Abstract
We give a description of the cohomology groups of the structure sheaf on smooth compactifications \(\overline{X}(w)\) of Deligne–Lusztig varieties X(w) for \(\textrm{GL}_n\), for all elements w in the Weyl group. As a consequence, we obtain the \(\textrm{mod}\ p^m\) and integral p-adic étale cohomology of \(\overline{X}(w)\). Moreover, using our result for \(\overline{X}(w)\) and a spectral sequence associated to a stratification of \(\overline{X}(w)\), we deduce the \(\textrm{mod}\ p^m\) and integral p-adic étale cohomology with compact support of X(w). In our proof of the main theorem, in addition to considering the Demazure–Hansen smooth compactifications of X(w), we show that a similar class of constructions provide smooth compactifications of X(w) in the case of \(\textrm{GL}_n\). Furthermore, we show in the appendix that the Zariski closure of X(w), for any connected reductive group G and any w, has pseudo-rational singularities.
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1 Introduction
Let \(G/\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) be a connected reductive group defined over a finite field \(\mathbb {F}_q\) and let F be the Frobenius endomorphism. Deligne–Lusztig varieties were introduced in [9] for studying irreducible representations of \(G(\mathbb {F}_q)\). The aim of this paper is to describe the cohomology groups of the structure sheaf for Deligne–Lusztig varieties for \(\textrm{GL}_n\) and their interpretations as \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representations.
1.1 General background
Fix a maximal torus \(T^*\) and a Borel subgroup \(B^*\) containing \(T^*\) in G. A Deligne–Lusztig variety X(w) is a locally closed subscheme of \(G/B^*\) consisting of Borel subgroups B whose relative position with FB is given by an element w of the Weyl group W. As \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes, Deligne–Lusztig varieties are quasi-projective and smooth of dimension l(w), which is the Bruhat length of w.
Deligne and Lusztig considered the virtual representations arising from the \(\ell \)-adic cohomology with compact support of X(w) and their étale coverings for \(\ell \ne p\). They showed that any irreducible representation of \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\) is contained in one of such virtual representations [9, §7]. In the same paper, they constructed smooth compactifications \(\overline{X}(w)\) of X(w) for each reduced expression of w [9, §9], which are analogous to the Demazure–Hansen desingularization of Schubert varieties.
A prominent example of Deligne–Lusztig varieties in the case of \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) is \(X(\textbf{w})\), where \(\textbf{w}\) corresponds to the standard Coxeter element. It is isomorphic to the complement of all \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-rational hyperplanes in the projective space \(\mathbb {P}^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) (resp. \(\mathbb {P}^{n-1}_{\mathbb {F}_q}\)), which we denote by \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) (resp. \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{\mathbb {F}_q}\).). This example was defined by Deligne and Lusztig [9], which first appeared in [36, Example 1]. In [18], Große-Klönne gave a vanishing result for the cohomology of sheaves of logarithmic differential forms on a smooth compactification of \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{\mathbb {F}_q}\).
For K a nonarchimedean local field, one may take the complement \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{\mathbb C_p}\) (resp. \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{K}\)) of all K-rational hyperplanes in the rigid analytic projective space \(\mathbb P^{n-1}_{\mathbb C_p}\) (resp. \(\mathbb P^{n-1}_{K}\)). This space is preserved under \(\textrm{GL}_n(K)\)-action and is an admissible open of the rigid analytic projective space. It was introduced by Drinfeld [13, §6] and often referred to as the p-adic Drinfeld half space when K is a finite extension of \(\mathbb Q_p\).
The p-adic Drinfeld half space admits a semistable weak formal model whose generic fibre recovers the p-adic Drinfeld half space. Moreover, a smooth compactification of \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{\mathbb {F}_q}\) lives in the special fibre of this weak formal model as an irreducible component cf. [6, 18]. The cohomology theories for certain coherent sheaves of the p-adic Drinfeld half space have been studied by Schneider and Stuhler [45], Schneider and Teitelbaum [46], Große-Klönne [18], Orlik [43], and many others.
