext (B, - ] . By i n j e c t i v i t y of Ext(A,-) in (mod(A°P),Ab), f therefore extends to a morphism f : Ext(B,-) ~ Ext(A,- ) . Now the classical formula [22]

Hom(Ext(B,-), Ext (A, - ) ) = Hom(A,B)

proves that f , hence a, is induced by some u: A ~ B. (As usual the notat ion Hom refers to the morphisms in the pro jec t ive ly stable category).

2.6. Corol lary. Hom~F/~Fo(E~t(A,-], ~m(B,- ] )= 0 for each A,B in mod(A°P).

Proof by combination of (2.5) and (2.2).

Proof of theorem 2.1. Proposit ion 2.5 in combination with Lemma 2.2 proves that the 'sheaves' H~m(P,-], with P indecomposable preproject ive, and E~t(A,- ] , with A inde- composable in modm(A°P), a l l have local endomorphism rings and f i n i t e dimensional

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morphism se ts .

I t t h e r e f o r e s u f f i c e s to prove t h a t

= H~m(mer f , - ] @ E ~ t ( C o k f , - ] ,

p rov i ded Hom(Po,_ ] -o~ Hom(P1,_ ] ~ F ~ 0 is a f i n i t e p r e s e n t a t i o n o f F (w i t h Po'

PI p r e p r o j e c t i v e ) . In f a c t , decompos i t i on o f the exac t sequence

O ~ P-* P I f Po ~ A ~ 0

i n t o s h o r t exac t sequences 0 ~ P ~ PI u p -~ O, 0 ~ P v Po

and P p r e p r o j e c t i v e , leads to a d iagram

~ A ~ O, w i t h f : v o u

0 0 + +

0 ~ H~m(A,-] ~ a~m(Po, - ] - ° ~ H~m(P,-] ~ E F t ( A , - ] ~ 0 I1 II +-ou +

0 ~ H~m(A,-] ~ a~m(Po, - ] - ° ~ a~m(P1, - ] ~ ~ ~ 0 + +

H~m(P,- ] ~ G

0 0

w i t h exac t rows and columns in ~/]F o. The Ker-Coker-Lemma proves the e x i s t e n c e o f an

exac t sequence 0 ~ E ~ t ( A , - ] ~ F ~ H~m(P,- ] ~ 0 which s p l i t s by P r o p o s i t i o n 2 .4 . []

3. A u s l a n d e r - R e i t e n sequences in F / F °

By Theorem 2 .1 , F/~= ° i s a K r u l l - S c h m i d t c a t e g o r y . I t is t h e r e f o r e n a t u r a l t o ask

whe ther ~/]F ° has a l so A u s l a n d e r - R e i t e n sequences:

3 .1 . Theorem. The c a t e g o r y ~/~=o o f ' cohe ren t sheaves ' has A u s l a n d e r - R e i t e n

sequences. More p r e c i s e l y , f o r each indecomposable

Re i ten sequences

0 ~ F ~ X ~ F(1)

0 ~ F ( - I ) ~ X ( - I ) ~ F

Hence the t r a n s l a t i o n f u n c t o r % o f F/~c o f o r IF/ ~ .

0

' shea f ' F t h e r e a re Aus lande r -

~ 0

-* O.

serves as A u s l a n d e r - R e i t e n t r a n s l a t i o n

Consequen t l y , a non -ze ro ' Isheaf ' cannot be p r o j e c t i v e nor i n j e c t i v e in ~/~c o.

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Proof. Up to t r a n s l a t i o n we may assume tha t F = ~ t ( A , - ] w i th A indecomposable

in moc~>(A°P). (Lemma 2 .2 ) . The Auslander-Rei ten sequence 0 ~ DTrA ~ B ~ A ~ 0 in

mod(A °p) leads to an exact sequence

0 ~ E~t (A , - ] ~ E~t (B , - ] ~ E~t(DTrA~-] ~ 0

in ~/IF o which has indecomposable end-terms (Thm.2.1) and is n o n - s p l i t (Prop. 2 .5 ) .

Using the c l a s s i f i c a t i o n of indecomposable 'sheaves' @ by Theorem 2.1, every non-

isomorphism E~t (A, - ] ~ G extends to E~t (B, - ] as a consequence of Co ro l l a r y 2.6 and Propos i t ion 2.5. n

The above proof moreover shows:

3.2. P ropos i t i on . The f u l l embedding

#: modm(A°P) °p ~ ~/IF o, A ~ E~t (A, - ]

preserves Auslander-Rei ten sequences.

3.3. Lemma. For E E ~o and P p r e p r o j e c t i v e , we have Ext , (E, Hom(P,-])

f o r i = 0,1.

= 0

Proof. We may assume tha t E is s imple , hence E has a p r o j e c t i v e r eso lu t i on

0 ~ Hom(P2,-] ~ Hom(P1,-] ~ Hom(Po,-] ~ E ~ O,

induced by an Auslander-Rei ten sequence 0 ~ Po ~ PI ~ P2 ~ 0 of p rep ro j ec t i ve

modules. Now apply Hon~(-, Hom(P,-]) and ca l cu la te homology.

The f o l l ow ing r e s u l t complements (3.2) and (2 .5 ) .

3.4. P ropos i t i on . The func to r

~: prep(A°P) °p ~ ~/IF o, P ~ HUm(P,-]

is a f u l l embedding and preserves exactness of sequences 0 ~ P' ~ P ~ P" ~ 0 p r e p r o j e c t i v e modules. Moreover, ~ preserves Auslander-Rei ten sequences.

o f

Proof. ~ is f u l l : A morphism ~: HUm(P,-] ~ ~ m ( P , - J , w i th P,P p r e p r o j e c t i v e , is induced by some morphism f : U ~ Hom(P,-] , where U c Hom(P,-] and Hom(P,-]/U has f i n i t e length . By Lemma 3.3, f extends to f : Hom(P,-] ~ Hom(P,-] , necessar i l y

induced by some u: P ~ P.

is f a i t h f u l : u: P ~ P has a f a c t o r i z a t i o n u = P ~ P' ~ P w i th v a mono- morphism and w an epimorphism. Assuming '{(u) = O, the diagram

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~(v) ~ m ( P , - ] . . . . . . . . H~m(P',-] , mx ' t (P/P ' , - ]

/

~(w) /

~dm(P,-]

, 0

has a commutative complet ion by some m: E~xt(P/P', - ] ~ H~m(P,-]. Since ~ = 0 by

Coro l l a r y 2 .6 , H~m(P',- ] = 0 hence P' = O, and u = 0 f o l l o w s .

Since Ex' t (P,- ] = O, f o r P p r o j e c t i v e , the requ i red exactness of ~ fo l l ows t r i v i a l l y . In p a r t i c u l a r , f o r each Auslander-Rei ten sequence 0 ~ P' ~ P ~ P" ~ 0 of

p r e p r o j e c t i v e modules, the induced sequence

0 ~ HUm(P",-] ~ H~m(P,-] ~ H~m(P',-] ~ 0

is exac t . I t i s , in f a c t , an Auslander-Rei ten sequence in ~/~=o: By the c l a s s i f i c a t i o n of indecomposable 'sheaves' G by Theorem 2.1, every non-isomorphism G ~ ~ m ( P ' , - ]

l i f t s to H~m(P,-] using Coro l l a ry 2.6 and the f ac t t ha t T is a f u l l embedding, n

3.5. Remark. Passing to a s l i g h t l y d i f f e r e n t con tex t , namely functors def ined g l o b a l l y

on mod(A), the study of f i n i t e l y presented functors means the study of shor t exact sequences in mod(A), w i th s i l l p le functors ( roughly) corresponding to Auslander-

Reiten sequences. Hence, in t h i s con tex t , ~o may be considered as the par t o f

determined by Auslander-Rei ten theory , and the passage from ~ to F ~ 0 means to f o rge t about Auslander-Rei ten sequences. In f a c t , i t was the main mot i va t i on f o r the

present research to de tec t , what happens behind tha t par t of representa t ion theory determined by Auslander-Rei ten theory . We re fe r to [15, 16] f o r a re la ted approach, mot ivated by P. Gab r i e l ' s i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of Kru l l -d imens ion [12 ] .

