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Smooth profinite groups, I: geometrizing Kummer theory

Charles De Clercq, Mathieu Florence

Abstract

In this series of three papers, we introduce and study cyclotomic pairs and smooth profinite groups. They are a geometric axiomatisation of Kummer theory for fields, with coefficients $p$-primary roots of unity, for a prime $p$. These coefficients are enhanced, to $G$-linearized line bundles in Witt vectors, over $G$-schemes of characteristic $p$. In the second paper, this upgrade is pushed even further, to the scheme-theoretic setting. In this first article, we introduce cyclotomic pairs, smooth profinite groups and $(G,S)$-cohomology. We prove a first lifting theorem for $G$-linearized torsors under line bundles (Theorem A). With the help of the algebro-geometric tools developed in the second article, this formalism is applied in the third one, to prove the Smoothness Theorem, whose essence reads as follows. Let $G$ be profinite group. Assume that, for every open subgroup $H \subset G$, and for $n=1$, the natural arrow $H^n(H,\mathbb{Z}/p^2) \to H^n(H,\mathbb{Z}/p)$ is surjective. Then, it is also surjective for every such $H$, and every $n \geq 2$. Applied to absolute Galois groups, the Smoothness Theorem provides a new proof of the Norm Residue Isomorphism Theorem, entirely disjoint from motivic cohomology.

Smooth profinite groups, I: geometrizing Kummer theory

Abstract

In this series of three papers, we introduce and study cyclotomic pairs and smooth profinite groups. They are a geometric axiomatisation of Kummer theory for fields, with coefficients -primary roots of unity, for a prime . These coefficients are enhanced, to -linearized line bundles in Witt vectors, over -schemes of characteristic . In the second paper, this upgrade is pushed even further, to the scheme-theoretic setting. In this first article, we introduce cyclotomic pairs, smooth profinite groups and -cohomology. We prove a first lifting theorem for -linearized torsors under line bundles (Theorem A). With the help of the algebro-geometric tools developed in the second article, this formalism is applied in the third one, to prove the Smoothness Theorem, whose essence reads as follows. Let be profinite group. Assume that, for every open subgroup , and for , the natural arrow is surjective. Then, it is also surjective for every such , and every . Applied to absolute Galois groups, the Smoothness Theorem provides a new proof of the Norm Residue Isomorphism Theorem, entirely disjoint from motivic cohomology.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 35 sections, 24 theorems, 279 equations.

Key Result

Lemma 2.5

Let $S$ be a $G$-scheme. Let $U \subset G$ be a $G$-invariant open subscheme. Then, $U$ is a $G$-scheme as well.

Theorems & Definitions (96)

  • Definition
  • Remark 2.1
  • Definition 2.2
  • Remark 2.3
  • Lemma 2.5
  • Definition 2.6
  • Definition 2.7
  • Remark 2.8
  • Remark 2.9
  • Remark 2.10
  • ...and 86 more