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Let $G$ be a group acting on a ring $A$. I would like to know in which generality we know that $\operatorname{Spec} A^G \cong (\operatorname{Spec} A)/G$. Moreover, when this is true, it also holds for the underlying topological spaces?

I know that both facts hold when $G$ is finite (but I don't have a proof and I would be grateful if someone sketched one or commented where I can find it). But I'm also interested in more general groups. In particular, I wonder if it holds for profinite groups.

Edit: let me be more precise.

If $G$ is a finite group we can define a scheme $(\operatorname{Spec} A)/G$ whose underlying topological space is the usual quotient and whose structure sheaf is simply $(\pi_*\mathcal{O}_{\operatorname{Spec}A})^G$, where $\pi$ is the canonical projection. This satisfies a universal property in the category of schemes. In this case, I don't know how to prove that this scheme is isomorphic to $\operatorname{Spec}A^G$.

For infinite groups, the quocient as defined above need not be a scheme. But it exists nevertheless as a topological space. In this case, it is still true that the topological space $(\operatorname{Spec} A)/G$ is homeomorphic to $\operatorname{Spec}A^G$?

Gabriel
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    @Gabriel - When $G$ is finite and $# G \neq char(A)$ you define $Spec(A)/G:=Spec(A^G)$. This "quotient" has "nice" properties in this case. For the general case you must first give meaning to the notation $Spec(A)/G$ - what do you mean? – hm2020 Jul 25 '21 at 11:33
  • Dear @Con and hm2020, I've edited the post with a better explanation of what I mean. – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 11:44
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    I'm not 100% convinced this quotient is a scheme when $G$ is finite. The example I have in mind is when $\operatorname{Spec} A = \mathbb{A}^1_{\mathbb{Q}}$ acted on by $GL_2(\mathbb{F}_2) \cong S_3$ as mobius transformations permuting $3$ chosen points. Then let $G$ be a subgroup of $GL_2(\mathbb{F}_2)$ not containing $-I$ - the quotient shouldn't be a scheme no? – Mummy the turkey Jul 25 '21 at 12:23
  • @Mummytheturkey the precise statement I have in mind is the following: let $X\to S$ be an affine morphism of schemes and let $G\subset\operatorname{Aut}(X|S)$ be a finite group of automorphisms. Then $X/G$, as I've defined, is a scheme. (This is proven in section 5.18 of Lenstra's notes on Galois Theory for Schemes.) So, in order to use this we have to suppose that $G$ acts freely, I think. – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 12:49
  • @JyrkiLahtonen I really think that in the finite group case (perhaps supposing freeness, as you've said) we have an isomorphism of schemes. The main example I have in mind is the fact that $\operatorname{Spec}k[x_1,\dotsc,x_n]=(\operatorname{Spec} K[x_1,\dotsc,x_n])/\operatorname{Gal}(K/k)$ for a Galois extension $K/k$. – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 12:52
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    @Gabriel FYI, the freeness of the action is not necessary. In broad terms, the action is free when the quotient map $Y\to Y/G$ is a $G$-torsor (equiv. a finite Galois cover with Galosi group $G$). – Alex Youcis Jul 25 '21 at 14:31
  • I've just realised that my comment is wrong, simply because the action is on $\mathbb{P}^1$ not $\mathbb{A}^1$ - I can remove it but i think it's a pretty good non-affine counterexample. – Mummy the turkey Jul 25 '21 at 14:36
  • @Mummytheturkey There is one thing in your comment that puzzles me a bit. In $GL_2(\Bbb{F}_2)$ we have $I=-I$ so what subgroup would not contain $-I$? Or did you mean the "famous" subgroup of $GL_2(\Bbb{Q})$ (acting via fractional linear transformation) isomorphic to $S_3$. – Jyrki Lahtonen Jul 25 '21 at 15:42
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    @JyrkiLahtonen ah excellent point - I just made an error. I was trying to give the following example in an elementary way. Consider the modular curve $X(p)/\mathbb{Q}$ acted on by $GL_2(\mathbb{F}_p)$, then the quotient of $X(p)$ by a subgroup $G \subset GL_2(\mathbb{F}_p)$ is in general only a stack (since the points above $0$ and $1728$ will have weird stablisers) unless $-I \in G$. It's pretty famous that $X(p) \cong \mathbb{P}^1$ when $p \leq 5$ by mobius transformations and I didn't want to figure it out for $p > 2$- but characteristic $2$ means that $-I = I$ and so whoops. – Mummy the turkey Jul 25 '21 at 16:20
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    cont. I should really have thought of this since $X(2)$ actually doesn't admit a model over $\mathbb{Q}$ in the strictest sense (since quadratic twists exist) things might not quite work out – Mummy the turkey Jul 25 '21 at 16:23
  • Thanks for the extras @Mummytheturkey. I'm afraid this thread is at (or above) my limit, so I cannot follow everything. No worries :-) – Jyrki Lahtonen Jul 25 '21 at 16:37
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    For the case of profinite groups, $\mathrm{Spec}(A^G)\cong\mathrm{Spec}(A)/G$. The bijecitivity follows from Lemma 4.9 here, and then use that integral maps like $A^G\to A$ induce closed maps on spectra. – Peter Scholze Oct 14 '21 at 10:36

