Pullback bundle and inverse image sheaf

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Let $\varphi \colon X \rightarrow Y$ be a morphism of varietys, $\mathcal{F}$ a locally free sheaf of $\mathcal{O}_{Y}$-modules and $L$ the associated vector bundle. Then we can construct the inverse image sheaf $\varphi^* \mathcal{F} = \varphi^{-1} \mathcal{F} \otimes_{\varphi^{-1} \mathcal{O}_{Y}} \mathcal{O}_{X}$. Furthermore there is the so called pullback bundle $\varphi^*L = L \times_Y X$.

According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pullback_bundle,"the pullback of bundles corresponds to the inverse image of sheaves" but how can I see this?

Thanks in advance!

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The way I think about this (and it should be isomorphic to the way any reputable source does) is the following:

$L$ is locally equal to $\operatorname{Spec} S(\mathcal{F})$, the spectrum of the symmetric tensor algebra over $\mathcal{F}$. This is pretty easy to understand on an affine patch—you are taking formal sums of tensors of module elements $a+b\otimes c + d\otimes e\otimes f \otimes g + u\otimes w \ldots$, where you quotient out by $x\otimes y - y\otimes x$ so that it's commutative.

Since $\mathcal{F}$ is locally free, it's not too hard to see that $S(\mathcal{F})$ is locally isomorphic—over an open affine patch $\operatorname{Spec} A=U\subset Y$ small enough to trivialize $\mathcal{F}$—to $A[x_1,\ldots,x_n]$, where $n$ is the rank of $\mathcal{F}$.

Let me make that explicit. On $U$, $\mathcal{F}$ looks like the module $M=\bigoplus_{i=1}^n Ax_i$. Then $S(M)$ is exactly the free algebra over $A$ generated by $x_1, \ldots , x_n$. So $S(M) = A[x_1,\ldots,x_n]$, and we can see that it's reasonable to call $\operatorname{Spec} S(\mathcal{F})$ a "vector bundle", since locally it looks like $\mathbb{A}^n_U$.

Okay, now let's suppose that $X\to Y$ is locally given by a morphism of rings $A\to B$, where $\operatorname{Spec} B = V \subset X$. The pullback of $M$ is clearly the base change $M\otimes_A B = \bigoplus_{i=1}^n B x_i$.

But how about pulling back the bundle? Well, it's just $\mathbb{A}^n_U \times_U V = \mathbb{A}^n_V$. Or, on the level of rings, we have $S(M) \otimes_A B = S(M\otimes_A B)$. And that works at the sheaf level, too: $S(\mathcal{F}) \otimes_{\varphi^{-1} \mathcal{O}_Y} \mathcal{O}_X = S(\mathcal{F}\otimes_{\varphi^{-1} \mathcal{O}_Y} \mathcal{O}_X)$.

So this all adds up to a pretty strong dictionary (actually, an equivalence of categories) between locally free sheaves and so-called "geometric vector bundles". Actually, it's a little more general than that—if you look closely at how morphisms of sheaves lift up to the corresponding bundles, you find that as long as $\mathcal{F}$ is reflexive—that is, the natural map $\mathcal{F}\to\mathcal{F}^{\vee\vee}$ is an isomorphism—it can pretty much be identified with its bundle—the sheafy $\operatorname{Spec} S(\mathcal{F})$. You can think of these as singular bundles.

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$Sh(X)\leftrightarrows Et(X)$ is the deep reason; for example in "Sheaves in Geometry and Logic" the inverse image sheaf is defined as the sheaf associated to the pullback of the bundle which corresponds to the sheaf you're considering.