nLab motive

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Contents

Context

Motivic cohomology

Cohomology

cohomology

Special and general types

Special notions

Variants

Extra structure

Operations

Theorems

Contents

Idea

In order to express this kinship of these different cohomological theories, I formulated the notion of “motive” associated to an algebraic variety. By this term I want to suggest that it is the “common motive” (or “common reason”) behind this multitude of cohomological invariants attached to an algebraic variety, or indeed, behind all cohomological invariants that are a priori possible. (Grothendieck, Récoltes et Semailles?)

The similarity of the behaviour of various cohomologies of varieties over a field suggests that there is a universal one among them with values in an intermediate abelian category, called the category of motives. The idea is that to every variety XX is associated a motive M(X)M(X), such that every good cohomology theory factors through the functor MM. (Here not every motive is supposed to be the image of a single variety.)

One distinguishes a theory of pure motives for smooth projective varieties from a more general theory of mixed motives for arbitrary smooth varieties. So far, pure motives and mixed motives have only been defined conditionally. However there are several equivalent definitions of a triangulated tensor category which has all conjectured structural properties of the derived category of mixed motives (except for the t-structure which would make it a derived category).

Grothendieck‘s original realization of this idea is the category of Chow motives, which is a certain abelianization and completion of a category of spans of smooth projective varieties. Later a more homotopy-theoretic version was given, the Voevodsky motives or derived motives, see below, which subsume the Chow motives faithfully. More generally still, there are definitions for noncommutative motives obtained by passing to noncommutative algebraic geometry. Finally, the construction principle of motives can also be adapted to other flavors of geometry. For instance in noncommutative topology the role of the category of noncommutative motives is played by KK-theory.

Constructions of motives often depend on whether we work in prime characteristics or in characteristic zero. Part of the formalism involves more general schemes than varieties.

Another crucial idea leading to motives is that the various cohomology theories lead to the same pieces of information; therefore there is a symmetry related to this, which is of Galois theory nature. For example, over the complex numbers one can compare the Betti cohomology and de Rham cohomology “realizations”. Thus one has a motivic Galois group, and as usually with representations one has a tensor category structure which is also rigid. Thus one has in fact an abelian tensor category of motives. Tannakian reconstruction plays a major role; for pure motives we have neutral Tannakian categories, and for mixed motives we have mixed Tannakian categories. Functions on the torsor of the isomorphism between “realizations” correspond to the matrices of periods in Hodge theory.

LL-functions (and ζ\zeta-functions in particular) of varieties are also invariants of their motives. The Langlands program indirectly involves motives; in particular its essential part can be expressed as a general modularity conjecture relating LL-functions to automorphic functions. Most of the deep properties of elliptic curves are of motivic nature, and in particular a major step of the proof of Fermat's last theorem by Wiles and Taylor can be interpreted as a proof of a special case of the modularity conjecture (for elliptic curves).

Constructions of the abelian category of mixed motives

There is no generally accepted construction of a \mathbb{Q}-linear abelian category of mixed motives, and its existence remains conjectural. However, there exist candidate and conditional constructions which are useful in practice.

Note that “the” abelian category of mixed motives depends on choosing a base scheme SS, and one speaks of motives (or motivic sheaves) over SS. Traditionally, SS is the spectrum of a field, often of characteristic zero.

Nori motives

Madhav Nori has an approach to the theory of motives based on a peculiar kind of Tannakian reconstruction, the so called Nori's Tannakian theorem. Nori’s construction unconditionally produces a \mathbb{Q}-Tannakian category of mixed motives over any subfield of \mathbb{C}.

Deligne motives

Pierre Deligne gave a definition of a category of mixed motives over number fields as compatible systems of realizations, essentially bundling together all the structure that mixed motives should give rise to. This approach automatically yields a \mathbb{Q}-Tannakian category of mixed motives with all the desired realization functors (Betti, \ell-adic, de Rham, and crystalline). See Deligne for details.

As the heart of a t-structure on the derived category of mixed motives

Deligne first suggested that it might be easier to define the derived category DM(S,)DM(S,\mathbb{Q}) of the hypothetical abelian category of mixed motives. Once this is done, one can in principle recover the abelian category as the heart of a t-structure on DM(S,)DM(S,\mathbb{Q}). It is now well-understood what the triangulated category DM(S,)DM(S,\mathbb{Q}) is over any base scheme (see below). The hypothetical t-structure on DM(S,)DM(S,\mathbb{Q}) whose heart is the abelian category of mixed motives over SS is called the motivic t-structure.

