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Book
On the cohomology of certain noncompact Shimura varieties
Author:
ISBN: 1282458000 1282936328 9786612936326 9786612458002 1400835399 9781400835393 9780691142920 0691142920 0691142939 9780691142937 9781282458000 9781282936324 Year: 2010 Publisher: Princeton : Princeton University Press,

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Abstract

This book studies the intersection cohomology of the Shimura varieties associated to unitary groups of any rank over Q. In general, these varieties are not compact. The intersection cohomology of the Shimura variety associated to a reductive group G carries commuting actions of the absolute Galois group of the reflex field and of the group G(Af) of finite adelic points of G. The second action can be studied on the set of complex points of the Shimura variety. In this book, Sophie Morel identifies the Galois action--at good places--on the G(Af)-isotypical components of the cohomology. Morel uses the method developed by Langlands, Ihara, and Kottwitz, which is to compare the Grothendieck-Lefschetz fixed point formula and the Arthur-Selberg trace formula. The first problem, that of applying the fixed point formula to the intersection cohomology, is geometric in nature and is the object of the first chapter, which builds on Morel's previous work. She then turns to the group-theoretical problem of comparing these results with the trace formula, when G is a unitary group over Q. Applications are then given. In particular, the Galois representation on a G(Af)-isotypical component of the cohomology is identified at almost all places, modulo a non-explicit multiplicity. Morel also gives some results on base change from unitary groups to general linear groups.


Book
Classifying spaces of degenerating polarized Hodge structures
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0691138214 1400837111 0691138222 9780691138220 9781400837113 9780691138213 Year: 2009 Publisher: Princeton, New Jersey ; Oxfordshire, England : Princeton University Press,

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In 1970, Phillip Griffiths envisioned that points at infinity could be added to the classifying space D of polarized Hodge structures. In this book, Kazuya Kato and Sampei Usui realize this dream by creating a logarithmic Hodge theory. They use the logarithmic structures begun by Fontaine-Illusie to revive nilpotent orbits as a logarithmic Hodge structure. The book focuses on two principal topics. First, Kato and Usui construct the fine moduli space of polarized logarithmic Hodge structures with additional structures. Even for a Hermitian symmetric domain D, the present theory is a refinement of the toroidal compactifications by Mumford et al. For general D, fine moduli spaces may have slits caused by Griffiths transversality at the boundary and be no longer locally compact. Second, Kato and Usui construct eight enlargements of D and describe their relations by a fundamental diagram, where four of these enlargements live in the Hodge theoretic area and the other four live in the algebra-group theoretic area. These two areas are connected by a continuous map given by the SL(2)-orbit theorem of Cattani-Kaplan-Schmid. This diagram is used for the construction in the first topic.

Keywords

Hodge theory. --- Logarithms. --- Logs (Logarithms) --- Algebra --- Complex manifolds --- Differentiable manifolds --- Geometry, Algebraic --- Homology theory --- Algebraic group. --- Algebraic variety. --- Analytic manifold. --- Analytic space. --- Annulus (mathematics). --- Arithmetic group. --- Atlas (topology). --- Canonical map. --- Classifying space. --- Coefficient. --- Cohomology. --- Compactification (mathematics). --- Complex manifold. --- Complex number. --- Congruence subgroup. --- Conjecture. --- Connected component (graph theory). --- Continuous function. --- Convex cone. --- Degeneracy (mathematics). --- Diagram (category theory). --- Differential form. --- Direct image functor. --- Divisor. --- Elliptic curve. --- Equivalence class. --- Existential quantification. --- Finite set. --- Functor. --- Geometry. --- Hodge structure. --- Homeomorphism. --- Homomorphism. --- Inverse function. --- Iwasawa decomposition. --- Local homeomorphism. --- Local ring. --- Local system. --- Logarithmic. --- Maximal compact subgroup. --- Modular curve. --- Modular form. --- Moduli space. --- Monodromy. --- Monoid. --- Morphism. --- Natural number. --- Nilpotent orbit. --- Nilpotent. --- Open problem. --- Open set. --- P-adic Hodge theory. --- P-adic number. --- Point at infinity. --- Proper morphism. --- Pullback (category theory). --- Quotient space (topology). --- Rational number. --- Relative interior. --- Ring (mathematics). --- Ring homomorphism. --- Scientific notation. --- Set (mathematics). --- Sheaf (mathematics). --- Smooth morphism. --- Special case. --- Strong topology. --- Subgroup. --- Subobject. --- Subset. --- Surjective function. --- Tangent bundle. --- Taylor series. --- Theorem. --- Topological space. --- Topology. --- Transversality (mathematics). --- Two-dimensional space. --- Vector bundle. --- Vector space. --- Weak topology.

