- Adelic algebraic group
In
mathematics , an adelic algebraic group is atopological group defined by analgebraic group over anumber field "K", and theadele ring "A" = "A"("K") of "K". It consists of the points of having values in "A"; the definition of the appropriate topology is straightforward only in case is alinear algebraic group . In the case of anabelian variety it presents a technical obstacle, though it is known that the concept is potentially useful in connection with Tamagawa numbers. Adelic algebraic groups are widely used innumber theory , particularly for the theory ofautomorphic representation s, and thearithmetic of quadratic form s.In case is a linear algebraic group, it is an
affine algebraic variety in affine "N"-space. The topology on the adelic algebraic group is taken to be thesubspace topology in "A""N", theCartesian product of "N" copies of the adele ring.An important example, the idele group "I"("K"), is the case of . Here the set of "ideles" (correctly, idèles) consists of the invertible adeles; but the topology on the idele group is "not" their topology as a subset of the adeles. Instead, considering that lies in two-dimensional
affine space as the 'hyperbola ' defined parametrically by:{("t", "t"−1)},
the topology correctly assigned to the idele group is that induced by inclusion in "A""2"; composing with a projection, we see that the ideles carry a
finer topology than the subspace topology from "A".Inside "A""N", the product "K""N" lies as a
discrete subgroup . This means that "G"("K") is a discrete subgroup of "G"("A"), also. In the case of the idele group, thequotient group :"I"("K")/"K"×
is the idele class group. It is closely related to (though larger than) the
ideal class group . The idele class group is not itself compact; the ideles must first be replaced by the ideles of norm 1, and then the image of those in the idele class group is acompact group ; the proof of this is essentially equivalent to the finiteness of the class number.The study of the
Galois cohomology of idele class groups is a central matter inclass field theory . Characters of the idele class group, now usually calledHecke character s, give rise to the most basic class ofL-function s.For more general , the Tamagawa number is defined (or indirectly computed) as the measure of
:"G"("A")/"G"("K").
Tsuneo Tamagawa 's observation was that, starting from an invariantdifferential form ω on , defined "over K", the measure involved waswell-defined : while ω could be replaced by "c"ω with "c" a non-zero element of "K", theproduct formula forvaluation s in "K" is reflected by the independence from "c" of the measure of the quotient, for the product measure constructed from ω on each effective factor. The computation of Tamagawa numbers forsemisimple group s contains important parts of classicalquadratic form theory.History of the terminology
Historically the "idèles" were introduced first in the mid-1930s, by
Claude Chevalley . This was to formulateclass field theory for infinite extensions in terms of topological groups. Shortly afterwards the "adèles" (additive idèles) were used byAndré Weil , to formulate a proof of theRiemann-Roch theorem . 'Adèle' being a French girls' name, this joke was not acceptable to some, who preferred the term "répartitions". The general construction of adelic algebraic groups in the 1950s followed in short order the algebraic group theory founded byArmand Borel andHarish-Chandra , and at this point the terminology became fixed.ee also
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Weil conjecture on Tamagawa numbers External links
*springer|first=A.S. |last=Rapinchuk|id=T/t092060|title=Tamagawa number
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