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In algebraic geometry, given a smooth projective curve ''X'' over a finite field \mathbf_q and a smooth affine group scheme ''G'' over it, the moduli stack of principal bundles over ''X'', denoted by \operatorname_G(X), is an algebraic stack given by: for any \mathbf_q-algebra ''R'', :\operatorname_G(X)(R) = the category of principal ''G''-bundles over the relative curve X \times_ \operatornameR. In particular, the category of \mathbf_q-points of \operatorname_G(X), that is, \operatorname_G(X)(\mathbf_q), is the category of ''G''-bundles over ''X''. Similarly, \operatorname_G(X) can also be defined when the curve ''X'' is over the field of complex numbers. Roughly, in the complex case, one can define \operatorname_G(X) as the quotient stack of the space of holomorphic connections on ''X'' by the gauge group. Replacing the quotient stack (which is not a topological space) by a homotopy quotient (which is a topological space) gives the homotopy type of \operatorname_G(X). In the finite field case, it is not common to define the homotopy type of \operatorname_G(X). But one can still define a ( smooth)
cohomology In mathematics, specifically in homology theory and algebraic topology, cohomology is a general term for a sequence of abelian groups, usually one associated with a topological space, often defined from a cochain complex. Cohomology can be viewe ...
and homology of \operatorname_G(X).


Basic properties

It is known that \operatorname_G(X) is a smooth stack of dimension (g(X) - 1) \dim G where g(X) is the genus of ''X''. It is not of finite type but locally of finite type; one thus usually uses a stratification by open substacks of finite type (cf. the
Harder–Narasimhan stratification In algebraic geometry and complex geometry, the Harder–Narasimhan stratification is any of a stratification of the moduli stack of principal ''G''-bundles by locally closed substacks in terms of "loci of instabilities". In the original form due ...
.) If ''G'' is a split reductive group, then the set of connected components \pi_0(\operatorname_G(X)) is in a natural bijection with the fundamental group \pi_1(G).


The Atiyah–Bott formula


Behrend's trace formula

This is a (conjectural) version of the
Lefschetz trace formula In mathematics, the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem is a formula that counts the fixed points of a continuous mapping from a compact topological space X to itself by means of traces of the induced mappings on the homology groups of X. It is named ...
for \operatorname_G(X) when ''X'' is over a finite field, introduced by Behrend in 1993. It states: if ''G'' is a smooth affine group scheme with semisimple connected generic fiber, then :\# \operatorname_G(X)(\mathbf_q) = q^ \operatorname (\phi^, H^*(\operatorname_G(X); \mathbb_l)) where (see also
Behrend's trace formula In algebraic geometry, Behrend's trace formula is a generalization of the Grothendieck–Lefschetz trace formula to a smooth algebraic stack over a finite field conjectured in 1993 and proven in 2003 by Kai Behrend. Unlike the classical one, the f ...
for the details) *''l'' is a prime number that is not ''p'' and the ring \mathbb_l of
l-adic integers In mathematics, the -adic number system for any prime number  extends the ordinary arithmetic of the rational numbers in a different way from the extension of the rational number system to the real and complex number systems. The extension ...
is viewed as a subring of \mathbb. *\phi is the
geometric Frobenius In mathematics, the Frobenius endomorphism is defined in any commutative ring ''R'' that has characteristic ''p'', where ''p'' is a prime number. Namely, the mapping φ that takes ''r'' in ''R'' to ''r'p'' is a ring endomorphism of ''R''. The ...
. *\# \operatorname_G(X)(\mathbf_q) = \sum_P , the sum running over all isomorphism classes of G-bundles on ''X'' and convergent. *\operatorname(\phi^, V_*) = \sum_^\infty (-1)^i \operatorname(\phi^, V_i) for a
graded vector space In mathematics, a graded vector space is a vector space that has the extra structure of a '' grading'' or a ''gradation'', which is a decomposition of the vector space into a direct sum of vector subspaces. Integer gradation Let \mathbb be ...
V_*, provided the series on the right absolutely converges. ''A priori,'' neither left nor right side in the formula converges. Thus, the formula states that the two sides converge to finite numbers and that those numbers coincide.


Notes

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References

*J. Heinloth
Lectures on the moduli stack of vector bundles on a curve
2009 preliminary version *J. Heinloth, A.H.W. Schmitt, The Cohomology Ring of Moduli Stacks of Principal Bundles over Curves, 2010 preprint, available at http://www.uni-essen.de/~hm0002/. * Gaitsgory, D; Lurie, J.; Weil's Conjecture for Function Fields. 2014


Further reading


Tamagawa number for functional fields
*C. Sorger
Lectures on moduli of principal G-bundles over algebraic curves


See also

*
Geometric Langlands conjectures In mathematics, the geometric Langlands correspondence is a reformulation of the Langlands correspondence obtained by replacing the number fields appearing in the original number theoretic version by function fields and applying techniques from al ...
*
Ran space In mathematics, the Ran space (or Ran's space) of a topological space ''X'' is a topological space \operatorname(X) whose underlying set is the set of all nonempty finite subsets of ''X'': for a metric space ''X'' the topology is induced by the ...
* Moduli stack of vector bundles Algebraic geometry