Consider projective algebraic curves defined over an algebraically
closed field of positive characteristic Instead of the curve one can
study the function field .
The Automorphism group is the group
of automorphisms .
The genus of a curve is defined as
Group of Automorphisms
, ,
, is an elliptic curve and
, the automorphism group is finite:
Hurwitz Bound
Characteristic zero
(1)
Characteristic
(2)
Automorphisms groups of Fermat curves
is not a power of the characteristic
,
and .
Action of the automorphism group
The automorphism group acts on every object of the curve,
in particular on , inducing
a representation
(3)
Aim: Describe the irreducible - indecomposable summands
of the above representation.
Consider the ramified covering , or equivalently the Galois extension .
Classical problem
Determine the decomposition of into its indecomposable direct summands.
Problem posed by Hecke and solved in by Chevalley and Weil using character theory.
Definition 1. For each point let be the maximal ideal of the local ring and the residue field of .
The fundamental character is the character
Theorem 1. If is algebraically closed and then fundamental characters describe the indecomposable summands.
Positive Characteristic
More difficult problem because:
Modular representation theory: Irreducible representation is a different than indecomposable.
Wild ramification: The decomposition groups
are not cyclic groups anymore.
There is no classification for indecomposable modules unless is cyclic.
If , prime
then the classification of indecomposable representations is considered to be impossible
Higher ramification groups
Definition 2. Ramification filtration
For the -th lower ramification group of at is the subgroup of elements which fix and act trivially on .
There is a sequence of groups:
such that is a cyclic group of order prime to and are elementary -abelian groups.
-module structure
Known results:
ramified, or [Tamagawa, Valentini]
Wild Ramification: Weak ramification [B. Koeck]
Cyclic Group case: [Valentini-Madan, Karanikolopoulos K]
Finding Bases
Consider elements of the form , for .
Find linear independend elements such that .
Boseck method: Works for cyclic covers of .
Consider the action of the automorphism on the constructed basis.
Boseck method
Consider the function field, corresponding to a curve :
Theorem 2. The following differentials form a basis of
A similar formula holds for coverings .
Group action on Basis
The action of is given by , .
Fix .
Find Jordan blocks
p-adic uniformization method
Mumford -adic analytic method:
is a a complete discrete valued field or . Curves with split analytic reduction are isomorphic to the algebraization of rigid analytic curves of the form
Here, is a finitely generated torsion-free discrete subgroup of , called a Schottky group, and is the set of limit points.
A smooth projective curve obtained in this way, denoted by , is called a Mumford curve, and the uniformization just described provides us with a set of tools similar to those coming from the uniformization theory of Riemann surfaces.
Polydifferentials on Mumford curves
Theorem 3. [P. Schneider, J. Teitelbaum]
where denotes the space of polynomials of one variable of degree
In particular
Theorem 4. We have , where is the normalizer of in . defines a well defined action on by the action :
Example: Artin-Schreier Mumford curves
[A.K. - F. Kato]
Let be a complete non-archimedean valued field of characteristic , and a power of .
For with , the smooth projective model of the affine plane curve defined by the equation
Automorphism Groups ASM-curves
Proposition 1. The Artin-Schreier-Mumford where the group is, up to conjugacy, given by the commutator group of the cyclic subgroups of order generated by
respectively, where and .
Automorphism Groups ASM-curves
The groups and generate a discrete subgroup , which is isomorphic to the free product . is a normal subgroup of and
is a free group of rank with the basis given by the commutators for .
Galois module structure
Theorem 5.
* As an -module:
where is the integral representation corresponding to the matrix
As a -module is an indecomposable module.
Groups with cyclic -Syllow
[Bleher, Chinburg, K.]
Theorem 6. Suppose that has non trivial cyclic Syllow -subgroups. Then then -module structure of is uniquely determined by the lower ramification groups and the fundamental charcters of closed points which are ramified on the cover .
Green Ring
Let be the Green ring: the ring consisting of -linear combinations of symbols , one for each isomorphism class of finitely generated -modules, with relations:
where acts diagonally on .
Define the representation algebra
Green Ring
and both rings share the same unit element: , the trivial simple -module.
We also have induction maps:
Also for finitely generated -modules if and only if as -modules.
Conlon Induction theorem
In we have for certain :
So
Study of -hypo-elementary groups
, .
Description of indecomposable summands: is a -dimensional -module, ) where is an eigenvector for , ,
and a basis is formed by .
Aim: Compute the exponents .
Idea of the proof
Let be the cyclic subgroup of generated by the Sylow -subgroups of the inertia groups of all closed points of .
For all integers let be the kernel of the action of
on .
Proposition 2. For the action of and of on makes the quotient sheaf into a sheaf of -modules.
for an effective divisor on .
Idea Use Riemann-Roch theorem on the quotient curve , to compute
An Example - Reduction of modular curves in char 3.
modulo has an automorphism group which contains , which has order .
The cover is branched at points with inertia groups and - moreover, in the first case the second ramification group is trivial.
Some decompositions
Lift to Characteristic zero
Modular representation theory: Brauer Characters, lift the representation to characteristic zero.
Lift the whole curve together with the automorphism group, not always possible!
Oort conjecture, cyclic group actions always lift.
