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Motive (algebraic geometry)

In algebraic geometry, motives (or sometimes motifs, following French usage) is a theory proposed by Alexander Grothendieck in the 1960s to unify the vast array of similarly behaved cohomology theories such as singular cohomology, de Rham cohomology, etale cohomology, and crystalline cohomology. Philosophically, a "motif" is the "cohomology essence" of a variety.

In the formulation of Grothendieck for smooth projective varieties, a motive is a triple , where is a smooth projective variety, is an idempotent correspondence, and m an integer, however, such a triple contains almost no information outside the context of Grothendieck's category of pure motives, where a morphism from to is given by a correspondence of degree . A more object-focused approach is taken by Pierre Deligne in Le Groupe Fondamental de la Droite Projective Moins Trois Points. In that article, a motive is a "system of realisations" – that is, a tuple

consisting of modules

over the rings

respectively, various comparison isomorphisms

between the obvious base changes of these modules, filtrations , a -action on and a "Frobenius" automorphism of . This data is modeled on the cohomologies of a smooth projective -variety and the structures and compatibilities they admit, and gives an idea about what kind of information is contained in a motive.

Introduction edit

The theory of motives was originally conjectured as an attempt to unify a rapidly multiplying array of cohomology theories, including Betti cohomology, de Rham cohomology, l-adic cohomology, and crystalline cohomology. The general hope is that equations like

  • [projective line] = [line] + [point]
  • [projective plane] = [plane] + [line] + [point]

can be put on increasingly solid mathematical footing with a deep meaning. Of course, the above equations are already known to be true in many senses, such as in the sense of CW-complex where "+" corresponds to attaching cells, and in the sense of various cohomology theories, where "+" corresponds to the direct sum.

From another viewpoint, motives continue the sequence of generalizations from rational functions on varieties to divisors on varieties to Chow groups of varieties. The generalization happens in more than one direction, since motives can be considered with respect to more types of equivalence than rational equivalence. The admissible equivalences are given by the definition of an adequate equivalence relation.

Definition of pure motives edit

The category of pure motives often proceeds in three steps. Below we describe the case of Chow motives  , where k is any field.

First step: category of (degree 0) correspondences, Corr(k) edit

The objects of   are simply smooth projective varieties over k. The morphisms are correspondences. They generalize morphisms of varieties  , which can be associated with their graphs in  , to fixed dimensional Chow cycles on  .

It will be useful to describe correspondences of arbitrary degree, although morphisms in   are correspondences of degree 0. In detail, let X and Y be smooth projective varieties and consider a decomposition of X into connected components:

 

If  , then the correspondences of degree r from X to Y are

 

where   denotes the Chow-cycles of codimension k. Correspondences are often denoted using the "⊢"-notation, e.g.,  . For any   and   their composition is defined by

 

where the dot denotes the product in the Chow ring (i.e., intersection).

Returning to constructing the category   notice that the composition of degree 0 correspondences is degree 0. Hence we define morphisms of   to be degree 0 correspondences.

The following association is a functor (here   denotes the graph of  ):

 

Just like   the category   has direct sums (XY := XY) and tensor products (XY := X × Y). It is a preadditive category. The sum of morphisms is defined by

 

Second step: category of pure effective Chow motives, Choweff(k) edit

The transition to motives is made by taking the pseudo-abelian envelope of  :

 .

In other words, effective Chow motives are pairs of smooth projective varieties X and idempotent correspondences α: XX, and morphisms are of a certain type of correspondence:

 
 

Composition is the above defined composition of correspondences, and the identity morphism of (X, α) is defined to be α : XX.

The association,

 ,

where ΔX := [idX] denotes the diagonal of X × X, is a functor. The motive [X] is often called the motive associated to the variety X.

As intended, Choweff(k) is a pseudo-abelian category. The direct sum of effective motives is given by

 

The tensor product of effective motives is defined by

 

where

 

The tensor product of morphisms may also be defined. Let f1 : (X1, α1) → (Y1, β1) and f2 : (X2, α2) → (Y2, β2) be morphisms of motives. Then let γ1A*(X1 × Y1) and γ2A*(X2 × Y2) be representatives of f1 and f2. Then

 ,

where πi : X1 × X2 × Y1 × Y2Xi × Yi are the projections.

Third step: category of pure Chow motives, Chow(k) edit

To proceed to motives, we adjoin to Choweff(k) a formal inverse (with respect to the tensor product) of a motive called the Lefschetz motive. The effect is that motives become triples instead of pairs. The Lefschetz motive L is

 .

If we define the motive 1, called the trivial Tate motive, by 1 := h(Spec(k)), then the elegant equation

 

holds, since

 

The tensor inverse of the Lefschetz motive is known as the Tate motive, T := L−1. Then we define the category of pure Chow motives by

 .

A motive is then a triple

 

such that morphisms are given by correspondences

 

and the composition of morphisms comes from composition of correspondences.

As intended,   is a rigid pseudo-abelian category.

Other types of motives edit

In order to define an intersection product, cycles must be "movable" so we can intersect them in general position. Choosing a suitable equivalence relation on cycles will guarantee that every pair of cycles has an equivalent pair in general position that we can intersect. The Chow groups are defined using rational equivalence, but other equivalences are possible, and each defines a different sort of motive. Examples of equivalences, from strongest to weakest, are

  • Rational equivalence
  • Algebraic equivalence
  • Smash-nilpotence equivalence (sometimes called Voevodsky equivalence)
  • Homological equivalence (in the sense of Weil cohomology)
  • Numerical equivalence

The literature occasionally calls every type of pure motive a Chow motive, in which case a motive with respect to algebraic equivalence would be called a Chow motive modulo algebraic equivalence.

