Jump to content

Christopher Deninger: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
OAbot (talk | contribs)
m Open access bot: doi added to citation with #oabot.
m Changing short description from "German mathematician" to "German mathematician (born 1958)"
 
(34 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|German mathematician (born 1958)}}
{{Infobox scientist
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Christopher Deninger
| name = Christopher Deninger
| image = Christopher Deninger.jpg
| image = Christopher Deninger.jpg
| image_size = 250px
| image_size = 250px
| caption =
| caption = Deninger at [[Oberwolfach]], 2005
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1958|4|8|df=y}}
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1958|4|8|df=y}}
| birth_place =
| birth_place =
Line 9: Line 10:
| death_place =
| death_place =
| nationality =
| nationality =
| fields = [[Mathematics]]
| fields = Mathematics
| workplaces = [[University of Münster]]
| workplaces = [[University of Münster]]
| alma_mater = [[University of Cologne]]
| alma_mater = [[University of Cologne]]
| doctoral_advisor = [[Curt Meyer]]
| doctoral_advisor = [[Curt Meyer]]
| doctoral_students = [[Annette Huber-Klawitter]], [[Annette Werner]]<ref>{{MathGenealogy |id=23622 }}</ref>
| doctoral_students = [[Annette Huber-Klawitter]]{{br}}[[Annette Werner]]<ref>{{MathGenealogy |id=23622 }}</ref>
| known_for =
| known_for =
| awards =
| awards =
}}
}}
'''Christopher Deninger''' (born 8 April 1958) is a [[Germany|German]] [[mathematician]] at the [[University of Münster]].
'''Christopher Deninger''' (born 8 April 1958) is a German mathematician at the [[University of Münster]]. Deninger's research focuses on [[arithmetic geometry]], including applications to [[L-function|''L''-functions]].


==Career==
Deninger obtained his [[doctorate]] from the [[University of Cologne]] in 1982, under the supervision of [[Curt Meyer]]. In 1992 he shared a [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize]] with [[Michael Rapoport]], [[Peter Schneider (mathematician)|Peter Schneider]] and [[Thomas Zink]]. In 1998 he was a [[List of International Congresses of Mathematicians Plenary and Invited Speakers|plenary speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians]] in 1998 in Berlin.<ref>{{cite book|author=Deninger, Christopher|chapter=Some analogies between number theory and dynamical systems on foliated spaces|title=Doc. Math. (Bielefeld) Extra Vol. ICM Berlin, 1998, vol. I|year=1998|pages=163–186|chapter-url=https://www.elibm.org/ft/10011720000}}</ref> In 2012 he became a fellow of the [[American Mathematical Society]].<ref>[http://www.ams.org/profession/fellows-list List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society], retrieved 2012-11-10.</ref>
Deninger obtained his doctorate from the [[University of Cologne]] in 1982, under the supervision of [[Curt Meyer]]. In 1992 he shared a [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize]] with [[Michael Rapoport]], [[Peter Schneider (mathematician)|Peter Schneider]] and [[Thomas Zink]]. In 1998 he was a [[List of International Congresses of Mathematicians Plenary and Invited Speakers|plenary speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians]] in 1998 in Berlin.<ref>{{cite book|last=Deninger|first=Christopher|chapter=Some analogies between number theory and dynamical systems on foliated spaces|title=Doc. Math. (Bielefeld) Extra Vol. ICM Berlin, 1998, vol. I|year=1998|pages=163–186|chapter-url=https://www.elibm.org/ft/10011720000}}</ref> In 2012 he became a fellow of the [[American Mathematical Society]].<ref>[https://www.ams.org/profession/fellows-list List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society], retrieved 2012-11-10.</ref>

Deninger has worked on a broad range of mathematical topics. While focussing on [[arithmetic geometry]], including his particularly influential work on [[L-function|''L''-functions]], Deninger has also studied analytical questions, often with an eye on analogies between arithmetic and analysis.


==Mathematical work==
==Mathematical work==
Line 29: Line 29:


===Special values of ''L''-functions===
===Special values of ''L''-functions===
Another group of Deninger's papers studies [[L-function|''L''-functions]] and their special values. A classical example of an ''L''-function is the [[Riemann zeta function]] &zeta;(''s''), for which formulas such as
Another group of Deninger's papers studies [[L-function|''L''-functions]] and their special values. A classical example of an ''L''-function is the [[Riemann zeta function]] ζ(''s''), for which formulas such as
:[[Basel problem|&zeta;(2) = &pi;<sup>2</sup> / 6]]
:[[Basel problem|ζ(2) = π<sup>2</sup> / 6]]
are known since Euler. In a landmark paper, {{harvtxt|Beilinson|1984}} had proposed a set of far-reaching conjectures describing the special values of ''L''-functions, i.e., the values of ''L''-functions at integers. In very rough terms, [[Beilinson conjecture|Beilinson's conjectures]] assert that for a smooth projective [[algebraic variety]] ''X'' over '''Q''', [[motivic cohomology]] of ''X'' should be closely related to [[Deligne cohomology]] of ''X''. In addition, the relation between these two cohomology theories should explain, according to Beilinson's conjecture, the pole orders and the values of
are known since Euler. In a landmark paper, {{harvtxt|Beilinson|1984}} had proposed a set of far-reaching conjectures describing the special values of ''L''-functions, i.e., the values of ''L''-functions at integers. In very rough terms, [[Beilinson conjecture|Beilinson's conjectures]] assert that for a smooth projective [[algebraic variety]] ''X'' over '''Q''', [[motivic cohomology]] of ''X'' should be closely related to [[Deligne cohomology]] of ''X''. In addition, the relation between these two cohomology theories should explain, according to Beilinson's conjecture, the pole orders and the values of
:''L''(''h''<sup>''n''</sup>(''X''), ''s'')
:''L''(''h''<sup>''n''</sup>(''X''), ''s'')
[[File:BorromeanRings.svg|thumb|right|Any two of the three [[Borromean rings]] can be pulled apart, yet the three rings are linked. The Massey product of the three cohomology classes given by winding around each circle can be used to capture this phenomenon algebraically.]]
[[File:BorromeanRings.svg|thumb|right|Any two of the three [[Borromean rings]] can be pulled apart, yet the three rings are linked. The Massey product of the three cohomology classes given by winding around each circle can be used to capture this phenomenon algebraically.]]
at integers ''s''. Bloch and Beilinson proved essential parts of this conjecture for ''h''<sup>1</sup>(''X'') in the case where ''X'' is an [[elliptic curve]] with [[complex multiplication]] and ''s''=2. In [[#CITEREF—Wingberg1988|1988]], Deninger & Wingberg gave an exposition of that result. In [[#CITREFDeninger1989|1989]] and [[#CITEREFDeniger1990|1990]], Deninger extended this result to certain elliptic curves considered by Shimura, at all ''s''&ge;2. Deninger & Nart ([[#CITEREF—Nart1995|1995]]) expressed the [[height pairing]], a key ingredient of Beilinson's conjecture, as a natural pairing of [[Ext functor|Ext-groups]] in a certain category of motives. In [[#CITEREF—1995|1995]], Deninger studied [[Massey product]]s in Deligne cohomology and conjectured therefrom a formula for the special value for the ''L''-function of an [[elliptic curve]] at ''s''=3, which was subsequently confirmed by {{harvtxt|Goncharov|1996}}. As of 2018, Beilinson's conjecture is still wide open, and Deninger's contributions remain some of the few cases where Beilinson's conjecture has been successfully attacked (surveys on the topic include [[#CITEREF—Scholl1991|Deninger & Scholl (1991)]], {{harvtxt|Nekovář|1994}}).
at integers ''s''. Bloch and Beilinson proved essential parts of this conjecture for ''h''<sup>1</sup>(''X'') in the case where ''X'' is an [[elliptic curve]] with [[complex multiplication]] and ''s''=2. In [[#CITEREF—Wingberg1988|1988]], Deninger & Wingberg gave an exposition of that result. In [[#CITREFDeninger1989|1989]] and [[#CITEREFDeniger1990|1990]], Deninger extended this result to certain elliptic curves considered by Shimura, at all ''s''≥2. Deninger & Nart ([[#CITEREF—Nart1995|1995]]) expressed the [[height pairing]], a key ingredient of Beilinson's conjecture, as a natural pairing of [[Ext functor|Ext-groups]] in a certain category of motives. In [[#CITEREF—1995|1995]], Deninger studied [[Massey product]]s in Deligne cohomology and conjectured therefrom a formula for the special value for the ''L''-function of an [[elliptic curve]] at ''s''=3, which was subsequently confirmed by {{harvtxt|Goncharov|1996}}. As of 2018, Beilinson's conjecture is still wide open, and Deninger's contributions remain some of the few cases where Beilinson's conjecture has been successfully attacked (surveys on the topic include [[#CITEREF—Scholl1991|Deninger & Scholl (1991)]], {{harvtxt|Nekovář|1994}}).


