Let X be a variety over a field k. Given any set-theoretic functions f_{0}, \dots, f_{n} : X(k) \rightarrow k that has no common zeros, we may define a set map X(k) \rightarrow \mathbb{P}^{n}(k) given by x \mapsto [f_{0}(x) : \cdots : f_{n}(x)].
Let's think about a scheme-theoretic version of this map. First, we assume that f_{0}, \dots, f_{n} are elements of H^{0}(X, \mathscr{O}_{X}). Note that an element f \in H^{0}(X, \mathscr{O}_{X}) corresponds with a k-scheme map X \rightarrow \mathbb{A}^{1} that corresponds to the k-algebra map k[t] \rightarrow H^{0}(X, \mathscr{O}_{X}) defined by t \mapsto f, so we are fixing k-scheme maps f_{0}, \dots, f_{n} : X \rightarrow \mathbb{A}^{1}, analogous to the previous situation.
A zero of f is a point of X that is sent to the maximal ideal (t) in \mathbb{A}^{1} = \mathrm{Spec}(k[t]). One can easily check that for any x \in X, the following are equivalent:
- [f] \in \mathscr{O}_{X,x} sits inside \mathfrak{m}_{X,x};
- x \in X is zero of f.
Example. Consider the case when X = \mathrm{Spec}(k[x_{1}, \dots, x_{m}]) and x = (x_{1} - a_{1}, \dots, x_{m} - a_{m}). In this case, we can observe that x is a zero of f \in k[x_{1}, \dots, x_{m}] if and only if f(a_{1}, \dots, a_{m}) = 0.
Hence, we may now require that f_{0}, \dots, f_{n} : X \rightarrow \mathbb{A}^{1} have no common zeros. (The data can be thought as f_{0}, \dots, f_{n} \in H^{0}(X, \mathscr{O}_{X}) as well.)
Special case: n = 1. We first consider the case n = 1, where we see how f_{0}, f_{1} \in H^{0}(X, \mathscr{O}_{X}) that have no common zeros may induce a k-scheme map X \rightarrow \mathbb{P}^{1}. Due to our hypothesis, we have the following open cover: X = X_{f_{0}} \cup X_{f_{1}}, where X_{f} := \{x \in X : f \text{ does not vanish at } x\}. It is important to note that (the restriction of) f is invertible in H^{0}(X_{f}, \mathscr{O}_{X}) because for any affine open U = \mathrm{Spec}(R) \subset X, we have X_{f} \cap U = D_{R}(f|_{U}) \simeq \mathrm{Spec}(R_{f|_{U}}).
We now construct two k-scheme maps X_{f_{i}} \rightarrow U_{i} = \mathrm{Spec}(k[x_{0}/x_{i}, x_{1}/x_{i}]) for i = 0, 1 and glue them together. For the construction for each i, it is enough to construct a k-algebra map k[x_{0}/x_{i}, x_{1}/x_{i}] \rightarrow H^{0}(X_{f_{i}}, \mathscr{O}_{X}). We do this by the following assignments:
- x_{0}/x_{1} \mapsto f_{0}/f_{1} := f_{0}f_{1}^{-1};
- x_{1}/x_{0} \mapsto f_{1}/f_{0} := f_{1}f_{0}^{-1}.
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