Mixed motives edit

For a fixed base field k, the category of mixed motives is a conjectural abelian tensor category  , together with a contravariant functor

 

taking values on all varieties (not just smooth projective ones as it was the case with pure motives). This should be such that motivic cohomology defined by

 

coincides with the one predicted by algebraic K-theory, and contains the category of Chow motives in a suitable sense (and other properties). The existence of such a category was conjectured by Alexander Beilinson.

Instead of constructing such a category, it was proposed by Deligne to first construct a category DM having the properties one expects for the derived category

 .

Getting MM back from DM would then be accomplished by a (conjectural) motivic t-structure.

The current state of the theory is that we do have a suitable category DM. Already this category is useful in applications. Vladimir Voevodsky's Fields Medal-winning proof of the Milnor conjecture uses these motives as a key ingredient.

There are different definitions due to Hanamura, Levine and Voevodsky. They are known to be equivalent in most cases and we will give Voevodsky's definition below. The category contains Chow motives as a full subcategory and gives the "right" motivic cohomology. However, Voevodsky also shows that (with integral coefficients) it does not admit a motivic t-structure.

Geometric Mixed Motives edit

Notation edit

Here we will fix a field k of characteristic 0 and let   be our coefficient ring. Set   as the category of quasi-projective varieties over k are separated schemes of finite type. We will also let   be the subcategory of smooth varieties.

Smooth varieties with correspondences edit

Given a smooth variety X and a variety Y call an integral closed subscheme   which is finite over X and surjective over a component of Y a prime correspondence from X to Y. Then, we can take the set of prime correspondences from X to Y and construct a free A-module  . Its elements are called finite correspondences. Then, we can form an additive category   whose objects are smooth varieties and morphisms are given by smooth correspondences. The only non-trivial part of this "definition" is the fact that we need to describe compositions. These are given by a push-pull formula from the theory of Chow rings.

Examples of correspondences edit

Typical examples of prime correspondences come from the graph   of a morphism of varieties  .

Localizing the homotopy category edit

From here we can form the homotopy category   of bounded complexes of smooth correspondences. Here smooth varieties will be denoted  . If we localize this category with respect to the smallest thick subcategory (meaning it is closed under extensions) containing morphisms

 

and

 

then we can form the triangulated category of effective geometric motives   Note that the first class of morphisms are localizing  -homotopies of varieties while the second will give the category of geometric mixed motives the Mayer–Vietoris sequence.

Also, note that this category has a tensor structure given by the product of varieties, so  .

Inverting the Tate motive edit

Using the triangulated structure we can construct a triangle

 

from the canonical map  . We will set   and call it the Tate motive. Taking the iterative tensor product lets us construct  . If we have an effective geometric motive M we let   denote   Moreover, this behaves functorially and forms a triangulated functor. Finally, we can define the category of geometric mixed motives   as the category of pairs   for M an effective geometric mixed motive and n an integer representing the twist by the Tate motive. The hom-groups are then the colimit

 

Examples of motives edit

Tate motives edit

There are several elementary examples of motives which are readily accessible. One of them being the Tate motives, denoted  ,  , or  , depending on the coefficients used in the construction of the category of Motives. These are fundamental building blocks in the category of motives because they form the "other part" besides Abelian varieties.

Motives of curves edit

The motive of a curve can be explicitly understood with relative ease: their Chow ring is just

 
for any smooth projective curve  , hence Jacobians embed into the category of motives.

Explanation for non-specialists edit

A commonly applied technique in mathematics is to study objects carrying a particular structure by introducing a category whose morphisms preserve this structure. Then one may ask when two given objects are isomorphic, and ask for a "particularly nice" representative in each isomorphism class. The classification of algebraic varieties, i.e. application of this idea in the case of algebraic varieties, is very difficult due to the highly non-linear structure of the objects. The relaxed question of studying varieties up to birational isomorphism has led to the field of birational geometry. Another way to handle the question is to attach to a given variety X an object of more linear nature, i.e. an object amenable to the techniques of linear algebra, for example a vector space. This "linearization" goes usually under the name of cohomology.

There are several important cohomology theories, which reflect different structural aspects of varieties. The (partly conjectural) theory of motives is an attempt to find a universal way to linearize algebraic varieties, i.e. motives are supposed to provide a cohomology theory that embodies all these particular cohomologies. For example, the genus of a smooth projective curve C which is an interesting invariant of the curve, is an integer, which can be read off the dimension of the first Betti cohomology group of C. So, the motive of the curve should contain the genus information. Of course, the genus is a rather coarse invariant, so the motive of C is more than just this number.

The search for a universal cohomology edit

Each algebraic variety X has a corresponding motive [X], so the simplest examples of motives are:

  • [point]
  • [projective line] = [point] + [line]
  • [projective plane] = [plane] + [line] + [point]

These 'equations' hold in many situations, namely for de Rham cohomology and Betti cohomology, l-adic cohomology, the number of points over any finite field, and in multiplicative notation for local zeta-functions.

The general idea is that one motive has the same structure in any reasonable cohomology theory with good formal properties; in particular, any Weil cohomology theory will have such properties. There are different Weil cohomology theories, they apply in different situations and have values in different categories, and reflect different structural aspects of the variety in question:

All these cohomology theories share common properties, e.g. existence of Mayer-Vietoris sequences, homotopy invariance   the product of X with the affine line) and others. Moreover, they are linked by comparison isomorphisms, for example Betti cohomology   of a smooth variety X over   with finite coefficients is isomorphic to l-adic cohomology with finite coefficients.