2 Answers2

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To answer your question it is useful, as some users have already pointed out, to make precise what we mean by ‘quotient’. The book [MFK] is very useful for this, and so I will recall the relevant parts here.

The first is a definition of quotient which is the most naive from the perspective of functor of points and, roughly, says that a map $\pi\colon Y\to X$ is a ‘quotient by $G$‘ (where $G$ is some group acting on $Y$) if $X$ satisfies the correct moduli problem.

Definition 1 ([MFK, Definition 0.5]): Let $S$ be a base scheme, $Y$ an $S$-scheme, and $G$ an $S$-group scheme acting on $Y$. Then, a morphism $\pi\colon Y\to X$ of $S$-schemes is called a categorical quotient if

  1. the diagram $$\begin{matrix}G\times_S Y & \xrightarrow{\text{act.}} & Y\\ \downarrow & & \downarrow\\ Y & \xrightarrow{\pi} & X\end{matrix}$$ commutes (where the left vertical arrow is the natural projection, and the right vertical arrow is the map $\pi$).
  2. For any $S$-scheme $Z$ the natural map $$\mathrm{Hom}_S(X,Z)\to\mathrm{Hom}_S(Y,Z)$$ is injective with image $\mathrm{Hom}_S(Y,Z)^G$ (where this is shorthand for the set of maps $\varphi\colon Y\to Z$ of $S$-schemes $Y\to Z$ such the diagram in 1. is commutative with $\pi\colon Y\to X$ replaced by $\varphi\colon Y\to Z$).

In words, this definition says that $\pi\colon Y\to X$ is a ‘categorical quotient’ if it’s 1) $G$-invariant (where $X$ is given the trivial $G$-action), and 2) a map $\varphi\colon Y\to Z$ factorizes through $\pi\colon Y\to X$ if and only if $\varphi$ is ‘$G$-equivariant’ (where $Z$ is given the trivial $G$-action). In short, a categorical quotient $\pi\colon Y\to X$ is an initial $G$-equivariant morphism to an $S$-scheme with trivial $G$-action.

This definition is very conceptually simple, but is really not super useful from a concrete perspective—-if categorical quotient is to exist, the definition is not very illuminating as to what it must ‘look like’. To this end, Mumford also defines an a priori more more topological, concrete guess of what a quotient must be.

