Phase III — Cohomology and Curves

Weeks 43–64 · ~143 hrs · Hartshorne Chapters III–IV

Goal: Make the machinery pay off. Sheaf cohomology is the tool that makes Riemann-Roch precise, gives Serre duality, and lets you compute everything. Curves are where every theorem is sharpest and most computable. By the end, you should be able to work all curve-related problems in all three qualifying exam sources.

Primary text: Hartshorne, Algebraic Geometry, Chapters III–IV Cohomology supplement: Serre, Faisceaux Algébriques Cohérents (FAC) — the foundational paper; read after Hartshorne III for historical context Curves supplement: Miranda, Algebraic Curves and Riemann Surfaces — bridges the analytic and algebraic viewpoints


Phase Bridge: Cohomology as Obstruction Theory

The passage from Phase II to Phase III is conceptual: Phase II built the language (schemes, sheaves, morphisms), Phase III makes the language compute. The key upgrade is sheaf cohomology, which converts geometric questions into linear algebra.

Phase II construction Phase III payoff
Quasi-coherent sheaf \(\mathcal{F}\) on \(X\) \(H^i(X, \mathcal{F})\): measures “holes” in \(\mathcal{F}\)
Line bundle \(\mathcal{L} = \mathcal{O}(D)\) \(h^0(\mathcal{L})\): dimension of global sections; gives \(\ell(D)\)
Kähler differentials \(\Omega_{X/k}\) \(\omega_X = \Omega_{X/k}^{\dim X}\): the dualizing sheaf for Serre duality
Morphism \(f: X \to Y\) \(R^i f_* \mathcal{F}\): higher direct images
Hilbert polynomial \(P_X(m)\) \(P_X(m) = \chi(\mathcal{O}_X(m))\): now provably a polynomial by finite-dimensionality of cohomology

Weeks 43–58 — Core Theory and Curves

Week 43 — Derived Functors

CA prerequisite: A&M Ch 2 (Hom and tensor), Ch 6 (chain complexes — not in A&M, use Weibel §2.1–2.3 or Hartshorne App A).

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 44 — Sheaf Cohomology

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 45 — Cohomology of Noetherian Affine Schemes

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 46 — Čech Cohomology

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 47 — Cohomology of Projective Space

Concepts to understand:

    • \(H^0(\mathbb{P}^n, \mathcal{O}(m)) = k[x_0, \ldots, x_n]_m\) (degree-\(m\) forms) for \(m \geq 0\), \(0\) for \(m < 0\)
    • \(H^n(\mathbb{P}^n, \mathcal{O}(m)) = 0\) for \(m \geq -n\), and dual to \(H^0(\mathcal{O}(-m-n-1))\) for \(m < -n\)
    • \(H^i = 0\) for \(0 < i < n\)

Reading:

Problems:

Geometric insight: The “duality” in the computation of \(H^n(\mathbb{P}^n, \mathcal{O}(m))\) vs \(H^0(\mathcal{O}(-m-n-1))\) is the first appearance of Serre duality. The dualizing sheaf of \(\mathbb{P}^n\) is \(\omega_{\mathbb{P}^n} = \mathcal{O}(-n-1)\).


Week 48 — Serre Duality

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 49 — Vanishing Theorems

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 50 — Flat Morphisms

CA prerequisite: A&M Ch 10 (flatness, local criterion) — read §10.1–10.3 this week.

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 51 — Cohomology and Base Change

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 52 — The Riemann-Roch Theorem (Scheme-Theoretic)

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:

Milestone: You should now be able to prove Riemann-Roch from scratch and apply it to compute \(\ell(D)\) for any divisor \(D\) on any smooth projective curve, given the genus.


Week 53 — Linear Systems and Embeddings

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 54 — Clifford’s Theorem and Castelnuovo’s Bound

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 55 — Elliptic Curves: Scheme-Theoretic Group Structure

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Week 56 — The Multiplication-by-\(n\) Map and Torsion

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Weeks 57–58 — Curves of Higher Genus

Concepts to understand:

Reading:

Problems:


Weeks 59–64 — Phase III Consolidation and Qual Practice

Use these six weeks for consolidation, returning to weak areas, and intensive qual problem work.

Week 59: Work all Harvard qual problems involving curves, genus, and Riemann-Roch - [ ] Compute genus of specific curves by multiple methods (genus formula, Hurwitz, RR) - [ ] “Find the arithmetic genus of \(y^3 = x^2 z\)” — work through Frenkel’s question

Week 60: Work all Harvard qual problems involving cohomology, line bundles, and Pic - [ ] “\(H^1\) and line bundles” — Wodzicki questions - [ ] “Serre’s affineness criterion” — Ogus questions - [ ] “Is the complement of a hypersurface in \(\mathbb{P}^2\) affine?” — Poonen question

Week 61: Work through Ritvik’s qual transcript (algebraic geometry section) completely - [ ] Write full solutions to all questions, including the ones solved verbally

Week 62: Work through Will Fisher’s qual transcript (algebraic geometry section) completely - [ ] Morphism types, Picard groups, Cartier vs Weil, Bezout, scheme-theoretic intersection

Week 63: Read Serre’s FAC (Faisceaux Algébriques Cohérents) §1–3 - [ ] Understand the historical context: FAC introduced coherent sheaves and their cohomology - [ ] See how Serre’s original proofs compare to Hartshorne’s presentation

Week 64: Write a self-assessment - [ ] List every question from all three qual sources you can now answer confidently - [ ] List gaps; prioritize for review during Phase IV where possible

Phase III Milestone: You should now be able to follow every question in the algebraic geometry sections of Ritvik’s and Will Fisher’s Berkeley qual transcripts, and work the majority of the Harvard qual collection.