Beilinson proved that, over fields of characteristic zero, the existence of the motivic t-structure implies the standard conjectures on algebraic cycles (see Beilinson), and Bondarko proved that it implies the existence of motivic t-structures for more general schemes (see Bondarko).

While the derived category of mixed motives can also be defined with integral rather than rational coefficients, Voevodksy observed that the derived category of integral motives cannot have a motivic t-structure (Voevodsky, Prop. 4.3.8). Thus, the abelian category of motives always refers to motives with rational coefficients.

References

  • Mikhail Bondarko, Mixed motivic sheaves (and weights for them) exist if ‘ordinary’ mixed motives do, 2013, (arXiv)
  • Pierre Deligne, Le groupe fondamental de la droite projective moins trois points, (pdf)

Constructions of the derived category of mixed motives

The derived category of the hypothetical abelian category of mixed motives has been unconditionally defined over any Noetherian scheme. The first definition was proposed by Voevodksy in the mid 1990s. Since then, several other definitions were formulated: one by Morel, one by Ayoub, and one by Cisinski and Déglise. The latter three are equivalent and support a full-fledged formalism of six operations. However, they are only known to be equivalent to Voevodsky’s definition over excellent? and geometrically unibranch? schemes.

On the other hand, Voevodsky’s definition is the only one among these four which also makes sense with integral coefficients rather than rational coefficients. Recently, Spitzweck? proposed a definition of the category of integral motives over general base schemes which also supports a formalism of six operations. It is known to agree with Voevodsky’s definition for fields of characteristic zero. Rationally, however, it agrees with the Morel/Ayoub/Cisinski-Déglise definition over any base scheme.

As homotopy invariant Nisnevich sheaves with transfers (Voevodsky motives)

Associated to a Noetherian scheme SS there is an additive category SmCor SSmCor_S of “finite” correspondences of schemes, whose

  • objects are smooth schemes of finite type over SS;

  • morphisms SmCor S(X,Y)SmCor_S(X,Y) are the abelian group of cycles on the fiber product X× SYX \times_S Y that are “universally integral relative to XX” and each of whose components are finite and and surjective over XX.

See at pure motive for more (see also MaVoWe, Appendix 1A). Associating to a morphism of schemes its graph defines a faithful functor Sm/SSmCor SSm/S\hookrightarrow SmCor_S.

An (∞,1)-presheaf with transfers on the category Sm/SSm/S of smooth schemes of finite type is an (∞,1)-presheaf on SmCor SSmCor_S which transforms finite sums into finite (∞,1)-products (and hence take values in connective chain complexes).

The (∞,1)-category DM 0 eff(S)DM^{eff}_{\geq 0}(S) is a certain reflexive localization of the (∞,1)-category of presheaves with transfers: it consists of those presheaves with transfers whose underlying presheaves on Sm/SSm/S are (∞,1)-sheaves for the Nisnevich topology and are A1-homotopy invariant.

The Tate motive (1)[2]\mathbb{Z}(1)[2] is the image of the pointed scheme ( 1,)(\mathbb{P}^1,\infty) in DM 0 eff(S)DM^{eff}_{\geq 0}(S).

Definition

The stable (∞,1)-category of (integral) motives DM(S)DM(S) is the stabilization of DM 0 eff(S)DM^{eff}_{\geq 0}(S) at the Tate motive (1)[2]\mathbb{Z}(1)[2].

The (∞,1)-category DM(S)DM(S) is a stable, symmetric monoidal, and locally presentable (∞,1)-category which is enriched in chain complexes. It is slightly larger than the category DM (S)DM^-(S) defined in MaVoWe, p. 110 which is not cocomplete.

Voevodsky’s cancellation theorem states that the canonical functor DM 0 eff(S)DM(S)DM^{eff}_{\geq 0}(S)\to DM(S) is fully faithful if SS is a perfect field.