I t came to us as a surpr ise tha t ( in the context covered by Theorem 3.1) ~ /F ° has again Auslander-Rei ten sequences. Despite the f ac t t ha t the general s i t u a t i o n s t i l l needs i n v e s t i g a t i o n , t h i s phenomenon, which holds t rue regardless i f A is tame or w i l d , under l ines once more the u t i l i t y of the concept in t roduced by M. Auslander and I . Reiten in [ 3] a lso in the study o f r e p r e s e n t a t i o n - i n f i n i t e a lgebras.

4. Global sec t ions , cohomology and t i l t i n g from sheaves to modules

The aim of t h i s sect ion is to show tha t the category F /~ ° is complete ly c o n t r o l l e d by mod(A). With t h i s purpose in mind, we in t roduce the s t ruc tu re sheaf 0 = ~ t ( D A , - ] , and def ine g lobal sect ions and cohomology fo r F in ~/]F ° by means o f

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F(X,F) = Hon~/]:o(O,F) , HI(x,F) = Ext~/JFo(O,F).

These are l e f t A-modules, since EndjF/~o(O) = A °p by Proposi t ion 2.5, and are in fac t

f i n i t e -d imens iona l . Concerning global sect ions, th is statement is covered by Theorem 2.1. For H I (x ,F ) , the asser t ion is contained in Proposi t ion 4.1. Moreover, £(X,O) = A A and HI (x ,o) = 0 (Lenrna 4 .2) .

I We note tha t - as before - ExfC/~:o(F,@) is def ined in the sense of Yoneda. We a lso

remark that our choice o f s t ruc ture sheaf is somewhat a r b i t r a r y . Since F ~ o is a t r ans l a t i on category, each O(n), f o r instance 0 ( - I ) = ~ m ( A , - ] , w i l l answer the same purpose. HUm(A,-] w i l l besides appear to be the more natural choice, judging from graded module theory , c f . [ 5].

The i n t e r r e l a t i o n between ~/JF o and mod(A) is best understood by means o f a t i l t i n g procedure. By Theorem 4.10, ~/JF o emerges from mod(A) by t i l t i n g a l l p re i n j ec t i ve A-modules to the ' l e f t hand side' of a l l remaining indecomposable A-modules, and inser t ing some add i t i ona l morphisms. However, there is no t i l t i n g module in mod(A) e f f ec t i ng th is ' t i l t i n g from modules to sheaves'. The s i t ua t i on is be t te r fo r the inverse process, since the s t ructure sheaf serves as a ' t i l t i n g module' (Remark 4.11). The reader w i l l observe the in f luence of the t i l t i n g theor ies developed by Brenner-But ler [ 7 ] , Happel-Ringel [19] , Bongartz [ 6 ] , Tachikawa [34] , though the present s i t ua t i on is not covered by these i nves t i ga t i on in a formal sense. The re l a t i onsh ip to Happel's new i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of t i l t i n g s , presented at the conference [18] , seems to be more c lose, but s t i l l needs fu r the r ana lys is ,

We would l i k e to po in t out , that a lso A. H. Schof ie ld deserves f u l l c red i t f o r a l l the resu l ts contained in th is sect ion. In fac t , the p ic ture on sheaves, global sections and cohomology presented here, is the resu l t of discussions wi th him during the conference, in a j o i n t e f f o r t to answer a question of P. Gabriel concerning the complete s t ruc ture o f cob(X). (At th is t ime, only the s t ruc ture of COho(X), the category o f a l l f i n i t e length sheaves, and of coh(X)/COho(X) were at the author 's d isposa l , c f . [ 5 ] ) . We a lso note that A. H. Schof ie ld has a d i f f e r e n t (but apparent ly equ iva len t ) procedure, a t tach ing sheaves to (tame) hered i ta ry a lgebras, based on the process of a t taching universal inverses to cer ta in maps of r ings and modules. Also, the dec is ive Proposi t ion 4.1 is his observat ion.

I f there is an exact sequence O n ~ F ~ O, fo r some n, F is ca l led generated by global sect ions. An equ iva lent asser t ion is the existence of an exact sequence 0 ~ O' ~ 0" ~ F ~ O, where 0 ' , 0" are in add(O), i . e . are d i r e c t factors o f some O n . Among indecomposable 'sheaves' exac t l y the EFt(A,- ] with A indecomposable p re in j ec t i ve or regular are generated by global sect ions. Moreover, the category

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( ~ o ) m of 'sheaves' generated by global sections is closed under extensions. A l l these assertions fo l low from Theorem 2.1 and Corol lary 2.6.

By dua l i t y , the category modm(A°P) Op is equivalent to the category mode(A) of f in i te-d imensional l e f t A-modules without pre in jec t ive indecomposable d i rec t factor .

4.1. Proposit ion (Scho f i e l d ) . The functor 'global sect ions' induces an equivalence F: (F~o)m ~ mode(A), F~F(X,F) from the category of 'sheaves' generated by global sections to the category of l e f t A-modules without pre in jec t ive indecomposable summands. Moreover, F(X,0) = A.

Proof. The functor ~' : mode(A) ~ (E/~=o)m, A ~ E~t(DA,-] is an equivalence of categories by Proposition 2.5. And F is an inverse to # ' , as fol lows from

(2.5) Hom(~t(DA,-] , E~t(DA,-]) Hom(DA,DA) = Hom(A,A) = A fo r A in mode(A).

I t fol lows from the next Lemma that F is moreover exact on exact sequences 0 ~ F' ~ F ~ P' ~ 0 with F' generated by global sections.

4.2. Lemma. HI(x,F) = 0 i f F is generated by global sections.

Proof. We may assume I f A is not i n j ec t i ve , by t rans la t ion (2.2) and Proposit ion 2.4 we ar r ive at

Ext~=/Fo(O, E%t(A,-]) = EXtlF/~=o(H~m(A,-], E%t(TrDA,-]) = 0.

For A i n j ec t i ve , P = (DA) t is pro ject ive, hence by (2.2)

Ext0=/iFo(O, EFt(A,- ] ) = Ext~=/jFo(~m(A,-], ~m(P, - ] ) .

This group is also zero by an easy var iant of Proposit ion 2.4. (Observe that for a project ive P, the functor Hom(P,-) is i n jec t i ve in (mod(A°P), Ab)).

F = E~t(A,- ] , with A indecomposable regular or p re in jec t ive .

To deal with sheaf cohomology properly, we w i l l need an addit ional property of the functor ~ of Proposition 2.5.

4.3. Proposit ion. For each A,B E mod~(A°P), # induces an isomorphism

Ext~(A,B) ~ Ex t~ /~o(~ t (B , - ] , E~t (A, - ] ) , n ~ # ( ~ )

ev ident ly functor ia l in A and B.

Proof. We recal l that (F/~o)m is closed under extensions. By Proposition 2.5 i t therefore remains to show that for each exact sequence

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¢(g) # ( f ) N: 0 ~ E~t(A,- ] , E~t(C,-] , E~t(B,- ] ~ 0

the corresponding sequence q: 0 ~ B ~ C ~ A ~ 0 is exact. Applying global sect ions to N, we obtain from (4.2) the exact sequence 0 ~ TrA T -~T rC T r f TrB ~ O, which proves the asser t ion . []

4 .4. Proposi t ion (Serre d u a l i t y ) . For each isomorphism

t~- (F,G) ~ HOn]F/~o(G, TF) DEx /.Fo

which is f unc to r i a l in F and G.