Definition 2 ([MFK, Definition 0.6]): Let $S$ be a scheme, $Y$ an $S$-scheme of finite type, and $G$ an $S$-group scheme of finite type acting on $Y$. A morphism of schemes $\pi\colon Y\to X$ is a geometric quotient if

  1. $\pi$ is $G$-equivariant (as in 1. of Definition 1),
  2. the map $\pi$ is surjective and for all geometric points $\mathrm{Spec}(K)\to S$ (i.e. maps to $S$ from the spectra of algebraically closed fields) the fibers of the map $Y(K)\to X(K)$ are precisely the $G(K)$-orbits of $G(K)$ acting on $Y(K)$,
  3. the map of underlying topological spaces of $\pi$ is a quotient map (i.e. for $U\subseteq X$ one has that $\pi^{-1}(U)$ is open if and only if $U$ is open),
  4. the natural map $\mathcal{O}_X\to \pi_\ast\mathcal{O}_Y$ induced by $\pi$ is an isomorphism onto the subsheaf $(\pi_\ast \mathcal{O}_Y)^G$ which, by definition, has sections over an open $U\subseteq X$ given by the set of elements $f\in\mathcal{O}_X(\pi^{-1}(U))=\mathrm{Hom}_S(\pi^{-1}(U),\mathbf{A}^1_S)$ which are $G$-equivariant as in 1. of Definition 1.

This definition is the ultimate concrete realization of what a quotient should be. Correctly interpreted a geometric quotient $\pi\colon Y\to X$ (if it exists) is equal to $(|Y|/G,(\pi_\ast \mathcal{O}_Y)^G)$—the topological quotient of $Y$ by the $G$-action with the sheaf of ‘invariant sections’.

What do I mean by ‘correctly intepreted’? Well, one must be minorly careful since, of course, the action of an $S$-group scheme $G$ on a $Y$ doesn’t mean that there is a group acting on the topological space $Y$ in any naive sense—right? But, recall that there is a natural identification of sets

$$Y=\left\{\text{Geometric points }\mathrm{Spec}(K)\to Y\right\}/\sim\qquad (1)$$

where two geometric points $\mathrm{Spec}(K_i)\to Y$ for $i=1,2$ are equivalent (what I’m writing as $\sim$) if there exists some third algebraically closed field $L$ containing $K_1,K_2$ such that compositions $\mathrm{Spec}(L)\to\mathrm{Spec}(K_i)\to Y$ are equal for $i=1,2$. With Equation $(1)$ we may define an equivalence relation $\simeq$ on $Y$ by saying that two geometric points $\mathrm{Spec}(L)\to G$ are equivalent if they are in the same $G(L)$-orbit. Then, when I write $|Y|/G$ what I mean is the quotient topological space $Y/\simeq$. Note that in the special case when $G=\underline{G}$ is a constant finite group scheme (I am abusing the abstract topological group and the group scheme) then $G$ does act on $Y$ and $|Y|/G$ (as I’ve defined above) does agree with the naive definition of $|Y|/G$.

So then, a natural set of questions is the following:

  1. in what generality do categorical quotients exist,
  2. in what generality are these categorical quotients actually geometric quotients (NB: a geometric quotient is automatically a categorical quotient by [MFK, Proposition 0.1])?

Of course, as your question indicates, you are interested in the case when $Y$ is actually an affine scheme $\mathrm{Spec}(A)$.

In this case, this question is answered in brilliant form in [MFK] in the case when $S=\mathrm{Spec}(k)$ (where $k$ is a field, not necessarily algebraically closed).

Theorem 1 ([MFK,Theorem 1.1 (and its proof), and Amplication 1.3]) Let $G$ be a reductive group over $k$ $(\ast\ast)$ and $Y=\mathrm{Spec}(A)$ an affine scheme over $S=\mathrm{Spec}(k)$ of finite type. Then,

  1. the natural map $\mathrm{Spec}(A)\to\mathrm{Spec}(A^G)$ is a categorical quotient (here $A^G$ is the subring of $A$ consisting of those elements $f$ which, when interpreted as maps $Y\to\mathbf{A}^1_k$, are $G$-equivariant as in 1. of Definition 1),
  2. this map is a geometric quotient if and only if for any geometric point $\overline{x}\colon \mathrm{Spec}(K)\to Y$ the orbit $G(K). \overline{x}\subseteq Y_{K}$ is closed.

This theorem is absolutely beautiful. As a special case we obtain an answer to your first question.

