For A a ring, there is an exact sequence of sheaves It can be proved by defining a homomorphism with and in degree 1, surjective in degrees and checking that locally on the n + 1 standard charts the kernel is isomorphic to the relative differential module.
Geometric interpretation
We assume that A is a fieldk. The exact sequence above is equivalent to the sequence where the last nonzero term is the tangent sheaf. We consider V a n+1 dimensional vector space over k , and explain the exact sequence This sequence is most easily understood by interpreting the central term as the sheaf of 1-homogeneous vector fields on the vector spaceV. There exists a remarkable section of this sheaf, the Euler vector field, tautologically defined by associating to a point of the vector space the identically associated tangent vector. This vector field is radial in the sense that it vanishes uniformly on 0-homogeneous functions, that is, the functions that are invariant by homothetic rescaling, or "independent of the radial coordinate". A function on gives rise by pull-back to a 0-homogeneous function on V. We obtain 1-homogeneous vector fields by multiplying the Euler vector field by such functions. This is the definition of the first map, and its injectivity is immediate. The second map is related to the notion of derivation, equivalent to that of vector field. Recall that a vector field on an open setU of the projective space can be defined as a derivation of the functions defined on this open set. Pulled-back in V, this is equivalent to a derivation on the preimage of U that preserves 0-homogeneous functions. Any vector field on can be thus obtained, and the defect of injectivity of this mapping consists precisely of the radial vector fields. We see therefore that the kernel of the second morphism identifies with the range of the first one.
The euler sequence can be used to compute the Chern classes of projective space. Recall that given a short exact sequence of coherent sheaveswe can compute the total chern class of with the formula. For example, on we findwhere represents the hyperplane class in the chow ring. Using the exact sequencewe can again use the total chern class formula to findsince we need to invert the polynomial in the denominator, this is equivalent to finding a power series such that.