In mathematics, specifically in algebraic geometry, the fiber product of schemes is a fundamental construction. It has many interpretations and special cases. For example, the fiber product describes how an algebraic variety over one field determines a variety over a bigger field, or the pullback of a family of varieties, or a fiber of a family of varieties. Base change is a closely related notion.
The category of schemes is a broad setting for algebraic geometry. A fruitful philosophy (known as Grothendieck's relative point of view) is that much of algebraic geometry should be developed for a morphism of schemes X → Y (called a scheme X over Y), rather than for a single scheme X. For example, rather than simply studying algebraic curves, one can study families of curves over any base scheme Y. Indeed, the two approaches enrich each other.
In particular, a scheme over a commutative ring R means a scheme X together with a morphism X → Spec(R). The older notion of an algebraic variety over a field k is equivalent to a scheme over k with certain properties. (There are different conventions for exactly which schemes should be called "varieties". One standard choice is that a variety over a field k means an integral separated scheme of finite type over k.[1])
In general, a morphism of schemes X → Y can be imagined as a family of schemes parametrized by the points of Y. Given a morphism from some other scheme Z to Y, there should be a "pullback" family of schemes over Z. This is exactly the fiber product X ×Y Z → Z.
Formally: it is a useful property of the category of schemes that the fiber product always exists.[2] That is, for any morphisms of schemes X → Y and Z → Y, there is a scheme X ×Y Z with morphisms to X and Z, making the diagram
commutative, and which is universal with that property. That is, for any scheme W with morphisms to X and Z whose compositions to Y are equal, there is a unique morphism from W to X ×Y Z that makes the diagram commute. As always with universal properties, this condition determines the scheme X ×Y Z up to a unique isomorphism, if it exists. The proof that fiber products of schemes always do exist reduces the problem to the tensor product of commutative rings (cf. gluing schemes). In particular, when X, Y, and Z are all affine schemes, so X = Spec(A), Y = Spec(B), and Z = Spec(C) for some commutative rings A,B,C, the fiber product is the affine scheme
The morphism X ×Y Z → Z is called the base change or pullback of the morphism X → Y via the morphism Z → Y.
In some cases, the fiber product of schemes has a right adjoint, the restriction of scalars.
Some important properties P of morphisms of schemes are preserved under arbitrary base change. That is, if X → Y has property P and Z → Y is any morphism of schemes, then the base change X xY Z → Z has property P. For example, flat morphisms, smooth morphisms, proper morphisms, and many other classes of morphisms are preserved under arbitrary base change.[5]
The word descent refers to the reverse question: if the pulled-back morphism X xY Z → Z has some property P, must the original morphism X → Y have property P? Clearly this is impossible in general: for example, Z might be the empty scheme, in which case the pulled-back morphism loses all information about the original morphism. But if the morphism Z → Y is flat and surjective (also called faithfully flat) and quasi-compact, then many properties do descend from Z to Y. Properties that descend include flatness, smoothness, properness, and many other classes of morphisms.[6] These results form part of Grothendieck's theory of faithfully flat descent.
Example: for any field extension k ⊂ E, the morphism Spec(E) → Spec(k) is faithfully flat and quasi-compact. So the descent results mentioned imply that a scheme X over k is smooth over k if and only if the base change XE is smooth over E. The same goes for properness and many other properties.