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The subject of algebraic cycles has thrived through its interaction
with algebraic K-theory, Hodge theory, arithmetic algebraic
geometry, number theory, and topology. These interactions have led
to such developments as a description of Chow groups in terms of
algebraic K-theory, the arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, progress on
the celebrated conjectures of Hodge and Tate, and the conjectures
of Bloch and Beilinson. The immense recent progress in algebraic
cycles, based on so many interactions with so many other areas of
mathematics, has contributed to a considerable degree of
inaccessibility, especially for graduate students. Even specialists
in one approach to algebraic cycles may not understand other
approaches well. This book offers students and specialists alike a
broad perspective of algebraic cycles, presented from several
viewpoints, including arithmetic, transcendental, topological,
motives and K-theory methods. Topics include a discussion of the
arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, higher Abel-Jacobi regulator maps,
polylogarithms and L-series, candidate Bloch-Beilinson filtrations,
applications of Chern-Simons invariants to algebraic cycles via the
study of algebraic vector bundles with algebraic connection,
motivic cohomology, Chow groups of singular varieties, and recent
progress on the Hodge and Tate conjectures for Abelian varieties.
This book casts the theory of periods of algebraic varieties in the
natural setting of Madhav Nori's abelian category of mixed motives.
It develops Nori's approach to mixed motives from scratch, thereby
filling an important gap in the literature, and then explains the
connection of mixed motives to periods, including a detailed
account of the theory of period numbers in the sense of
Kontsevich-Zagier and their structural properties. Period numbers
are central to number theory and algebraic geometry, and also play
an important role in other fields such as mathematical physics.
There are long-standing conjectures about their transcendence
properties, best understood in the language of cohomology of
algebraic varieties or, more generally, motives. Readers of this
book will discover that Nori's unconditional construction of an
abelian category of motives (over fields embeddable into the
complex numbers) is particularly well suited for this purpose.
Notably, Kontsevich's formal period algebra represents a torsor
under the motivic Galois group in Nori's sense, and the period
conjecture of Kontsevich and Zagier can be recast in this setting.
Periods and Nori Motives is highly informative and will appeal to
graduate students interested in algebraic geometry and number
theory as well as researchers working in related fields. Containing
relevant background material on topics such as singular cohomology,
algebraic de Rham cohomology, diagram categories and rigid tensor
categories, as well as many interesting examples, the overall
presentation of this book is self-contained.
The subject of algebraic cycles has thrived through its interaction
with algebraic K-theory, Hodge theory, arithmetic algebraic
geometry, number theory, and topology. These interactions have led
to such developments as a description of Chow groups in terms of
algebraic K-theory, the arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, progress on
the celebrated conjectures of Hodge and Tate, and the conjectures
of Bloch and Beilinson. The immense recent progress in algebraic
cycles, based on so many interactions with so many other areas of
mathematics, has contributed to a considerable degree of
inaccessibility, especially for graduate students. Even specialists
in one approach to algebraic cycles may not understand other
approaches well. This book offers students and specialists alike a
broad perspective of algebraic cycles, presented from several
viewpoints, including arithmetic, transcendental, topological,
motives and K-theory methods. Topics include a discussion of the
arithmetic Abel-Jacobi mapping, higher Abel-Jacobi regulator maps,
polylogarithms and L-series, candidate Bloch-Beilinson filtrations,
applications of Chern-Simons invariants to algebraic cycles via the
study of algebraic vector bundles with algebraic connection,
motivic cohomology, Chow groups of singular varieties, and recent
progress on the Hodge and Tate conjectures for Abelian varieties.
This book casts the theory of periods of algebraic varieties in the
natural setting of Madhav Nori's abelian category of mixed motives.
It develops Nori's approach to mixed motives from scratch, thereby
filling an important gap in the literature, and then explains the
connection of mixed motives to periods, including a detailed
account of the theory of period numbers in the sense of
Kontsevich-Zagier and their structural properties. Period numbers
are central to number theory and algebraic geometry, and also play
an important role in other fields such as mathematical physics.
There are long-standing conjectures about their transcendence
properties, best understood in the language of cohomology of
algebraic varieties or, more generally, motives. Readers of this
book will discover that Nori's unconditional construction of an
abelian category of motives (over fields embeddable into the
complex numbers) is particularly well suited for this purpose.
Notably, Kontsevich's formal period algebra represents a torsor
under the motivic Galois group in Nori's sense, and the period
conjecture of Kontsevich and Zagier can be recast in this setting.
Periods and Nori Motives is highly informative and will appeal to
graduate students interested in algebraic geometry and number
theory as well as researchers working in related fields. Containing
relevant background material on topics such as singular cohomology,
algebraic de Rham cohomology, diagram categories and rigid tensor
categories, as well as many interesting examples, the overall
presentation of this book is self-contained.
This up-to-date introduction to Griffiths' theory of period maps
and period domains focusses on algebraic, group-theoretic and
differential geometric aspects. Starting with an explanation of
Griffiths' basic theory, the authors go on to introduce spectral
sequences and Koszul complexes that are used to derive results
about cycles on higher-dimensional algebraic varieties such as the
Noether-Lefschetz theorem and Nori's theorem. They explain
differential geometric methods, leading up to proofs of
Arakelov-type theorems, the theorem of the fixed part and the
rigidity theorem. They also use Higgs bundles and harmonic maps to
prove the striking result that not all compact quotients of period
domains are Kahler. This thoroughly revised second edition includes
a new third part covering important recent developments, in which
the group-theoretic approach to Hodge structures is explained,
leading to Mumford-Tate groups and their associated domains, the
Mumford-Tate varieties and generalizations of Shimura varieties.
This up-to-date introduction to Griffiths' theory of period maps
and period domains focusses on algebraic, group-theoretic and
differential geometric aspects. Starting with an explanation of
Griffiths' basic theory, the authors go on to introduce spectral
sequences and Koszul complexes that are used to derive results
about cycles on higher-dimensional algebraic varieties such as the
Noether-Lefschetz theorem and Nori's theorem. They explain
differential geometric methods, leading up to proofs of
Arakelov-type theorems, the theorem of the fixed part and the
rigidity theorem. They also use Higgs bundles and harmonic maps to
prove the striking result that not all compact quotients of period
domains are Kahler. This thoroughly revised second edition includes
a new third part covering important recent developments, in which
the group-theoretic approach to Hodge structures is explained,
leading to Mumford-Tate groups and their associated domains, the
Mumford-Tate varieties and generalizations of Shimura varieties.
Das Buch wendet sich an alle, die in die klassischen Themen der
Zahlentheorie einsteigen wollen. Viel Wert wird auf die konkrete
Berechenbarkeit bei allen Problemlosungen gelegt. So gibt es auch
Abschnitte uber moderne Primzahltests und
Faktorisierungsalgorithmen und am Ende des Buches wird ein Weg zur
Bestimmung der Klassenzahl der quadratischen Zahlkorper
aufgezeigt.
Im Rahmen der Bachelor-/Master-Studiengange eignet sich das Buch
als Grundlage fur zwei Semester: ein Aufbaumodul in elementarer
Zahlentheorie mit einem Vertiefungsmodul in algebraischer
Zahlentheorie.
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