===''L''-functions via regularized determinants===
===''L''-functions via regularized determinants===
The Riemann &zeta;-function is defined using a [[Euler product|product of Euler factors]]
The Riemann ζ-function is defined using a [[Euler product|product of Euler factors]]
:<math>\zeta_p(s) := \frac 1 {1-p^{-s}}</math>
:<math>\zeta_p(s) := \frac 1 {1-p^{-s}}</math>
for each prime number ''p''. In order to obtain a functional equation for &zeta;(''s''), one needs to multiply them with an additional term involving the [[Gamma function]]:
for each prime number ''p''. In order to obtain a functional equation for ζ(''s''), one needs to multiply them with an additional term involving the [[Gamma function]]:
:<math>\zeta_\infty(s) := 2^{-1/2} \pi^{-s/2} \Gamma(s/2).</math>
:<math>\zeta_\infty(s) := 2^{-1/2} \pi^{-s/2} \Gamma(s/2).</math>
More general ''L''-functions are also defined by Euler products, involving, at each finite place, the determinant of the [[Frobenius endomorphism]] acting on [[l-adic cohomology]] of some [[algebraic variety|variety]] ''X'' / '''Q''', while the Euler factor for the infinite place are, according to [[Jean-Pierre Serre|Serre]], products of Gamma functions depending on the [[Hodge structure]]s attached to ''X'' / '''Q'''. {{harvtxt|Deninger|1991}} expressed these &Gamma;-factors in terms of [[functional determinant|regularized determinant]]s and moved on, in [[#CITEREF—1992|1992]] and in greater generality in [[#CITEREF—1994b|1994]], to unify the Euler factors of ''L''-functions at both finite and infinite places using regularized determinants. For example, for the Euler factors of the Riemann zeta-function this uniform description reads
More general ''L''-functions are also defined by Euler products, involving, at each finite place, the determinant of the [[Frobenius endomorphism]] acting on [[l-adic cohomology]] of some [[algebraic variety|variety]] ''X'' / '''Q''', while the Euler factor for the infinite place are, according to [[Jean-Pierre Serre|Serre]], products of Gamma functions depending on the [[Hodge structure]]s attached to ''X'' / '''Q'''. {{harvtxt|Deninger|1991}} expressed these Γ-factors in terms of [[functional determinant|regularized determinant]]s and moved on, in [[#CITEREF—1992|1992]] and in greater generality in [[#CITEREF—1994b|1994]], to unify the Euler factors of ''L''-functions at both finite and infinite places using regularized determinants. For example, for the Euler factors of the Riemann zeta-function this uniform description reads
:<math>\zeta_p(s) = \det{}_\infty \left (\frac 1{2 \pi}(s - \Theta) | R_p ) \right)^{-1}.</math>
:<math>\zeta_p(s) = \det{}_\infty \left (\frac 1{2 \pi}(s - \Theta) | R_p ) \right)^{-1}.</math>
Here ''p'' is either a prime number or infinity, corresponding to the non-Archimedean Euler factors and the Archimedean Euler factor respectively, and ''R''<sub>''p''</sub> is the space of finite real valued Fourier series on '''R'''/log(''p'')'''Z''' for a prime number ''p'', and ''R''<sub>∞</sub> = '''R'''[exp(&minus;2''y'')]. Finally, &Theta; is the derivative of the '''R'''-action given by shifting such functions.
Here ''p'' is either a prime number or infinity, corresponding to the non-Archimedean Euler factors and the Archimedean Euler factor respectively, and ''R''<sub>''p''</sub> is the space of finite real valued Fourier series on '''R'''/log(''p'')'''Z''' for a prime number ''p'', and ''R''<sub>∞</sub> = '''R'''[exp(&minus;2''y'')]. Finally, Θ is the derivative of the '''R'''-action given by shifting such functions.
[[#CITEREF—1994a|Deninger (1994)]] also exhibited a similar unifying approach for &epsilon;-factors (which express the ratio between completed ''L''-functions at ''s'' and at 1&minus;''s'').
[[#CITEREF—1994a|Deninger (1994)]] also exhibited a similar unifying approach for ε-factors (which express the ratio between completed ''L''-functions at ''s'' and at 1&minus;''s'').


===The arithmetic site===
===The arithmetic site===
These results led Deninger to propose a program concerning the existence of an "arithmetic site" ''Y'' associated to the [[compactification (mathematics)|compactification]] of [[Spectrum of a ring|Spec]] '''Z'''. Among other properties, this site would be equipped with an [[Group action (mathematics)|action]] of '''R''', and each prime number ''p'' would correspond to a closed orbit of the '''R'''-action of length log(''p''). Moreover, analogies between formulas in analytic number theory and dynamics on [[foliation|foliated spaces]] led Deninger to conjecture the existence of a foliation on this site. Moreover, this site is supposed to be endowed with an infinite-dimensional cohomology theory such that the ''L''-function of a motive ''M'' is given by
These results led Deninger to propose a program concerning the existence of an "arithmetic site" ''Y'' associated to the [[compactification (mathematics)|compactification]] of [[Spectrum of a ring|Spec]] '''Z'''. Among other properties, this site would be equipped with an [[Group action (mathematics)|action]] of '''R''', and each prime number ''p'' would correspond to a closed orbit of the '''R'''-action of length log(''p''). Moreover, analogies between formulas in analytic number theory and dynamics on [[foliation|foliated spaces]] led Deninger to conjecture the existence of a foliation on this site. Moreover, this site is supposed to be endowed with an infinite-dimensional cohomology theory such that the ''L''-function of a motive ''M'' is given by
:<math>L(M, s) = \prod_{i=0}^2 \det{}_\infty \left (\frac 1 {2\pi}(s-\Theta)|H^i_c(Y, F(M)) \right ).</math>
:<math>L(M, s) = \prod_{i=0}^2 \det{}_\infty \left (\frac 1 {2\pi}(s-\Theta)|H^i_c(Y, F(M)) \right ).</math>
Here ''M'' is a [[motive (mathematics)|motive]], such as the motives ''h''<sup>''n''</sup>(''X'') occurring in Beilinson's conjecture, and ''F''(''M'') is conceived to be the sheaf on ''Y'' attached to the motive ''M''. The operator &Theta; is the [[Lie group|infinitesimal generator]] of the [[flow (mathematics)|flow]] given by the '''R'''-action. The [[Riemann hypothesis]] would be, according to this program, a consequence of properties parallel to the positivity of the intersection pairing in [[Hodge theory]]. A version of the [[Lefschetz trace formula]] on this site, which would be part of this conjectural setup, has been proven by other means by [[#CITEREF—1993|Deninger (1993)]]. In [[#CITEREF—|2010]], Deninger proved that classical conjectures of Beilinson and Bloch concerning the [[intersection theory]] of [[algebraic cycle]]s would be further consequences of his program.
Here ''M'' is a [[motive (mathematics)|motive]], such as the motives ''h''<sup>''n''</sup>(''X'') occurring in Beilinson's conjecture, and ''F''(''M'') is conceived to be the sheaf on ''Y'' attached to the motive ''M''. The operator Θ is the [[Lie group|infinitesimal generator]] of the [[flow (mathematics)|flow]] given by the '''R'''-action. The [[Riemann hypothesis]] would be, according to this program, a consequence of properties parallel to the positivity of the intersection pairing in [[Hodge theory]]. A version of the [[Lefschetz trace formula]] on this site, which would be part of this conjectural setup, has been proven by other means by [[#CITEREF—1993|Deninger (1993)]]. In [[#CITEREF—|2010]], Deninger proved that classical conjectures of Beilinson and Bloch concerning the [[intersection theory]] of [[algebraic cycle]]s would be further consequences of his program.


