Riemann introduced the concept of a "local system" on P1-{a
finite set of points} nearly 140 years ago. His idea was to study
"n"th order linear differential equations by studying the rank "n"
local systems (of local holomorphic solutions) to which they gave
rise. His first application was to study the classical Gauss
hypergeometric function, which he did by studying rank-two local
systems on P1- {0,1, infinity}. His investigation was successful,
largely because any such (irreducible) local system is rigid in the
sense that it is globally determined as soon as one knows
separately each of its local monodromies. It became clear that luck
played a role in Riemann's success: most local systems are not
rigid. Yet many classical functions are solutions of differential
equations whose local systems are rigid, including both of the
standard "n"th order generalizations of the hypergeometric
function, n"F"n-1's, and the Pochhammer hypergeometric
functions.
This book is devoted to constructing all (irreducible) rigid
local systems on P1-{a finite set of points} and recognizing which
collections of independently given local monodromies arise as the
local monodromies of irreducible rigid local systems.
Although the problems addressed here go back to Riemann, and
seem to be problems in complex analysis, their solutions depend
essentially on a great deal of very recent arithmetic algebraic
geometry, including Grothendieck's etale cohomology theory,
Deligne's proof of his far-reaching generalization of the original
Weil Conjectures, the theory of perverse sheaves, and Laumon's work
on the "l"-adic Fourier Transform.
General
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