Derivations of Affine Schemes via Dual Numbers
Let
be an affine
The basic idea is:
The infinitesimal object we use is the algebra of dual numbers. For every commutative
We write the image of
There is a natural projection
The tangent functor of
Since
we have
The projection
Thus a tangent vector should be a point of
Tangent Vectors at an -Point
Let
be an
A tangent vector at
such that
So we have a diagram
Since
for a unique element
Thus a lift
such that
Now we ask when
Since
We need
The left-hand side is
The right-hand side is
Since
Comparing the coefficient of
This is precisely the Leibniz rule, where
We denote this
Therefore
In words:
Derivations as Infinitesimal Lifts
The previous computation can be summarized as follows.
A lift
over
This is a
Hence
This is the dual-number definition of derivations.
The derivation is not an extra object placed on top of the geometry. It is exactly the first-order part of a map to dual numbers.
The Global Version
There is also a global version.
Take
Then a global vector field on
of the projection
That is,
Every such section has the form
The condition that
Therefore
Geometrically,
is the module of global vector fields on the affine scheme
Square-Zero Extensions
The dual-number construction is a special case of a more general construction.
Let
with multiplication
Then
so
There is a projection
A section
of
The condition that
The left-hand side is
The right-hand side is
Thus
Therefore
When
by identifying
So the usual dual-number picture is the case
Relation with Kähler Differentials
The module of Kähler differentials
That is, for every
The universal derivation is
Every derivation
factors uniquely as
For a point
we get
Equivalently, after base change to
where
So the dual-number definition and the Kähler differential definition are two expressions of the same object.
Example: Affine Space
Let
An
It is determined by elements
where
A lift to
There are no equations to satisfy. Hence every choice of
gives a tangent vector.
Therefore
This matches the usual fact that affine
Example: A Hypersurface
Let
An
such that
A tangent vector at
This lift must satisfy the equation
in
Expanding to first order gives
Since
Therefore the tangent condition is
So
This is the usual Jacobian equation for the tangent space.
Example: Several Equations
Let
An
such that
for all
A tangent vector is a tuple
such that
still satisfies all equations modulo
For each
Since
for every
Hence
where
Thus the dual-number definition recovers the familiar Jacobian tangent space.
Example: The Node
Let
This is the union of the two coordinate axes.
Consider the origin
A tangent vector at the origin over
The equation is
After lifting, we get
So there is no linear condition on
Thus
At the origin, the tangent space is two-dimensional, even though each branch is one-dimensional. This is one way singularities appear in the tangent-space picture.
Example: The Cusp
Let
At the origin, a tangent vector is
The equation becomes
Since
both terms vanish. Hence there is again no linear condition.
So
The cusp is a curve, but its Zariski tangent space at the singular point is two-dimensional.
Away from the singular point, the Jacobian condition cuts out a one-dimensional tangent space.
Relation with Lie Algebras of Affine Algebraic Groups
Now suppose
As a functor,
The tangent functor is
The projection
The Lie algebra functor is the fiber over the identity:
This is a special case of the affine scheme construction.
For a general affine scheme
For an affine group
Thus
The Lie algebra of an affine algebraic group is the tangent space at the identity.
The Main Slogan
The dual-number method says:
A tangent vector is a first-order deformation
A derivation is the coefficient of
The Leibniz rule is not imposed artificially. It is exactly the condition that the lift is multiplicative.
So the conceptual summary is:
For affine schemes,
For affine algebraic groups,
These are the same idea: infinitesimal geometry is encoded by maps to dual numbers.