The theory of motives is an attempt to find a universal theory which embodies all these particular cohomologies and their structures and provides a framework for "equations" like

[projective line] = [line]+[point].

In particular, calculating the motive of any variety X directly gives all the information about the several Weil cohomology theories H*Betti(X), H*DR(X) etc.

Beginning with Grothendieck, people have tried to precisely define this theory for many years.

Motivic cohomology edit

Motivic cohomology itself had been invented before the creation of mixed motives by means of algebraic K-theory. The above category provides a neat way to (re)define it by

 

where n and m are integers and   is the m-th tensor power of the Tate object   which in Voevodsky's setting is the complex   shifted by –2, and [n] means the usual shift in the triangulated category.

Conjectures related to motives edit

The standard conjectures were first formulated in terms of the interplay of algebraic cycles and Weil cohomology theories. The category of pure motives provides a categorical framework for these conjectures.

The standard conjectures are commonly considered to be very hard and are open in the general case. Grothendieck, with Bombieri, showed the depth of the motivic approach by producing a conditional (very short and elegant) proof of the Weil conjectures (which are proven by different means by Deligne), assuming the standard conjectures to hold.

For example, the Künneth standard conjecture, which states the existence of algebraic cycles πiX × X inducing the canonical projectors H*(X) → Hi(X) ↣ H*(X) (for any Weil cohomology H) implies that every pure motive M decomposes in graded pieces of weight n: M = ⨁GrnM. The terminology weights comes from a similar decomposition of, say, de-Rham cohomology of smooth projective varieties, see Hodge theory.

Conjecture D, stating the concordance of numerical and homological equivalence, implies the equivalence of pure motives with respect to homological and numerical equivalence. (In particular the former category of motives would not depend on the choice of the Weil cohomology theory). Jannsen (1992) proved the following unconditional result: the category of (pure) motives over a field is abelian and semisimple if and only if the chosen equivalence relation is numerical equivalence.

The Hodge conjecture, may be neatly reformulated using motives: it holds iff the Hodge realization mapping any pure motive with rational coefficients (over a subfield   of  ) to its Hodge structure is a full functor   (rational Hodge structures). Here pure motive means pure motive with respect to homological equivalence.

Similarly, the Tate conjecture is equivalent to: the so-called Tate realization, i.e. ℓ-adic cohomology, is a full functor   (pure motives up to homological equivalence, continuous representations of the absolute Galois group of the base field k), which takes values in semi-simple representations. (The latter part is automatic in the case of the Hodge analogue).

Tannakian formalism and motivic Galois group edit

To motivate the (conjectural) motivic Galois group, fix a field k and consider the functor

finite separable extensions K of k → non-empty finite sets with a (continuous) transitive action of the absolute Galois group of k

which maps K to the (finite) set of embeddings of K into an algebraic closure of k. In Galois theory this functor is shown to be an equivalence of categories. Notice that fields are 0-dimensional. Motives of this kind are called Artin motives. By  -linearizing the above objects, another way of expressing the above is to say that Artin motives are equivalent to finite  -vector spaces together with an action of the Galois group.

The objective of the motivic Galois group is to extend the above equivalence to higher-dimensional varieties. In order to do this, the technical machinery of Tannakian category theory (going back to Tannaka–Krein duality, but a purely algebraic theory) is used. Its purpose is to shed light on both the Hodge conjecture and the Tate conjecture, the outstanding questions in algebraic cycle theory. Fix a Weil cohomology theory H. It gives a functor from Mnum (pure motives using numerical equivalence) to finite-dimensional  -vector spaces. It can be shown that the former category is a Tannakian category. Assuming the equivalence of homological and numerical equivalence, i.e. the above standard conjecture D, the functor H is an exact faithful tensor-functor. Applying the Tannakian formalism, one concludes that Mnum is equivalent to the category of representations of an algebraic group G, known as the motivic Galois group.

The motivic Galois group is to the theory of motives what the Mumford–Tate group is to Hodge theory. Again speaking in rough terms, the Hodge and Tate conjectures are types of invariant theory (the spaces that are morally the algebraic cycles are picked out by invariance under a group, if one sets up the correct definitions). The motivic Galois group has the surrounding representation theory. (What it is not, is a Galois group; however in terms of the Tate conjecture and Galois representations on étale cohomology, it predicts the image of the Galois group, or, more accurately, its Lie algebra.)

See also edit

References edit

Survey Articles edit

  • Beilinson, Alexander; Vologodsky, Vadim (2007), A DG guide to Voevodsky's motives, p. 4004, arXiv:math/0604004, Bibcode:2006math......4004B (technical introduction with comparatively short proofs)
  • Motives over Finite Fields - J.S. Milne
  • Mazur, Barry (2004), "What is ... a motive?" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 51 (10): 1214–1216, ISSN 0002-9920, MR 2104916 (motives-for-dummies text).
  • Serre, Jean-Pierre (1991), (PDF), Astérisque (in French) (198): 11, 333–349 (1992), ISSN 0303-1179, MR 1144336, archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-01-10 (high-level introduction to motives in French).
  • Tabauda, Goncalo (2011), "A guided tour through the garden of noncommutative motives", Journal of K-theory, arXiv:1108.3787

Books edit

  • André, Yves (2004), Une introduction aux motifs (motifs purs, motifs mixtes, périodes), Panoramas et Synthèses, vol. 17, Paris: Société Mathématique de France, ISBN 978-2-85629-164-1, MR 2115000
  • Jannsen, Uwe; Kleiman, Steven; Serre, Jean-Pierre, eds. (1994), Motives, Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics, vol. 55, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-1636-3, MR 1265518
    • L. Breen: Tannakian categories.
    • S. Kleiman: The standard conjectures.
    • A. Scholl: Classical motives. (detailed exposition of Chow motives)
  • Huber, Annette; Müller-Stach, Stefan (2017-03-20), Periods and Nori Motives, Springer, ISBN 978-3-319-50925-9
  • Mazza, Carlo; Voevodsky, Vladimir; Weibel, Charles (2006), Lecture notes on motivic cohomology, Clay Mathematics Monographs, vol. 2, Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-3847-1, MR 2242284
  • Levine, Marc (1998). Mixed Motives. Mathematical surveys and monographs, 57. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-0785-9.
  • Friedlander, Eric M.; Grayson, Daniel R. (2005). Handbook of K-Theory. Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-23019-9.

