On the spectral side of Arthur's trace formula -- absolute convergence (Q640783): Difference between revisions
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English | On the spectral side of Arthur's trace formula -- absolute convergence |
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On the spectral side of Arthur's trace formula -- absolute convergence (English)
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20 October 2011
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Introduced by Selberg for hyperbolic surfaces, the trace formula has been systematically studied by \textit{J. Arthur} [``An introduction to the trace formula'', Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. Clay Math. Proc. 4, 1--263 (2005; Zbl 1152.11021)] for adelic quotients \(G(F)\backslash G(\mathbb A)\) for any reductive group \(G\) defined on a number field \(F\). The trace formula settles the identity of a sum of geometric terms (weighted orbital integrals) with a sum of spectral terms (weighted traces of representations). The aim of this paper is a better comprehension of some limits of intertwining operators, with specific expressions for these limits as sums of products of first-order derivatives of intertwining operators. This analysis is based on the companion paper by the first two authors [Ann. Math. (2) 174, No. 1, 197--223 (2011; Zbl 1241.52006)], which proves combinatorial identities for some formal series families indexed by the chambers of a fan and with values in a non abelian algebra. Even if the exposition follows strictly Arthur's original expansion, it offers a refined spectral expansion and, as a original corollary, a convergence in trace norm, which is of primary importance for some application of the trace formula, e.g. Weyl's laws or limit multiplicities. It explains also the behaviour of Maass-Selberg relations in some degenerate cases.
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trace formula
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intertwining operators
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spectral expansion
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weighted orbital integrals
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Maass-Selberg relation
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