Moments, Monodromy, and Perversity

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A01=Nicholas M. Katz
Addition
Additive group
Affine space
Author_Nicholas M. Katz
Automorphism
Base change
Big O notation
Category=PBH
Central moment
Character sum
Codimension
Computation
Conjecture
Conjugacy class
Convolution
Corollary
Dense set
Determinant
Dimension
Dimension (vector space)
Diophantine equation
Direct sum
Discrete group
Disjoint sets
Divisor
Eigenvalues and eigenvectors
Elliptic curve
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Equidistribution theorem
Existential quantification
Exponential sum
Finite field
Fourier transform
Function space
Generic point
Hypersurface
Integer
Irreducible representation
Isomorphism class
L-function
Leray spectral sequence
Linear subspace
Monodromy
Morphism
Orthogonal group
P-value
Parameter space
Partition of a set
Perverse sheaf
Polynomial
Power series
Prime number
Pullback (category theory)
Random variable
Reductive group
Relative dimension
Scalar multiplication
Sheaf (mathematics)
Special case
Subgroup
Subobject
Subset
Summation
Surjective function
Symmetric group
Symplectic group
Tensor product
Theorem
Trace (linear algebra)
Trivial group
Unipotent
Variable (mathematics)
Zariski topology

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691123301
  • Weight: 794g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Oct 2005
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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It is now some thirty years since Deligne first proved his general equidistribution theorem, thus establishing the fundamental result governing the statistical properties of suitably "pure" algebro-geometric families of character sums over finite fields (and of their associated L-functions). Roughly speaking, Deligne showed that any such family obeys a "generalized Sato-Tate law," and that figuring out which generalized Sato-Tate law applies to a given family amounts essentially to computing a certain complex semisimple (not necessarily connected) algebraic group, the "geometric monodromy group" attached to that family. Up to now, nearly all techniques for determining geometric monodromy groups have relied, at least in part, on local information. In Moments, Monodromy, and Perversity, Nicholas Katz develops new techniques, which are resolutely global in nature. They are based on two vital ingredients, neither of which existed at the time of Deligne's original work on the subject. The first is the theory of perverse sheaves, pioneered by Goresky and MacPherson in the topological setting and then brilliantly transposed to algebraic geometry by Beilinson, Bernstein, Deligne, and Gabber. The second is Larsen's Alternative, which very nearly characterizes classical groups by their fourth moments. These new techniques, which are of great interest in their own right, are first developed and then used to calculate the geometric monodromy groups attached to some quite specific universal families of (L-functions attached to) character sums over finite fields.
Nicholas M. Katz is Professor of Mathematics at Princeton University. He is the author of five previous books in this series: "Arithmetic Moduli of Elliptic Curves" (with Barry Mazur); "Gauss Sums, Kloosterman Sums, and Monodromy Groups"; "Exponential Sums and Differential Equations"; "Rigid Local Systems"; and "Twisted L-Functions and Monodromy".