Fontaine's period rings

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In mathematics, Fontaine's period rings are a collection of commutative rings first defined by Jean-Marc Fontaine[1] that are used to classify p-adic Galois representations.

The ring BdR

The ring ๐dR is defined as follows. Let โ„‚p denote the completion of โ„šp. Let

๐„~+=limxxp๐’ชโ„‚p/(p).

An element of ๐„~+ is a sequence (x1,x2,) of elements xi๐’ชโ„‚p/(p) such that xi+1pxi(modp). There is a natural projection map f:๐„~+๐’ชโ„‚p/(p) given by f(x1,x2,)=x1. There is also a multiplicative (but not additive) map t:๐„~+๐’ชโ„‚p defined by

t(x,x2,)=limix~ipi,

where the x~i are arbitrary lifts of the xi to ๐’ชโ„‚p. The composite of t with the projection ๐’ชโ„‚p๐’ชโ„‚p/(p) is just f.

The general theory of Witt vectors yields a unique ring homomorphism θ:W(๐„~+)๐’ชโ„‚p such that θ([x])=t(x) for all x๐„~+, where [x] denotes the Teichmรผller representative of x. The ring ๐dR+ is defined to be completion of ๐~+=W(๐„~+)[1/p] with respect to the ideal ker(θ:๐~+โ„‚p). Finally, the field ๐dR is just the field of fractions of ๐dR+.

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

  1. โ†‘ Fontaine (1982)