Reference Literature edit

  • Jannsen, Uwe (1992), "Motives, numerical equivalence and semi-simplicity" (PDF), Inventiones Math., 107: 447–452, Bibcode:1992InMat.107..447J, doi:10.1007/BF01231898, S2CID 120799359
  • Kleiman, Steven L. (1972), "Motives", in Oort, F. (ed.), Algebraic geometry, Oslo 1970 (Proc. Fifth Nordic Summer-School in Math., Oslo, 1970), Groningen: Wolters-Noordhoff, pp. 53–82 (adequate equivalence relations on cycles).
  • Milne, James S. Motives — Grothendieck’s Dream
  • Voevodsky, Vladimir; Suslin, Andrei; Friedlander, Eric M. (2000), Cycles, transfers, and motivic homology theories, Annals of Mathematics Studies, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-04814-7 (Voevodsky's definition of mixed motives. Highly technical).
  • Huber, Annette (2000). (PDF). Journal of Algebraic Geometry. 9: 755–799. S2CID 17160833. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-09-26.

Future directions edit

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to Motive (algebraic geometry) at Wikiquote

motive, algebraic, geometry, other, uses, motive, disambiguation, algebraic, geometry, motives, sometimes, motifs, following, french, usage, theory, proposed, alexander, grothendieck, 1960s, unify, vast, array, similarly, behaved, cohomology, theories, such, s. For other uses see Motive disambiguation In algebraic geometry motives or sometimes motifs following French usage is a theory proposed by Alexander Grothendieck in the 1960s to unify the vast array of similarly behaved cohomology theories such as singular cohomology de Rham cohomology etale cohomology and crystalline cohomology Philosophically a motif is the cohomology essence of a variety In the formulation of Grothendieck for smooth projective varieties a motive is a triple X p m displaystyle X p m where X displaystyle X is a smooth projective variety p X X displaystyle p X vdash X is an idempotent correspondence and m an integer however such a triple contains almost no information outside the context of Grothendieck s category of pure motives where a morphism from X p m displaystyle X p m to Y q n displaystyle Y q n is given by a correspondence of degree n m displaystyle n m A more object focused approach is taken by Pierre Deligne in Le Groupe Fondamental de la Droite Projective Moins Trois Points In that article a motive is a system of realisations that is a tuple MB MDR MAf Mcris p compDR B compAf B compcris p DR W F F ϕ ϕp displaystyle left M B M mathrm DR M mathbb A f M operatorname cris p operatorname comp mathrm DR B operatorname comp mathbb A f B operatorname comp operatorname cris p mathrm DR W F infty F phi phi p right consisting of modules MB MDR MAf Mcris p displaystyle M B M mathrm DR M mathbb A f M operatorname cris p over the rings Q Q Af Qp displaystyle mathbb Q mathbb Q mathbb A f mathbb Q p respectively various comparison isomorphisms compDR B compAf B compcris p DR displaystyle operatorname comp mathrm DR B operatorname comp mathbb A f B operatorname comp operatorname cris p mathrm DR between the obvious base changes of these modules filtrations W F displaystyle W F a Gal Q Q displaystyle operatorname Gal overline mathbb Q mathbb Q action ϕ displaystyle phi on MAf displaystyle M mathbb A f and a Frobenius automorphism ϕp displaystyle phi p of Mcris p displaystyle M operatorname cris p This data is modeled on the cohomologies of a smooth projective Q displaystyle mathbb Q variety and the structures and compatibilities they admit and gives an idea about what kind of information is contained in a motive Contents 1 Introduction 2 Definition of pure motives 2 1 First step category of degree 0 correspondences Corr k 2 2 Second step category of pure effective Chow motives Choweff k 2 3 Third step category of pure Chow motives Chow k 2 4 Other types of motives 3 Mixed motives 3 1 Geometric Mixed Motives 3 1 1 Notation 3 1 2 Smooth varieties with correspondences 3 1 2 1 Examples of correspondences 3 1 3 Localizing the homotopy category 3 1 4 Inverting the Tate motive 4 Examples of motives 4 1 Tate motives 4 2 Motives of curves 5 Explanation for non specialists 6 The search for a universal cohomology 6 1 Motivic cohomology 7 Conjectures related to motives 8 Tannakian formalism and motivic Galois group 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Survey Articles 10 2 Books 10 3 Reference Literature 10 4 Future directions 11 External linksIntroduction editThe theory of motives was originally conjectured as an attempt to unify a rapidly multiplying array of cohomology theories including Betti cohomology de Rham cohomology l adic cohomology and crystalline cohomology The general hope is that equations like projective line line point projective plane plane line point can be put on increasingly solid mathematical footing with a deep meaning Of course the above equations are already known to be true in many senses such as in the sense of CW complex where corresponds to attaching cells and in the sense of various cohomology theories where corresponds to the direct sum From another viewpoint motives continue the sequence of generalizations from rational functions on varieties to divisors on varieties to Chow groups of varieties The generalization happens in more than one direction since motives can be considered with respect to more types of equivalence than rational equivalence The admissible equivalences are given by the definition of an adequate equivalence relation Definition of pure motives editThe category of pure motives often proceeds in three steps Below we describe the case of Chow motives Chow k displaystyle operatorname Chow k nbsp where k is any field First step category of degree 0 correspondences Corr k edit The objects of Corr k displaystyle operatorname Corr k nbsp are simply smooth projective varieties over k The morphisms are correspondences They generalize morphisms of varieties X Y displaystyle X to Y nbsp which can be associated with their graphs in X Y displaystyle X times Y nbsp to fixed dimensional Chow cycles on X Y displaystyle X times Y nbsp It will be useful to describe