In algebra, the Amitsur complex is a natural complex associated to a ring homomorphism. It was introduced by Shimshon Amitsur (1959). When the homomorphism is faithfully flat, the Amitsur complex is exact (thus determining a resolution), which is the basis of the theory of faithfully flat descent.
The notion should be thought of as a mechanism to go beyond the conventional localization of rings and modules.
Definition
Let
be a homomorphism of (not-necessary-commutative) rings. First define the cosimplicial set
(where
refers to
, not
) as follows. Define the face maps
by inserting
at the
th spot:[a]

Define the degeneracies
by multiplying out the
th and
th spots:

They satisfy the "obvious" cosimplicial identities and thus
is a cosimplicial set. It then determines the complex with the augumentation
, the Amitsur complex:

where
Exactness of the Amitsur complex
Faithfully flat case
In the above notations, if
is right faithfully flat, then a theorem of Alexander Grothendieck states that the (augmented) complex
is exact and thus is a resolution. More generally, if
is right faithfully flat, then, for each left
-module
,

is exact.
Proof:
Step 1: The statement is true if
splits as a ring homomorphism.
That "
splits" is to say
for some homomorphism
(
is a retraction and
a section). Given such a
, define

by

An easy computation shows the following identity: with
,
.
This is to say that
is a homotopy operator and so
determines the zero map on cohomology: i.e., the complex is exact.
Step 2: The statement is true in general.
We remark that
is a section of
. Thus, Step 1 applied to the split ring homomorphism
implies:

where
, is exact. Since
, etc., by "faithfully flat", the original sequence is exact.
Arc topology case
Bhargav Bhatt and Peter Scholze (2019, §8) show that the Amitsur complex is exact if
and
are (commutative) perfect rings, and the map is required to be a covering in the arc topology (which is a weaker condition than being a cover in the flat topology).
Notes
- ^ The reference (M. Artin) seems to have a typo, and this should be the correct formula; see the calculation of
and
in the note.
Citations
References
- Artin, Michael (1999), Noncommutative rings (Berkeley lecture notes) (PDF)
- Amitsur, Shimshon (1959), "Simple algebras and cohomology groups of arbitrary fields", Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, 90 (1): 73–112
- Bhatt, Bhargav; Scholze, Peter (2019), Prisms and Prismatic Cohomology, arXiv:1905.08229
- Amitsur complex at the nLab