331 research outputs found
Spectre automorphe des vari\'et\'es hyperboliques et applications topologiques
This book is made of two parts. The first is concerned with the differential
form spectrum of congruence hyperbolic manifolds. We prove Selberg type
theorems on the first eigenvalue of the laplacian on differential forms. The
method of proof is representation theoritic, we hope the different chapters may
as well serve as an introduction to the modern theory of automorphic forms and
its application to spectral questions. The second part of the book is of a more
differential geometric flavor, a new kind of lifting of cohomology classes is
proved.Comment: 237 pages, book (in french
Even Galois Representations and the Fontaine--Mazur conjecture II
We prove, under mild hypotheses, that there are no irreducible
two-dimensional_even_ Galois representations of \Gal(\Qbar/\Q) which are de
Rham with distinct Hodge--Tate weights. This removes the "ordinary" hypothesis
required in previous work of the author. We construct examples of irreducible
two-dimensional residual representations that have no characteristic zero
geometric (= de Rham) deformations.Comment: Updated to take into account suggestions of the referee; the main
theorems remain unchange
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Level-raising and symmetric power functoriality, III
© 2017. The simplest case of the Langlands functoriality principle asserts the existence of the symmetric powers Symnof a cuspidal representation of GL(2) over the adèles of F, where F is a number field. In 1978, Gelbart and Jacquet proved the existence of Sym2. After this, progress was slow, eventually leading, through the work of Kim and Shahidi, to the existence of Sym3and Sym4. In this series of articles we revisit this problem using recent progress in the deformation theory of modular Galois representations. As a consequence, our methods apply only to classical modular forms on a totally real number field; the present article proves the existence, in this "classical" case, of Sym6and Sym8
On the canonical degrees of curves in varieties of general type
A widely believed conjecture predicts that curves of bounded geometric genus
lying on a variety of general type form a bounded family. One may even ask
whether the canonical degree of a curve in a variety of general type is
bounded from above by some expression , where and are
positive constants, with the possible exceptions corresponding to curves lying
in a strict closed subset (depending on and ). A theorem of Miyaoka
proves this for smooth curves in minimal surfaces, with . A conjecture
of Vojta claims in essence that any constant is possible provided one
restricts oneself to curves of bounded gonality.
We show by explicit examples coming from the theory of Shimura varieties that
in general, the constant has to be at least equal to the dimension of the
ambient variety.
We also prove the desired inequality in the case of compact Shimura
varieties.Comment: 10 pages, to appear in Geometric and Functional Analysi
Oddness of residually reducible Galois representations
We show that suitable congruences between polarized automorphic forms over a CM field always produce elements in the Selmer group for exactly the
±-Asai (aka tensor induction) representation that is critical in the sense of Deligne. For this we relate the oddness of the associated polarized Galois representations (in the sense of the Bella ̈ıche-Chenevier sign being +1) to
the parity condition for criticality. Under an assumption similar to Vandiver’s
conjecture this also provides evidence for the Fontaine-Mazur conjecture for
polarized Galois representations of any even dimension
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Convergence of measures on compactifications of locally symmetric spaces
We conjecture that the set of homogeneous probability measures on the maximal Satake compactification of an arithmetic locally symmetric space S=Γ∖G/K is compact. More precisely, given a sequence of homogeneous probability measures on S, we expect that any weak limit is homogeneous with support contained in precisely one of the boundary components (including S itself). We introduce several tools to study this conjecture and we prove it in a number of cases, including when G=SL3(R) and Γ=SL3(Z)
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