nLab higher regulator

Redirected from "regulator".
Contents

Context

Cohomology

cohomology

Special and general types

Special notions

Variants

Extra structure

Operations

Theorems

Contents

Idea

In the context of arithmetic geometry a higher regulator, or just regulator for short, is a homomorphism from algebraic K-theory to a suitable ordinary cohomology theory. (It makes sense to think that it “regulates” cocycles in algebraic K-theory, which tend to be hard to analyze, to become cocycles in ordinary cohomology, about which typically more may be said.) This generalizes the original concept of a regulator of a number field which is a measure for the group of units of the ring of integers of the number field, in view of the fact that the determinant function provides a canonical homomorphism K 1GL 1K_1 \to GL_1 from the first algebraic K-theory to the group of units.

Regulators are used in the study of L-functions for instance in the context of the Beilinson conjectures and the Bloch-Kato conjecture.

The simplest example of such regulators are

These regulators may be understood as essentially being the Chern characters in algebraic K-theory (Deninger Scholl (2.6), Tamme 12). Based on this observation they serve to define differential cohomology-refinements of algebraic K-theory, namely differential algebraic K-theory (Bunke-Tamme 12).

we usually call transformations from K-theory to cyclic homology Chern characters, and transformations from K-theory to differential forms regulators. There is one exception, namely the usual Chern character from topological K-theory to cohomology with complex coefficients calculated by the de Rham cohomology. (Bunke 14, remark 2.20)

Definition

Dirichlet and Borel regulator

For RR a ring, KRK R denoting its algebraic K-theory spectrum and Σ nH\Sigma^n H \mathbb{R} a suspension of the Eilenberg-MacLane spectrum of the real numbers, then a regulator of KRK R-cohomology theory is a homomorphism of spectra

r σ,p:KRΣ pH r_{\sigma,p} \;\colon\; K R \longrightarrow \Sigma^p H \mathbb{R}

or equivalently is the induced cohomology operations. e.g. (Bunke-Tamme 12, 1.2)

If here RR is the ring of integers of a number field and σ:R\sigma \colon R \hookrightarrow \mathbb{C} is a choice of embedding into the complex numbers, then the Borel regulator (Borel 74) is of this form, for odd pp, such that its induced cohomology operation

r σ,p:K 1(R) r_{\sigma,p} \;\colon\; K_1(R) \longrightarrow \mathbb{R}

is the Dirichlet regulator given by

ulog|σ(u)|. u \mapsto log {\vert \sigma(u) \vert} \,.

A description of this in differential algebraic K-theory is in (Bunke-Tamme 12, 1.2):

for XX a smooth manifold, then a class in KR 0(X)K R^0(X) is represented by a finitely generated projective RR-module bundle VXV \to X. Write

cycl(V)KR 0(X) cycl(V) \in K R^0(X)

for this class.

Under the chosen embedding σ\sigma we have the complexification V σV \otimes_\sigma \mathbb{C} of this module bundle, which is a complex vector bundle with (because RR is geometrically discrete) a flat connection V σ\nabla_{V_\sigma}.

The choice of hermitean structure on V σV_\sigma, hence a reduction of the structure group to the unitary group induces an adjoint connection V σ *\nabla_{V_\sigma}^\ast. Write then

CS p( V σ *, V σ) CS_p(\nabla_{V_\sigma}^\ast, \nabla_{V_\sigma})

for the relative Chern-Simons form between these two connections, hence for the transgression of the relative Chern character in degree p+1p+1.

This is a closed differential form, (the Kamber-Tondeur form, see Bismut-Lott 95).

This differential form represents, via the de Rham theorem isomorphism, the Dirichlet regulator above

r σ,p(cycl(V))[CS p( V σ *, V σ)]H dR p(X)H p(X,). r_{\sigma,p}(cycl(V)) \simeq [CS_p(\nabla_{V_\sigma}^\ast, \nabla_{V_\sigma})] \in H_{dR}^p(X) \simeq H^p(X,\mathbb{R}) \,.

In differential algebraic K-theory this construction can be refined from landing in de Rham cohomology to landing in genuine ordinary differential cohomology (higher prequantization), hence with CS p( V σ *, V σ)CS_p(\nabla_{V_\sigma}^\ast, \nabla_{V_\sigma}) itself realized as the curvature of a circle (p-1)-bundle with connection.

Regulators of generalized algebraic K-theories

Based on the above abstract formulation of the classical Beilinson- and Borel-regulators, the following general definition suggests itsef:

Definition

Consider the following data:

  1. For 𝒞 \mathcal{C}^\otimes a symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category write 𝒦(𝒞)\mathcal{K}(\mathcal{C}) for its algebraic K-theory of a symmetric monoidal (∞,1)-category.

