Date:
Wed, 19/12/201811:00-13:00
Location:
Ross 63
Model theory and geometry of fields with automorphism
I will review some of the model-theoretic geometry of difference varieties, and some open problems.
A difference variety is defined by polynomial equations with an additional operator $\si$ interpreted as a field automorphism.
For each prime power $q=p^m$ there is a functor $M_q$ from difference varieties (or schemes) to ordinary varieties, by specializing to characteristic $p$ and interpreting $\si$ as the Frobenius automorphism $x \mapsto x^q$. Many constructions of algebraic geometry can be generalized so as to be compatible with these maps; notably, intersection theory on smooth projective varieties. Zero-dimensional difference varieties (say over $\Qq$)
(whose jet space is a finite-dimensional pro-algebraic variety), are at the heart of the theory; in particular the intersection of two difference subvarieties of complementary dimension is not a number but a zero-dimensional difference variety, up to a certain model-theoretically defined equivalence. Here the model theory of valued difference fields intervenes; specifically the notion of analyzability. Zero-dimensional difference varieties generalize varieties over (pseudo)-finite fields, but unlike the latter they can be moved in families. They appear to be closely connected to motives; I will formulate some questions and show a first instance of this conjectural connection.