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Let $f(x_1,\ldots,x_n)\in\mathbf{Z}[x_1,\ldots,x_n]$ be a polynomial. Assume that the variety cut out by $f$ is smooth and connected (so irreducible) over $\overline{\mathbf{Q}}$. Where can I find a proof of the following classical result: for almost all primes $p$, $f\pmod{p}$ is a smooth $\mathbb{F}_p$-scheme.

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Let me rephrase the problem a bit differently. Let us denote the zero locus in a field $k$ of a family of polynomials $\mathcal{F}$ with $\mathbf{Z}$-coefficients by $Z(\mathcal{F};k)$. Let $\nabla(f)=(g_1,g_2,\ldots,g_n)$. So assume that $$ Z(g_1,g_2,\ldots,g_n,f;\overline{\mathbf{Q}})=\emptyset $$ How do you prove that for almost all primes $p$ $$ Z(g_1,g_2,\ldots,g_n,f;\overline{\mathbf{F}_p})=\emptyset ? $$

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    $\begingroup$ Not true. Take $f = y^2- x^3$. This is not smooth over the generic fibre. You need more than an irreducible polynomial. The type of statements you are looking for are sometimes coined "spreading out". See Bjorn Poonen's notes on rational points. For example, any nice morphism of schemes $X \to S$ which is generically smooth is smooth over an open of $S$. That's the statement you are looking for. (It's a consequence of the fact that the locus of smoothness is open. Thus, if your polynomial $f$ defines a smooth variety modulo some $p$, then it defines a smooth variety over $\mathbb Q$.) $\endgroup$ Oct 1, 2014 at 22:39
  • $\begingroup$ sorry sorry, I meant smooth connected (so irreducible), I'll reedit it! $\endgroup$ Oct 1, 2014 at 23:19
  • $\begingroup$ @Ari, is it possible to prove this result using the notion of resultant combined with an decreasing induction on the dimension? $\endgroup$ Oct 1, 2014 at 23:21
  • $\begingroup$ Possibly. But what about working with the sheaf of differentials. This is a coherent sheaf on the arithmetic scheme defined by your polynomial. It is generically free by your assumption (of smoothness over the field of rational numbers). Do you see that it is locally free outside a finite set of primes? $\endgroup$ Oct 1, 2014 at 23:44
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    $\begingroup$ mathoverflow.net/questions/59071/… $\endgroup$ Oct 2, 2014 at 1:03

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I will first respond to the added question and then, for the sake of (likely unnecessary) completeness, give a few more details for the sort of argument that Ari proposed.

Let $g_1,\dotsc,g_r,f$ be elements of $S = \mathbf{Z}[x_1,\dotsc,x_n]$. In the rephrased question, one assumes $Z(g_1,\dotsc,g_r,f;\overline{\mathbf{Q}})=\emptyset$. By the Nullstellensatz, one then knows that $g_1,\dotsc,g_r,f$ generate the unit ideal in $S\otimes_\mathbf{Z}\mathbf{Q}$, i.e. that there is a relation $$ a_1 g_1 + \dotsb + a_r g_r + b f = 1, $$ where $a_1,\dotsc,a_r,b\in S\otimes_\mathbf{Z} \mathbf{Q}$. The polynomials $a_1,\dotsc,a_r,b$ have a common denominator $N$, and so they belong to $S\otimes_{\mathbf{Z}}\otimes{\mathbf{Z}[1/N]}$, and the above equation holds in this ring as well. It thus holds in all quotients of this ring, and thus for $p$ prime to $N$, there are no solutions in $\overline{F_p}$.


Perhaps it is also worth making something like Ari's argument even more explicit and concrete to make clear the role $\nabla$ in Hugo's addition. Consider first a more general setting of an ideal $I$ in $S = R[x_1,\dotsc,x_n]$. Let $A = S/I$. The scheme morphism ${\rm Spec}(A)\to {\rm Spec}(R)$ is smooth precisely when the usual map $I/I^2\to \Omega^1_{S/R}\otimes_S A$ defined by $f\mapsto df\otimes 1$ is a split injection: the nilsquare lifting property for ${\rm Spec}(A)\to {\rm Spec}(R)$ is a direct consequence of the existence of a splitting and of the smoothness of ${\rm Spec}(S)\to{\rm Spec}(R)$.

(I will spell this ``direct consequence'' out: to see the nilsquare lifting property in general, by the smoothness of $S/R$ (for which the lifting property is trivial), it is enough to consider the problem of lifting the identity map $A\to A$ along $S/I^2\to A$. We have the quotient map $S\to S/I^2$, and the splitting $s$ in question tells us exactly how to modify the quotient map so that it vanishes on $I$ and thus factors through $A$; indeed, the map $f\mapsto \overline{f} - s(df\otimes 1)$ is another homomorphism $S\to S/I^2$ lifting $S\to A$, and it vanishes on $I$ by definition. Conversely, if we know that $A/R$ is smooth, then reversing these steps and applying the nilsquare lifting property to lift the identity map $A\to A$ along $S/I^2\to A$ provides us with a splitting.)