As rational stable motivic homotopy types with trivial action of the Hopf element (Morel motives)

Let ϵ:𝔾 m𝔾 m𝔾 m𝔾 m\epsilon : \mathbb{G}_m\wedge \mathbb{G}_m\to \mathbb{G}_m\wedge \mathbb{G}_m be the transposition. In the stable motivic homotopy category SH(S)SH(S) this becomes an endomorphism of the motivic sphere spectrum S 0S^0 such that ϵ 2=1\epsilon^2=1. Rationally (or even away from 2), we obtain a pair of idempotent elements

1+ϵ2,1ϵ2 \frac{1+\epsilon}{2}, \quad \frac{1-\epsilon}{2}

which induce a splitting SH(S) SH(S) +×SH(S) SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}}\simeq SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}_+}\times SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}_-}.

Definition

SH(S) +SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}_+} is the stable (,1)(\infty,1)-category of Morel motives.

In other words, a Morel motive is a rational stable motivic homotopy type on which ϵ\epsilon acts as 1-1.

The Hopf element ηπ 1,1(S 0)\eta\in \pi_{1,1}(S^0) is the stabilization of the algebraic Hopf fibration 𝔸 20 1\mathbb{A}^2-0\to\mathbb{P}^1 over SS. Morel motives can also be characterized as those rational stable motivic homotopy types that are acted on trivially by the Hopf element.

We have ϵ=1\epsilon=-1 if and only if 1-1 is a sum of squares in all the residue fields of SS, in which case SH(S) =SH(S) +SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}}= SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}_+}. Thus, the other summand SH(S) SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}_-} only appears over formally real fields. It is called the category of Witt motives.

As homotopy invariant étale sheaves without transfers (Ayoub motives)

According to Ayoub, the stable (,1)(\infty,1)-category of motives over a scheme SS can be constructed in the same way as the stable motivic homotopy category SH(S)SH(S), with two variations:

The resulting (∞,1)-category is denoted DA et(S,)DA^{\mathrm{et}}(S,\mathbb{Q}). Its objects are thus 1\mathbb{P}^1-spectra of 𝔸 1\mathbb{A}^1-invariant étale (∞,1)-sheaves with values in connective rational chain complexes.

As modules over a summand of rational homotopy invariant algebraic K-theory (Beilinson motives)

This definition is due to Cisinski and Déglise. The rationalization of the homotopy invariant algebraic K-theory spectrum KGLSH(S)KGL\in SH(S) splits as a direct sum

KGL = nΣ T nH B KGL_{\mathbb{Q}} = \bigoplus_{n\in\mathbb{Z}} \Sigma_T^n H_B

for some E E_\infty rational motivic ring spectrum H BSH(S)H_B\in SH(S).

Definition

The stable (,1)(\infty,1)-category of Beilinson motives is the (,1)(\infty,1)-category of modules over H BH_B. Equivalently, it is the full subcategory of SH(S) SH(S)_{\mathbb{Q}} consisting of H BH_B-local objects.

Cisinski and Déglise have shown that H BH_B is exactly the ++-summand S + 0S^0_{\mathbb{Q}_+} of the rational motivic sphere spectrum, and hence that a Beilinson motive is the same thing as a Morel motive. They have also shown that Beilinson/Morel motives are equivalent to Ayoub motives. Finally, they have shown that Beilinson motives are equivalent to rational Voevodsky motives DM(S,)DM(S,\mathbb{Q}) when SS is excellent? and geometrically unibranch?. Over such schemes, all four definitions of the derived category of mixed motives are therefore equivalent.

As modules over a spectrum representing motivic cohomology over SpecSpec \mathbb{Z} (Spitzweck motives)

One idea to define a category of integral motives with a formalism of six operations is to first define an E E_\infty motivic ring spectrum M SH(Spec)M_{\mathbb{Z}}\in SH(Spec \mathbb{Z}). If f:SSpecf: S\to Spec \mathbb{Z} is any scheme, we obtain an E E_\infty-algebra M S=f *(M )M_S = f^\ast(M_{\mathbb{Z}}) in SH(S)SH(S). The categories of modules over M SM_S for varying SS then inherit a complete formalism of six operations from SHSH.