Corollary 1: Let $G$ be a finite abstract group (of order coprime to the characteristic of $k$) acting on the affine $k$-scheme $\mathrm{Spec}(A)$. Then, $\mathrm{Spec}(A)\to\mathrm{Spec}(A^G)$ is a geometric quotient (thus, a fortiori, $\mathrm{Spec}(A^G)$ is $\mathrm{Spec}(A)/G$ with the sheaf of invariant sections).

This is clear since the closedness condition in 2. of Theorem 1 is automatic since this orbit will be a finite set of $K$-points of $Y_K$ and so automatically closed.

But, you can also use this to give other wonderfully interesting examples.

Example 1: Let $\mathbf{G}_{m,k}$ act on $\mathrm{GL}_{n,k}$ in the obvious way (by identifying $\mathbf{G}_{m,k}=Z(\mathrm{GL}_{n,k})$). Then, by the above the geometric quotient of $\mathrm{GL}_{n,k}$ by $\mathbf{G}_{m,k}$ exists and is equal to $\mathrm{Spec}(\mathcal{O}(\mathrm{GL}_{n,k})^{\mathbf{G}_{m,k}})$. I leave it for you to calculate that this is precisely $\mathrm{PGL}_{n,k}$ as you’d expect!

As for your question about infinite constant groups, the answer is definitely no in full generality that $\mathrm{Spec}(A^G)$ has underlying topological space $\mathrm{Spec}(A)/G$.

Example 2: Consider $\mathbf{Z}$ acting on $\mathbf{C}[x]$ by $n\cdot x=x+n$ then $\mathbf{C}[x]^\mathbf{Z}$ is the set of polynomials $f(x)$ such that $f(x)=f(x+n)$ for all $n$, and evidently this is the ring $\mathbf{C}$. But, $\mathbf{A}^1_\mathbf{C}/\mathbf{Z}$ is not a point.

For profinite groups it’s more possible (assuming that finite quotients have order invertible in $k$) by trying to bootstrap from the finite case and commuting some sort of limits—haven’t thought too much. In the positive direction though, we have the following examlpe.

Example 3: Let $K$ be a field and set $\Gamma:=\mathrm{Gal}(K^\mathrm{sep}/K)$. Let $A$ be a finite type $K$-algebra. It is true that the natural map

$$\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})\to \mathrm{Spec}(A)=\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}}^\Gamma)$$

identifies the target, topologically, with $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})/\Gamma$.

EDIT: Here’s a proof of Example 3–it’s WAY overkill, sorry I’m just writing a quick justification. Note that by Tag 0383 the map $\mathrm{Spec}(K^\mathrm{sep})\to \mathrm{Spec}(K)$ is universally open and surjective. Thus, $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})\to\mathrm{Spec}(A)$ is open and surjective, and thus generalizing (see Tag 040F) and surjective. Thus, by standard theory of spectral spaces, the map $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})\to\mathrm{Spec}(A)$ is a quotient map (see [Scholze, Lemma 2.5]). Note that this map is evidently equivariant for the action of $\Gamma$ and thus we get an induced map $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})/\Gamma\to \mathrm{Spec}(A)$. This map is clearly still a quotient map. But, it is also a bijection (cf.. [GW, Proposition 5.4]). Thus, it’s a homeomorphism.

EDIT EDIT: A more elementary way to verify what I said is the following. Note that $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})=\varprojlim > \mathrm{Spec}(A_L)$ where $L$ runs over the finite Galois subextensions of $K^\mathrm{sep}/K$. The action of $\Gamma$ on $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})$ may be seen as the induced action of $\varprojlim \mathrm{Gal}(L/K)$ on $\varprojlim \mathrm{Spec}(A_L)$ and so, consequently, I leave it to you to verify that the map $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})\to\mathrm{Spec}(A)$ may be identified as the projective limit of the maps $\mathrm{Spec}(A_L)\to\mathrm{Spec}(A)$ and thus the question of whether the induced map $\mathrm{Spec}(A_{K^\mathrm{sep}})/\Gamma\to\mathrm{Spec}(A)$ is a homeomorphism is implied by the claim that $\mathrm{Spec}(A_L)/\mathrm{Gal}(L/K)\to\mathrm{Spec}(A)$ is a homeomorphism for all $L$. This then is simple (e.g. it follows (essentially) from Theorem 1 above).

