Cartesian monoid
In algebraic geometry and commutative algebra, a ring homomorphism is called formally smooth (from French: Formellement lisse) if it satisfies the following infinitesimal lifting property:
Suppose B is given the structure of an A-algebra via the map f. Given a commutative A-algebra, C, and a nilpotent ideal , any A-algebra homomorphism may be lifted to an A-algebra map . If moreover any such lifting is unique, then f is said to be formally etale. [1] [2]
Formally smooth maps were defined by Alexander Grothendieck in Éléments de géométrie algébrique IV. Among other things, Grothendieck proved that any such map is flat.[1]
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