Spitzweck defined such an E E_\infty-algebra M M_{\mathbb{Z}} such that

  • if SS is smooth over a Dedekind domain, M SM_S represents Bloch-Levine motivic cohomology,
  • if SS is smooth over a field, M SM_S is equivalent to Voevodsky’s motivic Eilenberg-Mac Lane spectrum HH\mathbb{Z},
  • M M_{\mathbb{Z}}\otimes\mathbb{Q} is the Beilinson motive H BH_B.

The stable (,1)(\infty,1)-category of M SM_S-modules is thus a well-behaved candidate for a derived category of integral motives, but it is only known to agree with Voevodsky’s definition when SS is a field of characteristic zero (by Rondigs-Ostvaer, Theorem 5.5).

Variations and extensions

Correspondences are interesting in noncommutative geometry of the operator algebra flavour. For example, KK-groups are in fact themselves sort of correspondences; Connes and Skandalis had an early reference very much paralleling some ideas from the algebraic world. More recently, motives in the operator algebraic setup have been approached by Connes, Marcolli and others.

In derived noncommutative algebraic geometry based on A A_\infty-categories, Kontsevich proposed a theory of noncommutative motives. There is now a more general setup (than Kontsevich’s) due to Cisinski and Tabuada, see the references at noncommutative motive.

In birational geometry, Bruno Kahn defined the appropriate version. In rigid analytic geometry, A 1A^1-homotopy theory is replaced by B 1B^1-homotopy theory and the appropriate analogue of the Voevodsky’s category of mixed motives has been constructed; the construction follows the same basic pattern.

Relation to other fields

Relation to physics

Motivic structures show up in quantum field theory, for instance

The pull-push quantization in Gromov-Witten theory is naturally understood as a “motivic quantization” in terms of Chow motives of Deligne-Mumford stacks (Behrend-Manin 95).

Relation to KK-theory

See at KK-theory in the section As an analog of motives in noncommutative topology.

References

General

A brief exposition is in

  • Barry Mazur, What is… a Motive?, Notices of the AMS, volume 51, Number 10, 2004 (pdf)

A review is also in chapter I of

Lectures include

  • Marc Levine, Six lectures on motives, lectures at ICTP Workshop on K-theory and Motives 2006 (pdf)

The definition of Voevodsky motives can be found in

Voevodsky’s formalization of motives was sketched in

and worked out in detail in

  • Joseph Ayoub, Les six opérations de Grothendieck et le formalisme des cycles évanescents dans le monde motivique (I), Astérisque, vol. 314, Soc. Math. France, 2007.

    Les six opérations de Grothendieck et le formalisme des cycles évanescents dans le monde motivique (II), Astérisque, vol. 315, Soc. Math. France, 2007.

the definition of Ayoub motives in

  • Joseph Ayoub, La réalisation étale et les opérations de Grothendieck (pdf)

For the definition of Beilinson and Morel motives, the equivalences of the various definitions, and the formalism of six operations, see

The fact that DM(k)DM(k) is equivalent to the category of H()H(\mathbb{Z})-modules if char(k)=0\mathrm{char}(k)=0 is proved in

Spitzweck’s definition of a motivic cohomology spectrum over SpecSpec \mathbb{Z} is in

  • Markus Spitzweck, A commutative P^1-spectrum representing motivic cohomology over Dedekind domains I (arXiv)

A summary of the axioms and of the main theorems is in the introduction of

An outline of the big picture can be found in the introduction to

Some pretty useful comments on motives are at this MathOverflow thead:

See also the blog post

A formal discussion of motives can be found in lecture 14 of

There is also

For a noncommutative analogue to the theory of motives, see noncommutative motives.

Some other aspects

Motives from the point of view of Grothendieck topoi are studied in

Relation to Hodge theory

Explicit discussion of the relation to Hodge theory is in

Relation KK-theory and bivariant K-theory, K-motives

Relation of motivic cohomology to bivariant algebraic K-theory (see also at KK-theory) is discussed in

See also at KK-theory – Relation to motives.

For a collection of literature see also paragraph 1.5 in

(in the context of noncommutative motives).

In physics

See also at motivic multiple zeta values.

That the pull-push quantization in Gromov-Witten theory is naturally understood as a “motivic quantization” in terms of Chow motives of Deligne-Mumford stacks was suggested in

Further investigation of these stacky Chow motives then appears in

For more see at motives in physics.

Last revised on August 9, 2021 at 22:42:09. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.