correspondences of arbitrary degree although morphisms in Corr k displaystyle operatorname Corr k nbsp are correspondences of degree 0 In detail let X and Y be smooth projective varieties and consider a decomposition of X into connected components X iXi di dim Xi displaystyle X coprod i X i qquad d i dim X i nbsp If r Z displaystyle r in mathbb Z nbsp then the correspondences of degree r from X to Y are Corrr k X Y iAdi r Xi Y displaystyle operatorname Corr r k X Y bigoplus i A d i r X i times Y nbsp where Ak X displaystyle A k X nbsp denotes the Chow cycles of codimension k Correspondences are often denoted using the notation e g a X Y displaystyle alpha X vdash Y nbsp For any a Corrr X Y displaystyle alpha in operatorname Corr r X Y nbsp and b Corrs Y Z displaystyle beta in operatorname Corr s Y Z nbsp their composition is defined by b a pXZ pXY a pYZ b Corrr s X Z displaystyle beta circ alpha pi XZ left pi XY alpha cdot pi YZ beta right in operatorname Corr r s X Z nbsp where the dot denotes the product in the Chow ring i e intersection Returning to constructing the category Corr k displaystyle operatorname Corr k nbsp notice that the composition of degree 0 correspondences is degree 0 Hence we define morphisms of Corr k displaystyle operatorname Corr k nbsp to be degree 0 correspondences The following association is a functor here Gf X Y displaystyle Gamma f subseteq X times Y nbsp denotes the graph of f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp F SmProj k Corr k X Xf Gf displaystyle F begin cases operatorname SmProj k longrightarrow operatorname Corr k X longmapsto X f longmapsto Gamma f end cases nbsp Just like SmProj k displaystyle operatorname SmProj k nbsp the category Corr k displaystyle operatorname Corr k nbsp has direct sums X Y X Y and tensor products X Y X Y It is a preadditive category The sum of morphisms is defined by a b a b A X X A Y Y A X Y X Y displaystyle alpha beta alpha beta in A X times X oplus A Y times Y hookrightarrow A left left X coprod Y right times left X coprod Y right right nbsp Second step category of pure effective Chow motives Choweff k edit The transition to motives is made by taking the pseudo abelian envelope of Corr k displaystyle operatorname Corr k nbsp Choweff k Split Corr k displaystyle operatorname Chow operatorname eff k Split operatorname Corr k nbsp In other words effective Chow motives are pairs of smooth projective varieties X and idempotent correspondences a X X and morphisms are of a certain type of correspondence Ob Choweff k X a a X X Corr k such that a a a displaystyle operatorname Ob left operatorname Chow operatorname eff k right X alpha mid alpha X vdash X in operatorname Corr k mbox such that alpha circ alpha alpha nbsp Mor X a Y b f X Y f a f b f displaystyle operatorname Mor X alpha Y beta f X vdash Y f circ alpha f beta circ f nbsp Composition is the above defined composition of correspondences and the identity morphism of X a is defined to be a X X The association h SmProj k Choweff k X X X DX f f Gf X Y displaystyle h begin cases operatorname SmProj k amp longrightarrow operatorname Chow eff k X amp longmapsto X X Delta X f amp longmapsto f Gamma f subset X times Y end cases nbsp where DX idX denotes the diagonal of X X is a functor The motive X is often called the motive associated to the variety X As intended Choweff k is a pseudo abelian category The direct sum of effective motives is given by X a Y b X Y a b displaystyle X alpha oplus Y beta left left X coprod Y right alpha beta right nbsp The tensor product of effective motives is defined by X a Y b X Y pX a pY b displaystyle X alpha otimes Y beta X times Y pi X alpha cdot pi Y beta nbsp where pX X Y X Y X X andpY X Y X Y Y Y displaystyle pi X X times Y times X times Y to X times X quad text and quad pi Y X times Y times X times Y to Y times Y nbsp The tensor product of morphisms may also be defined Let f1 X1 a1 Y1 b1 and f2 X2 a2 Y2 b2 be morphisms of motives Then let g1 A X1 Y1 and g2 A X2 Y2 be representatives of f1 and f2 Then f1 f2 X1 a1 X2 a2 Y1 b1 Y2 b2 f1 f2 p1 g1 p2 g2 displaystyle f 1 otimes f 2 X 1 alpha 1 otimes X 2 alpha 2 vdash Y 1 beta 1 otimes Y 2 beta 2 qquad f 1 otimes f 2 pi 1 gamma 1 cdot pi 2 gamma 2 nbsp where pi X1 X2 Y1 Y2 Xi Yi are the projections Third step category of pure Chow motives Chow k edit To proceed to motives we adjoin to Choweff k a formal inverse with respect to the tensor product of a motive called the Lefschetz motive The effect is that motives become triples instead of pairs The Lefschetz motive L is L P1 l l pt P1 A1 P1 P1 displaystyle L mathbb P 1 lambda qquad lambda pt times mathbb P 1 in A 1 mathbb P 1 times mathbb P 1 nbsp If we define the motive 1 called the trivial Tate motive by 1 h Spec k then the elegant equation P1 1 L displaystyle mathbb P 1 mathbf 1 oplus L nbsp holds since 1 P1 P1 pt displaystyle mathbf 1 cong left mathbb P 1 mathbb P 1 times operatorname pt right nbsp The tensor inverse of the Lefschetz motive is known as the Tate motive T L 1 Then we define the category of pure Chow motives by Chow k Choweff k T displaystyle operatorname Chow k operatorname Chow operatorname eff k T nbsp A motive is then a triple X SmProj k p X X n Z displaystyle X in operatorname SmProj k p X vdash X n in mathbb Z nbsp such that morphisms are given by correspondences f X p m Y q n f Corrn m X Y such that f p f q f displaystyle f X p m to Y q n quad f in operatorname Corr n m X Y mbox such that f circ p f q circ f nbsp and the composition of morphisms comes from composition of correspondences As intended Chow k displaystyle operatorname Chow k nbsp is a rigid pseudo abelian category Other types of motives edit In order to define an intersection product cycles must be movable so we can intersect them in general position Choosing a suitable equivalence relation on cycles will guarantee that every pair of cycles has an equivalent pair in general position that we can intersect The Chow groups are defined using rational equivalence but other equivalences are possible and each defines a different sort of motive Examples of equivalences from