Turning to the case in question, we take first $R = \mathbf{Q}$ and $I = (f)$. The $A$-module $I/I^2$ is free of rank $1$ with generator $f$. By the smoothness assumption (which we may make over $\mathbf{Q}$ just as well as over $\overline{\mathbf{Q}}$ without changing the problem), there is a splitting $s:\Omega^1_{S/R}\otimes_S A\to I/I^2$. Let $a_i f = s(dx_i\otimes 1)$. Since the image of the generator $f$ of $I/I^2$ in $\Omega^1_{S/R}\otimes_S A$ is $\sum_i (\partial f/\partial x_i) (dx_i\otimes 1)$, we have $$ \sum_i \frac{\partial f}{\partial x_i} a_i = 1, $$ i.e. the $\partial f/\partial x_i$ generate the unit ideal in $A$. Conversely, if the $\partial f/\partial x_i$ generate the unit ideal and we have such $a_i$, we can construct a splitting $dx_i\mapsto a_i$. Thus smoothness for $I=(f)$ is equivalent to the fact that the $\partial f/\partial x_i$ generate the unit ideal in $A$.

Now we can see how smoothness spreads out from the generic fiber: the $a_i$ all belong to the subring $\mathbf{Z}[1/N][x_1,\dotsc,x_n]/(f)$ of $A$ for some $N$. The $\partial f/\partial x_i$ thus generate the unit ideal in $\mathbf{Z}[1/N][x_1,\dotsc,x_n]/(f)$, which allows us to construct the splitting and hence to get smoothness of $\mathbf{Z}[1/N][x_1,\dotsc,x_n]/(f)$ over $\mathbf{Z}[1/N]$. Reducing mod $p$, we get smoothness over $\mathbf{F}_p$ whenever $p$ is prime to $N$.

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  • $\begingroup$ Dear aonymous, thanks a lot for your answer. I had completely forgotten about the Nullestellsaz (and elemination theory), but now I remember Wan der Waerden wonderful treatment in his second algebra book. I really like this kind of argument since it is extremely elementary and it goes directly to the heart of the matter without burying it into fancy words which sometimes hide the essential truth. $\endgroup$ Oct 4, 2014 at 1:59
  • $\begingroup$ The second part of your explanation is extremely enlightening and made me understand with some depth the meaning of the expression "smoothness spreads out from the generic fiber". $\endgroup$ Oct 4, 2014 at 2:20
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Let $f:X\to \operatorname{Spec}\mathbb Z[1/n]$ be a morphism of finite type. As $f$ is generically flat, there is a finite set of primes $S$ such that $X\to \operatorname{Spec} \mathbb Z$ is flat over $\operatorname{Spec}\mathbb Z - S$. (This is easy to show, so let's assume $f$ is flat now.)

If $f$ is flat along the generic point, and its generic fiber is smooth, then it is smooth along the preimages of the generic point by a classical result. We can find an affine open neighborhood of each preimage of the generic point such that the restriction of $f$ to each affine open is smooth. Since $f$ is quasi-compact there are finitely many of these, call them $U_1,\ldots,U_n$. Taking the intersection $V = \cap_{i=1}^n f(U_i)$, we have an open set of $\operatorname{Spec}\mathbb{Z}$ for which the induced map $f: f^{-1}(V) \to V$ is smooth. The topology on $\operatorname{Spec}\mathbb{Z}$ is such that non-empty opens are the complement of finitely many primes, so there is a finite set of primes $S$ such that $X\to \operatorname{Spec}\mathbb Z[1/n]$ is smooth over $\operatorname{Spec}\mathbb Z - S$.

In general you can't weaken finite type to locally of finite type here.

To prove this, you can proceed in many ways. One way is to use the sheaf of differentials. That sheaf is locally free [Edit: of rank $\dim X_{\mathbb{Q}}$] if and only if the morphism is smooth.

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    $\begingroup$ Local freeness is not sufficient: it must also have the "correct" rank (related to the fiber dimension). After all, if $k'/k$ is a finite extension of fields then $\Omega^1_{k'/k}$ is a $k'$-vector space of finite dimension but is nonzero when $k'$ is not $k$-smooth (equivalently, not $k$-etale). $\endgroup$
    – user27920
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This is just an after thought about my question. At the end it is really a linear algebra problem. Starting with the polynomials $g_1,g_2,\ldots,g_n,g_{n+1}=f$ one may ask if it is possible to find an array of coefficients $$ a_{\underline{i}}^{(k)} $$ where $\underline{i}=(i_1,i_2,\ldots,i_n)$ are $n$-tuples and $1\leq k\leq n+1$ such that $$ \sum_{k=1}^{n+1}\left(\sum_{\underline{i}} a_{\underline{i}}^{(k)}x_1^{i_1}\ldots x_{n}^{i_n}\right)g_k=cte $$ Now thanks to the Nullstellensatz, since $Z(g_1,g_2,\ldots,g_n,g_{n+1};\overline{\mathbf{Q}})=\emptyset$, we know that this linear algebra problem adimts a solution (even over $\mathbb{Q}$ since the system is linear). So really, what the Nullstellensatz says is that unless there is some commun solution to your set of polynomials in an algebraic closure, then the set of linear equations above always admit a solution.

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