F,G i n ]F/]F o there is a canonical

Proof. Up to t r ans l a t i on we may assume F = E~t (B , - ] , G = E~t(A,- ] where A and B are w i thout p repro jec t i ve indecomposable d i r ec t fac to r . By (4.3) DExt(F,G) D(Ex t I (A ,B) ) , DExtI(A,B) ~ Hom(B,DTrA) canon ica l l y [13],and f i n a l l y Hom(B,DTrA)

Hom(~IG,F) fo l lows from Proposi t ion 2.5. []

4.5. Coro l la ry . The 'sheaf ' 0 ( - I ) = FFom(A,-] have

D HI(x,F) ~ HomlF/~o(F, 0 ( - I ) )

f u n c t o r i a l l y in F E~/~=o.

t~ (F , - ) and Ext~/~o(-,G) 4.6. Coro l la ry . Ex /iF °

4.7. Coro l la ry . For an indecomposable 'sheaf ' equ iva len t .

a) F is generated by global sect ions.

b) F(X,F) , O.

c) HI(x ,F) = O.

serves as a dua l i z i ng sheaf, i . e . we

are r i g h t exact func tors .

F, the fo l l ow ing asser t ions are

Proof. (a) ~ (b) From (2.1) and (2.6) we deduce F = E~t(A,- ] f o r some A, and F is generated by global sect ions. (a) ~ (c) is Lemma 4.2. (c) ~ (a): I f F is not generated by global sect ions, F = H~m(P,-] fo r some prepro jec t ive module P as a consequence of (2 .1 ) . By (3.4) Hom(H~m(P,-], H~m(A,-]) = Hom(A,P) # 0 and the asser t ion fo l lows from (4 .5) . []

4.8. Propos i t ion. The cohomology func to r

H I ( x , - ) : F /~ o -* mod(A), F ~ HI(x ,F)

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induces an equivalenc e between the category (F/~o)~ of 'coherent sheaves' F with- out non-zero global sections and the category prej(A) of a l l preinject ive l e f t A- modules. Moreover, HI(X, -) induces an isomorphism

E~/IFo(H~m(DQ,-], H~m(DQ,-]) ~ Ext~(Q,Q)

for each pair Q,Q of preinject ive l e f t A-modules.

Proof. By means of the dual i ty functor D, the category prej(A) is dual to prep(A°P). According to (3.4. ) , (2.1) and (2.6) the functor

~' : prej(A) ~ (~/]Fo)~, Q~ H~m(DQ,-]

is an equivalence of categories. Moreover, for Q pre in ject ive, we in fer from (4.5), (3.4) that HI(x, H~m(DQ,-]) = D Hom(~m(DQ,-], H~m(A,-]) = Q. This proves the f i r s t assertion. Since ( /~c O) is closed under extensions, the las t assertion follows from the previous argument and Proposition 3.4. m

4.9. Remark. We may rephrase (4.8) par t ly as fol lows: Each 'coherent sheaf' F/T ° without non-zero global sections is determined by i t s cohomology, since

F in

F m H~m(DHI(x,F),-]. S imi lar ly we in fer from (4.7) and (4.1) that every 'coherent sheaf' O with t r i v i a l cohomology is determined by i t s global sections, since G ~ E~t(DZ'(X,G),-]. As a resu l t , each indecomposable F in ~/IF o is e i ther deter- mined by global sections or by cohomology (Corollary 4.7).

We also note that we may get r id of excessive dual izat ions, replacing Hom and Ext by tensorproduct and Tor. For instance, in the s i tuat ion above, we have

T E~t(D?(X,G),-] = (- @A £(X'G))N and

T ~m(DHI(X,F), - ] = Tor~(-,HI(x,F)) ~.

In order to summarize the previous results in a suggestive form, define A and B as the fu l l subcategory of mod(A) consistin£ of a l l p re in ject ive (a l l preprojec- t i ve or regular) indecomposable modules, respect ively.

4.10. Theorem. For each connected hereditary Art in algebra of i n f i n i t e representation type, the category ind(F/iF o) of indecomposable 'coherent sheaves' i s equivalent to the category $ constructed from the category ind(A) of indecomposable l e f t A-modules as follows

' the objects of $ are the objects of ind(A)

Hom$(X,Y) = HomA(X,Y) i_f X,Y are both in A or both in B and Hom$(X,Y) Ext~(X,Y) otherwise.

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the composition in $ is given by the Yoneda-composition of Ext~(i = 0,1).

By transport of structure, the t ranslat ion % of F ~ o acts on obje_cts X o f $ by ~(X) = DTrX, i f X is non-projective, and %(X) = DX t i f X is project ive. Moreover, we have Ext$(X,Y) = ExtA(X,Y) provided X,Y are both in A or both in 8, and Ext$(X,Y) = HomA(X,Y) otherwise. Dual i ty DExt$(X,Y) = Hom$(Y,TX) holds func to r ia l l y in X,Y. The addit ive completion add(S) of $ is abelian. Assuming A add i t iona l ly basic, the d i rect sum of a complete system of indecomposable project ive ( in jec t ive) A-modules in add(S) serves as the structure sheaf O, the dualizing sheaf 0( - I ) , respect ively.

Proof. Define #: $ ~ i n d ( ~ o) on objects by #(X) = HomA(DX,-] for A in A and @(X) = E~{t(DX, - ] for A in 8. The action of # on morphisms u: X ~ Y is given by Proposition 3.4 i f X,Y are both in A, by Proposition 2.5 i f X,Y are both in B. For A E A, B E B we have Hom$(B,A) = Ext~(B,A). = D HomA(A,DTrB) = O. A variant of the proof of Proposition 2.5 proves that Yoneda's lemma defines an isomorphism Hom$(A,B) = Ext~(A,B) ~ Hon~/IFo(H~m(DB,-], E~t(DA,-]), functor ia l in A E A, B E 8.

This defines # as a functor, and shows in combination with (2.6) that # is an equivalence of categories. []

The relat ionship between mod(A) and ~ o may hence be depicted as fol lows. Here, P, R, J stand for a complete system of preproject ive, regular or prein ject ive indecomposable l e f t A-modules, respect ively.

ind(A): ~ P

J

ind (~=/iFo) : J C Figure I

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I t is understood tha t in both cases there are only (non-zero) morphisms from the l e f t hand to the r i g h t hand side.

4.11. Remark. The comparison of (4.10) wi th the t i l t i n g theor ies fo r A r t i n algebras [ 6, 7,18,19,34] shows tha t the ' s t ruc tu re sheaf ' 0 serves as a t i l t i n g module f o r

~/~=o' and mod(A) emerges from ~/IF o by t i l t i n g wi th O. Let us reca l l from [ 6,19] t h a t , f o r an A r t i n algebra A, a module T is ca l led a t i l t i n g module i f i t s a t i s f i e s the fo l l ow ing three proper t ies : (a) Ex t I (T ,T ) = O, (b) E x t ' , - ) = O, (c) There is an exact sequence 0 ~ A ~ T' ~ T " ~ 0 wi th T ' ,T " in add(T). Also reca l l tha t (c) may be replaced by the more convenient cond i t ion ( c ' ) s ta t i ng tha t the indecomposable d i r e c t fac tors o f T cons t i t u te a basis f o r the Grothendieck group Ko(mOd(A)).

Obviously, cond i t ion (c) does not make sense fo r F/IF o. This prevents tha t the present s i t u a t i o n is covered by [ 6,19] in a s t r i c t sense. Note however, tha t 0 s a t i s f i e s the analogues of condi t ions (a) , ( b ) , ( c ' ) f o r ~/IF o, as fo l lows from (4 .2 ) , (4.6) and (5 .2) . This suggests to develop t i l t i n g theory in a framework not r es t r i c t ed to modules over A r t i n algebras, based e n t i r e l y on condi t ions (a) , (b) , (c ' ) .

We close th i s sect ion w i th another property, f a m i l i a r in a lgebra ic geometry o f p ro jec t i ve spaces:

4.12. Propos i t ion . For each 'coherent sheaf' F ( i n F/F o) there is an in teger N, depending on F, such that F(n) is generated by 31obal sect ions fo r each n > N.

