Tate Module Of A Number Field
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In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a Tate module of an abelian group, named for
John Tate John Tate may refer to: * John Tate (mathematician) (1925–2019), American mathematician * John Torrence Tate Sr. (1889–1950), American physicist * John Tate (Australian politician) (1895–1977) * John Tate (actor) (1915–1979), Australian act ...
, is a module constructed from an abelian group ''A''. Often, this construction is made in the following situation: ''G'' is a commutative group scheme over a field ''K'', ''Ks'' is the separable closure of ''K'', and ''A'' = ''G''(''Ks'') (the ''Ks''-valued points of ''G''). In this case, the Tate module of ''A'' is equipped with an action of the absolute Galois group of ''K'', and it is referred to as the Tate module of ''G''.


Definition

Given an abelian group ''A'' and a prime number ''p'', the ''p''-adic Tate module of ''A'' is :T_p(A)=\underset A ^n/math> where ''A'' 'pn''is the ''pn'' torsion of ''A'' (i.e. the kernel of the multiplication-by-''pn'' map), and the inverse limit is over
positive integer In mathematics, the natural numbers are those numbers used for counting (as in "there are ''six'' coins on the table") and ordering (as in "this is the ''third'' largest city in the country"). Numbers used for counting are called ''cardinal n ...
s ''n'' with transition morphisms given by the multiplication-by-''p'' map ''A'' 'p''''n''+1→ ''A'' 'pn'' Thus, the Tate module encodes all the ''p''-power torsion of ''A''. It is equipped with the structure of a Z''p''-module via :z(a_n)_n=((z\textp^n)a_n)_n.


Examples


''The'' Tate module

When the abelian group ''A'' is the group of roots of unity in a separable closure ''Ks'' of ''K'', the ''p''-adic Tate module of ''A'' is sometimes referred to as ''the'' Tate module (where the choice of ''p'' and ''K'' are tacitly understood). It is a free rank one module over ''Z''''p'' with a linear action of the absolute Galois group ''GK'' of ''K''. Thus, it is a Galois representation also referred to as the ''p''-adic cyclotomic character of ''K''. It can also be considered as the Tate module of the
multiplicative group scheme In mathematics, a group scheme is a type of object from algebraic geometry equipped with a composition law. Group schemes arise naturally as symmetries of schemes, and they generalize algebraic groups, in the sense that all algebraic groups ha ...
G''m'',''K'' over ''K''.


The Tate module of an abelian variety

Given an
abelian variety In mathematics, particularly in algebraic geometry, complex analysis and algebraic number theory, an abelian variety is a projective algebraic variety that is also an algebraic group, i.e., has a group law that can be defined by regular func ...
''G'' over a field ''K'', the ''Ks''-valued points of ''G'' are an abelian group. The ''p''-adic Tate module ''T''''p''(''G'') of ''G'' is a Galois representation (of the absolute Galois group, ''GK'', of ''K''). Classical results on abelian varieties show that if ''K'' has characteristic zero, or characteristic ℓ where the prime number ''p'' ≠ ℓ, then ''T''''p''(''G'') is a free module over ''Z''''p'' of rank 2''d'', where ''d'' is the dimension of ''G''. In the other case, it is still free, but the rank may take any value from 0 to ''d'' (see for example Hasse–Witt matrix). In the case where ''p'' is not equal to the characteristic of ''K'', the ''p''-adic Tate module of ''G'' is the
dual Dual or Duals may refer to: Paired/two things * Dual (mathematics), a notion of paired concepts that mirror one another ** Dual (category theory), a formalization of mathematical duality *** see more cases in :Duality theories * Dual (grammatical ...
of the étale cohomology H^1_(G\times_KK^s,\mathbf_p). A special case of the Tate conjecture can be phrased in terms of Tate modules. Suppose ''K'' is finitely generated over its prime field (e.g. a finite field, an
algebraic number field In mathematics, an algebraic number field (or simply number field) is an extension field K of the field of rational numbers such that the field extension K / \mathbb has finite degree (and hence is an algebraic field extension). Thus K is a f ...
, a global function field), of characteristic different from ''p'', and ''A'' and ''B'' are two abelian varieties over ''K''. The Tate conjecture then predicts that :\mathrm_K(A,B)\otimes\mathbf_p\cong\mathrm_(T_p(A),T_p(B)) where Hom''K''(''A'', ''B'') is the group of morphisms of abelian varieties from ''A'' to ''B'', and the right-hand side is the group of ''GK''-linear maps from ''Tp''(''A'') to ''Tp''(''B''). The case where ''K'' is a finite field was proved by Tate himself in the 1960s. Gerd Faltings proved the case where ''K'' is a number field in his celebrated "Mordell paper". In the case of a Jacobian over a curve ''C'' over a finite field ''k'' of characteristic prime to ''p'', the Tate module can be identified with the Galois group of the composite extension :k(C) \subset \hat k (C) \subset A^ \ where \hat k is an extension of ''k'' containing all ''p''-power roots of unity and ''A''(''p'') is the maximal unramified abelian ''p''-extension of \hat k (C).


Tate module of a number field

The description of the Tate module for the function field of a curve over a finite field suggests a definition for a Tate module of an
algebraic number field In mathematics, an algebraic number field (or simply number field) is an extension field K of the field of rational numbers such that the field extension K / \mathbb has finite degree (and hence is an algebraic field extension). Thus K is a f ...
, the other class of global field, introduced by Kenkichi Iwasawa. For a number field ''K'' we let ''K''''m'' denote the extension by ''p''''m''-power roots of unity, \hat K the union of the ''K''''m'' and ''A''(''p'') the maximal unramified abelian ''p''-extension of \hat K. Let :T_p(K) = \mathrm(A^/\hat K) \ . Then ''T''''p''(''K'') is a pro-''p''-group and so a Z''p''-module. Using class field theory one can describe ''T''''p''(''K'') as isomorphic to the inverse limit of the class groups ''C''''m'' of the ''K''''m'' under norm. Iwasawa exhibited ''T''''p''(''K'') as a module over the completion Z''p'' ''T'' and this implies a formula for the exponent of ''p'' in the order of the class groups ''C''''m'' of the form : \lambda m + \mu p^m + \kappa \ . The
Ferrero–Washington theorem In algebraic number theory, the Ferrero–Washington theorem, proved first by and later by , states that Iwasawa's μ-invariant vanishes for cyclotomic Z''p''-extensions of abelian algebraic number field In mathematics, an algebraic number fie ...
states that μ is zero.


See also

* Tate conjecture * Tate twist * Iwasawa theory


Notes


References

* * * *Section 13 of *{{Citation , last=Tate , first=John , title=Endomorphisms of abelian varieties over finite fields , journal=Inventiones Mathematicae , volume=2 , mr=0206004 , year=1966 , issue=2 , pages=134–144 , doi=10.1007/bf01404549 , bibcode=1966InMat...2..134T , s2cid=245902 Abelian varieties