In mathematics,
Cartier duality is an analogue of
Pontryagin duality
In mathematics, Pontryagin duality is a duality between locally compact abelian groups that allows generalizing Fourier transform to all such groups, which include the circle group (the multiplicative group of complex numbers of modulus one), ...
for commutative group schemes. It was introduced by .
Definition using characters
Given any finite flat commutative
group scheme
In mathematics, a group scheme is a type of object from Algebraic geometry, algebraic geometry equipped with a composition law. Group schemes arise naturally as symmetries of Scheme (mathematics), schemes, and they generalize algebraic groups, in ...
''G'' over ''S'', its Cartier dual is the group of characters, defined as the functor that takes any ''S''-scheme ''T'' to the abelian group of group scheme homomorphisms from the base change
to
and any map of ''S''-schemes to the canonical map of character groups. This functor is representable by a finite flat ''S''-group scheme, and Cartier duality forms an additive involutive antiequivalence from the category of finite flat commutative ''S''-group schemes to itself. If ''G'' is a constant commutative group scheme, then its Cartier dual is the diagonalizable group ''D''(''G''), and vice versa. If ''S'' is affine, then the duality functor is given by the duality of the Hopf algebras of functions.
Definition using Hopf algebras
A finite commutative group scheme over a field corresponds to a finite dimensional commutative cocommutative
Hopf algebra Hopf is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include:
*Eberhard Hopf (1902–1983), Austrian mathematician
*Hans Hopf (1916–1993), German tenor
*Heinz Hopf (1894–1971), German mathematician
*Heinz Hopf (actor) (1934–2001), Swedis ...
. Cartier duality corresponds to taking the
dual of the Hopf algebra, exchanging the multiplication and comultiplication.
More general cases of Cartier duality
The definition of Cartier dual extends usefully to much more general situations where the resulting functor on schemes is no longer represented as a group scheme. Common cases include fppf sheaves of commutative groups over ''S'', and complexes thereof. These more general geometric objects can be useful when one wants to work with categories that have good limit behavior. There are cases of intermediate abstraction, such as commutative algebraic groups over a field, where Cartier duality gives an antiequivalence with commutative affine
formal group In mathematics, a formal group law is (roughly speaking) a formal power series behaving as if it were the product of a Lie group. They were introduced by . The term formal group sometimes means the same as formal group law, and sometimes means one o ...
s, so if ''G'' is the additive group
, then its Cartier dual is the multiplicative formal group
, and if ''G'' is a torus, then its Cartier dual is étale and torsion-free. For loop groups of tori, Cartier duality defines the tame symbol in local
geometric class field theory In mathematics, geometric class field theory is an extension of class field theory to higher-dimensional geometrical objects: much the same way as class field theory describes the abelianization of the Galois group of a local or global field, geom ...
.
Gérard Laumon introduced a sheaf-theoretic Fourier transform for
quasi-coherent module
In mathematics, especially in algebraic geometry and the theory of complex manifolds, coherent sheaves are a class of Sheaf (mathematics), sheaves closely linked to the geometric properties of the underlying space. The definition of coherent sheave ...
s over
1-motives that specializes to many of these equivalences.
Examples
*The Cartier dual of the cyclic group
of order ''n'' is the ''n''-th roots of unity
.
*Over a field of characteristic ''p'' the group scheme
(the kernel of the endomorphism of the additive group induced by taking ''p''th powers) is its own Cartier dual.
References
*
*{{citation, mr=0213365
, last=Oort, first= Frans, authorlink=Frans Oort
, title=Commutative group schemes
, series=Lecture Notes in Mathematics, volume=15, publisher= Springer-Verlag, place= Berlin-New York, year= 1966
Algebraic groups