This program was surveyed by Deninger in his talks at the [[European Congress of Mathematicians]] in [[#CITEREF—1994c|1992]], at the [[International Congress of Mathematicians]] in [[#CITEREF—1998|1998]], and also by {{harvtxt|Leichtnam|2005}}. In [[#CITEREF—2002|2002]], Deninger constructed a foliated space which corresponds to an [[elliptic curve]] over a [[finite field]], and {{harvtxt|Hesselholt|2016}} showed that the Hasse-Weil zeta-function of a smooth proper variety over '''F'''<sub>''p''</sub> can be expressed using regularized determinants involving [[Hochschild homology|topological Hochschild homology]]. In addition, the analogy between knots and primes has been fruitfully studied in [[arithmetic topology]]. However, as of 2018, the construction of a foliated space corresponding to Spec '''Z''' remains elusive.
This program was surveyed by Deninger in his talks at the [[European Congress of Mathematicians]] in [[#CITEREF—1994c|1992]], at the [[International Congress of Mathematicians]] in [[#CITEREF—1998|1998]], and also by {{harvtxt|Leichtnam|2005}}. In [[#CITEREF—2002|2002]], Deninger constructed a foliated space which corresponds to an [[elliptic curve]] over a [[finite field]], and {{harvtxt|Hesselholt|2016}} showed that the Hasse-Weil zeta-function of a smooth proper variety over '''F'''<sub>''p''</sub> can be expressed using regularized determinants involving [[Hochschild homology|topological Hochschild homology]]. In addition, the analogy between knots and primes has been fruitfully studied in [[arithmetic topology]]. However, as of 2018, the construction of a foliated space corresponding to Spec '''Z''' remains elusive.


===Vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves===
===Vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves===
A series of joint papers with Annette Werner examines [[vector bundle]]s on ''p''-adic curves. A classical result motivating this study is the [[Narasimhan–Seshadri theorem]], a cornerstone of the [[Simpson correspondence]]. It asserts that a vector bundle on a compact [[Riemann surface]] ''X'' is [[stable bundle|stable]] if it arises from a [[unitary representation]] of the [[fundamental group]] &pi;<sub>1</sub>(''X'').
A series of joint papers with Annette Werner examines [[vector bundle]]s on ''p''-adic curves. A classical result motivating this study is the [[Narasimhan–Seshadri theorem]], a cornerstone of the [[Simpson correspondence]]. It asserts that a vector bundle on a compact [[Riemann surface]] ''X'' is [[stable bundle|stable]] if it arises from a [[unitary representation]] of the [[fundamental group]] π<sub>1</sub>(''X'').


In [[#CITEREF—Werner2005|Deninger & Werner (2005)]] established a [[p-adic numbers|''p''-adic]] analogue thereof: for a smooth projective [[algebraic curve]] over '''C'''<sub>''p''</sub>, obtained by base change from <math>X / \overline \mathbf Q_p</math>, they constructed an action of the [[etale fundamental group]] &pi;<sub>1</sub>(X) on the fibers on certain vector bundles, including those of degree 0 and having potentially strongly semistable reduction. In another paper of [[#CITEREF—Werner2005b|2005]], they related the resulting representations of the fundamental group of the curve ''X'' with representations of the [[Tate module]] of the [[Jacobian variety]] of ''X''. In [[#CITEREF—Werner2007|2007]] and [[#CITEREF—Werner2010|2010]] they continued this work by showing that such vector bundles form a [[Tannakian category]] which amounts to identifying this class of vector bundles as a category of representations of a certain group.
In [[#CITEREF—Werner2005|Deninger & Werner (2005)]] established a [[p-adic numbers|''p''-adic]] analogue thereof: for a smooth projective [[algebraic curve]] over '''C'''<sub>''p''</sub>, obtained by base change from <math>X / \overline \mathbf Q_p</math>, they constructed an action of the [[etale fundamental group]] π<sub>1</sub>(X) on the fibers on certain vector bundles, including those of degree 0 and having potentially strongly semistable reduction. In another paper of [[#CITEREF—Werner2005b|2005]], they related the resulting representations of the fundamental group of the curve ''X'' with representations of the [[Tate module]] of the [[Jacobian variety]] of ''X''. In [[#CITEREF—Werner2007|2007]] and [[#CITEREF—Werner2010|2010]] they continued this work by showing that such vector bundles form a [[Tannakian category]] which amounts to identifying this class of vector bundles as a category of representations of a certain group.


===Foliations and the Heisenberg group===
===Foliations and the Heisenberg group===
In several joint papers, Deninger and Wilhelm Singhof studied quotients of the ''n''-dimensional [[Heisenberg group]] ''H'' by the standard [[lattice (discrete subgroup)|lattice]] consisting of integer-valued matrices,
In several joint papers, Deninger and Wilhelm Singhof studied quotients of the ''n''-dimensional [[Heisenberg group]] ''H'' by the standard [[lattice (discrete subgroup)|lattice]] consisting of integer-valued matrices,


: ''X'' = ''H'' / &Gamma;,
: ''X'' = ''H'' / Γ,


from various points of view. In [[#CITEREF—Singhof1984|1984]], they computed the [[e-invariant]] of ''X'' in terms of &zeta;(&minus;''n''), which leads to a construction of elements in the [[stable homotopy groups of spheres]] of arbitrarily large order. In [[#CITEREF—Singhof1988|1988]], they used methods of [[analytic number theory]] to give estimates on the dimension of the [[Lie algebra cohomology|cohomology]] of [[nilpotent Lie algebra]]s.
from various points of view. In [[#CITEREFDeninger1984|1984]], they computed the [[e-invariant]] of ''X'' in terms of ζ(&minus;''n''), which leads to a construction of elements in the [[stable homotopy groups of spheres]] of arbitrarily large order. In [[#CITEREF—Singhof1988|1988]], they used methods of [[analytic number theory]] to give estimates on the dimension of the [[Lie algebra cohomology|cohomology]] of [[nilpotent Lie algebra]]s.


The classical fact from [[Hodge theory]] that any cohomology class on a Kähler manifold admits a unique [[harmonic form|harmonic]] had been generalized by {{harvtxt|Álvarez López|Kordyukov|2001}} to Riemannian [[foliation]]s. [[#CITEREF—Singhof2001|Deninger & Singhof (2001)]] show that foliations on the above space ''X'', which satisfy only slightly weaker conditions, do not admit such Hodge theoretic properties. In another joint paper from [[#CITREFDeningerSinghof2001b|2001]], they established a dynamical Lefschetz trace formula: it relates the trace of an operator on harmonic forms the local traces appearing at the closed orbits (on certain foliated spaces with an '''R'''-action). This result serves as a corroboration of Deninger's program mentioned above in the sense that it verifies a prediction made by this program on the analytic side, i.e., the one concerning dynamics on foliated spaces.
The classical fact from [[Hodge theory]] that any cohomology class on a Kähler manifold admits a unique [[harmonic form|harmonic]] had been generalized by {{harvtxt|Álvarez López|Kordyukov|2001}} to Riemannian [[foliation]]s. [[#CITEREF—Singhof2001|Deninger & Singhof (2001)]] show that foliations on the above space ''X'', which satisfy only slightly weaker conditions, do not admit such Hodge theoretic properties. In another joint paper from [[#CITREFDeningerSinghof2001b|2001]], they established a dynamical Lefschetz trace formula: it relates the trace of an operator on harmonic forms the local traces appearing at the closed orbits (on certain foliated spaces with an '''R'''-action). This result serves as a corroboration of Deninger's program mentioned above in the sense that it verifies a prediction made by this program on the analytic side, i.e., the one concerning dynamics on foliated spaces.
Line 72: Line 72:
:<math>X_f := (\mathbf Z \Gamma / \mathbf Z \Gamma f)\widehat{\ }\ , </math>
:<math>X_f := (\mathbf Z \Gamma / \mathbf Z \Gamma f)\widehat{\ }\ , </math>


where &Gamma; is a discrete group, ''f'' is an element of its [[group ring]] '''Z'''&Gamma;, and the hat denotes the [[Pontryagin dual]]. For &Gamma; = '''Z'''<sup>''n''</sup> and <math>f \in \mathbb Z[x_1^{\pm 1}, \dots, x_n^{\pm n}]</math>, {{harvtxt|Lind|Schmidt|Ward|1990}} had shown that the entropy of the &Gamma;-action on ''X''<sub>''f''</sub> is given by the [[Mahler measure]]
where Γ is a discrete group, ''f'' is an element of its [[group ring]] '''Z'''Γ, and the hat denotes the [[Pontryagin dual]]. For Γ = '''Z'''<sup>''n''</sup> and <math>f \in \mathbb Z[x_1^{\pm 1}, \dots, x_n^{\pm n}]</math>, {{harvtxt|Lind|Schmidt|Ward|1990}} had shown that the entropy of the Γ-action on ''X''<sub>''f''</sub> is given by the [[Mahler measure]]