5. Euler c h a r a c t e r i s t i c and rank

Let us denote by

dim: mod(A) ~ Ko(mOd(A)), A ~ dim A

[ ] : F/F o ~ Ko(~/Fo),F ~ IF]

the natural maps of mod(A) and ~/JF ° in to t h e i r respect ive Grothendieck groups. For each F in ~ o i t s Euler c h a r a c t e r i s t i c in Ko(mod(A)) is def ined as

x(F) = dim F(X,F) - dim HI (x ,F ) .

~ecal l f o r t h i s purpose tha t F(X,F) and HI (x ,F) are f i n i t e l y generated l e f t A-modules. We i n f e r from (4.6) tha t × is add i t i ve on shor t exact sequences, hence induces a morphism h: Ko(F/~: o) ~ Ko(mOd(A)) o f abel ian groups s a t i s f y i n g h ( [F ] ) = ×(F). We also note tha t both Ko(mod (A)) and Ko(~/~: o) are equipped wi th

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b i l i n e a r forms, s a t i s f y i n g

< dim A, dim B > = dimkHom(A,B) - dimkExt(A,B)

< IF ] , [G] > = dimkHom(F,G) - dimkExt(F,G)

f o r a l l A,B in mod(A) and a l l F,@ in ~ o ' respect ive ly . (Use Coro l la ry 4 .6) . By the d e f i n i t i o n of the b i l i n e a r form of KoOF/JFo), the t r a n s l a t i o n func to r ~ of ~/~o induces an isometry of Ko(~/JFo), also denoted ~, hence s a t i s f y i n g T ( [F ] ) = [TF]. The f o l l ow ing propos i t ion describes a phenomenon f a m i l i a r from t i l t i n g theory [ 6,19]:

5.1. Proposi t ion. The Euler c h a r a c t e r i s t i c induces a group isomorphism

h: Ko(F/IF o) ~ Ko(mod(A))

(a) h ( [F ] ) = x(F)

(b) < x , y > = < h (x ) , h(y) >

(c ) h ( [ ~ F ] ) = c h ( [ F ] )

where c: Ko(mod(A)) ~ Ko(mOd(A)) t r a n s l a t i o n func to r of ~ /F o.

s a t i s f y i n g

fo r each F i n ~/]F o,

fo r each x ,y inn Ko(~/Fo),

fo r each F i n ~/]Fo,

denotes the Coxeter t ransformat ion and the

Proof. As fo l lows from g l .d im A < I there is a group homomorphism k: Ko(mod(A)) ~ Ko(F/~= o) s a t i s f y i n g k(di_m A) = [E~t (DA,- ] ] - [~m(DA, - ] ] fo r each A in mod(A). I t fo l lows from (4.9) tha t k o h ( [F ] ) = IF] f o r each indecomposable 'sheaf ' F, and h o k(dim A) = dim A fo r each indecomposable A-module A. The v e r i f i c a t i o n of (b) and (c) is also s t ra igh t fo rward from (4.10). n

By means o f (5.1) the Euler c h a r a c t e r i s t i c ×: F/IF ° ~ Ko(mOd(A)) def ines Ko(mOd(A)) as ' the ' Grothendieck group of ~/~o" Ko(m°d(A)) is f ree abel ian w i th a 'natura l bas is ' cons is t ing of d imS I . . . . . dim S d f o r a complete system S I . . . . . S d of simple A-modules. With respect to the above basis we may and w i l l i d e n t i f y X(F) w i th an element of ~d , whenever i t turns out to be convenient.

n I n r I f 0 = 01 @ . . . @ O r is a decomposition of the ' s t ruc tu re sheaf ' 0 in to

indecomposable d i rec t f ac to rs , i t fo l lows from (4.1) tha t F(X,O I ) . . . . . F(X,O r ) is a complete system of indecomposable p ro jec t i ve A-modules. Note tha t x(O i ) = F(X,Oi ) . Hence by hered i ty of A we have:

5.2. Coro l la ry . Let 01 . . . . . 0 d be a complet_ee system of (pai rwise nonisomorphic) d i r ec t fac tors of the ' s t ruc tu re sheaf' 0. Then d is the number of isomorphism classes of simple A-module§. Moreover the system X(O I ) . . . . . X(0 d) is a £ - b a s i s f o r

Ko(mOd(A)) = Ko~/Fo) .

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5.3 We assume from now on that the algebra A is in addi t ion tame and as before hereditary and connected. By de f i n i t i on A is tame [ 9,31] i f the b i l i nea r form on Ko(mOd(A)), considered before, leads to a posi t ive semi-def in i te quadratic form q on the rat ional Grothendieck group ~ @~ Ko(mod(A)). We refer to the work of V. Dlab and C. M. Ringel [ 9,10,31] for a detai led account on the representation theory of tame heredi tary algebras. Here, we only note the fo l lowing fac ts , which are charac ter is t i c for the tame case (cf . [31 ] ) :

( I ) There exists a non-zero ~ - l i n e a r map 6: Ko(mOd(A)) ~ ~ , cal led the defect, which is invar ian t under the Coxeter transformation c. We may choose ~ in such a way that there is a project ive A-module P, necessari ly indecomposable, with ~(P) = - I . (Notation: ~(A) = 6(dim A) for A in mod(A)).

(2) By means of ~, preproject ive, pre in jec t ive and regular A-modules A are characterized by 6(A) < O, 6(A) > 0 and 6(A) = O, respect ively.

(3) The category reg(A) of regular A-modules is an exact subcategory of mod(A), hence an abelian length category, and each regular module R has f i n i t e length (= regular length of R) in reg(A).

(4) reg(A) decomposes uniquely into a coproduct reg(A) = I I regx(A) x C X

of un iser ia l subcategories regx(A). X may be choosen to be the set of a l l regular Auslander-Reiten components. For x in X, regx(A) is the addi t ive closure of the modules contained in the component x.

(5) Each 'component' regx(A) has only a f i n i t e number n x of (isomorphism types of) simple objects (= simple regular modules), a l l conjugate under the Auslander- Reiten t rans la t ion DTr, which acts on reg(A) hence on each 'component' regx(A) as a category equivalence. Moreover, with the exception of at most three 'components' Xl,X2,X 3, cal led non-homogeneous, we have n x = I . The remaining components, and the modules contained there in , are cal led homogeneous.

(6) There is a simple regular module S, necessari ly homogeneous, such that

~(A) = dim Hom(S,A) - dim Ext(S,A) End(S) End(S)

for each A-module A. Moreover, i f h = dim S, for each x £ X, the sum of the dimension vectors of a complete system of simple objects in regx(A) is an integer mul t ip le of h.

(7) X, the set of a l l regular Auslander-Reiten components, has the a l te rnat ive descr ipt ion as the set of DTr-orbits of (isomorphism classes) of simple regular

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A-modules.

5.4. We are now going to sketch, how to def ine a sheaf 0 x dimensional k-£1gebras on X and how to i n te rp re te ~/]F o as the ca.tegory coh(X) o f coherent OX-mOdules. For a de ta i l ed account we re fe r to the expos i t ion in [ 5]. The po in t o f view, adapted here, d i f f e r s however from [ 5] since a l l ' l o c a l i z a t i o n s ' are e f fec ted by the format ion of quot ien t categor ies in the sense of Grothendieck [ t 2 ] , whereas in [ 5] the 'ca lcu lus o f f r ac t i ons ' in the sense of [14] dominates.

The approach is based on the fo l l ow ing resu l t from [ 5] , c f . a lso [15] fo r a re la ted phenomenon in (mod(A), Ab).

