transfinite arithmetic, cardinal arithmetic, ordinal arithmetic
prime field, p-adic integer, p-adic rational number, p-adic complex number
arithmetic geometry, function field analogy
denotes the spectrum of the commutative ring of integers. Its closed points are the maximal ideals , for each prime number in , which are closed, and the non-maximal prime ideal , whose closure is the whole of . For details see at Zariski topology this example.
Since is the initial object in the category CRing of commutative rings, is the terminal object in the category of affine schemes.
The gros etale topos over is the context for arithmetic geometry. By the discussion at Borger's absolute geometry it sits via an essential geometric morphism over the F1-topos:
There are some phenomena that may be interpreted as behaving like a 3-manifold in some ways.
Several properties of make it behave as if of dimension 3. For instance has étale cohomological dimension equal to 3, up to 2-torsion (Mazur 73). Moreover the étale fundamental group is trivial, and hence Mazur suggested that is in fact analogous to the 3-sphere.
Similarly, the spectra of finite fields look like compact 1-dimensional spaces – circles – in that their étale cohomology with -coefficients for coprime to is in degrees 0 and 1 and vanishes in all higher degrees.
From this it is folklore (going back to Mazur and Manin, review includes Deninger 05, section 8, Kohno-Morishita 06) that the spectra of prime fields with their canonical embedding into
(formally dual to the canonical mod- projection ) are analogous to knots inside this 3-dimensional space (a good exposition is in LeBruyn).
Observations like this give rise to the field of arithmetic topology.
However, in view of the analogy between the Selberg zeta function and the Artin L-function it might be more appropriate to think of as analogous to a hyperbolic manifold of dimension 3 (see also Fujiwara 07, slide 7) and then to think of finite field spectra as analogous to the prime geodesics in the manifold. This does not change the fact that every single is like an embedded circle, hence like a knot, but it affects the perspective on which role these play. For instance there does not seem to be a differential geometric analog situation where one considers infinite products over all knots in a 3-space, but there are such situations where one considers infinite products over all prime geodesics in a space, namely the Selberg zeta function analogous to the Artin L-function with its product over prime ideals.
Barry Mazur, Notes on étale cohomology of number fields, Annales scientifiques de l’École Normale Supérieure, Sér. 4, 6 no. 4 (1973), p. 521-552 (NUMDAM)
Barry Mazur, Remarks on the Alexander polynomial, unpublished note
Christopher Deninger, Arithmetic Geometry and Analysis on Foliated Spaces (arXiv:math/0505354)
Toshitake Kohno, Masanori Morishita (eds.), Primes and Knots, Contemporary Mathematics, AMS 2006 (web)
Lieven LeBruyn, talk 2010 (pdf slides (35 mb), MO comment (with more details))
K. Fujiwara, -adic gauge theory in number theory, 2007 (pdf slides)
Bertrand Toën, Michel Vaquié, Au-dessous de , Journal of K-Theory 3 3 (2009) 437-500 [doi:10.1017/is008004027jkt048]
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