:<math>m(f) := (2 \pi i)^{-n} \int_{\mathbb R^n / \Gamma} \log |f(z_1, \dots, z_n)| \frac{ dz_1}{z_1} \dots \frac{ dz_n}{z_n}.</math>
:<math>m(f) := (2 \pi i)^{-n} \int_{\mathbb R^n / \Gamma} \log |f(z_1, \dots, z_n)| \frac{ dz_1}{z_1} \dots \frac{ dz_n}{z_n}.</math>
Line 78: Line 78:
Moreover, it had been known that Mahler measures of certain polynomials were known to be expressible in terms of special values of certain L-functions. In [[#CITEREF—1997|1997]], Deninger observed that the integrand in the definition of the Mahler measure has a natural explanation in terms of Deligne cohomology. Using known cases of the Beilinson conjecture, he deduced that ''m''(''f'') is the image of the symbol {''f'', ''t''<sub>1</sub>, ..., ''t''<sub>''n''</sub>} under the Beilinson regulator, where the variety is the complement in the ''n''-dimensional [[algebraic torus|torus]] of the zero set of ''f''. This led to a conceptual explanation for the afore-mentioned formulas for Mahler measures. {{harvtxt|Besser|Deninger|1999}} and Deninger later in [[#CITEREF—2009|2009]] carried over these ideas to the ''p''-adic world, by replacing the Beilinson regulator map to Deligne cohomology by a regulator map to [[syntomic cohomology]], and the logarithm appearing in the definition of the entropy by a [[p-adic logarithm|''p''-adic logarithm]].
Moreover, it had been known that Mahler measures of certain polynomials were known to be expressible in terms of special values of certain L-functions. In [[#CITEREF—1997|1997]], Deninger observed that the integrand in the definition of the Mahler measure has a natural explanation in terms of Deligne cohomology. Using known cases of the Beilinson conjecture, he deduced that ''m''(''f'') is the image of the symbol {''f'', ''t''<sub>1</sub>, ..., ''t''<sub>''n''</sub>} under the Beilinson regulator, where the variety is the complement in the ''n''-dimensional [[algebraic torus|torus]] of the zero set of ''f''. This led to a conceptual explanation for the afore-mentioned formulas for Mahler measures. {{harvtxt|Besser|Deninger|1999}} and Deninger later in [[#CITEREF—2009|2009]] carried over these ideas to the ''p''-adic world, by replacing the Beilinson regulator map to Deligne cohomology by a regulator map to [[syntomic cohomology]], and the logarithm appearing in the definition of the entropy by a [[p-adic logarithm|''p''-adic logarithm]].


In [[#CITEREF—2006|2006]] and [[#CITEREF—Schmidt2007|2007]], Deninger and [[Klaus Schmidt (mathematician)|Klaus Schmidt]] pushed the parallel between entropy and Mahler measures beyond abelian groups, namely residually finite, countable discrete [[amenable group]]s &Gamma;. They showed that the &Gamma;-action on ''X''<sub>''f''</sub> is [[expansive action|expansive]] if and only if ''f'' is invertible in the ''L''<sup>1</sup>-[[convolution algebra]] of &Gamma;. Moreover, the logarithm of the [[Fuglede-Kadison determinant]] on the [[von Neumann algebra]] N&Gamma; associated to &Gamma; (which replaces the Mahler measure for '''Z'''<sup>''n''</sup>) agrees with the [[entropy]] of the above action.
In [[#CITEREF—2006|2006]] and [[#CITEREF—Schmidt2007|2007]], Deninger and [[Klaus Schmidt (mathematician)|Klaus Schmidt]] pushed the parallel between entropy and Mahler measures beyond abelian groups, namely residually finite, countable discrete [[amenable group]]s Γ. They showed that the Γ-action on ''X''<sub>''f''</sub> is [[expansive action|expansive]] if and only if ''f'' is invertible in the ''L''<sup>1</sup>-[[convolution algebra]] of Γ. Moreover, the logarithm of the [[Fuglede-Kadison determinant]] on the [[von Neumann algebra]] associated to Γ (which replaces the Mahler measure for '''Z'''<sup>''n''</sup>) agrees with the [[entropy]] of the above action.


===Witt vectors===
===Witt vectors===
Line 86: Line 86:


===Artin–Verdier duality===
===Artin–Verdier duality===
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=On Artin–Verdier duality for function fields|journal=Mathematische Zeitschrift|year=1984|volume=188|issue=1|pages=91–100|mr=767366|doi=10.1007/BF01163876}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=On Artin–Verdier duality for function fields|journal=Mathematische Zeitschrift|year=1984|volume=188|issue=1|pages=91–100|mr=767366|doi=10.1007/BF01163876|s2cid=123090400}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=An extension of Artin–Verdier duality to nontorsion sheaves|journal=J. Reine Angew. Math.|volume=1986|issue=366|year=1986|pages=18–31|mr=833011|doi=10.1515/crll.1986.366.18}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=An extension of Artin–Verdier duality to nontorsion sheaves|journal=J. Reine Angew. Math.|volume=1986|issue=366|year=1986|pages=18–31|mr=833011|doi=10.1515/crll.1986.366.18|s2cid=116275426}}
*{{Citation|author=|last2= Wingberg|first2=Kay|title=Artin–Verdier duality for ''n''-dimensional local fields involving higher algebraic ''K''-sheaves|journal=Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra|volume=43|year=1986|issue=3|pages= 243–255|mr=868985|doi= 10.1016/0022-4049(86)90066-6}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2= Wingberg|first2=Kay|title=Artin–Verdier duality for ''n''-dimensional local fields involving higher algebraic ''K''-sheaves|journal=Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra|volume=43|year=1986|issue=3|pages= 243–255|mr=868985|doi= 10.1016/0022-4049(86)90066-6|doi-access=free}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=Duality in the étale cohomology of one-dimensional proper schemes and generalizations|journal=Mathematische Annalen|volume=277|year=1987|issue=3|mr=891590|doi=10.1007/BF01458330|pages=529–541}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Duality in the étale cohomology of one-dimensional proper schemes and generalizations|journal=Mathematische Annalen|volume=277|year=1987|issue=3|mr=891590|doi=10.1007/BF01458330|pages=529–541|s2cid=120941469}}


===''L''-functions and Beilinson's conjecture===
===''L''-functions and Beilinson's conjecture===


*{{Citation|author=|last2=Wingberg|first2=Kay|chapter=On the Beilinson conjectures for elliptic curves with complex multiplication|title=Beilinson's conjectures on special values of ''L''-functions|series=Perspect. Math.|volume=4|year=1988|publisher=Academic Press|location=Boston, MA|mr=944996}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Wingberg|first2=Kay|chapter=On the Beilinson conjectures for elliptic curves with complex multiplication|title=Beilinson's conjectures on special values of ''L''-functions|series=Perspect. Math.|volume=4|year=1988|publisher=Academic Press|location=Boston, MA|mr=944996}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=Higher regulators and Hecke ''L''-series of imaginary quadratic fields. I|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=96|year=1989|issue=1|pages=1–69|mr=981737|doi=10.1007/BF01393970|bibcode=1989InMat..96....1D}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Higher regulators and Hecke ''L''-series of imaginary quadratic fields. I|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=96|year=1989|issue=1|pages=1–69|mr=981737|doi=10.1007/BF01393970|bibcode=1989InMat..96....1D|s2cid=122586535}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=Higher regulators and Hecke ''L''-series of imaginary quadratic fields. II|journal=Annals of Mathematics |series=Second Series|volume=132|year=1990|issue=1|pages=131–158|mr=1059937|doi=10.2307/1971502|jstor=1971502}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Higher regulators and Hecke ''L''-series of imaginary quadratic fields. II|journal=Annals of Mathematics |series=Second Series|volume=132|year=1990|issue=1|pages=131–158|mr=1059937|doi=10.2307/1971502|jstor=1971502}}
*{{Citation|author=|last2=Scholl|first2=Anthony J.|chapter=The Beĭlinson conjectures|
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Scholl|first2=Anthony J.|chapter=The Beĭlinson conjectures
title=''L''-functions and arithmetic (Durham, 1989)|series=London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser.|volume=153|pages=173–209|publisher=Cambridge Univ. Press|year=1991|mr=1110393|doi=10.1017/CBO9780511526053.007|isbn=9780521386197}}
|title=''L''-functions and arithmetic (Durham, 1989)|series=London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser.|volume=153|pages=173–209|publisher=Cambridge Univ. Press|year=1991|mr=1110393|doi=10.1017/CBO9780511526053.007|isbn=9780521386197}}