D-Modules and Spherical Representations. (MN-39)
Author:
ISBN: 1400862078 9781400862078 0691025177 9780691608327 9780691025179 0691025177 0691608326 9780691608327 Year: 2014 Publisher: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press,

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The theory of D-modules deals with the algebraic aspects of differential equations. These are particularly interesting on homogeneous manifolds, since the infinitesimal action of a Lie algebra consists of differential operators. Hence, it is possible to attach geometric invariants, like the support and the characteristic variety, to representations of Lie groups. By considering D-modules on flag varieties, one obtains a simple classification of all irreducible admissible representations of reductive Lie groups. On the other hand, it is natural to study the representations realized by functions on pseudo-Riemannian symmetric spaces, i.e., spherical representations. The problem is then to describe the spherical representations among all irreducible ones, and to compute their multiplicities. This is the goal of this work, achieved fairly completely at least for the discrete series representations of reductive symmetric spaces. The book provides a general introduction to the theory of D-modules on flag varieties, and it describes spherical D-modules in terms of a cohomological formula. Using microlocalization of representations, the author derives a criterion for irreducibility. The relation between multiplicities and singularities is also discussed at length.Originally published in 1990.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.

Keywords

Differentiable manifolds. --- D-modules. --- Representations of groups. --- Lie groups. --- Groups, Lie --- Lie algebras --- Symmetric spaces --- Topological groups --- Group representation (Mathematics) --- Groups, Representation theory of --- Group theory --- Modules (Algebra) --- Differential manifolds --- Manifolds (Mathematics) --- Affine space. --- Algebraic cycle. --- Algebraic element. --- Analytic function. --- Annihilator (ring theory). --- Automorphism. --- Banach space. --- Base change. --- Big O notation. --- Bijection. --- Bilinear form. --- Borel subgroup. --- Cartan subalgebra. --- Cofibration. --- Cohomology. --- Commutative diagram. --- Commutative property. --- Commutator subgroup. --- Complexification (Lie group). --- Conjugacy class. --- Coproduct. --- Coset. --- Cotangent space. --- D-module. --- Derived category. --- Diagram (category theory). --- Differential operator. --- Dimension (vector space). --- Direct image functor. --- Discrete series representation. --- Disk (mathematics). --- Dot product. --- Double coset. --- Eigenfunction. --- Eigenvalues and eigenvectors. --- Endomorphism. --- Euler operator. --- Existential quantification. --- Fibration. --- Function space. --- Functor. --- G-module. --- Gelfand pair. --- Generic point. --- Hilbert space. --- Holomorphic function. --- Homomorphism. --- Hyperfunction. --- Ideal (ring theory). --- Infinitesimal character. --- Inner automorphism. --- Invertible sheaf. --- Irreducibility (mathematics). --- Irreducible representation. --- Levi decomposition. --- Lie algebra. --- Line bundle. --- Linear algebraic group. --- Linear space (geometry). --- Manifold. --- Maximal compact subgroup. --- Maximal torus. --- Metric space. --- Module (mathematics). --- Moment map. --- Morphism. --- Noetherian ring. --- Open set. --- Presheaf (category theory). --- Principal series representation. --- Projective line. --- Projective object. --- Projective space. --- Projective variety. --- Reductive group. --- Riemannian geometry. --- Riemann–Hilbert correspondence. --- Right inverse. --- Ring (mathematics). --- Root system. --- Satake diagram. --- Sheaf (mathematics). --- Sheaf of modules. --- Special case. --- Sphere. --- Square-integrable function. --- Sub"ient. --- Subalgebra. --- Subcategory. --- Subgroup. --- Summation. --- Surjective function. --- Symmetric space. --- Symplectic geometry. --- Tensor product. --- Theorem. --- Triangular matrix. --- Vector bundle. --- Volume form. --- Weyl group.


