Inertia elements versus Frobenius elements (Q711576)
From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Inertia elements versus Frobenius elements |
scientific article |
Statements
Inertia elements versus Frobenius elements (English)
0 references
27 October 2010
0 references
For a Galois extension of fields \(\tilde{K}|K\) let \(\mathfrak{Rm}(\tilde{K})\) be the set of the ramification elements in \(\text{Gal}(\tilde{K}|K)\), \(\mathfrak{In}(\tilde{K})\) the set of the inertia elements, \(\mathfrak{In.tm}(\tilde{K})\) the set of the tame inertia elements. The author proves that \(\mathfrak{Rm}(\tilde{K})\), \(\mathfrak{In}(\tilde{K})\), \(\mathfrak{In.tm}(\tilde{K})\) are closed in \(\text{Gal}(\tilde{K}|K)\). If \(K\) is finitely generated, then the set \(\mathfrak{In.tm.div}(\tilde{K})\) of the divisorial inertia elements is dense in \(\mathfrak{In.tm}(\tilde{K})\). If \(K|k\) is a function field, then \(\mathfrak{In}(\tilde{K}|k)\) and \(\mathfrak{In.tm}(\tilde{K}|k)\) are closed subsets of \(\text{Gal}(\tilde{K}|K)\), and \(\mathfrak{In.tm.div}(\tilde{K}|k)\) is dense in \(\mathfrak{In.tm}(\tilde{K}|k)\).
0 references
Galois extension
0 references
ramification elements
0 references
inertia elements
0 references
tame inertia elements
0 references