*{{Citation|author=|title=On the &Gamma;-factors attached to motives|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=104|year=1991|issue=2|pages=245–261|mr=1098609|doi=10.1007/BF01245075}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=On the Γ-factors attached to motives|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=104|year=1991|issue=2|pages=245–261|mr=1098609|doi=10.1007/BF01245075|bibcode=1991InMat.104..245D |s2cid=123206613}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=Local ''L''-factors of motives and regularized determinants|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=107|year=1992|issue=1|pages=135–150|mr=1135468|bibcode=1992InMat.107..135D|doi=10.1007/BF01231885}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Local ''L''-factors of motives and regularized determinants|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=107|year=1992|issue=1|pages=135–150|mr=1135468|bibcode=1992InMat.107..135D|doi=10.1007/BF01231885|s2cid=120740473}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=Lefschetz trace formulas and explicit formulas in analytic number theory|journal=Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik|volume=1993|issue=441|pages=1&ndash;15|year=1993|doi=10.1515/crll.1993.441.1|url=https://eudml.org/doc/153540|zbl=0782.11034}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Lefschetz trace formulas and explicit formulas in analytic number theory|journal=Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik|volume=1993|issue=441|pages=1&ndash;15|year=1993|doi=10.1515/crll.1993.441.1|url=https://eudml.org/doc/153540|zbl=0782.11034|s2cid=116031228}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=Motivic &epsilon;-factors at infinity and regularized dimensions|journal=Indag. Math. (N.S.)|volume=5|year=1994a|issue=4|pages=403&ndash;409|mr=1307961|doi=10.1016/0019-3577(94)90015-9|doi-access=free}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Motivic ε-factors at infinity and regularized dimensions|journal=Indag. Math. |series=New Series|volume=5|year=1994a|issue=4|pages=403&ndash;409|mr=1307961|doi=10.1016/0019-3577(94)90015-9|doi-access=free}}
*{{Citation|author=|chapter=Motivic ''L''-functions and regularized determinants|title=Motives (Seattle, WA, 1991)|series=Proc. Sympos. Pure Math.|volume=55|publisher=Amer. Math. Soc.|location=Providence, RI|year=1994b|mr=1265547}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|chapter=Motivic ''L''-functions and regularized determinants|title=Motives (Seattle, WA, 1991)|series=Proc. Sympos. Pure Math.|volume=55|publisher=Amer. Math. Soc.|location=Providence, RI|year=1994b|mr=1265547}}
*{{Citation|author=|chapter=Evidence for a cohomological approach to analytic number theory|title=First European Congress of Mathematics, Vol. I (Paris, 1992)|series=Progr. Math.|volume=119|pages=491&ndash;510|publisher=Birkhäuser, Basel|year=1994c|mr=1341834}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|chapter=Evidence for a cohomological approach to analytic number theory|title=First European Congress of Mathematics, Vol. I (Paris, 1992)|series=Progr. Math.|volume=119|pages=491&ndash;510|publisher=Birkhäuser, Basel|year=1994c|mr=1341834}}
*{{Citation|author=|last2=Nart|first2=Enric|title=On Ext<sup>2</sup> of motives over arithmetic curves|journal=Amer. J. Math.|volume=117|year=1995|issue=3|pages=601&ndash;625|mr=1333938|doi=10.2307/2375082|jstor=2375082}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Nart|first2=Enric|title=On Ext<sup>2</sup> of motives over arithmetic curves|journal=Amer. J. Math.|volume=117|year=1995|issue=3|pages=601&ndash;625|mr=1333938|doi=10.2307/2375082|jstor=2375082}}
*{{Citation|author=|title=Higher order operations in Deligne cohomology|journal=Invent. Math.|volume=120|year=1995|issue=2|pages=289&ndash;315|mr=1329043|doi=10.1007/BF01241130|bibcode=1995InMat.120..289D}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Higher order operations in Deligne cohomology|journal=Invent. Math.|volume=120|year=1995|issue=2|pages=289&ndash;315|mr=1329043|doi=10.1007/BF01241130|bibcode=1995InMat.120..289D|s2cid=121481341}}
* {{Citation|author=|chapter=Some analogies between number theory and dynamical systems on foliated spaces|title=Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol. I (Berlin, 1998)|publisher=Documenta Mathematica (Extra Vol. I)|year=1998|pages=163&ndash;186|mr=1648030}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|chapter=Some analogies between number theory and dynamical systems on foliated spaces|title=Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians, Vol. I (Berlin, 1998)|publisher=Documenta Mathematica (Extra Vol. I)|year=1998|pages=163&ndash;186|mr=1648030}}
*{{Citation|author=|chapter=On the nature of the "explicit formulas" in analytic number theory---a simple example|title=Number theoretic methods (Iizuka, 2001)|series=Dev. Math.|volume=8|pages=97–118|publisher=Kluwer Acad. Publ.|location=Dordrecht|year=2002|mr=1974137|doi=10.1007/978-1-4757-3675-5_7|isbn=978-1-4419-5239-4|arxiv=math/0204194}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|chapter=On the nature of the "explicit formulas" in analytic number theory---a simple example|title=Number theoretic methods (Iizuka, 2001)|series=Dev. Math.|volume=8|pages=97–118|publisher=Kluwer Acad. Publ.|location=Dordrecht|year=2002|mr=1974137|doi=10.1007/978-1-4757-3675-5_7|isbn=978-1-4419-5239-4|arxiv=math/0204194|s2cid=17829739}}
* {{Citation|author=|chapter=The Hilbert-Polya strategy and height pairings|title=Casimir force, Casimir operators and the Riemann hypothesis|pages=275&ndash;283|publisher=Walter de Gruyter, Berlin|year=2010|mr=2777722}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|chapter=The Hilbert-Polya strategy and height pairings|title=Casimir force, Casimir operators and the Riemann hypothesis|pages=275&ndash;283|publisher=Walter de Gruyter, Berlin|year=2010|mr=2777722}}


===''p''-adic vector bundles===
===''p''-adic vector bundles===


* {{Citation|author1=|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|title=Vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves and parallel transport|journal=Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure |series= Quatrième Série|volume=38|year=2005|issue=4|pages=553&ndash;597|mr=2172951|doi=10.1016/j.ansens.2005.05.002|url=http://www.numdam.org/item/ASENS_2005_4_38_4_553_0/}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|title=Vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves and parallel transport|journal=Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure |series= Quatrième Série|volume=38|year=2005|issue=4|pages=553&ndash;597|mr=2172951|doi=10.1016/j.ansens.2005.05.002|s2cid=8884837|url=http://www.numdam.org/item/ASENS_2005_4_38_4_553_0/|arxiv=math/0403516}}
* {{Citation|author1=|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|chapter=Line bundles and ''p''-adic characters|title=Number fields and function fields&ndash;two parallel worlds|series=Progr. Math.|volume=239|pages=101&ndash;131|year=2005|mr=2176589|doi=10.1007/0-8176-4447-4_7|arxiv=math/0407511|isbn=978-0-8176-4397-3}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|chapter=Line bundles and ''p''-adic characters|title=Number fields and function fields&ndash;two parallel worlds|series=Progr. Math.|volume=239|pages=101&ndash;131|year=2005|mr=2176589|doi=10.1007/0-8176-4447-4_7|arxiv=math/0407511|isbn=978-0-8176-4397-3|s2cid=119669442}}
* {{Citation|author1=|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|chapter=On Tannaka duality for vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves|title=Algebraic cycles and motives. Vol. 2|series=London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser.|volume=344|pages=94&ndash;111|year=2007|mr=2187151}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|chapter=On Tannaka duality for vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves|title=Algebraic cycles and motives. Vol. 2|series=London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser.|volume=344|pages=94&ndash;111|year=2007|mr=2187151}}
*{{Citation|author1=|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|chapter=Vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves and parallel transport II|title=Algebraic and arithmetic structures of moduli spaces (Sapporo 2007)|series=Adv. Stud. Pure Math.|volume=58|pages=1&ndash;26|year=2010|mr=2676155|doi=10.2969/aspm/05810001|doi-access=free}}
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Werner|first2=Annette|chapter=Vector bundles on ''p''-adic curves and parallel transport II|title=Algebraic and arithmetic structures of moduli spaces (Sapporo 2007)|series=Adv. Stud. Pure Math.|volume=58|pages=1&ndash;26|year=2010|mr=2676155|doi=10.2969/aspm/05810001|isbn=978-4-86497-008-2|doi-access=free}}


===The Heisenberg group, Lie algebras, and foliations===
===The Heisenberg group, Lie algebras, and foliations===