This also indicates some generality in which your profinite group question may have an answer. Namely, if $\varprojlim G_i$ is a projective limit of finite groups acting on $\varprojlim X_i$, where each $X_i$ is affine, then you probably get what you want. I just now, embarassingly, have recalled that questions of this form are considered quite often in Shimura varieties and are discussed (for instance) in [Deligne] and [Milne].

I’ll think about it more if I have time.

$(\ast\ast)$: The definition of a reductive group is somewhat technical. A reductive group is, in particular, an affine group scheme over $k$ of finite type. In characteristic $0$ one can define it as one all of whose representations are semisimple. In positive characteristic one needs to be more careful. Ask me if you’d like further explanation. Examples of reductive groups are: $\mathrm{GL}_n$, $\mathrm{SL}_n$, $\mathrm{PGL}_n$, $\mathrm{Sp}_{2n}$, any torus, finite constant groups with order coprime to the characteristic of $k$,… Examples of non reductive groups are: $\mathbf{G}_a$, the upper triangular matrices in $\mathrm{GL}_n$,…

References:

[Deligne] Deligne, P., 1979, June. Variétés de Shimura: interprétation modulaire, et techniques de construction de modeles canoniques. In Automorphic forms, representations and L-functions (Proc. Sympos. Pure Math., Oregon State Univ., Corvallis, Ore., 1977), Part (Vol. 2, pp. 247-289).

[GW] Görtz, U. and Wedhorn, T., 2010. Algebraic Geometry I: Schemes. Vieweg+ Teubner.

[Milne] Milne, J.S., 1990. Canonical models of (mixed) Shimura varieties and automorphic vector bundles. Automorphic forms, Shimura varieties, and L-functions, 1, pp.283-414.

[MF] Mumford, D., Fogarty, J. and Kirwan, F., 1994. Geometric invariant theory (Vol. 34). Springer Science & Business Media.

[Scholze] Scholze, Peter. Etale cohomology of diamonds. http://www.math.uni-bonn.de/people/scholze/EtCohDiamonds.pdf

Alex Youcis
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    I think this is one of the best answers I have ever seen on this site - it is definitely not easy to make GIT seem relatively accessible, and I think it provides an excellent conceptual bridge between classical invariant theory and what was possibly the intuition of these authors. – Mummy the turkey Jul 25 '21 at 14:33
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    @Mummytheturkey Thank you for your kind words! Although, I think ‘making GIT seem relatively accessible’ might be a bit of a stretch since everything I discuss here is in the first 30 pages of the book. :) – Alex Youcis Jul 25 '21 at 14:36
  • indeed ('seem' is doing some heavy lifting) - but I think anyone who has battled their way through these pages can probably attest to what I have said! – Mummy the turkey Jul 25 '21 at 14:38
  • +1 for the incredible answer! Do you happen to have some reference for our example 3? This is very cool! – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 14:43
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    @Mummytheturkey I’ve written a proof of Example 3. I’ve used WAY too hard results so I don’t have to think too hard—I’m sure it’s much more elementary than what I’ve done. But, hopefully the techniques I’ve used might be useful to you elsewhere. – Alex Youcis Jul 25 '21 at 14:56
  • @Gabriel Oops, sorry! Pinged the wrong person. – Alex Youcis Jul 25 '21 at 14:57
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    @Gabriel I’ve added a further edit indicating a simpler proof, and also giving you a place to look for more general versions of these questions. Incidentally, it’s embarrassing that it took me this long to remember to mention these references since I work in closely related fields to those articles. – Alex Youcis Jul 25 '21 at 15:21
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    I really appreciate your effort, and it is indeed very helpful to me! Moreover, it absolutely shouldn't be embarrassing. You sure are an inspiration for all of us :) – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 15:24
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    @Gabriel Thank you for your kind words as well, but honestly it is Mumford who is the inspiration! Best of luck. – Alex Youcis Jul 25 '21 at 15:27
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Question: "For infinite groups, the quotient as defined above need not be a scheme. But it exists nevertheless as a topological space. In this case, it is still true that the topological space $(SpecA)/G$ is homeomorphic to $Spec(A^G)$?"