5.4. Propos i t ion. Assume A is a connected, tame, hered i ta ry Ar t in algebra. The functor

~: reg(A) ~ / ] T o, R ~ E~t(DR,-]

induces an equivalence between the category o f a l l regular l e f t A-modules and the

o f not necessar i ly f i n i t e -

category U = (F~o)o o f a l l f i n i t e length objects of C = ~/]F o. Moreover, an indecomposable object of F/]F o e i t h e r has f i n i t e length , or else has no subobject of f i n i t e length.

5.5. By (5.3) U decomposes uniquely in to a coproduct U = ] ] U of un ise r ia l x E X x

subcategories. A subset U of X is ca l led open i f U = ~ or U is the complement of a f i n i t e set. This def ines the Zar isk i topology on X. For U c X, observe that < U > = ] ] U is a Serre subcategory of C =~:/~o. Let C(U) denote the

x E X ' - U x

quot ien t category C/< U > . For U c V, we have < U > = < V >~ hence a 'canonica l ' functor ruv: C(V) -~ C(U), C ~ C. Note that C(X) = C.

Recall the d e f i n i t i o n of 0 = E~t(DA,-] E ~ / ~ o . For U * @ open in X, def ine Ox(U) = HOmC(u)(O,O)°P and, of course, Ox(~) = O. For U c V, the canonical functor ruv: C(V) ~ C(U) def ines ' r e s t r i c t i o n maps ~ Ox(V) ~ Ox(U), obv iously subject to t r a n s i t i v i t y . This def ines 0 X as a presheaf of k-algebras. 0 X i s , in f ac t , a sheaf as fo l lows by s t ra igh t fo rward v e r i f i c a t i o n from the decomposition U = ] [ U .

x £ X x

Since the category prep(A °p) is l e f t noether ian in the r ingoid-sense [ 5 ,25 ] , 0 X is a sheaf o f noether ian k-algebras. More p rec ise ly , Ox(X) = A, and OX(U) is a k-algebra of i n f i n i t e dimension, which is hered i ta ry of Krul l dimension one and noether ian on both sides,, i f U is an a f f i n e open subset of X. This means that U is a non-empty open subset of X, but d i f f e r e n t from X.

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S i m i l a r l y , f o r F in ~/~F o and U open in X, def ine Fx(U) = Homc(u)(O,F) and r e s t r i c t i o n maps Fx(V) ~ Fx(U), f o r U ~ V, by means of the func to r rVU. Again, F X is a sheaf on X. Moreover, f o r each open subset U of X, Fx(U) is a l e f t Ox(U)-module, which is noether ian. I t eas i l y fo l lows that each F X is a coherent l e f t Ox-module. Also, the assignment FM~ F X extends to an equivalence of categories F/~= o ~ coh(X), F ~ F X.

5.6. For each x C X denote by C x the quot ien t category C~ < X ~ {x} >. The s ta lk 0 x o f the s t ruc tu re sheaf 0 X a t x turns out to be isomorphic to Hom Cx(O,O) °p. S i m i l a r l y , f o r each F in F/n= o the s ta lk Fx of F X at x may

be ca lcu la ted as HOmcx(O,F). C x is equ iva lent to the category mod(O x) of a l l

f i n i t e l y generated l e f t Ox-modules. In p a r t i c u l a r , U x may be i d e n t i f i e d w i th mod(Ox) o, the category of a l l l e f t Ox-modules of f i n i t e length. 0 x is semi-per fect , hered i ta ry noetherian of Kru l l dimension one wi th n x equal to the number of (isomorphism types of ) simple Ox-modules. Hence the s ta lk 0 x is Mor i ta -equ iva len t to a local r ing exac t l y f o r the homogeneous points in X.

5.7. Since X is i r r e d u c i b l e in the Zar isk i topology we may def ine the s ta lk F~ of F (or F X) in the generic po in t ~ by means of

F~ = lim~ Fx(U), U

where U runs through the set of a l l non-empty open subsets of X, ev iden t l y d i rected by inc lus ion V m U. (Note tha t according to our d e f i n i t i o n s ~ does not belong to X, but sometimes i t may be convenient to at tach ~ to X). A l t e r n a t i v e l y , F~ may be ca lcu la ted as Hom C~(O,F) °p, where C~ = C / < X > is a semi-simple category [5] equ iva len t to m~d(O~).

Hence the r ing O~ is semi-simple, i . e . a f u l l matr ix r ing over some skew f i e l d K = K(X). Sometimes we w i l l term O~ the ra t iona l func t ion r ing and K the ra t iona l func t ion f i e l d of X. I t is shown in [ 5] tha t K is isomorphic to the endomorphism skew f i e l d End(AQ) of the unique indecomposable to rs ion f ree d i v i s i b l e l e f t A-module Q, introduced by C. M. Ringel in his study of i n f i n i t e -d imens iona l A-modules. Hence i f the base f i e l d k is a l g e b r a i c a l l y c losed, we have K = k(T) the f i e l d of ra t iona l func t ions in one indeterminate T over k [30] . We may rephrase the preceeding as fo l l ows : The quot ien t category

coh(X) / COho(X)

of coherent sheaves modulo f i n i t e length sheaves is equ iva len t to mod(K(X)), the category of f i n i t e dimensional modules over the ra t iona l func t ion f i e l d of X.

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For a semi-perfect r ing A each f i n i t e l y generated project ive A-module P r

decomposes into a d i r ec t sum @ Pi of r indecomposable pro jec t ive A-modules i=1

Call r the rank of P. Notation: rk A P. We define the rank of a coherent sheaf

F as rk F = rko~ F~ = length 0~ F~.

5.7. Proposit ion. I f ×: F ~ ° ~ Ko(mOd(A)) denotes the Euler charac ter is t ic and 6: Ko(mOd(A)) ~ the defect, we have

Pi"

rk F = ~(x(F)

for each coherent sheaf F. F has rank zero i f and only i f F has f i n i t e length i n E/~= o. I f F is an indecomposable coherent sheaf of non-zero rank r , i t s r es t r i c t i on to each a f f ineopen subset is p ro jec t i ve , moreover F x i s Ox-project ive of rank r for each x (~ X.

Proof. The fo l lowing facts are proved in [ 5]: I f R E mod(A °p) is regular , E~{t(R, - ] is zero in C~ = coh(X)/COho(X). Hom(P,-] has length -~(P) in C~ i f P is pro ject ive. ~ t ( Q , - ] has length B(Q) in C~ i f Q is pre in jec t ive . By means of (4.10) rk F = ~(×(F)) fol lows from the de f i n i t i on of the Euler charac ter is t i c . The second assertion is a consequence of (5.4). I f F is indecomposable of rank r > 0, we may assume by t rans la t ion that F = F(6m(P,-] with P preproject ive. The last assertion now fol lows from [ 5]. []

5.8. We in fe r from (5.7) that an indecomposable coherent sheaf F is e i ther of f i n i t e length (and concentrated at some x C X) or else is l oca l l y pro ject ive. Since an indecomposable preproject ive (pre in jec t ive) module is uniquely determined by i t s dimension vector dim A, each indecom~osable l oca l l y pro ject ive coherent sheaf F is uniquely determined (up to isomorphism) by i t s Euler charac te r is t i c . Since rk F = ~(×(F)) for each F, the rank is invar ian t under t rans la t ion .

Figure 2 depicts the s i tua t ion i f A is the path algebra of a quiver of extended D7" Since the rank is %-invar iant , and given on T-orb i ts by the scheme Dynkin type

1 2 2 2 2 I we have 4 T-orb i ts of rank one and two respect ively. From well-known propert ies of the defect [ 9] we fu r ther conclude that fo r A of extended Dynkin type E 6, E 7, E 8 the maximal rank of an indecomposable l oca l l y project ive sheaf is 3,4 and 6, respect ively.

6. The quiver case

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closed. Hence A is the path algebra k[F] of a connected quiver F of extended Dynkin type.

