Galois representation
In general, let be any field. Write for a separable closure of , and for the absolute Galois group of . Let be a (Hausdorff) Abelian
![]()
topological group
![]()
. Then an (-valued) Galois representation
![]()
for is a continuous
homomorphism
![]()
where we endow with the Krull topology, and where is the group of continuous automorphisms of , endowed with the compact-open topology
![]()
. One calls the representation space for .
The simplest case is where , the group of column vectors with complex entries. Then , and we have what is usually called a complex representation of degree . In the same manner, letting , with any field (such as or a finite field![]()
) we obtain the usual definition of a degree representation over .
There is an alternate definition which we should also mention. Write for the group ring![]()
of with coefficients in . Then a Galois representation for is simply a continuous -module (i.e. the action of on is given by a continuous homomorphism ). In other words, all the information in a representation is preserved in considering the representation space as a continuous -module. The equivalence of these two definitions is as described in the entry for the group algebra
![]()
.
When is complete, the continuity requirement is equivalent
![]()
to the action of on naturally extending to a -module structure
![]()
on . The notation denotes the completed group ring:
where is any profinite group, and ranges over all normal subgroups![]()
of finite index.
A notation we will be using often is the following. Suppose is a group, is a representation and a subgroup![]()
. Then we let
the subgroup of fixed pointwise by .
Given a Galois representation , let . By the fundamental theorem of infinite Galois theory, since is a closed normal subgroup of , it corresponds to a certain normal subfield![]()
of . Naturally, this is the fixed field of , and we denote it by . (The notation becomes better justified after we view some examples.) Notice that since is trivial on , it factors through a representation
which is faithful. This property characterizes .
In the case or , the so-called “no small subgroups” argument implies that the image of is finite.
For a first application of definition, we say that is discrete if for all , the stabilizer![]()
of in is open in . This is the case when is given the discrete topology, such as when is finite and Hausdorff. The stabilizer of any fixes a finite extension
of , which we denote by . One has that is the union of all the .
As a second application, suppose that the image is Abelian. Then the quotient is Abelian, so contains the commutator subgroup
![]()
of , which means that is contained in , the maximal Abelian extension
![]()
of . This is the case when is a character
, i.e. a -dimensional representation over some (commutative
unital) ring,
Associated to any field are two basic Galois representations, namely those with representation spaces and , for any normal intermediate field , with the usual action of the Galois group![]()
on them. Both of these representations are discrete. The additive
representation is rather simple if is finite: by the normal basis theorem, it is merely a permutation representation on the normal basis. Also, if and , then , the field obtained by adjoining to , agrees with the fixed field of the stabilizer of in . This motivates the notation “” introduced above.
By contrast, in general, can become a rather complicated object. To look at just a piece of the representation , assume that contains the group of -th roots of unity![]()
, where is prime to the characteristic
of . Then we let . It is possible to choose an isomorphism
![]()
of Abelian groups , and it follows that our representation is . Now assume that has the form , where is a prime not equal to the characteristic, and set . This gives a sequence
![]()
of representations , which are compatible with the natural maps . This compatibility allows us to glue them together into a big representation
called the -adic cyclotomic representation of . This representation is often not discrete. The notation will be explained below.
This example may be generalized as follows. Let be an Abelian algebraic group defined over . For each integer , let be the set of -rational points whose order divides . Then we define the -adic Tate module of via
It acquires a natural Galois action from the ones on the . The two most commonly treated examples of this are the cases (the multiplicative group![]()
, giving the cyclotomic representation above) and , an elliptic curve
![]()
defined over .
The last thing which we shall mention about generalities is that to any Galois representation , one may associate![]()
the Galois cohomology groups , more commonly written , which are defined to be the group cohomology
![]()
of (computed with continuous cochains) with coefficients in .
Galois representations play a fundamental role in algebraic number theory![]()
, as many objects and properties related to global fields
![]()
and local fields
![]()
may be determined by certain Galois representations and their properties. We shall describe the local case first, and then the global case.
Let be a local field, by which we mean the fraction field of a complete DVR with finite residue field![]()
. We write for the normalized valuation
![]()
, for the associated DVR, for the maximal ideal
![]()
of , for the residue field, and for the characteristic of .
Let be a finite Galois extension![]()
, and define , , , and accordingly. There is a natural surjection . We call the kernel of this map the inertia group, and write it . Further, the -Sylow subgroup of is normal, and we call it the wild ramification group, and denote it by . One calls the tame ramification group.
It happens that the formation of these group is compatible with extensions , in that we have surjections and . This lets us define to be the inverse limits![]()
of the subgroups , as usual ranging over all finite Galois extensions of in .
Let be a Galois representation for with representation space . We say that is unramified if the inertia group acts trivially on , or in other words or . Otherwise we say it is ramified. Similarly, we say that is (at most) tamely ramified if the wild ramification group acts trivially, or , or ; and if not we say it is wildly ramified.
We let be the maximal unramified extension of , and be the maximal tamely ramified extension of .
Unramified or tamely ramified extensions are usually much easier to study than wildly ramified extensions. In the unramified case, it results from the fact that is pro-cyclic. Thus an unramified representation is completely determined by the action of for a topological generator of . (Such a is often called a Frobenius element
![]()
.)
Given a finite extension![]()
, one defines the inertia degree and the ramification degree as usual. Then in the Galois case one may recover them as and . The tame inertia degree, which is the non--part of , is equal to , while the wild inertia degree, which is the -part of , is equal to .
One finds that the inertia and ramification properties of may be computed from the ramification properties of the Galois representation .
We now turn to global fields. We shall only treat the number field![]()
case. Thus we let be a finite extension of , and write for its ring of integers
![]()
. For each place of , write for the completion of with respect to . When is a finite place, we write simply for its associated normalized valuation, for , for , for , and for the characteristic of .
For each place , fix an algebraic closure![]()
of . Furthermore, choose an embedding
![]()
. This choice is equivalent to choosing an extension of to all of , and to choosing an embedding . We denote the image of this last embedding by ; it is called a decomposition group at . Sitting inside are two groups, and , corresponding to the inertia and wild ramification subgroups and of ; we call the images and the inertia group at and the wild ramification group at , respectively.
For a Galois representation and a place , it is profitable to consider the restricted representation . One calls a global representation, and a local representation. We say that is ramified or tamely ramified (or not) at if is (or isn’t). The Tchebotarev density theorem implies that the corresponding Frobenius elements are dense in , so that the union of the is dense in . Therefore, it is reasonable to try to reduce questions about to questions about all the independently. This is a manifestation of Hasse’s local-to-global principle.
Given a global Galois representation with representation space which is unramified at all but finitely many places , it is a goal of number theory![]()
to prove that it arises naturally in arithmetic geometry (namely, as a subrepresentation of an étale cohomology group of a motive), and also to prove that it arises from an automorphic form. This can only be shown in certain special cases.
| Title | Galois representation |
| Canonical name | GaloisRepresentation |
| Date of creation | 2013-03-22 13:28:21 |
| Last modified on | 2013-03-22 13:28:21 |
| Owner | alozano (2414) |
| Last modified by | alozano (2414) |
| Numerical id | 18 |
| Author | alozano (2414) |
| Entry type | Definition |
| Classification | msc 11R32 |
| Classification | msc 11R04 |
| Classification | msc 11R34 |
| Related topic | InverseLimit |
| Defines | tame inertia group |
| Defines | wild inertia group |
| Defines | tame inertia degree |
| Defines | wild inertia degree |
| Defines | discrete module |
| Defines | Tate module |
| Defines | cyclotomic representation |
| Defines | Galois cohomology |