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Noncommutative projective geometry

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In mathematics, noncommutative projective geometry is a noncommutative analog of projective geometry in the setting of noncommutative algebraic geometry.

Examples

  • The quantum plane, the most basic example, is the quotient ring of the free ring:
k x , y / ( y x q x y ) {\displaystyle k\langle x,y\rangle /(yx-qxy)}
  • More generally, the quantum polynomial ring is the quotient ring:
k x 1 , , x n / ( x i x j q i j x j x i ) {\displaystyle k\langle x_{1},\dots ,x_{n}\rangle /(x_{i}x_{j}-q_{ij}x_{j}x_{i})}

Proj construction

See also: Proj construction

By definition, the Proj of a graded ring R is the quotient category of the category of finitely generated graded modules over R by the subcategory of torsion modules. If R is a commutative Noetherian graded ring generated by degree-one elements, then the Proj of R in this sense is equivalent to the category of coherent sheaves on the usual Proj of R. Hence, the construction can be thought of as a generalization of the Proj construction for a commutative graded ring.

See also

References

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