6.1. I f p is a source (or sink) of F, we may inver t the di rect ion of a l l arrows of F s tar t ing (respect ively ending) at p. I terat ion of th is procedure leads to the notion of an admissible change of or ientat ion of F and hence of A = k[F]. I f A I emerges from A by an admissible change of or ientat ion, the in te r re la t ion between mod(A~ p) and mod(A Op) is most conveniently described by means of a sui tably chosen preprojective t i l t i n g module T £ mod(A°P), forming a complete s l ice (see [19]).

As a resu l t , we may iden t i f y P(A~ p) with a f u l l subcategory A of P(A°P), which is co f in i te in P(A Op) and closed under successors in P(A°P). I .e . only f i n i t e l y many objects of P(A Op) are not contained in A. Further Hom (A,P) ~ 0 with A in A and P in P(A °p) implies that P is already in A. From these facts one eas i ly deduces that for each f i n i t e l y presented functor F: P(A °p) ~ Ab also the res t r i c t ion to A is f i n i t e l y presented.

This allows to define the res t r i c t ion ~(A) ~ ( A 1 ) , F ~ F]A which c lear ly induces an isomorphism

~(A)/]Fo(A) -~ F(A I )AYo(AI),

since A = P(A~ p) is co f in i te in P(A). To summarize

6.1. Proposition. I f A I emerges from A by an admissible change of or ientat ion, A and A I have isomorphic categories ~(A)AFo(A) and ~(AI)/~o(A I) of coherent sheaves, and - a f o r t i o r i - isomorphic parameter curves X(A) and X(AI). In par t icu lar X(A) = X(A°P).

Note that we use the term curve for the pair (X, coh(X)), not for the pair (X, 0x). This amounts to iden t i f y curves X,Y with equivalent categories coh(X), coh(Y) of coherent sheaves, i .e . with Morita-equivalent structure sheaves 0 X, 0y. (Call 0 X and 0y Morita-equivalent provided mod(0 x) and mod(0y), the i r respective categories of coherent modules, are equivalent.) This choice of de f in i t ion is motivated by the fact that T(A)/]Fo(A) determines the parameter curve (X, cob(X)) uniquely (cf . Section 5).

6.2. I f A is a quiver algebra of extended Dynkin type ~, where ~ means one of the Dynkin diagrams Ap,q(1 < p < q), Dn(n > 4), E 6, E 7, E 8, the curve X(A) only depends on A, according to (6.1). Hence each Dynkin type ~ determines a curve X(~) uniquely determined by ~ up to isomorphism.

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Conversely, the curve X determines i ts Dynkin type as fo l lows: Suppose X = X(A) with A of extended Dynkin type Ap,q, D n, E 6, E 7, E 8. We recal l from Section 5 that for each x in X, the stalk 0 is semi-perfect with a f i n i t e x number n x of (isomorphism classes) of simple modules. Thus the m u l t i p l i c i t y n x of x is the number of (isomorphism classes) of simple objects in the 'component' regx(A). From the c lass i f i ca t i on of a l l non-homogeneous regular simple A-modules by Dlab and Ringel (see the tables in [ 9]) we obtain the fo l lowing information:

We may always choose three points respect ive ly , such that each x E X Moreover, exact ly the cases

Xl,X2,X 3 of m u l t i p l i c i t y n I < n 2 < n 3 d i f fe ren t from Xl,X2,X 3 has m u l t i p l i c i t y I .

Ap,q: (1,p,q) I < p < q

Dn+2: (2,2,n) 2 < n

E6: (2,3,3)

E7: (2,3,4)

E8: (2,3,5)

w i l l occur for (n I , n 2, n3). Hence the s i ngu la r i t y type &(X) = (n I , n 2, n 3) X = X(A) is always a Dynkin diagram (with base-point) Ap,q, D n, E 6, E 7, E 8. Moreover, A has extended Dynkin type ~. To summarize:

of

6.2. Theorem. The map X ~ A(X), where A(X) is the s i ngu la r i t y type of X, establishes a b i jec t ion between the set of isomorphism classes of parameter curves X = X(A) with A a connected tame hereditary k-algebra, and Dynkin diagrams Ap,q(p < q), Dn(n > 4), E6, E7, E8, respect ively.

For A tame heredi tary connected, the Dynkin diagram ~(X), where X is the parameter curve of A, w i l l also be termed the s i ngu la r i t y type of A.

6.3. We recal l that the Kronecker algebra Z = Z(k) is the path algebra k[- ~ -] of the quiver - ~ -. Z is tame hereditary of s i ngu la r i t y type At, I . Hence the curve X(Z) has no s ingular (= non-homogeneous) points, i . e . points x of m u l t i p l i c i t y n x > I .

6.3. Proposit ion. For each base f i e l d k, not necessari ly a lgebra ica l l y closed, the parameter curve of the Kronecker algebra z(k) is the pro ject ive l i ne P1(k).

Proof. Consider the usual ~ -g rad ing

k[X,Y] = e H n n E

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of the polynomial algebra k[X,Y] by to ta l degree of polynomials. As is eas i ly ve r i f i ed , the S-modules

X Pn = Hn-1 # Hn (n = 0,1,2 . . . . )

are a complete system of preproject ive indecomposable Kronecker modules. (Here, X and Y also refer to the mu l t i p l i ca t i on by X and Y, respect ive ly) . Moreover, each map

~n,m: Hm-n ~ H°m~(Pn'Pm)' f ~ mul t i p l i ca t i on by f

is an isomorphism of k-vectorspaces for each pair n,m > 0 [26].

Hence the category P = P(~) has the fo l lowing abstract in te rp re ta t ion :

- the objects of P are the pos i t ive integers 0,1,2, . . . .

- the morphisms of P are given by P(n,m) = Hm_ n.

- the composition of P is given by the mu l t i p l i ca t i on of k[X,Y].

As a resu l t , the category ~(s) = f .p . (P(s°P) , Ab) is equivalent to the category

mod~ (k[X,Y]) +

of f i n i t e l y presented, ~+-graded kIX,Y]-modules with degree zero maps. (Note that ~ soP). Hence F(Z)/IFo(S) coincides with the quot ient category of mod~ (k[X,Y])

modulo the Serre subcategory of a l l ~+-graded k[X,Y]-modules having f i n i t e length. By Serre's c lassical resu l t [32] th is is the category coh(P1(k)) of coherent sheaves on the project ive l i ne P1(k). Hence cob(X) ~ coh(P1(k)). Since in both cases the points of the respective curves are in l- l-correspondence with the simple coherent sheaves, we also have a natural homeomorphism X ~ P1(k) of the underlying spaces, inducing the given isomorphism coh(X) ~ coh(P1(k)). []

According to our de f i n i t i on of the parameter curve X = X(z), given in Section 5, which excludes the generic point ~, P1(k) has to be interpeted as m-Proj(k[X,Y]), the maximal project ive spectrum of the #+-graded algebra k[X,Y]. Hence the points of P1(k) are the maximal graded prime ideals of k[X,Y]. Of course, i f k is a lgebra ica l l y closed, P1(k) takes the more fami l i a r form {k x k} ~ {O)/k*.

6.4. Since preproject ive (pre in jec t ive) indecomposable Kronecker modules have dimension type (n,n + I ) , resp. (n + I , n) , n = 0,1,2 . . . . . and defect - I , resp. I , the indecomposable l oca l l y pro ject ive coherent sheaves F on the project ive l i ne a l l have rank one. Moreover, they are uniquely determined by t he i r Euler character charac ter is t ic x(F) = (n, n + I ) , hence by t he i r degree d(F) = n E ~ . In th is way Grothendieck's c l ass i f i ca t i on of holomorphic vector bundles on P1(~), [17] hence

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modulo Serre's GAGA [33] the c lass i f i ca t i on of algebraic vector bundles (= l oca l l y project ive coherent sheaves on PI(~)) , becomes a consequence of L. Kronecker's c l ass i f i ca t i on [24] of f i n i t e dimensional Z-modules, i . e . of pairs of matrices up to simultaneous conjugation. Moreover, the c l ass i f i ca t i on of indecomposable vector bundles on PI(¢) depends via (4.10) mainly on the easy part of Kronecker's c l a s s i f i c a t i o n , i .e . on the determination of a l l indecomposable preproject ive or pre in jec t ive Z-modules. This 'expla ins ' the p o s s i b i l i t y for "a short elementary proof of Grothendieck's theorem on algebraic vector bundles over the project ive l ine" [21].