strongest to weakest are Rational equivalence Algebraic equivalence Smash nilpotence equivalence sometimes called Voevodsky equivalence Homological equivalence in the sense of Weil cohomology Numerical equivalenceThe literature occasionally calls every type of pure motive a Chow motive in which case a motive with respect to algebraic equivalence would be called a Chow motive modulo algebraic equivalence Mixed motives editFor a fixed base field k the category of mixed motives is a conjectural abelian tensor category MM k displaystyle MM k nbsp together with a contravariant functor Var k MM k displaystyle operatorname Var k to MM k nbsp taking values on all varieties not just smooth projective ones as it was the case with pure motives This should be such that motivic cohomology defined by ExtMM 1 displaystyle operatorname Ext MM 1 nbsp coincides with the one predicted by algebraic K theory and contains the category of Chow motives in a suitable sense and other properties The existence of such a category was conjectured by Alexander Beilinson Instead of constructing such a category it was proposed by Deligne to first construct a category DM having the properties one expects for the derived category Db MM k displaystyle D b MM k nbsp Getting MM back from DM would then be accomplished by a conjectural motivic t structure The current state of the theory is that we do have a suitable category DM Already this category is useful in applications Vladimir Voevodsky s Fields Medal winning proof of the Milnor conjecture uses these motives as a key ingredient There are different definitions due to Hanamura Levine and Voevodsky They are known to be equivalent in most cases and we will give Voevodsky s definition below The category contains Chow motives as a full subcategory and gives the right motivic cohomology However Voevodsky also shows that with integral coefficients it does not admit a motivic t structure Geometric Mixed Motives edit Notation edit Here we will fix a field k of characteristic 0 and let A Q Z displaystyle A mathbb Q mathbb Z nbsp be our coefficient ring Set Var k displaystyle mathcal Var k nbsp as the category of quasi projective varieties over k are separated schemes of finite type We will also let Sm k displaystyle mathcal Sm k nbsp be the subcategory of smooth varieties Smooth varieties with correspondences edit Given a smooth variety X and a variety Y call an integral closed subscheme W X Y displaystyle W subset X times Y nbsp which is finite over X and surjective over a component of Y a prime correspondence from X to Y Then we can take the set of prime correspondences from X to Y and construct a free A module CA X Y displaystyle C A X Y nbsp Its elements are called finite correspondences Then we can form an additive category SmCor displaystyle mathcal SmCor nbsp whose objects are smooth varieties and morphisms are given by smooth correspondences The only non trivial part of this definition is the fact that we need to describe compositions These are given by a push pull formula from the theory of Chow rings Examples of correspondences edit Typical examples of prime correspondences come from the graph Gf X Y displaystyle Gamma f subset X times Y nbsp of a morphism of varieties f X Y displaystyle f X to Y nbsp Localizing the homotopy category edit From here we can form the homotopy category Kb SmCor displaystyle K b mathcal SmCor nbsp of bounded complexes of smooth correspondences Here smooth varieties will be denoted X displaystyle X nbsp If we localize this category with respect to the smallest thick subcategory meaning it is closed under extensions containing morphisms X A1 X displaystyle X times mathbb A 1 to X nbsp and U V jU jV U V jU jV X displaystyle U cap V xrightarrow j U j V U oplus V xrightarrow j U j V X nbsp then we can form the triangulated category of effective geometric motives DMgmeff k A displaystyle mathcal DM text gm text eff k A nbsp Note that the first class of morphisms are localizing A1 displaystyle mathbb A 1 nbsp homotopies of varieties while the second will give the category of geometric mixed motives the Mayer Vietoris sequence Also note that this category has a tensor structure given by the product of varieties so X Y X Y displaystyle X otimes Y X times Y nbsp Inverting the Tate motive edit Using the triangulated structure we can construct a triangle L P1 Spec k 1 displaystyle mathbb L to mathbb P 1 to operatorname Spec k xrightarrow 1 nbsp from the canonical map P1 Spec k displaystyle mathbb P 1 to operatorname Spec k nbsp We will set A 1 L 2 displaystyle A 1 mathbb L 2 nbsp and call it the Tate motive Taking the iterative tensor product lets us construct A k displaystyle A k nbsp If we have an effective geometric motive M we let M k displaystyle M k nbsp denote M A k displaystyle M otimes A k nbsp Moreover this behaves functorially and forms a triangulated functor Finally we can define the category of geometric mixed motives DMgm displaystyle mathcal DM gm nbsp as the category of pairs M n displaystyle M n nbsp for M an effective geometric mixed motive and n an integer representing the twist by the Tate motive The hom groups are then the colimit HomDM A n B m limk n mHomDMgmeff A k n B k m displaystyle operatorname Hom mathcal DM A n B m lim k geq n m operatorname Hom mathcal DM gm operatorname eff A k n B k m nbsp Examples of motives editTate motives edit There are several elementary examples of motives which are readily accessible One of them being the Tate motives denoted Q n displaystyle mathbb Q n nbsp Z n displaystyle mathbb Z n nbsp or A n displaystyle A n nbsp depending on the coefficients used in the construction of the category of Motives These are fundamental building blocks in the category of motives because they form the other part besides Abelian varieties Motives of curves edit The motive of a curve can be explicitly understood with relative ease their Chow ring is justZ Pic C displaystyle mathbb Z oplus text Pic C nbsp for any smooth projective curve C displaystyle C nbsp hence Jacobians embed into the category of motives Explanation for non