Group-stack

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In algebraic geometry, a group-stack is an algebraic stack whose categories of points have group structures or even groupoid structures in a compatible way.[1] It generalizes a group scheme, which is a scheme whose sets of points have group structures in a compatible way.

Examples

  • A group scheme is a group-stack. More generally, a group algebraic-space, an algebraic-space analog of a group scheme, is a group-stack.
  • Over a field k, a vector bundle stack 𝒱 on a Deligne–Mumford stack X is a group-stack such that there is a vector bundle V over k on X and a presentation V𝒱. It has an action by the affine line 𝔸1 corresponding to scalar multiplication.
  • A Picard stack is an example of a group-stack (or groupoid-stack).

Actions of group-stacks

The definition of a group action of a group-stack is a bit tricky. First, given an algebraic stack X and a group scheme G on a base scheme S, a right action of G on X consists of

  1. a morphism σ:X×GX,
  2. (associativity) a natural isomorphism σ(m×1X)σ(1X×σ), where m is the multiplication on G,
  3. (identity) a natural isomorphism 1Xσ(1X×e), where e:SG is the identity section of G,

that satisfy the typical compatibility conditions.

If, more generally, G is a group-stack, one then extends the above using local presentations.

Notes

References