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Relative cycle

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For the algebraic topology concept, see Relative homology § Definition.

In algebraic geometry, a relative cycle is a type of algebraic cycle on a scheme. In particular, let X {\displaystyle X} be a scheme of finite type over a Noetherian scheme S {\displaystyle S} , so that X S {\displaystyle X\rightarrow S} . Then a relative cycle is a cycle on X {\displaystyle X} which lies over the generic points of S {\displaystyle S} , such that the cycle has a well-defined specialization to any fiber of the projection X S {\displaystyle X\rightarrow S} .(Voevodsky & Suslin 2000)

The notion was introduced by Andrei Suslin and Vladimir Voevodsky in 2000; the authors were motivated to overcome some of the deficiencies of sheaves with transfers.

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