Possible (and useful) adequate equivalence relations include rational, algebraic, homological and numerical equivalence. They are called "adequate" because dividing out by the equivalence relation is functorial, i.e. push-forward (with change of codimension) and pull-back of cycles is well-defined. Codimension 1 cycles modulo rational equivalence form the classical group of divisors modulo linear equivalence. All cycles modulo rational equivalence form the Chow ring.
Definition
Let Z*(X) := Z[X] be the free abelian group on the algebraic cycles of X. Then an adequate equivalence relation is a family of equivalence relations, ~X on Z*(X), one for each smooth projective variety X, satisfying the following three conditions:
(Linearity) The equivalence relation is compatible with addition of cycles.
(Moving lemma) If are cycles on X, then there exists a cycle such that ~X and intersects properly.
(Push-forwards) Let and be cycles such that intersects properly. If ~X 0, then ~Y 0, where is the projection.
The push-forward cycle in the last axiom is often denoted
If is the graph of a function, then this reduces to the push-forward of the function. The generalizations of functions from X to Y to cycles on X × Y are known as correspondences. The last axiom allows us to push forward cycles by a correspondence.
Examples of equivalence relations
The most common equivalence relations, listed from strongest to weakest, are gathered in the following table.
definition
remarks
rational equivalence
Z ~rat Z' if there is a cycle V on X × P1flat over P1, such that [V ∩ X × {0}] − [V ∩ X × {∞}] = [Z] − [Z' ].
the finest adequate equivalence relation (Lemma 3.2.2.1 in Yves André's book[2]) "∩" denotes intersection in the cycle-theoretic sense (i.e. with multiplicities) and [.] denotes the cycle associated to a subscheme. see also Chow ring
algebraic equivalence
Z ~algZ′ if there is a curveC and a cycle V on X × C flat over C, such that [V ∩ X × {c}] − [V ∩ X × {d}] = [Z] − [Z' ] for two points c and d on the curve.
Z ~numZ′ if deg(Z ∩ T) = deg(Z′ ∩ T), where T is any cycle such that dim T = codim Z (The intersection is a linear combination of points and we add the intersection multiplicities at each point to get the degree.)
the coarsest equivalence relation (Exercise 3.2.7.2 in Yves André's book[4])
^André, Yves (2004), Une introduction aux motifs (motifs purs, motifs mixtes, périodes), Panoramas et Synthèses, vol. 17, Paris: Société Mathématique de France, ISBN978-2-85629-164-1, MR2115000
^Voevodsky, V. (1995), "A nilpotence theorem for cycles algebraically equivalent to 0", Int. Math. Res. Notices, 4: 1–12
^André, Yves (2004), Une introduction aux motifs (motifs purs, motifs mixtes, périodes), Panoramas et Synthèses, vol. 17, Paris: Société Mathématique de France, ISBN978-2-85629-164-1, MR2115000
References
Kleiman, Steven L. (1972), "Motives", in Oort, F. (ed.), Algebraic geometry, Oslo 1970 (Proc. Fifth Nordic Summer-School in Math., Oslo, 1970), Groningen: Wolters-Noordhoff, pp. 53–82, MR0382267
Jannsen, U. (2000), "Equivalence relations on algebraic cycles", The Arithmetic and Geometry of Algebraic Cycles, NATO, 200, Kluwer Ac. Publ. Co.: 225–260
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