Book
The ergodic theory of lattice subgroups
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0691141843 0691141851 9786612303807 1282303805 1400831067 9781400831067 9781282303805 9780691141848 9780691141855 Year: 2009 Volume: 172 Publisher: Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press,

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The results established in this book constitute a new departure in ergodic theory and a significant expansion of its scope. Traditional ergodic theorems focused on amenable groups, and relied on the existence of an asymptotically invariant sequence in the group, the resulting maximal inequalities based on covering arguments, and the transference principle. Here, Alexander Gorodnik and Amos Nevo develop a systematic general approach to the proof of ergodic theorems for a large class of non-amenable locally compact groups and their lattice subgroups. Simple general conditions on the spectral theory of the group and the regularity of the averaging sets are formulated, which suffice to guarantee convergence to the ergodic mean. In particular, this approach gives a complete solution to the problem of establishing mean and pointwise ergodic theorems for the natural averages on semisimple algebraic groups and on their discrete lattice subgroups. Furthermore, an explicit quantitative rate of convergence to the ergodic mean is established in many cases. The topic of this volume lies at the intersection of several mathematical fields of fundamental importance. These include ergodic theory and dynamics of non-amenable groups, harmonic analysis on semisimple algebraic groups and their homogeneous spaces, quantitative non-Euclidean lattice point counting problems and their application to number theory, as well as equidistribution and non-commutative Diophantine approximation. Many examples and applications are provided in the text, demonstrating the usefulness of the results established.

Keywords

Dynamics. --- Ergodic theory. --- Harmonic analysis. --- Lattice theory. --- Lie groups. --- Ergodic theory --- Lie groups --- Lattice theory --- Harmonic analysis --- Dynamics --- Calculus --- Mathematics --- Physical Sciences & Mathematics --- Dynamical systems --- Kinetics --- Analysis (Mathematics) --- Functions, Potential --- Potential functions --- Lattices (Mathematics) --- Space lattice (Mathematics) --- Structural analysis (Mathematics) --- Groups, Lie --- Ergodic transformations --- Mechanics, Analytic --- Force and energy --- Mechanics --- Physics --- Statics --- Banach algebras --- Mathematical analysis --- Bessel functions --- Fourier series --- Harmonic functions --- Time-series analysis --- Algebra, Abstract --- Algebra, Boolean --- Group theory --- Set theory --- Topology --- Transformations (Mathematics) --- Crystallography, Mathematical --- Lie algebras --- Symmetric spaces --- Topological groups --- Continuous groups --- Mathematical physics --- Measure theory --- Absolute continuity. --- Algebraic group. --- Amenable group. --- Asymptote. --- Asymptotic analysis. --- Asymptotic expansion. --- Automorphism. --- Borel set. --- Bounded function. --- Bounded operator. --- Bounded set (topological vector space). --- Congruence subgroup. --- Continuous function. --- Convergence of random variables. --- Convolution. --- Coset. --- Counting problem (complexity). --- Counting. --- Differentiable function. --- Dimension (vector space). --- Diophantine approximation. --- Direct integral. --- Direct product. --- Discrete group. --- Embedding. --- Equidistribution theorem. --- Ergodicity. --- Estimation. --- Explicit formulae (L-function). --- Family of sets. --- Haar measure. --- Hilbert space. --- Hyperbolic space. --- Induced representation. --- Infimum and supremum. --- Initial condition. --- Interpolation theorem. --- Invariance principle (linguistics). --- Invariant measure. --- Irreducible representation. --- Isometry group. --- Iwasawa group. --- Lattice (group). --- Lie algebra. --- Linear algebraic group. --- Linear space (geometry). --- Lipschitz continuity. --- Mass distribution. --- Mathematical induction. --- Maximal compact subgroup. --- Maximal ergodic theorem. --- Measure (mathematics). --- Mellin transform. --- Metric space. --- Monotonic function. --- Neighbourhood (mathematics). --- Normal subgroup. --- Number theory. --- One-parameter group. --- Operator norm. --- Orthogonal complement. --- P-adic number. --- Parametrization. --- Parity (mathematics). --- Pointwise convergence. --- Pointwise. --- Principal homogeneous space. --- Principal series representation. --- Probability measure. --- Probability space. --- Probability. --- Rate of convergence. --- Regular representation. --- Representation theory. --- Resolution of singularities. --- Sobolev space. --- Special case. --- Spectral gap. --- Spectral method. --- Spectral theory. --- Square (algebra). --- Subgroup. --- Subsequence. --- Subset. --- Symmetric space. --- Tensor algebra. --- Tensor product. --- Theorem. --- Transfer principle. --- Unit sphere. --- Unit vector. --- Unitary group. --- Unitary representation. --- Upper and lower bounds. --- Variable (mathematics). --- Vector group. --- Vector space. --- Volume form. --- Word metric.

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