  2. For ACh (Ab)A \in Ch_\bullet(Ab) any chain complex write HAH A for its Eilenberg-MacLane spectrum given by the stable Dold-Kan correspondence.

Then a regulator with coefficients in AA of the algebraic K-theory represented by 𝒦(𝒞)\mathcal{K}(\mathcal{C}) is a homomorphism of spectra (hence a cohomology operation)

r:𝒦(𝒞)HA. r \;\colon\; \mathcal{K}(\mathcal{C}) \longrightarrow H A \,.

Accordingly the spectrum of AA-regulators of 𝒦(𝒞)\mathcal{K}(\mathcal{C}) is the mapping spectrum [𝒦(𝒞),HA][\mathcal{K}(\mathcal{C}), H A].

(Bunke-Tamme 12, def. 23).

Beilinson regulators

(…)

Examples

Constructions in terms of line nn-bundles (n1n-1-bundle gerbes)

Some special cases of Beilinson regulators have known “geometric” constructions in terms of maps relating holomorphic line n-bundles for various nn.

The regulator

c 2,2:K 2(X)H 2(X,(2) 𝒟) c_{2,2} \colon K_2(X) \longrightarrow H^2(X, \mathbb{Z}(2)_{\mathcal{D}})

is given by sending pairs of non-vanishing holomorphic functions to the holomorphic line bundle which is their Beilinson-Deligne cup product (the “Deligne line bundle”) (Bloch 78).

Moreover, the regulator

c 1,2:K 1(X)H 3(X,(2) 𝒟) c_{1,2} \colon K_1(X) \longrightarrow H^3(X, \mathbb{Z}(2)_{\mathcal{D}})

or rather its component

c 1,2:H 1(X,K 2)H 3(X,(2) 𝒟) c_{1,2} \colon H^1(X, \mathbf{K}_2) \longrightarrow H^3(X, \mathbb{Z}(2)_{\mathcal{D}})

is given by sending functions constituing a cocycle in the relevant Gersten complex to a bundle gerbe whose transition line bundles are Deligne line bundles built from these functions (Brylinski 94, theorem 3.3).

Notice that c 2,1c_{2,1} is the regulator that interpolates the string 2-group/universal Chern-Simons line 3-bundle for a reductive algebraic group from the algebraic to the complex-analytic realm, see at universal Chern-Simons line 3-bundles – For reductive algebraic groups.

Properties

Becker-Gottlieb transfer and GRR for algebraic K-theory

For π:XB\pi \colon X \to B a proper submersion of smooth manifolds, there is a variant of fiber integration in generalized cohomology given by the Becker-Gottlieb transfer in some EE-cohomology theory

tr π:E *(X)E *(B). tr_\pi \;\colon\; E^\ast(X) \longrightarrow E^\ast(B) \,.

Moreover, for the above sheaves of RR-modules cycl(V)cycl(V) we have the direct image sheaves π *V\pi_\ast V and there is an identity

i0(1) icycl(R iπ *(V))tr π(cycl(V)) \underset{i \geq 0}{\sum} (-1)^i cycl(R^i \pi_\ast(V)) \simeq tr_\pi(cycl(V))

in KR(B)K R(B). The above Borel-Dirichlet regulator r σ,pr_{\sigma,p} is such that it preseves this as an identity in H(X,)H(X,\mathbb{R}). Hence it plays a role here analogous that of the Chern character in the Grothendieck-Riemann-Roch theorem.

The Becker-Gottlieb transfer refines in turn to differential cohomology, hence differential algebraic K-theory mapping to ordinary differential cohomology, according to (Bunke-Gepner 13).

However, the above relation between direct image of sheaves and push-forward in cohomology receives a correction when refined to differential algebraic K-theory, a correction by a term in the image of the inclusion a()a(-) of differential forms into differential cohomology, by the transfer index conjecture one has

i0(1) icycl^(R iπ *(V))+a(something)tr^ π(cycl^(V)) \underset{i \geq 0}{\sum} (-1)^i \widehat{cycl}(R^i \pi_\ast(V)) + a(something) \simeq \widehat{tr}_\pi(\widehat{cycl}(V))

where the hats denote the differential cohomology refinement.

See at Becker-Gottlieb transfer.

Relation to complex volumes and Bloch group

There is some relation between the Borel regulators and complex volumes of hyperbolic manifolds via maps out of the Bloch group (Suslin 90, Neumann-Yang 97, p. 17, Zickert 07, p. 3, Zickert 09).

