Selberg's Trace Formula
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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, the Selberg trace formula, introduced by , is an expression for the character of the unitary representation of a
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group that is also a differentiable manifold. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Euclidean space, whereas groups define the abstract concept of a binary operation along with the additio ...
on the space of
square-integrable function In mathematics, a square-integrable function, also called a quadratically integrable function or L^2 function or square-summable function, is a real- or complex-valued measurable function for which the integral of the square of the absolute value i ...
s, where is a cofinite discrete group. The character is given by the trace of certain functions on . The simplest case is when is cocompact, when the representation breaks up into discrete summands. Here the trace formula is an extension of the
Frobenius formula In mathematics, specifically in representation theory, the Frobenius formula, introduced by G. Frobenius, computes the characters of irreducible representations of the symmetric group ''S'n''. Among the other applications, the formula can be use ...
for the character of an induced representation of finite groups. When is the cocompact subgroup of the real numbers , the Selberg trace formula is essentially the Poisson summation formula. The case when is not compact is harder, because there is a
continuous spectrum In physics, a continuous spectrum usually means a set of attainable values for some physical quantity (such as energy or wavelength) that is best described as an interval of real numbers, as opposed to a discrete spectrum, a set of attainable ...
, described using Eisenstein series. Selberg worked out the non-compact case when is the group ; the extension to higher rank groups is the
Arthur–Selberg trace formula In mathematics, the Arthur–Selberg trace formula is a generalization of the Selberg trace formula from the group SL2 to arbitrary reductive groups over global fields, developed by James Arthur (mathematician), James Arthur in a long series of pape ...
. When is the fundamental group of a Riemann surface, the Selberg trace formula describes the spectrum of differential operators such as the Laplacian in terms of geometric data involving the lengths of geodesics on the Riemann surface. In this case the Selberg trace formula is formally similar to the Explicit formulae (L-function), explicit formulas relating the zeros of the Riemann zeta function to prime numbers, with the zeta zeros corresponding to eigenvalues of the Laplacian, and the primes corresponding to geodesics. Motivated by the analogy, Selberg introduced the Selberg zeta function of a Riemann surface, whose analytic properties are encoded by the Selberg trace formula.


Early history

Cases of particular interest include those for which the space is a compact Riemann surface . The initial publication in 1956 of Atle Selberg dealt with this case, its Laplacian differential operator and its powers. The traces of powers of a Laplacian can be used to define the Selberg zeta function. The interest of this case was the analogy between the formula obtained, and the explicit formula (L-function), explicit formulae of prime number theory. Here the closed geodesics on play the role of prime numbers. At the same time, interest in the traces of Hecke operators was linked to the Eichler–Selberg trace formula, of Selberg and Martin Eichler, for a Hecke operator acting on a vector space of cusp forms of a given weight, for a given congruence subgroup of the modular group. Here the trace of the identity operator is the dimension of the vector space, i.e. the dimension of the space of modular forms of a given type: a quantity traditionally calculated by means of the Riemann–Roch theorem.


Applications

The trace formula has applications to arithmetic geometry and number theory. For instance, using the trace theorem, Eichler–Shimura congruence relation, Eichler and Shimura calculated the Hasse–Weil L-functions associated to modular curves; Goro Shimura's methods by-passed the analysis involved in the trace formula. The development of parabolic cohomology (from Eichler cohomology) provided a purely algebraic setting based on group cohomology, taking account of the cusp form, cusps characteristic of non-compact Riemann surfaces and modular curves. The trace formula also has purely differential geometry, differential-geometric applications. For instance, by a result of Buser, the length spectrum of a Riemann surface is an isospectral invariant, essentially by the trace formula.


Later work

The general theory of Eisenstein series was largely motivated by the requirement to separate out the
continuous spectrum In physics, a continuous spectrum usually means a set of attainable values for some physical quantity (such as energy or wavelength) that is best described as an interval of real numbers, as opposed to a discrete spectrum, a set of attainable ...
, which is characteristic of the non-compact case. The trace formula is often given for algebraic groups over the adeles rather than for Lie groups, because this makes the corresponding discrete subgroup into an algebraic group over a field which is technically easier to work with. The case of SL2(C) is discussed in and . Gel'fand et al also treat SL2() where is a locally compact topological field with ultrametric space, ultrametric norm, so a finite extension of the p-adic numbers Q''p'' or of the formal Laurent series F''q''((''T'')); they also handle the adelic case in characteristic 0, combining all completions R and Q''p'' of the rational numbers Q. Contemporary successors of the theory are the
Arthur–Selberg trace formula In mathematics, the Arthur–Selberg trace formula is a generalization of the Selberg trace formula from the group SL2 to arbitrary reductive groups over global fields, developed by James Arthur (mathematician), James Arthur in a long series of pape ...
applying to the case of general semisimple ''G'', and the many studies of the trace formula in the Langlands philosophy (dealing with technical issues such as endoscopy (trace formula), endoscopy). The Selberg trace formula can be derived from the Arthur–Selberg trace formula with some effort.


Selberg trace formula for compact hyperbolic surfaces

A compact hyperbolic surface can be written as the space of orbits \Gamma \backslash \mathbf, where is a subgroup of , and is the upper half plane, and acts on by linear fractional transformations. The Selberg trace formula for this case is easier than the general case because the surface is compact so there is no continuous spectrum, and the group has no parabolic or elliptic elements (other than the identity). Then the spectrum for the Laplace–Beltrami operator on is discrete and real, since the Laplace operator is self adjoint with compact resolvent formalism, resolvent; that is 0 = \mu_0 < \mu_1 \leq \mu_2 \leq \cdots where the eigenvalues correspond to -invariant eigenfunctions in of the Laplacian; in other words \begin u(\gamma z) = u(z), \qquad \forall \gamma \in \Gamma \\ y^2 \left (u_ + u_ \right) + \mu_ u = 0. \end Using the variable substitution \mu = s(1-s), \qquad s=\tfrac+ir the eigenvalues are labeled r_, n \geq 0. Then the Selberg trace formula is given by \sum_^\infty h(r_n) = \frac \int_^\infty r \, h(r) \tanh(\pi r)\,dr + \sum_ \frac g(\log N(T)). The right hand side is a sum over conjugacy classes of the group , with the first term corresponding to the identity element and the remaining terms forming a sum over the other conjugacy classes (which are all hyperbolic in this case). The function has to satisfy the following: * be analytic on ; * ; * there exist positive constants and such that: \vert h(r) \vert \leq M \left( 1+\left, \operatorname(r) \ \right )^. The function is the Fourier transform of , that is, h(r) = \int_^\infty g(u) e^ \, du.


Notes


References

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External links


Selberg trace formula resource page
{{Authority control Automorphic forms