specialists editA commonly applied technique in mathematics is to study objects carrying a particular structure by introducing a category whose morphisms preserve this structure Then one may ask when two given objects are isomorphic and ask for a particularly nice representative in each isomorphism class The classification of algebraic varieties i e application of this idea in the case of algebraic varieties is very difficult due to the highly non linear structure of the objects The relaxed question of studying varieties up to birational isomorphism has led to the field of birational geometry Another way to handle the question is to attach to a given variety X an object of more linear nature i e an object amenable to the techniques of linear algebra for example a vector space This linearization goes usually under the name of cohomology There are several important cohomology theories which reflect different structural aspects of varieties The partly conjectural theory of motives is an attempt to find a universal way to linearize algebraic varieties i e motives are supposed to provide a cohomology theory that embodies all these particular cohomologies For example the genus of a smooth projective curve C which is an interesting invariant of the curve is an integer which can be read off the dimension of the first Betti cohomology group of C So the motive of the curve should contain the genus information Of course the genus is a rather coarse invariant so the motive of C is more than just this number The search for a universal cohomology editEach algebraic variety X has a corresponding motive X so the simplest examples of motives are point projective line point line projective plane plane line point These equations hold in many situations namely for de Rham cohomology and Betti cohomology l adic cohomology the number of points over any finite field and in multiplicative notation for local zeta functions The general idea is that one motive has the same structure in any reasonable cohomology theory with good formal properties in particular any Weil cohomology theory will have such properties There are different Weil cohomology theories they apply in different situations and have values in different categories and reflect different structural aspects of the variety in question Betti cohomology is defined for varieties over subfields of the complex numbers it has the advantage of being defined over the integers and is a topological invariant de Rham cohomology for varieties over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp comes with a mixed Hodge structure it is a differential geometric invariant l adic cohomology over any field of characteristic l has a canonical Galois group action i e has values in representations of the absolute Galois group crystalline cohomologyAll these cohomology theories share common properties e g existence of Mayer Vietoris sequences homotopy invariance H X H X A1 displaystyle H X cong H X times mathbb A 1 nbsp the product of X with the affine line and others Moreover they are linked by comparison isomorphisms for example Betti cohomology HBetti X Z n displaystyle H text Betti X mathbb Z n nbsp of a smooth variety X over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp with finite coefficients is isomorphic to l adic cohomology with finite coefficients The theory of motives is an attempt to find a universal theory which embodies all these particular cohomologies and their structures and provides a framework for equations like projective line line point In particular calculating the motive of any variety X directly gives all the information about the several Weil cohomology theories H Betti X H DR X etc Beginning with Grothendieck people have tried to precisely define this theory for many years Motivic cohomology edit Motivic cohomology itself had been invented before the creation of mixed motives by means of algebraic K theory The above category provides a neat way to re define it by Hn X m Hn X Z m HomDM X Z m n displaystyle H n X m H n X mathbb Z m operatorname Hom DM X mathbb Z m n nbsp where n and m are integers and Z m displaystyle mathbb Z m nbsp is the m th tensor power of the Tate object Z 1 displaystyle mathbb Z 1 nbsp which in Voevodsky s setting is the complex P1 pt displaystyle mathbb P 1 to operatorname pt nbsp shifted by 2 and n means the usual shift in the triangulated category Conjectures related to motives editThe standard conjectures were first formulated in terms of the interplay of algebraic cycles and Weil cohomology theories The category of pure motives provides a categorical framework for these conjectures The standard conjectures are commonly considered to be very hard and are open in the general case Grothendieck with Bombieri showed the depth of the motivic approach by producing a conditional very short and elegant proof of the Weil conjectures which are proven by different means by Deligne assuming the standard conjectures to hold For example the Kunneth standard conjecture which states the existence of algebraic cycles pi X X inducing the canonical projectors H X Hi X H X for any Weil cohomology H implies that every pure motive M decomposes in graded pieces of weight n M GrnM The terminology weights comes from a similar decomposition of say de Rham cohomology of smooth projective varieties see Hodge theory Conjecture D stating the concordance of numerical and homological equivalence implies the equivalence of pure motives with respect to homological and numerical equivalence In particular the former category of motives would not depend on the choice of the Weil cohomology theory Jannsen 1992 proved the following unconditional result the category of pure motives over a field is abelian and semisimple if and only if the chosen equivalence relation is numerical equivalence The Hodge conjecture may be neatly reformulated using motives it holds iff the Hodge realization mapping any pure motive with rational coefficients over a subfield k displaystyle k nbsp of C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp to its Hodge structure is a