* {{Citation|author1=|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|title=The ''e''-invariant and the spectrum of the Laplacian for compact nilmanifolds covered by Heisenberg groups|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=78|year=1984|issue=1|pages=101&ndash;112|mr=762355|doi=10.1007/BF01388716|bibcode=1984InMat..78..101D}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|title=The ''e''-invariant and the spectrum of the Laplacian for compact nilmanifolds covered by Heisenberg groups|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=78|year=1984|issue=1|pages=101&ndash;112|mr=762355|doi=10.1007/BF01388716|bibcode=1984InMat..78..101D|s2cid=119465585}}
* {{Citation|author1=|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|title=On the cohomology of nilpotent Lie algebras|journal=Bull. Soc. Math. France|volume=116|year=1988|issue=1|pages=3&ndash;14|mr=946276|doi=10.24033/bsmf.2087|doi-access=free}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|title=On the cohomology of nilpotent Lie algebras|journal=Bull. Soc. Math. France|volume=116|year=1988|issue=1|pages=3&ndash;14|mr=946276|doi=10.24033/bsmf.2087|doi-access=free}}
* {{Citation|author1=|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|title=A counterexample to smooth leafwise Hodge decomposition for general foliations and to a type of dynamical trace formulas|journal=Ann. Inst. Fourier (Grenoble)|volume=51|year=2001|issue=1|pages=209&ndash;219|mr=1821074|doi=10.5802/aif.1821}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|title=A counterexample to smooth leafwise Hodge decomposition for general foliations and to a type of dynamical trace formulas|journal=Ann. Inst. Fourier (Grenoble)|volume=51|year=2001|issue=1|pages=209&ndash;219|mr=1821074|doi=10.5802/aif.1821|url=https://aif.centre-mersenne.org/articles/10.5802/aif.1821/ |doi-access=free}}
* {{Citation|author1=|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|chapter=A note on dynamical trace formulas|title=Dynamical, spectral, and arithmetic zeta functions (San Antonio, TX, 1999)|series=Contemp. Math.|volume=290|pages=41&ndash;55|publisher=AMS|year=2001b|mr=1868467|doi=10.1090/conm/290/04572}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Singhof|first2=Wilhelm|chapter=A note on dynamical trace formulas|title=Dynamical, spectral, and arithmetic zeta functions (San Antonio, TX, 1999)|series=Contemp. Math.|volume=290|pages=41&ndash;55|publisher=AMS|year=2001b|mr=1868467|doi=10.1090/conm/290/04572|isbn=9780821820797|doi-access=free}}


===Entropy===
===Entropy===


* {{Citation|author=|title=Deligne periods of mixed motives, ''K''-theory and the entropy of certain '''Z'''<sup>''n''</sup>-actions|journal=Journal of the American Mathematical Society|volume=10|year=1997|issue=2|pages=259&ndash;281|mr=1415320|doi=10.1090/S0894-0347-97-00228-2|doi-access=free}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Deligne periods of mixed motives, ''K''-theory and the entropy of certain '''Z'''<sup>''n''</sup>-actions|journal=Journal of the American Mathematical Society|volume=10|year=1997|issue=2|pages=259&ndash;281|mr=1415320|doi=10.1090/S0894-0347-97-00228-2|doi-access=free}}
* {{Citation|author=|title=Fuglede-Kadison determinants and entropy for actions of discrete amenable groups|
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|title=Fuglede-Kadison determinants and entropy for actions of discrete amenable groups
journal=Journal of the American Mathematical Society|volume=19|year=2006|issue=3|pages=737&ndash;758|mr=2220105|doi=10.1090/S0894-0347-06-00519-4|arxiv=math/0502233}}
|journal=Journal of the American Mathematical Society|volume=19|year=2006|issue=3|pages=737&ndash;758|mr=2220105|doi=10.1090/S0894-0347-06-00519-4|arxiv=math/0502233|s2cid=7741105}}


*{{Citation|author=|last2=Schmidt|first2=Klaus|title=Expansive algebraic actions of discrete residually finite amenable groups and their entropy|
*{{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|last2=Schmidt|first2=Klaus|title=Expansive algebraic actions of discrete residually finite amenable groups and their entropy
journal=Ergodic Theory and Dynamical Systems|volume=27|year=2007|issue=3|pages=769&ndash;786|mr=2322178|doi=10.1017/S0143385706000939|arxiv=math/0605723}}
|journal=Ergodic Theory and Dynamical Systems|volume=27|year=2007|issue=3|pages=769&ndash;786|mr=2322178|doi=10.1017/S0143385706000939|arxiv=math/0605723|s2cid=12803685}}


* {{Citation|last1=Besser|first1=Amnon|last2=Deninger|first2=Christopher|title=''p''-adic Mahler measures|journal=Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik |volume=1999|issue=517|year=1999|pages=19&ndash;50|mr=1728549|doi=10.1515/crll.1999.093}}
* {{Citation|last1=Besser|first1=Amnon|last2=Deninger|first2=Christopher|title=''p''-adic Mahler measures|journal=Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik |volume=1999|issue=517|year=1999|pages=19&ndash;50|mr=1728549|doi=10.1515/crll.1999.093}}
* {{Citation|author1=|chapter=''p''-adic entropy and a ''p''-adic Fuglede-Kadison determinant|title=Algebra, arithmetic, and geometry: in honor of Yu. I. Manin. Vol. I|series=Progr. Math.|volume=269|pages=423&ndash;442|year=2009|publisher=Birkhäuser|mr=2641178|doi=10.1007/978-0-8176-4745-2_10|arxiv=math/0608539|isbn=978-0-8176-4744-5}}
* {{Citation|last1=Deninger|first1=Christopher|chapter=''p''-adic entropy and a ''p''-adic Fuglede-Kadison determinant|title=Algebra, arithmetic, and geometry: in honor of Yu. I. Manin. Vol. I|series=Progr. Math.|volume=269|pages=423&ndash;442|year=2009|publisher=Birkhäuser|mr=2641178|doi=10.1007/978-0-8176-4745-2_10|arxiv=math/0608539|isbn=978-0-8176-4744-5|s2cid=6186513}}


===Witt vectors===
===Witt vectors===


* {{Citation|last1=Cuntz|first1=Joachim|last2=Deninger|first2=Christopher|title=Witt vector rings and the relative de Rham Witt complex|journal=Journal of Algebra|volume=440|year=2015|pages=545&ndash;593|mr=3373405|doi=10.1016/j.jalgebra.2015.05.029|arxiv=1410.5249}}
* {{Citation|last1=Cuntz|first1=Joachim|last2=Deninger|first2=Christopher|title=Witt vector rings and the relative de Rham Witt complex|journal=Journal of Algebra|volume=440|year=2015|pages=545&ndash;593|mr=3373405|doi=10.1016/j.jalgebra.2015.05.029|arxiv=1410.5249|s2cid=119171724}}
* {{Citation|last1=Cuntz|first1=Joachim|last2=Deninger|first2=Christopher|title=An alternative to Witt vectors|journal=Münster Journal of Mathematics|volume=7|year=2014|issue=1|pages=105&ndash;114|mr=3271241|bibcode=2013arXiv1311.2774C|arxiv=1311.2774|doi=10.1080/18756891.2013.858905}}
* {{Citation|last1=Cuntz|first1=Joachim|last2=Deninger|first2=Christopher|title=An alternative to Witt vectors|journal=Münster Journal of Mathematics|volume=7|year=2014|issue=1|pages=105&ndash;114|mr=3271241|bibcode=2013arXiv1311.2774C|arxiv=1311.2774|doi=10.1080/18756891.2013.858905}}


