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Geometric Methods in the Algebraic Theory of Quadratic Forms: Summer School, Lens, 2000

✍ Scribed by Oleg T. Izhboldin, Bruno Kahn, Nikita A. Karpenko, Alexander Vishik (auth.), Jean-Pierre Tignol (eds.)


Book ID
127418152
Publisher
Springer
Year
2004
Tongue
French
Weight
2 MB
Edition
1
Category
Library
City
Berlin; New York
ISBN
3540409904
ISSN
0075-8434

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✦ Synopsis


The geometric approach to the algebraic theory of quadratic forms is the study of projective quadrics over arbitrary fields. Function fields of quadrics have been central to the proofs of fundamental results since the renewal of the theory by Pfister in the 1960's. Recently, more refined geometric tools have been brought to bear on this topic, such as Chow groups and motives, and have produced remarkable advances on a number of
outstanding problems. Several aspects of these new methods are addressed in this volume, which includes

  • an introduction to motives of quadrics by Alexander Vishik, with various applications, notably to the splitting patterns of quadratic forms under base field extensions;
  • papers by Oleg Izhboldin and Nikita Karpenko on Chow groups of quadrics and their stable birational equivalence, with application to the construction of fields which carry anisotropic quadratic forms of dimension 9, but none of higher dimension;
  • a contribution in French by Bruno Kahn which lays out a general framework for the computation of the unramified cohomology groups of quadrics and other cellular varieties.

Most of the material appears here for the first time in print. The intended audience consists of research mathematicians at the graduate or post-graduate level.

✦ Subjects


Algebraic Geometry


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Some model-theoretic results in the alge
✍ Vincent Astier πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2001 πŸ› Elsevier Science 🌐 English βš– 268 KB

This paper studies some model-theoretic properties of special groups of ΓΏnite type. Special groups are a ΓΏrst-order axiomatization of the algebraic theory of quadratic forms, introduced by Dickmann and Miraglia, which is essentially equivalent to abstract Witt rings. More precisely, we consider ele