Question: How the representation theory could help us understand deformations and liftings?
Deformation Theory
A deformation of the curve is a relative curve (proper, smooth) over a local ring with maximal ideal
such that
such that gives the identity on the special fibres.
Equivalence of Deformations
Two deformations are considered to be equivalent if there is an isomorphism making the diagram commutative:
The Deformation functor
where is the category of local Artin algebras.
(4)
Problems:
Compute the dimension of the tangent space , in terms of the ramification data of the cover .
For a vector , integrate to a deformation
over a complete local ring.
Moduli Space and Tangent deformation functor
Local Deformation functor
There is a representation:
expressing the action of the
decomposition group to the completed local ring at a point.
The local deformation functor is defined:
Local-Global principle
Cohomology theories appear as derived functor of appropriate left exact functors.
For example for group cohomology we apply the functor of invariant element of -modules, and for Zarisky cohomology the functor of global sections.
Grothendieck's Tohoku paper: Cohomology of composition of two left exact functors.
In particular global sections and group invariants. Machinery for computations: 5-term exact sequence.
The study of the functor can be reduced to the study of the following deformation
functors attached to each wild ramification point of the cover :
Representation theory again
Idea: Serre duality:
Equivariant version of it: [A.K.]
For a -module ,
Computations
If , then .
If , then we can have .
Idea: The knowledge of -module structure can lead to a computation of
.
Example:Certain Elementary Abelian extensions
with
Example: Certain Elementary Abelian extensions
Theorem 7. Assume that has the -adic expansion .
Let be the map
defined by:
then
Example: Certain Elementary Abelian extensions
Theorem 8.
Action on L(D) for G-invariant D.
Let be a fully ramified point of .
Theorem 9. Assume that , .
Consider the Weierstrass semigroup at up to the first pole number
not divisible by :
and select functions in
with .
Then the natural representation
is faithful.
Explicit description of actions on .
We can select the uniformizer such that ,
The action is now given in closed form:
Idea: Work with General Linear group instead of
Representation Filtration
For each , consider the representations:
which give rise to the decreasing sequence of groups:
We also obtain a tower of function fields:
Theorem 10.
[A.K. - S. Karanikolopoulos]
If is a HKG-cover, then the representation and the ramification
filtrations coincide.
Harbater-Katz-Gabber Covers
Definition 3. A HKG-cover is a cover
, where is a -group and there is only one branch point point .
The Harbater–Katz–Gabber compactification theorem asserts that given an action of a -group on , there is a HKG-cover
ramified only at one point of with Galois group
such that and the action of
on the completed local ring coincides with the original
action of on .
-module structure for HKG-covers
The HKG-compactification allows us to attach global invariants to the local case, like genus, Jacobian, -rank, differentials etc.
Study of .
Select a function such that .
where
-module structure for HKG-covers
Theorem 11. For every pole number select a function such that . The set
forms a basis
for the space of -holomorphic (poly)differentials of .
Theorem 12.
The module is a direct sum of
direct indecomposable summands.
Corollary: If , then . In particular curves with big-action (in the sense of M.Matignon-M.Rocher) have one indecomposable summand.
Integral Representation Theory
The problem
Lemma 1. Let be a local integral domain with residue field and quotient field . Every finitely generated module so that is free -module of rank .
Let be a deformation of .
The spaces are free -modules.
Problem: Describe the module structure of within the theory of integral representations
Remark Usually the term integral representation is reserved for -modules. Our situation is a little bit easier since we work over complete local rings, and we can add the eigenvalues .
Example: Cyclic groups
Description of the modules.
We extend the binomial coefficient by zero for . For we consider the matrix , defined by
This is a lower triangular matrix defined over , and in positive characteristic has order .
The representation
is indecomposable.
Idea: Over we consider the vector space with basis , with the natural action of the generator .
(so ).
Description of the modules
is an integral domain which is a -algebra
()
For we define the -module
The modules are isomorphic.
Remark: The reduction of this basis is trivial.
Consider instead the following module:
The modules and are -isomorphic but not -isomorphic.
Description of the modules
The modules are indecomposable. Indeed, their reduction is the indecomposable module .
Set
Set
Remark: The ring is called the Oort-Sekiguchi-Suwa factor of the versal deformation ring .
The decomposition
Theorem 13. Let be an automorphism of of order and conductor with , , .
The free -module has the following structure:
where
The Bertin-Mezard model
Kummer extension .
, and set . The model becomes
.
More generally we can replace by , where if , and consider the Kummer extension
where ,
we have
Remark: The assumption made for is a polynomial.
Kummer extensions
Description of a basis
Proposition 3. The set of differentials of the form
where
forms a basis of holomorphic differentials.
This base is not suitable for taking the reduction modulo the maximal ideal of
the ring .
Description of the basis
Define
There are some polynomials such that
is a basis for .
Use the special fibre Boseck Basis to show that the reductions are holomorphic.
Ingredients of the proof
Knowledge of the Galois module structure and ramification in both the special and the generic fibre.
Knowledge of the relative curve.
Conclusions - Further study
Representation theoretic obstructions.
Compute integral representations of all the groups that are known to lift.
Applications to relative Weierstrass points and their deformations.