Diagonalizable algebraic group
An affine algebraic group $ G $ that is isomorphic to a closed subgroup of an algebraic torus. Thus, $ G $ is isomorphic to a closed subgroup of a multiplicative group of all diagonal matrices of given size. If $ G $ is defined over a field $ k $ and the isomorphism is defined over $ k $ , the diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $ is said to be split (or decomposable) over $ k $ .
Any closed subgroup $ H $
in a diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $ ,
as well as the image of $ G $
under an arbitrary rational homomorphism $ \phi $ ,
is a diagonalizable algebraic group. If, in addition, $ G $
is defined and split over a field $ k $ ,
while $ \phi $
is defined over $ k $ ,
then both $ H $
and $ \phi (G) $
are defined and split over $ k $ .
A diagonalizable algebraic group is split over $ k $
if and only if elements in the group $ \widehat{G} $
of its rational characters are rational over $ k $ .
If $ \widehat{G} $
contains no non-unit elements rational over $ k $ ,
the diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $
is said to be anisotropic over $ k $ .
Any diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $
defined over the field $ k $
is split over some finite separable extension of $ k $ .
A diagonalizable algebraic group is connected if and only if it is an algebraic torus. The connectedness of $ G $
is also equivalent to the absence of torsion in $ \widehat{G} $ .
For any diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $
defined over $ k $ ,
the group $ \widehat{G} $
is a finitely-generated Abelian group without $ p $ -
torsion, where $ p $
is the characteristic of $ k $ .
Any diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $
which is defined and split over a field $ k $
is the direct product of a finite Abelian group and an algebraic torus defined and split over $ k $ .
Any diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $
which is connected and defined over a field $ k $
contains a largest anisotropic subtorus $ G _{a} $
and a largest subtorus $ G _{d} $
which is split over $ k $ ;
for these, $ G = G _{a} G _{d} $ ,
and $ G _{a} \cap G _{d} $
is a finite set.
If a diagonalizable algebraic group $ G $ is defined over a field $ k $ and $ \Gamma $ is the Galois group of the separable closure of $ k $ , then $ \widehat{G} $ is endowed with a continuous action of $ \Gamma $ . If, in addition, $ \phi : \ G \rightarrow H $ is a rational homomorphism between diagonalizable algebraic groups, while $ G $ , $ H $ and $ \phi $ are defined over $ k $ , then the homomorphism $ \widehat \phi : \ \widehat{H} \rightarrow \widehat{G} $ is $ \Gamma $ - equivariant (i.e. is a homomorphism of $ \Gamma $ - modules). The resulting contravariant functor from the category of diagonalizable $ \Gamma $ - groups and their $ k $ - morphisms into the category of finitely-generated Abelian groups without $ k $ - torsion with a continuous action of the group $ p $ and their $ \Gamma $ - equivariant homomorphisms is an equivalence of these categories.
References
[1] | A. Borel, "Linear algebraic groups" , Benjamin (1969) MR0251042 Zbl 0206.49801 Zbl 0186.33201 |
[2] | T. Ono, "Arithmetic of algebraic tori" Ann. of Math. , 74 : 1 (1961) pp. 101–139 MR0124326 Zbl 0119.27801 |
Comments
References
[a1] | J.E. Humphreys, "Linear algebraic groups" , Springer (1975) MR0396773 Zbl 0325.20039 |
Diagonalizable algebraic group. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Diagonalizable_algebraic_group&oldid=21836