Answer: If $H \subseteq G$ are linear algebraic groups over a field $k$, you may construct the quotient $\pi: G \rightarrow G/H$ and $G/H$ is a smooth quasi projective scheme of finite type over $k$.

Remark: "Dear @Con and hm2020, I've edited the post with a better explanation of what I mean."

Example: If $W \subseteq V$ is an $m$-dimensional subspace of and $n$-dimensional $k$-vector space $V$, let $P \subseteq SL(V)$ be the subgroup of elements "fixing" $W$. It follows $\pi: SL(V) \rightarrow SL(V)/P$ is the grassmannian $\mathbb{G}(m,V)$ parametrizing $m$-dimensional subspaces of $V$. Hence in these cases you always get a quasi projective scheme. In fact the quotient map $\pi$ is locally trivial in the etale topology with fiber $H$ - it is a "principal fiber bundle in the etale topology".

Note: Both groups $P:=Spec(A)$ and $SL(V):=Spec(B)$ are affine schemes of finite type over $k$. There can be no isomorphism $SL(V)/P \cong Spec(B^T)$ for some group $T$ acting on $B$, since $SL(V)/P$ is quasi projective and non-affine in general. When the subgroup $P \subseteq SL(V)$ is parabolic, it follows the quotient $SL(V)/P$ is a projective scheme which is non-affine. You should take a look at Borel's book "Linear algebraic groups" and Theorem 6.8, page 98. I believe this gives a construction of a quotient G/H for any field k.

@Gabriel - The answer was a "partial answer", meant to indicate that "in some cases you can construct quotients of schemes by "infinite groups" and where the quotient is a scheme". The process of constructing quotients in algebraic geometry is a complicated process - I believe your question on the relation between $Spec(A^G)$ and the quotient topological space $Spec(A)/G$ is answered in an exercise in Atiyah-Macdonald, Chapter 5 on integral extensions. There is also a treatment in Lius book on algebraic geometry.

In the exercise (Ex.5.13) they prove that if $A$ is a commutative unital ring and if $G \subseteq Aut(A)$ is a finite group, it follows for any prime ideal $\mathfrak{q} \subseteq A^G$, the group $G$ acts transitively on the set of prime ideals $\mathfrak{p} \subseteq A$ with $\mathfrak{p}\cap A^G = \mathfrak{q}$.

Question: "Let G be a group acting on a ring A. I would like to know in which generality we know that $Spec(A^G)≅(SpecA)/G$?"

Hence in this case it follows there is a homeomorphism

$$Spec(A)/G \cong Spec(A^G).$$

Any element $g \in G$ is a ring automorphism $g:A \rightarrow A$ and you get for any prime ideal $\mathfrak{p} \subseteq A$ an induced prime ideal $g^{-1}(\mathfrak{p})\subseteq A$. This defines an action of $G$ on $Spec(A)$. You define two prime ideals $\mathfrak{p}, \mathfrak{p}'$ to be equivalent iff there is an element $g\in G$ with $g\mathfrak{p}=\mathfrak{p}'$. This equivalence relation defines the quotient topological space $Spec(A)/G$. And by the exercise: The points in $Spec(A^G)$ are in 1-1 correspondence with orbits of $G$ in $Spec(A)$. Hence there is a homeomorphism $Spec(A)/G \cong Spec(A^G)$

Example: The symmetric group $G$ on two elements acts on $A:=k[x,y]$ and the invariant ring $A^G=k[s_1,s_2]$ is the subring on the elementary symmetric functions $s_1=x+y, s_2=xy$. The sub ring $A^G$ is a polynomial ring in the two functions $s_1,s_2$ - they are "algebraically independent". As a consequence the quotient map

$$\pi: \mathbb{A}^2_k \rightarrow \mathbb{A}^2_k/G:=Sym^2(\mathbb{A}^1_k) \cong \mathbb{A}^2_k$$

gives an isomorphism between the symmetric product $Sym^2(\mathbb{A}^1_k)$ and affine two space.

