Dieudonné module

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In mathematics, a Dieudonné module introduced by Jean Dieudonné (1954, 1957b), is a module over the non-commutative Dieudonné ring, which is generated over the ring of Witt vectors by two special endomorphisms and called the Frobenius and Verschiebung operators. They are used for studying finite flat commutative group schemes.

Finite flat commutative group schemes over a perfect field of positive characteristic can be studied by transferring their geometric structure to a (semi-)linear-algebraic setting. The basic object is the Dieudonné ring

,

which is a quotient of the ring of noncommutative polynomials, with coefficients in Witt vectors of . The endomorphisms and are the Frobenius and Verschiebung operators, and they may act nontrivially on the Witt vectors. Dieudonné and Pierre Cartier constructed an antiequivalence of categories between finite commutative group schemes over of order a power of and modules over with finite -length. The Dieudonné module functor in one direction is given by homomorphisms into the abelian sheaf of Witt co-vectors. This sheaf is more or less dual to the sheaf of Witt vectors (which is in fact representable by a group scheme), since it is constructed by taking a direct limit of finite length Witt vectors under successive Verschiebung maps , and then completing. Many properties of commutative group schemes can be seen by examining the corresponding Dieudonné modules, e.g., connected -group schemes correspond to -modules for which is nilpotent, and étale group schemes correspond to modules for which is an isomorphism.

Dieudonné theory exists in a somewhat more general setting than finite flat groups over a field. Tadao Oda's 1967 thesis gave a connection between Dieudonné modules and the first de Rham cohomology of abelian varieties, and at about the same time, Alexander Grothendieck suggested that there should be a crystalline version of the theory that could be used to analyze -divisible groups. Galois actions on the group schemes transfer through the equivalences of categories, and the associated deformation theory of Galois representations was used in Andrew Wiles's work on the Shimura–Taniyama conjecture.

Dieudonné rings edit

If   is a field of characteristic  , its ring of Witt vectors consists of sequences   of elements of  , and has an endomorphism   induced by the Frobenius endomorphism of  , so  . The Dieudonné ring, often denoted by   or  , is the non-commutative ring over   generated by 2 elements   and   subject to the relations

 
 
 .

It is a  -graded ring, where the piece of degree   is a 1-dimensional free module over  , spanned by   if   and by   if  .

Some authors define the Dieudonné ring to be the completion of the ring above for the ideal generated by   and  .

Dieudonné modules and groups edit

Special sorts of modules over the Dieudonné ring correspond to certain algebraic group schemes. For example, finite length modules over the Dieudonné ring form an abelian category equivalent to the opposite of the category of finite commutative  -group schemes over  .

Examples edit

  • If   is the constant group scheme   over  , then its corresponding Dieudonné module   is   with   and  .
  • For the scheme of  -th roots of unity  , then its corresponding Dieudonné module is   with   and  .
  • For  , defined as the kernel of the Frobenius  , the Dieudonné module is   with  .
  • If   is the  -torsion of an elliptic curve over   (with  -torsion in  ), then the Dieudonné module depends on whether   is supersingular or not.

Dieudonné–Manin classification theorem edit

The Dieudonné–Manin classification theorem was proved by Dieudonné (1955) and Yuri Manin (1963). It describes the structure of Dieudonné modules over an algebraically closed field   up to "isogeny". More precisely, it classifies the finitely generated modules over  , where   is the Dieudonné ring. The category of such modules is semisimple, so every module is a direct sum of simple modules. The simple modules are the modules   where   and   are coprime integers with  . The module   has a basis over   of the form   for some element  , and  . The rational number   is called the slope of the module.

The Dieudonné module of a group scheme edit

If   is a commutative group scheme, its Dieudonné module   is defined to be  , defined as   where   is the formal Witt group scheme and   is the truncated Witt group scheme of Witt vectors of length  .

The Dieudonné module gives antiequivalences between various sorts of commutative group schemes and left modules over the Dieudonné ring  .

  • Finite commutative group schemes of  -power order correspond to   modules that have finite length over  .
  • Unipotent affine commutative group schemes correspond to   modules that are  -torsion.
  •  -divisible groups correspond to  -modules that are finitely generated free  -modules, at least over perfect fields.

Dieudonné crystal edit

A Dieudonné crystal is a crystal   together with homomorphisms   and   satisfying the relations   (on  ),   (on  ). Dieudonné crystals were introduced by Grothendieck (1966). They play the same role for classifying algebraic groups over schemes that Dieudonné modules play for classifying algebraic groups over fields.

References edit

  • Cartier, Pierre (1962), "Groupes algébriques et groupes formels", Colloq. Théorie des Groupes Algébriques (Bruxelles, 1962) (PDF), Librairie Universitaire, Louvain, pp. 87–111, MR 0148665
  • Dieudonné, Jean (1955), "Lie groups and Lie hyperalgebras over a field of characteristic p>0. IV", American Journal of Mathematics, 77: 429–452, doi:10.2307/2372633, ISSN 0002-9327, JSTOR 2372633, MR 0071718
  • Dieudonné, Jean (1957), "Lie groups and Lie hyperalgebras over a field of characteristic p>0. VI", American Journal of Mathematics, 79: 331–388, doi:10.2307/2372686, ISSN 0002-9327, JSTOR 2372686, MR 0094413
  • Dieudonné, Jean (1957b), "Groupes de Lie et hyperalgèbres de Lie sur un corps de caractéristique p>0. VII", Mathematische Annalen, 134: 114–133, doi:10.1007/BF01342790, ISSN 0025-5831, MR 0098146
  • Dolgachev, Igor V. (2001) [1994], "Dieudonné module", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Grothendieck, Alexander (1966), Letter to J. Tate (PDF).
  • Manin, Yuri I. (1963), "Theory of commutative formal groups over fields of finite characteristic", Akademiya Nauk SSSR i Moskovskoe Matematicheskoe Obshchestvo. Uspekhi Matematicheskikh Nauk, 18 (6): 3–90, doi:10.1070/RM1963v018n06ABEH001142, ISSN 0042-1316, MR 0157972

External links edit