Line 147: Line 147:
* {{Citation|last1=Álvarez López|first1=Jesús|last2=Kordyukov|first2=Yuri A.|title=Long time behavior of leafwise heat flow for Riemannian foliations|journal=Compositio Mathematica|volume=125|year=2001|issue=2|pages=129–153|mr=1815391|doi=10.1023/A:1002492700960|doi-access=free}}
* {{Citation|last1=Álvarez López|first1=Jesús|last2=Kordyukov|first2=Yuri A.|title=Long time behavior of leafwise heat flow for Riemannian foliations|journal=Compositio Mathematica|volume=125|year=2001|issue=2|pages=129–153|mr=1815391|doi=10.1023/A:1002492700960|doi-access=free}}
*{{Citation|last=Beilinson|first=A. A.|author-link=Alexander Beilinson|chapter=Higher regulators and values of ''L''-functions|title=Current problems in mathematics, Vol. 24|series=Itogi Nauki i Tekhniki|publisher=Akad. Nauk SSSR, Vsesoyuz. Inst. Nauchn. i Tekhn. Inform.|location=Moscow|year=1984|mr=760999}}
*{{Citation|last=Beilinson|first=A. A.|author-link=Alexander Beilinson|chapter=Higher regulators and values of ''L''-functions|title=Current problems in mathematics, Vol. 24|series=Itogi Nauki i Tekhniki|publisher=Akad. Nauk SSSR, Vsesoyuz. Inst. Nauchn. i Tekhn. Inform.|location=Moscow|year=1984|mr=760999}}
*{{Citation|last=Geisser|first=Thomas|title=Duality via cycle complexes|journal=Annals of Mathematics |series=Second Series|volume=172|year=2010|issue=2|pages=1095–1127|mr=mr2680487|doi=10.4007/annals.2010.172.1095|doi-access=free}}
*{{Citation|last=Geisser|first=Thomas|title=Duality via cycle complexes|journal=Annals of Mathematics |series=Second Series|volume=172|year=2010|issue=2|pages=1095–1127|mr=2680487|doi=10.4007/annals.2010.172.1095|doi-access=free|arxiv=math/0608456}}
*{{Citation|last=Goncharov|first=A. B.|author-link=Alexander Goncharov|title=Deninger's conjecture of ''L''-functions of elliptic curves at ''s''=3|journal=Journal of Mathematical Sciences|volume=81|year=1996|issue=3|pages=2631&ndash;2656|mr=1420221|doi=10.1007/BF02362333}}
*{{Citation|last=Goncharov|first=A. B.|author-link=Alexander Goncharov|title=Deninger's conjecture of ''L''-functions of elliptic curves at ''s''=3|journal=Journal of Mathematical Sciences|volume=81|year=1996|issue=3|pages=2631&ndash;2656|mr=1420221|doi=10.1007/BF02362333|s2cid=15570808|doi-access=free}}
*{{Citation|last=Hesselholt|first=Lars|author-link=Lars Hesselholt|title=Topological Hochschild homology and the Hasse-Weil zeta function|volume=708|pages=157–180|arxiv=1602.01980|year=2016|bibcode=2016arXiv160201980H|doi=10.1090/conm/708/14264|series=Contemporary Mathematics|isbn=9781470429119}}
*{{Citation|last=Hesselholt|first=Lars|author-link=Lars Hesselholt|title=Topological Hochschild homology and the Hasse-Weil zeta function|volume=708|pages=157–180|arxiv=1602.01980|year=2016|bibcode=2016arXiv160201980H|doi=10.1090/conm/708/14264|series=Contemporary Mathematics|isbn=9781470429119|s2cid=119145574}}
*{{Citation|last=Leichtnam|first=Eric|author-link=Éric Leichtnam|chapter=An invitation to Deninger's work on arithmetic zeta functions|title=Geometry, spectral theory, groups, and dynamics|series=Contemp. Math.|volume=387|pages=201–236|publisher=Amer. Math. Soc.|location=Providence, RI|year=2005|mr=2180209|doi=10.1090/conm/387/07243|isbn=9780821837108}}
*{{Citation|last=Leichtnam|first=Eric|author-link=Éric Leichtnam|chapter=An invitation to Deninger's work on arithmetic zeta functions|title=Geometry, spectral theory, groups, and dynamics|series=Contemp. Math.|volume=387|pages=201–236|publisher=Amer. Math. Soc.|location=Providence, RI|year=2005|mr=2180209|doi=10.1090/conm/387/07243|isbn=9780821837108}}
* {{Citation|last1=Lind|first1=Douglas|last2=Schmidt|first2=Klaus|last3=Ward|first3=Tom|title=Mahler measure and entropy for commuting automorphisms of compact groups|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=101|year=1990|issue=3|pages=593&ndash;629|mr=1062797|doi=10.1007/BF01231517|bibcode=1990InMat.101..593L|url=https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/18590/1/mahlerentropy.pdf}}
* {{Citation|last1=Lind|first1=Douglas|last2=Schmidt|first2=Klaus|last3=Ward|first3=Tom|title=Mahler measure and entropy for commuting automorphisms of compact groups|journal=Inventiones Mathematicae|volume=101|year=1990|issue=3|pages=593&ndash;629|mr=1062797|doi=10.1007/BF01231517|bibcode=1990InMat.101..593L|s2cid=17077751|url=https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/18590/1/mahlerentropy.pdf}}
*{{Citation|last=Nekovář|first=Jan|chapter=Beĭlinson's conjectures|title=Motives (Seattle, WA, 1991)|series=Proc. Sympos. Pure Math.|volume=55|publisher=Amer. Math. Soc.|location=Providence, RI|year=1994|mr=1265544}}
*{{Citation|last=Nekovář|first=Jan|chapter=Beĭlinson's conjectures|title=Motives (Seattle, WA, 1991)|series=Proc. Sympos. Pure Math.|volume=55|publisher=Amer. Math. Soc.|location=Providence, RI|year=1994|mr=1265544}}


Line 163: Line 163:
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:20th-century German mathematicians]]
[[Category:20th-century German mathematicians]]
[[Category:University of Münster faculty]]
[[Category:Academic staff of the University of Münster]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Mathematical Society]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Mathematical Society]]
[[Category:21st-century German mathematicians]]
[[Category:21st-century German mathematicians]]

Latest revision as of 21:07, 26 October 2024

Christopher Deninger
Deninger at Oberwolfach, 2005
Born (1958-04-08) 8 April 1958 (age 66)
Alma materUniversity of Cologne
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Münster
Doctoral advisorCurt Meyer
Doctoral studentsAnnette Huber-Klawitter
Annette Werner[1]

Christopher Deninger (born 8 April 1958) is a German mathematician at the University of Münster. Deninger's research focuses on arithmetic geometry, including applications to L-functions.

Career

[edit]

Deninger obtained his doctorate from the University of Cologne in 1982, under the supervision of Curt Meyer. In 1992 he shared a Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize with Michael Rapoport, Peter Schneider and Thomas Zink. In 1998 he was a plenary speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1998 in Berlin.[2] In 2012 he became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[3]

Mathematical work

[edit]

Artin–Verdier duality

[edit]

In a series of papers between 1984 and 1987, Deninger studied extensions of Artin–Verdier duality. Broadly speaking, Artin–Verdier duality, a consequence of class field theory, is an arithmetic analogue of Poincaré duality, a duality for sheaf cohomology on a compact manifold. In this parallel, the (spectrum of the) ring of integers in a number field corresponds to a 3-manifold. Following work of Mazur, Deninger (1984) extended Artin–Verdier duality to function fields. Deninger then extended these results in various directions, such as non-torsion sheaves (1986), arithmetic surfaces (1987), as well as higher-dimensional local fields (with Wingberg, 1986). The appearance of Bloch's motivic complexes considered in the latter papers influenced work of several authors including Geisser (2010), who identified Bloch's complexes to be the dualizing complexes over higher-dimensional schemes.

Special values of L-functions

[edit]

Another group of Deninger's papers studies L-functions and their special values. A classical example of an L-function is the Riemann zeta function ζ(s), for which formulas such as

ζ(2) = π2 / 6

are known since Euler. In a landmark paper, Beilinson (1984) had proposed a set of far-reaching conjectures describing the special values of L-functions, i.e., the values of L-functions at integers. In very rough terms, Beilinson's conjectures assert that for a smooth projective algebraic variety X over Q, motivic cohomology of X should be closely related to Deligne cohomology of X. In addition, the relation between these two cohomology theories should explain, according to Beilinson's conjecture, the pole orders and the values of

L(hn(X), s)
Any two of the three Borromean rings can be pulled apart, yet the three rings are linked. The Massey product of the three cohomology classes given by winding around each circle can be used to capture this phenomenon algebraically.

at integers s. Bloch and Beilinson proved essential parts of this conjecture for h1(X) in the case where X is an elliptic curve with complex multiplication and s=2. In 1988, Deninger & Wingberg gave an exposition of that result. In 1989 and 1990, Deninger extended this result to certain elliptic curves considered by Shimura, at all s≥2. Deninger & Nart (1995) expressed the height pairing, a key ingredient of Beilinson's conjecture, as a natural pairing of Ext-groups in a certain category of motives. In 1995, Deninger studied Massey products in Deligne cohomology and conjectured therefrom a formula for the special value for the L-function of an elliptic curve at s=3, which was subsequently confirmed by Goncharov (1996). As of 2018, Beilinson's conjecture is still wide open, and Deninger's contributions remain some of the few cases where Beilinson's conjecture has been successfully attacked (surveys on the topic include Deninger & Scholl (1991), Nekovář (1994)).

L-functions via regularized determinants

[edit]

The Riemann ζ-function is defined using a product of Euler factors

for each prime number p. In order to obtain a functional equation for ζ(s), one needs to multiply them with an additional term involving the Gamma function:

More general L-functions are also defined by Euler products, involving, at each finite place, the determinant of the Frobenius endomorphism acting on l-adic cohomology of some variety X / Q, while the Euler factor for the infinite place are, according to Serre, products of Gamma functions depending on the Hodge structures attached to X / Q. Deninger (1991) expressed these Γ-factors in terms of regularized determinants and moved on, in 1992 and in greater generality in 1994, to unify the Euler factors of L-functions at both finite and infinite places using regularized determinants. For example, for the Euler factors of the Riemann zeta-function this uniform description reads

Here p is either a prime number or infinity, corresponding to the non-Archimedean Euler factors and the Archimedean Euler factor respectively, and Rp is the space of finite real valued Fourier series on R/log(p)Z for a prime number p, and R = R[exp(−2y)]. Finally, Θ is the derivative of the R-action given by shifting such functions. Deninger (1994) also exhibited a similar unifying approach for ε-factors (which express the ratio between completed L-functions at s and at 1−s).