1.2 The individual \(\ell \)-adic cohomology for Deligne–Lusztig varieties
In [44], Orlik provided a strategy for computing the \(\ell \)-adic cohomology groups with compact support of Deligne–Lusztig varieties for \(G=\textrm{GL}_{n}\). We briefly recall the methods of loc. cit. which are relevant to us.
Let \(F^+\) be the free monoid generated by a fixed set of standard generators of W. The generalized Deligne–Lusztig variety attached to \(w\in F^+\) were introduced in [37]. It is a subscheme of \((G/B^*)^{r+1}\) with relative positions of successive pairs of Borel subgroups determined by the standard generators in the expression of w. For the precise definition see Sect. 3.
Orlik studied the association between cohomology groups of \(\overline{X}(w)\) and \(\overline{X}(w')\), where \(w,w'\in F^+\) and \(w'\) is obtained via replacing a reduced subexpression of w by another according to a relation in the group presentation of W or via shifting the first standard generator in the expression of w to the end. In particular, he constructed three operators C, K, R on elements of \(F^+\). As the construction of the operators is related to the relations in the group presentation of W cf. Sect. 5, one can always use finitely many of these operators to transform w into either a standard Coxeter element in a standard Levi subgroup of G, or of the form svs, when \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) [15].
If we have \(svs\in F^+\), then \(\overline{X}(svs)\rightarrow \overline{X}(vs)\) is a \(\mathbb P^1\)-fibration. This let one relate the cohomology group of \(\overline{X}(svs)\) with the one for \(\overline{X}(vs)\), which is of dimension \(\dim _{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}(\overline{X}(svs))-1\).
Orlik then establishes a double induction procedure with respect to the length of w and the number of operators applied. The base case is the cohomology of \(\overline{X}(w)\) with \(w\in F^+\) having no repeating terms in its expression. As \(\overline{X}(w)\) is universally homeomorphic to a finite disjoint union of products of smooth compactifications of \(\mathcal {X}^{j}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) with \(j\le n-1\), its \(\ell \)-adic étale cohomology can be determined.
1.3 Statement of results
We adapt Orlik’s method of double induction to the cohomology of the structure sheaf on \(\overline{X}(w), w\in F^+\). The cohomology of the structure sheaf for the smooth compactification \(\overline{X}(s_1\ldots s_{n-1})\) of \(X({\textbf{w}})\) follows from a result of Große-Klönne for the smooth compactification of \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{\mathbb {F}_q}\) after base changing to \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) [18, Theorem 2.3]:
Theorem
(Große-Klönne) Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) and \({\textbf{w}} =s_1\ldots s_{n-1}\) the standard Coxeter element. Then
Our base cases are \(\overline{X}(w)\), when w is a standard Coxeter element for a standard Levi subgroup L of \(\textrm{GL}_n\). If L is a proper standard Levi subgroup, then \(\overline{X}(w)\) is a finite disjoint union, with each irreducible component isomorphic to the product of smooth compactifications of \(\mathcal {X}^j_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) of dimensions \(j<n-1\). In particular, the number of irreducible components \(\overline{X}(w)\) is given by the number of \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-rational points on G/P, where P is the standard parabolic subgroup associated to L. The cohomology of \(\overline{X}(w)\) then also follows from the above theorem.
The double induction strategy then allows us to deduce the following result:
Theorem 1.1
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) and \(w\in F^+\) with \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\). Let \(I=\{s_{i_1},\ldots , s_{i_r}\}\) and \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\) be the standard parabolic subgroup associated to I, then
where \(\mathbb {1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) is the trivial \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation with coefficients in \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\).
If \(w=svs\), we construct maps \(\overline{X}(svs)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sv)\) and \(\overline{X}(svs)\rightarrow \overline{X}(vs)\) and show that they give isomorphisms of cohomology groups with respect to the structure sheaf. These isomorphisms are \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant. Consequently, they also induce isomorphisms on cohomology groups in the case of the cyclic shift operator C cf. Definition 5.1. The construction of these maps only relies on the fact that \(\textrm{GL}_n\) is split reductive, so this step applies to any split reductive connected groups defined over \(\mathbb {F}_q\).