Note: In Waterhouse, "Affine group schemes", Ch.16.2 they prove that for any affine group scheme $G$ over a field $k$ and any closed normal subgroup $N \subseteq G$, the quotient $G/N$ exists and $G/N$ is an affine group scheme over $k$. Hence if $G:=SL(V)$, you get for any normal subgroup scheme $N$ a quotient $G/N$ that is an affine scheme, and for a parabolic subgroup scheme $P$ you get a quotient $G/P$ that is a projective scheme. Hence the quotient construction is not simply "taking the Spec of the invariant ring" $Spec(B^T)$ for some group $T$ acting on $B$. I read somewhere that the study of quotients $\pi: G \rightarrow G/H$ for affine group schemes $H \subseteq G$ and the fact that $\pi$ trivialize in the etale topology (and not in the Zariski topology in general) "inspired" the study of the etale topology and etale descent. Hence if you want to study principal fiber bundles in algebraic geometry/algebra you will need the etale topology.

Why is the projection map $\mathbb{A}^{n+1}_k\setminus \{\vec 0\} \to \mathbb{P}^n_k$ a morphism of schemes?

Quotient of a Lie algebra by a subalgebra - what is it?

hm2020
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    Dear @hm2020, first and foremost, I would like to thank you for being one of the people that answer most often my questions. I also appreciate a lot the structure "question / answer" of all your answers. That being said, very often I don't understand how you answer my questions. Frequently, the reason seems to be that you use lots of objects which are not clearly (at least to me) related to the subject in question. For example, I have absolutely no idea how your text about algebraic groups answers my question. – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 12:58
  • @Gabriel - you should do the Exercise AM.5.13 in Atiyah-Macdonald's book "Introduction to commutative algebra". They study such quotients. It requires much effort and work to understand it properly. – hm2020 Jul 25 '21 at 13:16
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    I know how to do this exercise, but I don't know how it helps. Could you explain more? – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 13:25
  • @Gabriel - If $G \subseteq Aut(A)$ is a finite group it follows from AM.5.13 that two prime ideals $\mathfrak{p}, \mathfrak{p}' \subseteq A$ are equivalent under the action of $G$ iff $\mathfrak{p}\cap A^G = \mathfrak{p}' \cap A^G$. See the edited post. – hm2020 Jul 25 '21 at 13:27
  • This also implies that the quotient topology on $\operatorname{Spec}A / G$ coincides with the Zariski topology on $\operatorname{Spec}A^G$? – Gabriel Jul 25 '21 at 13:29
  • @Gabriel - yes. – hm2020 Jul 25 '21 at 13:36
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    I do think your example of a reductive group modulo a proper parabolic being projective and positive dimensional (so not affine) is definitely a good one. It explains why one needs something like the hypothesis in my post that one needs $G$ to be reductive. – Alex Youcis Jul 25 '21 at 15:58
  • @AlexYoucis - I'm not a historian, but I believe this type of quotient and the fact that $\pi$ trivialize in the etale topology inspired the study of the etale topology in the beginning. – hm2020 Jul 26 '21 at 11:15
  • @Gabriel - I added a link to a discussion where projective space is constructed using "geometric invariant theory" and taking the quotient of a non-affine scheme $X$ by an action of a (non-finite) group scheme $GL(1,k)$. This construction is elementary. – hm2020 Jul 27 '21 at 10:22
  • Thank you @hm2020 :) – Gabriel Jul 28 '21 at 11:29
  • @Gabriel - in the above link I give elementary examples of geometric quotients. As an exercise you should verify that these quotients satisfy the criteria given in Youcis post. – hm2020 Jul 29 '21 at 08:36