6.4. Corol lary. (Kronecker (1890), Grothendieck (1957)). Each l oca l l y project ive coherent sheaf F o n_n P1(k) decomposes into a f i n i t e d i rec t sum of rank one sheaves. Moreover, the degree map F:~ d(F) establishes a l- l-correspondence between l oca l l y project ive coherent sheaves F of rank one and integers n £ ~ respect ively.

6.5. By (6.3) the parameter curve of the Kronecker algebra and the pro ject ive l i ne P1(k) have the same categories of coherent sheaves. However, the commutative and the noncommutative point of view lead to d i f f e ren t notions of structure sheaf, global sect ions, cohomology and tw is t ing operation. The usual tw is t ing cf . [20] ~: coh(P1(k)) -* coh(P1(k)),FF* F I t ] is induced by the s h i f t operat ion,

- I g M n ~ 0 Mn+ I , on graded k[X,Y]-modules. As is eas i ly ve r i f i ed o 2 = % , n > O n > O where T denotes the t rans la t ion functor of section 2. Hence the tw is t ing operations are related by

F(n) = F[2n]

for each coherent sheaf F and integer n.

Further, ~ I = H°m(Po'-] is the c lassical choice for the structure sheaf. Our choice instead i s , up to t rans la t ion (cf . Section 4) ,

0 = ~I e ~ l [ I ] = H~m(Po,-] @ H~m(PI,-]

As a resu l t , global sections £ and Fcl and cohomology H I and H Icl compare according to

F(X,F) = rc l (X,F [ - I ] ) e rc l (X,F)

1 (X,F [ -1 ] ) 0 1 (X,F). HI(x,F) = Hcl Hc l

Accordingly, the non-commutative version of global sections and cohomology contains more information on g(cf . Remark 4.9) .

6.6. Each f i n i t e subgroup G of the project ive general l i near group PGL(2.~), i . e . each polyhedral group G acts on the project ive l i ne PI(~) by M~bius transformations. From the point of view of geometry and invar ian t theory the resu l t ing quotients

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PI(C)/G have been c lass i f i ed by F. Klein in his famous book on the icosahedron [23].

6.6. Theorem (F. Klein (1884). The quot ient X = PI(£)/G is a compact Riemann surface with at most three s ingular points x , y , z . The s i ngu la r i t y type A(X) o f X, given b_y_y the m u l t i p l i c i t i e s (nx,ny,nz) , where n x < ny < n z, is a Dynkin diagram Ap,p(p > I ) , Dn(n > 4) , E 6, E 7, E 8, which determines X up to isomorphism.

Here, the m u l t i p l i c i t y n x of x C X, x = Gp, p E P~({), is defined as the order of the s t ab i l i ze r group G(p) of p. We also note that A(X), X = PI({) /G, is jus t

the Dynkin type of the polyhedral group G. Hence, for A = (p ,q , r ) , G is generated by a,b,c with relat ions a p = b q = c r =abc = I.

By means of the theory of skew group algebras i t is proved in [27] that the parameter curves of the tame hereditary connected C-algebras - with the exception Of the s ingu ]a r i t y types Ap,q with p , q - are jus t Kle in 's simple curve s i ngu la r i t i es l i s ted in (6.6).

For k a lgebra ica l l y closed of a rb i t ra ry charac te r i s t i c , there is an a l te rna t i ve way to describe the parameter curves of Proposit ion 6.2 as the pro ject ive l i ne to- gether with a conf igurat ion of s ingular points contro l led by a Dynkin diagram ( in the sense of 6.2). There is a corresponding process of des ingu lar iza t ion , which leaves the funct ion f i e l d K(X) invar ian t , and leads - in a f i n i t e number of steps - to P l (k) . For a detai led account we refer to [35]. Thus each parameter curve X of (6.2) is b i r a t i o n a l l y equivalent to P1(k), i . e . has the f i e l d k(T) of rat ional funct ions in the indeterminate T as i t s f i e l d of rat ional funct ions. Since also HI(x, 0 X) = 0 (see (4 .2) ) , i t is in accordance with c lassical terminology to attach genus zero to each parameter curve (6.2) .

7. Theory of d iv iso rs : Picard group

7.1. Let X = X(A) be the parameter curve of A. For each x in X, l e t S(I) ~(n) be a complete system of simple regular A-modules of type x, i . e .

X 2 . • . ~ b x

belonging to the component regx(A), and denote by S x the d i rec t sum S (1)x " " ' s ( n ) x Since we suppose the base f i e l d k of A to be a lgebra ica l ly closed, the dimension vector dim S x does not depend on x [ 9]. Accordingly, we may calculate the defect of a A-module A by means of

6(A) = dimkHomA(Sx,A) - dim Ext~(Sx,A).

We define the group of d iv isors Div(X) on X as the free abelian group on X. A d i v i so r D = Z nxX is pos i t ive i f n x ~- 0 fo r each x E X. Each d i v i so r D

x E X

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has a decomposit ion D = D+ - D_, where D+, D_ are both p o s i t i v e .

By means of Theorem 4.10 we can and w i l l i d e n t i f y regu la r A-modules and f i n i t e length sheaves on X, which are necessar i l y coherent . The Grothendieck group

Ko(reg(A)) = Ko(COho(X)) is f ree abe l ian w i th a basis cons i s t i ng of a complete

system of a l l s imple regu la r A-modules (= s imple sheaves on X). The map, assoc ia t ing to each simple regu la r A-module S i t s type x E X, induces a natura l epimorphism

t : Ko(reg(A)) ~ Div(X) o f abe l ian groups. In t h i s way, each regu la r module R ( f i n i t e length sheaf E) def ines a d i v i s o r JR] (resp. [E l ) on X.

7.2. We def ine Pic(X) as the set of a l l isomorphism classes o f l o c a l l y p r o j e c t i v e coherent rank one sheaves on X. I f no confusion a r i s e s , we w i l l use the no ta t ion

L C Pic(X) a lso to i nd i ca te tha t L is a l o c a l l y p r o j e c t i v e coherent rank one sheaf on X.

7.2. Lemma. Given L E Pic(X) and x C X, there is a simple sheaf E ( resp. E') type x, un iquely determined up to isomorphism, such tha t Ex t I (E ,L ) m 0 (resp. Hom(L,E') ~ 0) . Moreover, E' = %E.

of

Proof. Since D Ext(E,L) = Hom(L,% E) i t su f f i ces to prove existence and uniqueness f o r E. By t r a n s l a t i o n we may assume in the context of Theorem 4.10 tha t L = P is

n S( i ) a p r e p r o j e c t i v e A-module of defect 6(P) = - I . I f S = @ i=I

a complete system of s imple regu la r modules o f type x, we have n E x t ( S ( i ) , p ) Hence ~ dim = I , and the asser t ion f o l l o w s .

i= I

We thus ob ta in n o n - s p l i t exact sequences

O ~ L ~ L(x) ~ E ~ 0

o ~ L ( - x ) ~ L ~ E' ~ O.

Observe tha t L(x) and L ( -x ) are in Pic(X) the Euler c h a r a c t e r i s t i c shows tha t L(x) and p a i r (L ,× ) . As a r e s u l t , f o r each x C X b i j e c t i o n w i th inverse L ~ L ( - x ) .

is the d i r e c t sum of

6(P) = - d imkExt(S,P). D

again. Moreover, the c a l c u l a t i o n o f L ( -x ) are uniquely determined by the

the map Pic(X) ~ P ic (X) , L i~ L(x) is a

7.3. Lemma. For each L in Pic(X) and x ,y Moreover, ~ (L (x ) ) = (~L ) ( x ) .

in X we have L (x ) ( y ) = L ( y ) ( x ) .