full functor H M k Q HSQ displaystyle H M k mathbb Q to HS mathbb Q nbsp rational Hodge structures Here pure motive means pure motive with respect to homological equivalence Similarly the Tate conjecture is equivalent to the so called Tate realization i e ℓ adic cohomology is a full functor H M k Qℓ Repℓ Gal k displaystyle H M k mathbb Q ell to operatorname Rep ell operatorname Gal k nbsp pure motives up to homological equivalence continuous representations of the absolute Galois group of the base field k which takes values in semi simple representations The latter part is automatic in the case of the Hodge analogue Tannakian formalism and motivic Galois group editTo motivate the conjectural motivic Galois group fix a field k and consider the functor finite separable extensions K of k non empty finite sets with a continuous transitive action of the absolute Galois group of kwhich maps K to the finite set of embeddings of K into an algebraic closure of k In Galois theory this functor is shown to be an equivalence of categories Notice that fields are 0 dimensional Motives of this kind are called Artin motives By Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp linearizing the above objects another way of expressing the above is to say that Artin motives are equivalent to finite Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp vector spaces together with an action of the Galois group The objective of the motivic Galois group is to extend the above equivalence to higher dimensional varieties In order to do this the technical machinery of Tannakian category theory going back to Tannaka Krein duality but a purely algebraic theory is used Its purpose is to shed light on both the Hodge conjecture and the Tate conjecture the outstanding questions in algebraic cycle theory Fix a Weil cohomology theory H It gives a functor from Mnum pure motives using numerical equivalence to finite dimensional Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp vector spaces It can be shown that the former category is a Tannakian category Assuming the equivalence of homological and numerical equivalence i e the above standard conjecture D the functor H is an exact faithful tensor functor Applying the Tannakian formalism one concludes that Mnum is equivalent to the category of representations of an algebraic group G known as the motivic Galois group The motivic Galois group is to the theory of motives what the Mumford Tate group is to Hodge theory Again speaking in rough terms the Hodge and Tate conjectures are types of invariant theory the spaces that are morally the algebraic cycles are picked out by invariance under a group if one sets up the correct definitions The motivic Galois group has the surrounding representation theory What it is not is a Galois group however in terms of the Tate conjecture and Galois representations on etale cohomology it predicts the image of the Galois group or more accurately its Lie algebra See also editRing of periods Motivic cohomology Presheaf with transfers Mixed Hodge module L functions of motivesReferences editSurvey Articles edit Beilinson Alexander Vologodsky Vadim 2007 A DG guide to Voevodsky s motives p 4004 arXiv math 0604004 Bibcode 2006math 4004B technical introduction with comparatively short proofs Motives over Finite Fields J S Milne Mazur Barry 2004 What is a motive PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 51 10 1214 1216 ISSN 0002 9920 MR 2104916 motives for dummies text Serre Jean Pierre 1991 Motifs PDF Asterisque in French 198 11 333 349 1992 ISSN 0303 1179 MR 1144336 archived from the original PDF on 2022 01 10 high level introduction to motives in French Tabauda Goncalo 2011 A guided tour through the garden of noncommutative motives Journal of K theory arXiv 1108 3787Books edit Andre Yves 2004 Une introduction aux motifs motifs purs motifs mixtes periodes Panoramas et Syntheses vol 17 Paris Societe Mathematique de France ISBN 978 2 85629 164 1 MR 2115000 Jannsen Uwe Kleiman Steven Serre Jean Pierre eds 1994 Motives Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics vol 55 Providence R I American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 1636 3 MR 1265518 L Breen Tannakian categories S Kleiman The standard conjectures A Scholl Classical motives detailed exposition of Chow motives Huber Annette Muller Stach Stefan 2017 03 20 Periods and Nori Motives Springer ISBN 978 3 319 50925 9 Mazza Carlo Voevodsky Vladimir Weibel Charles 2006 Lecture notes on motivic cohomology Clay Mathematics Monographs vol 2 Providence R I American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 3847 1 MR 2242284 Levine Marc 1998 Mixed Motives Mathematical surveys and monographs 57 American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 0785 9 Friedlander Eric M Grayson Daniel R 2005 Handbook of K Theory Springer ISBN 978 3 540 23019 9 Reference Literature edit Jannsen Uwe 1992 Motives numerical equivalence and semi simplicity PDF Inventiones Math 107 447 452 Bibcode 1992InMat 107 447J doi 10 1007 BF01231898 S2CID 120799359 Kleiman Steven L 1972 Motives in Oort F ed Algebraic geometry Oslo 1970 Proc Fifth Nordic Summer School in Math Oslo 1970 Groningen Wolters Noordhoff pp 53 82 adequate equivalence relations on cycles Milne James S Motives Grothendieck s Dream Voevodsky Vladimir Suslin Andrei Friedlander Eric M 2000 Cycles transfers and motivic homology theories Annals of Mathematics Studies Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 04814 7 Voevodsky s definition of mixed motives Highly technical Huber Annette 2000 Realization of Voevodsky s motives PDF Journal of Algebraic Geometry 9 755 799 S2CID 17160833 Archived from the original PDF on 2017 09 26 Future directions edit Musings on Q 1 4 displaystyle mathbb Q 1 4 nbsp Arithmetic spin structures on elliptic curves What are Fractional Motives External links edit nbsp Quotations related to Motive algebraic geometry at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Motive algebraic geometry amp oldid 1206126100, wikipedia, wiki, 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