Arithmetic and geometric Frobenius
In mathematics, the Frobenius endomorphism is defined in any commutative ring R that has characteristic p, where p is a prime number. Namely, the mapping φ that takes r in R to rp is a ring endomorphism of R.
The image of φ is then Rp, the subring of R consisting of p-th powers. In some important cases, for example finite fields, φ is surjective. Otherwise φ is an endomorphism but not a ring automorphism.
The terminology of geometric Frobenius arises by applying the spectrum of a ring construction to φ. This gives a mapping
:φ*: Spec(Rp) → Spec(R)
of affine schemes. Even in cases where Rp = R this is not the identity, unless R is the prime field.
Mappings created by fibre product with φ*, i.e. base changes, tend in scheme theory to be called geometric Frobenius. The reason for a careful terminology is that the Frobenius automorphism in Galois groups, or defined by transport of structure, is often the inverse mapping of the geometric Frobenius. As in the case of a cyclic group in which a generator is also the inverse of a generator, there are in many situations two possible definitions of Frobenius, and without a consistent convention some problem of a minus sign may appear.
References
- {{Citation | last1=Freitag | first1=Eberhard | authorlink2=Reinhardt Kiehl|last2=Kiehl | first2=Reinhardt | title=Étale cohomology and the Weil conjecture | publisher=Springer-Verlag | location=Berlin, New York | series=Ergebnisse der Mathematik und ihrer Grenzgebiete (3) [Results in Mathematics and Related Areas (3)] | isbn=978-3-540-12175-6 | mr=926276 | year=1988 | volume=13}}, p. 5
{{DEFAULTSORT:Arithmetic And Geometric Frobenius}}
Category:Mathematical terminology
Category:Algebraic number theory
{{algebraic-geometry-stub}}