Adele group
An element of the adèle group, i.e. of the restricted topological direct product
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of the group with distinguished invariant open subgroups
. Here
is a linear algebraic group, defined over a global field
,
is the set of valuations (cf. Valuation) of
,
is the completion of
with respect to
, and
is the ring of integer elements in
. The adèle group of an algebraic group
is denoted by
. Since all groups
are locally compact and since
is compact,
is a locally compact group.
Examples. 1) If is the additive group
of the field
, then
has a natural ring structure, and is called the adèle ring of
; it is denoted by
. 2) If
is the multiplicative group
of the field
, then
is called the idèle group of
(the idèle group is the group of units in the adèle ring
). 3) If
is the general linear group over
, then
consists of the elements
for which
for almost all valuations
.
The concept of an adèle group was first introduced by C. Chevalley (in the 1930s) for algebraic number fields, to meet certain needs of class field theory. It was generalized twenty years later to algebraic groups by M. Kneser and T. Tamagawa [1], . They noted that the principal results on the arithmetic of quadratic forms over number fields can be conveniently reformulated in terms of adèle groups.
The image of the diagonal imbedding of in
is a discrete subgroup in
, called the subgroup of principal adèles. If
is the set of all Archimedean valuations of
, then
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is known as the subgroup of integer adèles. If , then the number of different double cosets of the type
of the adèle group
is finite and equal to the number of ideal classes of
. The naturally arising problem as to whether the number of such double classes for an arbitrary algebraic group is finite is connected with the reduction theory for subgroups of principal adèles, i.e. with the construction of fundamental domains for the quotient space
. It has been shown [5] that
is compact if and only if the group
is
-anisotropic (cf. Anisotropic group). Another problem that has been solved are the circumstances under which the quotient space
over an algebraic number field has finite volume in the Haar measure. Since
is locally compact, such a measure always exists, and the volume of
in the Haar measure is finite if and only if the group
has no rational
-characters (cf. Character of a group). The number
— the volume of
— is an important arithmetical invariant of the algebraic group G (cf. Tamagawa number). It was shown on the strength of these results [5] that the decomposition
![]() |
is valid for an arbitrary algebraic group . If
is a function field, it was also proved that the number of double classes of this kind for the adèle group of the algebraic group is finite, and an analogue of the reduction theory was developed [6]. For various arithmetical applications of adèle groups see [4], [7].
References
[1] | A. Weil, "Adèles and algebraic groups" , Princeton Univ. Press (1961) |
[2a] | T. Tamagawa, "Adéles" , Algebraic groups and discontinuous subgroups , Proc. Symp. Pure Math. , 9 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1966) pp. 113–121 |
[2b] | M. Kneser, "Strong approximation" , Algebraic groups and discontinuous subgroups , Proc. Symp. Pure Math. , 9 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1966) pp. 187–198 |
[3] | J.W.S. Cassels (ed.) A. Fröhlich (ed.) , Algebraic number theory , Acad. Press (1967) |
[4] | V.P. Platonov, "Algebraic groups" J. Soviet Math. , 4 : 5 (1975) pp. 463–482 Itogi Nauk. Algebra Topol. Geom. , 11 (1973) pp. 5–37 |
[5] | A. Borel, "Some finiteness properties of adèle groups over number fields" Publ. Math. IHES : 16 (1963) pp. 5–30 |
[6] | G. Harder, "Minkowskische Reduktionstheorie über Funktionenkörpern" Invent. Math. , 7 (1969) pp. 33–54 |
[7] | V.P. Platonov, "The arithmetic theory of linear algebraic groups and number theory" Trudy Mat. Inst. Steklov. , 132 (1973) pp. 162–168 (In Russian) |
[8] | A. Weil, "Basic number theory" , Springer (1974) |
Comments
Let be an index set. For each
let
be a locally compact group and
on open compact subgroup. The restricted (topological) direct product of the
with respect to the
, above denoted by
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consists (as a set) of all such that
in
for all but finitely many
. The topology on
is defined by taking as a basis at the identity the open subgroups
with
an open neighbourhood of
for all
and
for all but finitely many
. This makes
a locally compact topological group.
Adele group. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Adele_group&oldid=14257