In harmonic analysis and number theory, an automorphic form is a well-behaved function from a topological group to the (or complex vector space) which is invariant under the action of a discrete subgroup of the topological group. Automorphic forms are a generalization of the idea of periodic functions in Euclidean space to general topological groups.
are holomorphic automorphic forms defined over the groups SL(2, R) or PSL(2, R), with the discrete subgroup being the modular group or one of its congruence subgroups; in this sense the theory of automorphic forms is an extension of the theory of modular forms. More generally, one can use the Adele ring approach as a way of dealing with the whole family of congruence subgroups at once. From this point of view, an automorphic form over the group , for an algebraic group and an algebraic number field , is a complex-valued function on that is left invariant under and satisfies certain smoothness and growth conditions.
Henri Poincaré first discovered automorphic forms as generalizations of trigonometric and elliptic functions. Through the Langlands conjectures, automorphic forms play an important role in modern number theory.
where is an everywhere nonzero holomorphic function. Equivalently, an automorphic form is a function whose divisor is invariant under the action of .
The factor of automorphy for the automorphic form is the function . An automorphic function is an automorphic form for which is the identity.
An automorphic form is a function F on G (with values in some fixed finite-dimensional vector space V, in the vector-valued case), subject to three kinds of conditions:
It is the first of these that makes F automorphic, that is, satisfy an interesting functional equation relating F( g) with F( γg) for . In the vector-valued case the specification can involve a finite-dimensional group representation ρ acting on the components to 'twist' them. The Casimir operator condition says that some have F as eigenfunction; this ensures that F has excellent analytic properties, but whether it is actually a complex-analytic function depends on the particular case. The third condition is to handle the case where G/Γ is not compact space but has Cusp form.
The formulation requires the general notion of factor of automorphy j for Γ, which is a type of 1-cocycle in the language of group cohomology. The values of j may be complex numbers, or in fact complex square matrices, corresponding to the possibility of vector-valued automorphic forms. The cocycle condition imposed on the factor of automorphy is something that can be routinely checked, when j is derived from a Jacobian matrix, by means of the chain rule.
A more straightforward but technically advanced definition using class field theory, constructs automorphic forms and their correspondent functions as embeddings of to their underlying global field extensions. In this formulation, automorphic forms are certain finite invariants, mapping from the idele class group under the Artin reciprocity law. Herein, the analytical structure of its L-function allows for generalizations with various algebro-geometric properties; and the resultant Langlands program. To oversimplify, automorphic forms in this general perspective, are analytic functionals quantifying the invariance of number fields in a most abstract sense, therefore indicating the 'primitivity' of their fundamental structure. Allowing a powerful mathematical tool for analyzing the invariant constructs of virtually any numerical structure.
Examples of automorphic forms in an explicit unabstracted state are difficult to obtain, though some have directly analytical properties:
- The Eisenstein series (which is a prototypical modular form) over certain as .
- Specific generalizations of Dirichlet L-functions as class field-theoretic objects.
- Generally any harmonic analytic object as a functor over which is invariant on its ideal class group (or idele).
As a general principle, automorphic forms can be thought of as analytic functions on Abstract algebra, which are invariant with respect to a generalized analogue of their prime ideal (or an abstracted irreducible fundamental representation). As mentioned, automorphic functions can be seen as generalizations of modular forms (as therefore ), constructed by some zeta function analogue on an automorphic structure. In the simplest sense, automorphic forms are defined on general ; because of their symmetry properties. Therefore, in simpler terms, a general function which analyzes the invariance of a structure with respect to its prime 'morphology'.
Poincaré explains how he discovered Fuchsian functions:
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