Proof. Consider the push-out diagram

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0 i, J, L (x ) ,~ E ,,, ~ 0 x

t u 0 ~ ~ L D E x =-0

1 ~ E

Y

1 0

0

L L

i L(y)

1 E

Y

I 0

where Ex, Ey are s imple sheaves o f type x , y r e s p e c t i v e l y . We may assume x • y . The midd le row does not s p l i t , s ince o the rw ise E x ~ Ey. Hence [ E P ic(X) and [ = ( L ( x ) ) ( y ) = ( L ( y ) ( x ) f o l l o w s . The l a s t a s s e r t i o n f o l l o w s from the ~ - i n v a r i a n c e

o f regx (A) , u

7 .4 . By means o f (7 .3 ) the a c t i o n XxPic(X) ~ P i c ( X ) , ( x , L ) ~ L ( x ) , extends un ique ly

to a group a c t i o n

Div(X) x Pic(X) ~ P i c ( X ) , (D,L) ~ L(D) ,

s ince Div(X) i s f r e e abe l i an on X. This a c t i o n may be c h a r a c t e r i z e d as f o l l o w s :

I f D = D+ - D_, w i t h D+, D both p o s i t i v e , t he re are f i n i t e leng th sheaves E+, E_

w i t h [E+] = D+, [E ] = D t o g e t h e r w i t h shor t exac t sequences

O ~ L ~ [ - ~ E+ ~ 0

0 ~ L(D) ~ L ~ E -. 0 .

Moreover , Div(X) acts t r a n s i t i v e l y on P i c (X ) : Given L o, L I E P i c ( X ) , in the c o n t e x t

o f (4 .10) we may assume t h a t Lo = Po~ LI = PI a re p r e p r o j e c t i v e A-modules o f de fec t - , 0 - I . Accord ing to [ 5] t he re are sho r t exac t sequences 0 -~ Po -~ P ~ Ro '

0 ~ PI ~ P ~ RI ~ 0 wi i :h R o, R I r e g u l a r and P p r e p r o j e c t i v e o f de fec t - I . With D = [R o] - [R I ] we o b t a i n L I = Lo(D) f rom the above d e s c r i p t i o n o f the a c t i o n o f Div(X) on P i c (X ) .

Since Div(X)

L o E P ic(X)

is a b e l i a n , t r a n s i t i v i t y i m p l i e s t h a t the s t a b i l i z e r group o f

Divo(X) = {D E Div(X) I Lo(D) = L o}

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does not depend on the choice of L o. We ca l l Divo(X) the group of p r i nc ipa l

d i v i s o r s . Div(X) /Divo(X) is the d i v i s o r class group of X. To summarize:

7.4. P ropos i t i on . The group ac t ion

Div(X) x Pic(X) ~ P ic (X) , (D,L) ~ L(D)

is t r a n s i t i v e . For each L o E Pic(X) the s t a b i l i z e r group of L o is the group of p r i n c i p a l d i v i s o r s on X. By means of the b i j e c t i o n

Div(X) /Divo(X) ~ P ic (X) , [D] ~ Lo(D)

Pic(X) becomes an abe l ian group, isomorphic to the d i v i s o r c lass group w i th L o serv ing as the zero element. Moreover T(L(D)) = (TL)(D) holds f o r each D E Div(X) and L E P ic (X) .

Let K be a d i v i s o r w i th TL o = Lo(K). From ~(Lo(D)) = (%(Lo))(D) = Lo(K + D) = (Lo(D))(K) we ob ta in tha t %L = L(K) f o r each K E P ic (X) . Each d i v i s o r K w i th t h i s p roper ty w i l l be ca l l ed a canonical d i v i s o r f o r X. Note tha t the d i v i s o r c lass

[K] E Div(X) /D ivo(X) of K is uniquely determined.

7.5. As in the c lass i ca l contex t a d i v i s o r D is p r i n c i p a l , i . e . L(D) = L f o r each L E P ic (X) , i f and only i f D ar ises as the d i v i s o r of a non-zero r a t i ona l func t ion f E K(X)*:

We begin w i th the observat ion t ha t each non-zero morphism s: L ~ [ , w i th L, [

in P ic (X) , is necessar i l y a monomorphism wi th a cokernel E of f i n i t e length . (Consider the rank of k e r ( s ) , coke r ( s ) ) . We may hence de f ine the d i v i s o r of s as

d i v ( s ) = [E] . C lea r l y , d iV(SlS) = d iV(S l ) + d i v ( s ) i f s,s I are both non-zero, and t h e i r composi t ion is de f ined.

We r e f e r to [ 5] f o r a proof t ha t - f o r each f i xed L E Pic(X) - the f i e l d K(X) cons is ts of a l l l e f t f r ac t i ons f = s - l t , where s: L ~ [ , t : L ~ [ both are

monomorphism s t a r t i n g a t L, having a cokernel of f i n i t e length . We note tha t necessar i l y [ belongs to P ic (X) , again. Since s - l t = s ; I t I in K(×) i f and on ly i f there e x i s t s, s I both non-zero w i th a f i n i t e length cokernel and s a t i s -

f y ing s ls = s s I , s l t = s t I , the d i v i s o r of f = s - l t is def ined uniquely by d i v ( f ) = d i v ( t ) - d i v ( s ) . Moreover, the formula d i v ( f g ) = d i v ( f ) + d i v (g ) holds f o r a l l f , g c K(× )* . According to (7.4) we have L(D) = L i f and only i f there are shor t exact sequences 0 ~ L ~ [ ~ E+ ~ O, 0 ~ L ~ [ ~ E_ ~ 0 w i th E+, E_ both o f f i n i t e length and D = [E+] - [E ] , hence d i v ( s - l t ) = D, which proves the asse r t i on .

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7.5. Proposi t !on. I f ( p , q , r ) denotes the s i n g u l a r i t y type of X, the Picard group Pic(X) is the abel ian group on three generators x , y , z w i th re la t i ons px = qy = rz .

Proof. I f S is a simple sheaf of type x wi th m u l t i p l i c i t y n x = I , we have x (L ( x ) ) = x(L) + x(S) . Hence [x ] E Div(X) /Divo(X) has i n f i n i t e order. Moreover, we have [x ] = [y ] in Div(X) /Divo(X) fo r a l l non-s ingu lar points x , y of X. Assuming x s ingu la r of m u l t i p l i c i t y p > I , l e t E i ( i E~p) be a complete system of simple sheaves of type x , s a t i s f y i n g ~IE i = Ei+ I . Given L E P ic (X) , we may assume Ext1(E i ,L) # O. Hence thus obta in x (L (px ) ) = x(L) +

x (L (px ) ) = x(L) + x(E) i f E holds in D iv (X) /D ivo(X) .

0 • Hom(L(x), E i ) = D Ext(Ei+ I , L (x ) ) f o l l ows . We x ( E i ) . Hence by (7.1) we get x (L (px ) ) =

i E P

is simple of non-s ingu lar type y. Hence p [x ] = [y ]

7.6. As a r e s u l t , the Picard group Pic(X) is an abel ian group of rank one which genera l l y has to rs ion . The fo l l ow ing table summarizes the in format ion on Pic(X):

s i n g u l a r i t y type of

Ap,q = (1 ,p ,q)

Dn_ 2 = (2 ,2 ,n) n even n odd

E 6 = (2,3,3)

E 7 = (2,3,4)

E 8 = (2 ,3 ,5)

Pic(X)

8 Z: d ' where

@ ZZ2 @ 77 2

2Z ¢ ;~ 2 Z: eT~ 3 ~ eZZ 2 7/

d = g d(p,q}

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Helmut Lenzing Fachbereich Mathematik der Universit~t-GH D-4790 Paderborn W.-Germany

Received 20.11.1984