The arithmetic site

[edit]

These results led Deninger to propose a program concerning the existence of an "arithmetic site" Y associated to the compactification of Spec Z. Among other properties, this site would be equipped with an action of R, and each prime number p would correspond to a closed orbit of the R-action of length log(p). Moreover, analogies between formulas in analytic number theory and dynamics on foliated spaces led Deninger to conjecture the existence of a foliation on this site. Moreover, this site is supposed to be endowed with an infinite-dimensional cohomology theory such that the L-function of a motive M is given by

Here M is a motive, such as the motives hn(X) occurring in Beilinson's conjecture, and F(M) is conceived to be the sheaf on Y attached to the motive M. The operator Θ is the infinitesimal generator of the flow given by the R-action. The Riemann hypothesis would be, according to this program, a consequence of properties parallel to the positivity of the intersection pairing in Hodge theory. A version of the Lefschetz trace formula on this site, which would be part of this conjectural setup, has been proven by other means by Deninger (1993). In 2010, Deninger proved that classical conjectures of Beilinson and Bloch concerning the intersection theory of algebraic cycles would be further consequences of his program.

This program was surveyed by Deninger in his talks at the European Congress of Mathematicians in 1992, at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1998, and also by Leichtnam (2005). In 2002, Deninger constructed a foliated space which corresponds to an elliptic curve over a finite field, and Hesselholt (2016) showed that the Hasse-Weil zeta-function of a smooth proper variety over Fp can be expressed using regularized determinants involving topological Hochschild homology. In addition, the analogy between knots and primes has been fruitfully studied in arithmetic topology. However, as of 2018, the construction of a foliated space corresponding to Spec Z remains elusive.

Vector bundles on p-adic curves

[edit]

A series of joint papers with Annette Werner examines vector bundles on p-adic curves. A classical result motivating this study is the Narasimhan–Seshadri theorem, a cornerstone of the Simpson correspondence. It asserts that a vector bundle on a compact Riemann surface X is stable if it arises from a unitary representation of the fundamental group π1(X).

In Deninger & Werner (2005) established a p-adic analogue thereof: for a smooth projective algebraic curve over Cp, obtained by base change from , they constructed an action of the etale fundamental group π1(X) on the fibers on certain vector bundles, including those of degree 0 and having potentially strongly semistable reduction. In another paper of 2005, they related the resulting representations of the fundamental group of the curve X with representations of the Tate module of the Jacobian variety of X. In 2007 and 2010 they continued this work by showing that such vector bundles form a Tannakian category which amounts to identifying this class of vector bundles as a category of representations of a certain group.

Foliations and the Heisenberg group

[edit]

In several joint papers, Deninger and Wilhelm Singhof studied quotients of the n-dimensional Heisenberg group H by the standard lattice consisting of integer-valued matrices,

X = H / Γ,

from various points of view. In 1984, they computed the e-invariant of X in terms of ζ(−n), which leads to a construction of elements in the stable homotopy groups of spheres of arbitrarily large order. In 1988, they used methods of analytic number theory to give estimates on the dimension of the cohomology of nilpotent Lie algebras.

The classical fact from Hodge theory that any cohomology class on a Kähler manifold admits a unique harmonic had been generalized by Álvarez López & Kordyukov (2001) to Riemannian foliations. Deninger & Singhof (2001) show that foliations on the above space X, which satisfy only slightly weaker conditions, do not admit such Hodge theoretic properties. In another joint paper from 2001, they established a dynamical Lefschetz trace formula: it relates the trace of an operator on harmonic forms the local traces appearing at the closed orbits (on certain foliated spaces with an R-action). This result serves as a corroboration of Deninger's program mentioned above in the sense that it verifies a prediction made by this program on the analytic side, i.e., the one concerning dynamics on foliated spaces.

Entropy and Mahler measures

[edit]

Another group of Deninger's papers revolves around the space

where Γ is a discrete group, f is an element of its group ring ZΓ, and the hat denotes the Pontryagin dual. For Γ = Zn and , Lind, Schmidt & Ward (1990) had shown that the entropy of the Γ-action on Xf is given by the Mahler measure

Moreover, it had been known that Mahler measures of certain polynomials were known to be expressible in terms of special values of certain L-functions. In 1997, Deninger observed that the integrand in the definition of the Mahler measure has a natural explanation in terms of Deligne cohomology. Using known cases of the Beilinson conjecture, he deduced that m(f) is the image of the symbol {f, t1, ..., tn} under the Beilinson regulator, where the variety is the complement in the n-dimensional torus of the zero set of f. This led to a conceptual explanation for the afore-mentioned formulas for Mahler measures. Besser & Deninger (1999) and Deninger later in 2009 carried over these ideas to the p-adic world, by replacing the Beilinson regulator map to Deligne cohomology by a regulator map to syntomic cohomology, and the logarithm appearing in the definition of the entropy by a p-adic logarithm.

In 2006 and 2007, Deninger and Klaus Schmidt pushed the parallel between entropy and Mahler measures beyond abelian groups, namely residually finite, countable discrete amenable groups Γ. They showed that the Γ-action on Xf is expansive if and only if f is invertible in the L1-convolution algebra of Γ. Moreover, the logarithm of the Fuglede-Kadison determinant on the von Neumann algebra NΓ associated to Γ (which replaces the Mahler measure for Zn) agrees with the entropy of the above action.

Witt vectors

[edit]

Joachim Cuntz and Deninger worked together on Witt vectors. In two papers around 2014, they simplified the theory by giving a presentation of the ring of Witt vectors in terms of a completion of the monoid algebra ZR. This approach avoids the universal polynomials used in the classical definition of the addition of Witt vectors.

Selected bibliography

[edit]

Artin–Verdier duality

[edit]
  • Deninger, Christopher (1984), "On Artin–Verdier duality for function fields", Mathematische Zeitschrift, 188 (1): 91–100, doi:10.1007/BF01163876, MR 0767366, S2CID 123090400
  • Deninger, Christopher (1986), "An extension of Artin–Verdier duality to nontorsion sheaves", J. Reine Angew. Math., 1986 (366): 18–31, doi:10.1515/crll.1986.366.18, MR 0833011, S2CID 116275426
  • Deninger, Christopher; Wingberg, Kay (1986), "Artin–Verdier duality for n-dimensional local fields involving higher algebraic K-sheaves", Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra, 43 (3): 243–255, doi:10.1016/0022-4049(86)90066-6, MR 0868985
  • Deninger, Christopher (1987), "Duality in the étale cohomology of one-dimensional proper schemes and generalizations", Mathematische Annalen, 277 (3): 529–541, doi:10.1007/BF01458330, MR 0891590, S2CID 120941469

L-functions and Beilinson's conjecture

[edit]
  • Deninger, Christopher; Wingberg, Kay (1988), "On the Beilinson conjectures for elliptic curves with complex multiplication", Beilinson's conjectures on special values of L-functions, Perspect. Math., vol. 4, Boston, MA: Academic Press, MR 0944996
  • Deninger, Christopher (1989), "Higher regulators and Hecke L-series of imaginary quadratic fields. I", Inventiones Mathematicae, 96 (1): 1–69, Bibcode:1989InMat..96....1D, doi:10.1007/BF01393970, MR 0981737, S2CID 122586535
  • Deninger, Christopher (1990), "Higher regulators and Hecke L-series of imaginary quadratic fields. II", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 132 (1): 131–158, doi:10.2307/1971502, JSTOR 1971502, MR 1059937
  • Deninger, Christopher; Scholl, Anthony J. (1991), "The Beĭlinson conjectures", L-functions and arithmetic (Durham, 1989), London Math. Soc. Lecture Note Ser., vol. 153, Cambridge Univ. Press, pp. 173–209, doi:10.1017/CBO9780511526053.007, ISBN 9780521386197, MR 1110393

p-adic vector bundles

[edit]

The Heisenberg group, Lie algebras, and foliations

[edit]

Entropy

[edit]

Witt vectors

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Christopher Deninger at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. ^ Deninger, Christopher (1998). "Some analogies between number theory and dynamical systems on foliated spaces". Doc. Math. (Bielefeld) Extra Vol. ICM Berlin, 1998, vol. I. pp. 163–186.
  3. ^ List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society, retrieved 2012-11-10.
[edit]