For kk an algebraic number field and σ 1,,σ r 2:k\sigma_1, \cdots, \sigma_{r_2}\colon k \to \mathbb{C} its complex embeddings up to conjugation, then write

vol jvol(σ j):H 3(PSL(2,k),) vol_j \coloneqq vol \circ (\sigma_j)\colon H_3(PSL(2,k), \mathbb{Z}) \to \mathbb{R}

Then then map

(vol 1,,vol r 2):H 3(PSL(2,k),) r 2 (vol_1, \cdots, vol_{r_2}) \colon H_3(PSL(2,k),\mathbb{Z}) \longrightarrow \mathbb{R}^{r_2}

is the Borel regulator (Neumann 11, p. 6).

For the moment, see at Bloch group for more details.

References

The Borel regulator is due to

  • Armand Borel, Cohomologie de SL nSL_n et valeurs de fonctions de zeta, Ann. Scuola Norm. Sup. Pisa Cl. Sci. (4) 417 (1971), 613–636.

  • Armand Borel, Stable real cohomology of arithmetic groups, Ann. Sci. Ecole Norm. Sup. (4) 7 (1974), 235-272 (1975). MR 0387496

The Beilinson regulator with values in Deligne cohomology is due to

  • Spencer Bloch, Applications of the dilogarithm function in algebraic K-theory and algebraic geometry, in: Proc. of the International Symp. on Alg. Geometry, Kinokuniya, Tokyo, 1978

  • Spencer Bloch, The dilogarithm and extensions of Lie algebras, Algebraic K-Theory Evanston 1980, Lecture Notes in Mathematics Volume 854, 1981, pp 1-23

  • Alexander BeilinsonHigher regulators and values of L-functions, Journal of Soviet Mathematics 30 (1985), 2036-2070, (mathnet (Russian), DOI)

  • Alexander Beilinson, Higher regulators of curves, Funct. Anal. Appl. 14 (1980), 116-118, mathnet (Russian).

  • Alexander Beilinson, Height pairing between algebraic cycles, in K-Theory, Arithmetic and Geometry, Lecture Notes in Mathematics Volume 1289, 1987, pp 1-26, DOI.

reviewed in

A discussion of the Beilinson regulator on K 2K_2 in terms of bundle gerbes is in

  • Jean-Luc Brylinski, Holomorphic gerbes and the Beilinson regulator, Astérisque 226 (1994): 145-174 (pdf)

See also

  • Christophe Soulé, On higher p-adic regulators, Algebraic K-Theory Evanston 1980 Lecture Notes in Mathematics Volume 854, 1981, pp 372-401_ (publisher page)

The relation to Chern characters is made very explicit in

  • Georg Tamme, Karoubi’s relative Chern character and Beilinson’s regulator, Ann. Sci. Ec. Norm. Super. (4) 45 (2012), no. 4, 601-636. (pdf)

see also

The interpretation of these regulator Chern characters in differential algebraic K-theory is due to

based on

  • Jean-Michel Bismut, John Lott, Flat vector bundles, direct images and

    higher real analytic torsion_, J. Amer. Math. Soc. 8 (1995), no. 2, 291-363.

See also

  • Charles Weibel, Algebraic K-theory and the Adams e-invariant, in Algebraic K-theory, number theory, geometry and analysis(Bielefeld, 1982), volume 1046 of Lecture Notes in Math., pages 442-450. Springer, Berlin, 1984. 61 pdf

  • A.A. Suslin, On the K-theory of local fields, In Proceedings of the Luminy conference on algebraic K-theory (Luminy, 1983), volume 34, pages 301-318, 1984.

  • Wikipedia, Beilinson regulator

For more references see also at Beilinson conjecture.

Relation of the Borel regulator to the Bloch group, the Cheeger-Simons class/complex volumes of hyperbolic manifolds is discussed in

  • Andrei Suslin. K 3K_3 of a field, and the Bloch group. Trudy Mat. Inst. Steklov., 183:180–199, 229, 1990. Translated in Proc. Steklov Inst. Math. 1991, no. 4, 217–239, Galois theory, rings, algebraic groups and their applications (Russian).

  • Walter Neumann, Jun Yang, Bloch invariants of hyperbolic 3-manifolds, Duke Math. J. Volume 96, Number 1 (1999), 29-59. (arXiv:math/9712224, Euclid)

  • Christian Zickert, The volume and Chern-Simons invariant of a representation, Duke Math. J., 150 (3):489-532, 2009 (arXiv:0710.2049, Euclid)

  • Christian Zickert, The extended Bloch group and algebraic K-theory (arXiv:0910.4005)

  • Walter Neumann, Realizing arithmetic invariants of hyperbolic 3-manifolds, Contemporary Math 541 (Amer. Math. Soc. 2011), 233–246 (arXiv:1108.0062)

Last revised on September 23, 2020 at 10:07:01. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.