- Adele ring
In
number theory , the adele ring is atopological ring which is built on the field ofrational number s (or, more generally, anyalgebraic number field ). It involves all the completions of the field.The word "adele" is short for "additive
idele ". Adeles were called valuation vectors or repartitions before about 1950.Definitions
The profinite completion of the integers is the
inverse limit of the rings ::By theChinese remainder theorem it is isomorphic to the product of all the rings of "p"-adic integers::The ring of integral adeles "A"Z is the product:
The ring of (rational) adeles "A"Q is the
tensor product :(topologized so that "A"Z is an open subring). More generally the ring of adeles "A"K of any algebraic number field K is the tensor product :(topologized as the product of deg("K") copies of AQ).The ring of (rational) adeles can also be defined as the
restricted product :of all the "p"-adic completions and thereal number s (or in other words as the restricted product of all completions of the rationals). In this case the restricted product means that for an adele all but a finite number of the arep-adic integer s.The adeles of a
function field over a finite field can be defined in a similar way, as the restricted product of all completions.Properties
The rational adeles "A" are a
locally compact group with the rational numbers Q contained as a discrete co-compact subgroup. The use of adele rings in connection withFourier transform s was exploited in Tate's thesis (1950). One key property of theadditive group of adeles is that it is isomorphic to itsPontryagin dual .Applications
The ring "A" is much used in advanced parts of
number theory , often as the coefficients in matrix groups: that is, combined with the theory ofalgebraic group s to constructadelic algebraic group s. The "idele group " ofclass field theory appears as the group of 1×1 invertible matrices over the adeles. (It is not given the subset topology, as the inverse is not continuous in this topology. Instead the ideles are identified with the closed subset of all pairs ("x","y") of "A"×"A"with "xy"=1, with the subset topology.)An important stage in the development of the theory was the definition of the
Tamagawa number for an adelic linear algebraic group. This is a volume measure relating "G"(Q) with "G"("A"), saying how "G"(Q), which is adiscrete group in "G"("A"), lies in the latter. A conjecture of André Weil was that the Tamagawa number was always 1 for asimply connected "G". This arose out of Weil's modern treatment of results in the theory ofquadratic form s; the proof was case-by-case and took decades. The final steps were taken byRobert Kottwitz in 1988 andV.I. Chernousov in 1989.Meanwhile the influence of the Tamagawa number idea was felt in the theory of
abelian varieties . There the application by no means works, in any straightforward way. But during the formulation of theBirch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture , the consideration that for anelliptic curve "E" the group of rational points "E"(Q) might be brought into relation with the "E"(Qp) was one motivation and signpost, on the way from numerical evidence to the conjecture.ee also
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Adelic algebraic group
*Schwartz-Bruhat function References
Almost any book on modern algebraic number theory, such as:
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