Hodge classes and Tate classes on simple abelian fourfolds (Q1895997): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Added link to MaRDI item.
RedirectionBot (talk | contribs)
Removed claims
Property / author
 
Property / author: B. J. J. Moonen / rank
Normal rank
 
Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Kenji Ueno / rank
Normal rank
 

Revision as of 07:23, 10 February 2024

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Hodge classes and Tate classes on simple abelian fourfolds
scientific article

    Statements

    Hodge classes and Tate classes on simple abelian fourfolds (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    10 November 1997
    0 references
    For a smooth projective variety \(X\) over the field \(\mathbb{C}\) of complex numbers, the \(n\)-th cohomology group \(H^n(X,\mathbb{Q})\) carries a Hodge structure. A rational cohomology class \(c\in H^{2r}(X,\mathbb{Q})\) is called a Hodge class if \(c\in H^{2r}(X,\mathbb{Q})\cap H^{r,r}\). A Hodge class \(c\) is called exceptional, if it is not expressed as a linear combination with rational coefficients of cup products of divisor classes. In the present paper the author shows that for a simple abelian fourfold \(X\) over \(\mathbb{C}\), \(X\) supports exceptional Hodge classes if and only if \(\text{End}^0(X)\) contains an imaginary quadratic field \(k\) which is stable under all Rosati involutions and \(\text{Lie}(X)\) becomes a free \(k\otimes\mathbb{C}\) module. Here a subalgebra \(B\) of \(\text{End}^0(X)\) is called stable under all Rosati involutions if \(\iota_\lambda(B)=B\) for every polarization \(\lambda\) with associated Rosati involution \(\iota_\lambda\). The authors also show that the if part is true for all simple abelian varieties of dimension \(\geq 4\). For an abelian fourfold \(X\) defined over a number field \(K\), the authors also consider the Tate class \(c\in H_{\text{ét}}^{2p} (X_{\overline{K}}, \mathbb{Q}_\ell)\). Here \(c\in H_{\text{ét}}^{2p} (X_{\overline{K}}, \mathbb{Q}_\ell)\) is called a Tate class if for any \(\sigma\in \text{Gal}(\overline{K}/K)\) we have \(\sigma(c)= \chi_\ell (\sigma)^{-p}\cdot c\) for the cyclotomic character \(\chi_\ell: \text{Gal} (\overline{K}/K)\to \mathbb{Q}_\ell^*\). A Tate class is called exceptional, if it is not a linear combination with \(\mathbb{Q}_\ell\) coefficients of cup products of divisor classes. Now the similar result holds for a Tate class. Namely, the authors show that for a simple abelian fourfold \(X\) defined over a number field \(K\), \(X\) supports exceptional Tate classes if and only if \(\text{End}^0 (X_{\overline{K}})\) contains an imaginary quadratic field \(k\) which is stable under all Rosati involutions and \(\text{Lie} (X_{\overline{K}})\) becomes a free \(k\otimes \overline{K}\) module. Moreover, the if part is true for all simple abelian varieties of dimension \(\geq 4\) defined over a number field. The proof is based on the theory of Hodge groups and the algebraic envelop of the image of the representation \(\rho_\ell: \text{Gal} (\overline{K}/K)\to GL(T_\ell(X)\otimes \mathbb{Q}_\ell)\), where \(T_\ell(X)\) is the Tate module of \(X\).
    0 references
    simple abelian fourfold
    0 references
    exceptional Hodge classes
    0 references
    Rosati involutions
    0 references
    Tate class
    0 references
    Hodge groups
    0 references

    Identifiers