Modularity of the Rankin-Selberg \(L\)-series, and multiplicity one for \(\mathrm{SL}(2)\) (Q1589983)

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Modularity of the Rankin-Selberg \(L\)-series, and multiplicity one for \(\mathrm{SL}(2)\)
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    Modularity of the Rankin-Selberg \(L\)-series, and multiplicity one for \(\mathrm{SL}(2)\) (English)
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    14 May 2001
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    The main result of the paper is the following theorem. Let \(\pi\) and \(\pi'\) be two isobaric automorphic representations of \(\mathrm{GL}(2)\) over a number field \(F\). Then there exists an automorphic representation \(\Pi\) of \(\mathrm{GL}(4)\) over \(F\) whose \(L\)- and \(\varepsilon\)-factors are \(L(s,\pi_v \times \pi'_v)\) and \(\varepsilon(s,\pi_v \times \pi'_v)\) (the \(L\)-function of \(\Pi\) is the ``convolution'' of the \(L\)-functions of \(\pi\) and \(\pi'\)). The theorem is completed by a criterion for the cuspidality of \(\Pi\). The result is derived from a converse theorem for \(\mathrm{GL}(4)\). In order to define candidates for \(\Pi_v\) at all places, the author uses base change to an infinite family of solvable extensions of \(F\). Then the analytic properties of \(L(s,\Pi\times\eta)\), with \(\eta\) cuspidal on \(\mathrm{GL}(1)\) or \(\mathrm{GL}(2)\), have to be proved, so that the converse theorem can be applied. The most difficult part is the required boundedness in vertical strips of these \(L\)-functions (for \(\eta\) on \(\mathrm{GL}(2)\)). Here the author uses the integral representation of the triple \(L\)-function defined by Piatetski-Shapiro and Rallis. That integral involves an Eisenstein series \(E(f_s)\) on \(\mathrm{GSp}(6)\), which has to be estimated. Arthur's truncation functor is used to do that. Finally one descends to the original base field \(F\). Applications of the theorem are, among others, multiplicity one for cusp forms on \(\mathrm{SL}(2)\) and a proof of the Tate conjecture for 4-fold products of modular curves.
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    isobaric automorphic representations
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    \(L\) factor
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    \(\varepsilon\)-factor
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    cuspidality
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    \(L\)-functions
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    multiplicity one
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    Tate conjecture
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