For the operators K and R corresponding to relations in the symmetric group cf. Definition 5.3, we first construct an intermediate proper smooth scheme such that both \(\overline{X}(w)\) and \(\overline{X}(K(w))\) (resp. \(\overline{X}(R(w))\)) have birational morphisms to it, then we use a theorem of Chatzistamatiou and Rülling to get the isomorphism of cohomology groups. The theorem [5, Theorem 3.2.8] shows that for proper smooth schemes over a perfect field, birational morphisms induce cohomological equivalence for the structure sheaf and the canonical bundle. In Appendix A, we show that \(\overline{X(w)}\) has pseudo-rational singularities. For schemes with such singularities, there is a generalization of Chatzistamatiou–Rülling’s result by Kovács [32, Theorem 8.13]. Hence the statements on the operators K and R follows from this and it generalizes to arbitrary connected reductive groups whenever there is an operator replacing a reduced subexpression of w according to relation in the group presentation of W that does not reduce the Bruhat length.
Since all steps in our version of the double induction induce isomorphisms on the cohomology groups as \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces, and we have higher vanishing for the base case, we may analyze the \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action after we obtain the cohomology. In particular, the global sections of the irreducible components are isomorphic to the base field, so they have to be trivial representations of their corresponding \(P(\mathbb {F}_q)\).
If we consider the sheaf of Witt vectors \(W_m\left( \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) of length m on \(\overline{X}(w)\), our theorem implies that
Using the Artin–Schreier–Witt sequence we obtain the cohomology of the constant sheaves \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\) and \(\mathbb Z_p\) on \(\overline{X}(w)_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}\), shown in Proposition 7.2 and Corollary 7.3 below.
Corollary 1.2
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\), and \(w\in F^+\) with \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\). Let R be \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z, m\ge 1,\) or \(\mathbb Z_p\). Then
where \( \mathbb {1}_{R}\) is the trivial \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation with coefficients in R.
The higher vanishing of these cohomology groups are obtained inductively via the long exact sequence associated to the mod p short exact sequence for \(\mathbb Z/p^m \mathbb Z\). The result for \(\mathbb Z_p\)-coefficients follows after verifying the Mittag–Leffler condition.
There is a spectral sequence associated to a stratification of \(\overline{X}(w)\):
The corollary above implies that this spectral sequence degenerates at the \(E_2\)-page. In particular, except at the 0th term, \(E^{\bullet ,0}_1\) is quasi-isomorphic to the Solomon–Tits complex mod p cf. [44]. The Solomon–Tits complex is a simplicial complex constructed from the group \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\), whose 0th homology is \(\mathbb Z\) and highest non-vanishing homology realizes the Steinberg representation over \(\mathbb Z\). This method has been used to study the compactly supported \(\ell \)-adic cohomology of X(w) [44, §5, §7], c.f. [8, Ch VII]. Using this method, we obtain the following results on the compactly supported cohomology for \(X(w)_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}\) with \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\) and \(\mathbb Z_p\)-coefficients in Theorem 8.4 and Corollary 8.5.
Theorem 1.3
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) and \(w\in F^+\). Let \(L_I\supseteq T^*\) be the standard Levi subgroup of \(\textrm{GL}_n\) such that \(P_I=U_I\rtimes L_I\), where \(U_I\) is the unipotent radical of \(P_I\). Let R be \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z, m\ge 1\) or \(\mathbb Z_p\). Then
where \(\text {St}_{L_I}\) is the Steinberg representation for \(L_I\) with coefficients in R. In particular, when \(I=S\), we have \(H^{\ell (w)}_{{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}, c}\left( X(w),R \right) =\text {St}_{\textrm{GL}_n}\).
Appendix A provides some insights on the geometry of \(\overline{X(w)}\) for arbitrary connected reductive group G defined over \(\mathbb {F}_q\). We show that they are strongly F-regular and thus have pseudo-rational singularities. This result is achieved using the fact that \(\overline{X(w)}\) are associated to Zariski closure of Bruhat cells (resp. Schubert varieties) via the Lang map. Thus \(\overline{X(w)}\) are F-regular because the the Zariski closure of Bruhat cells are F-regular [4]. It then follows from Kovács’ theorem that the cohomology of \(\overline{X(w)}\) is isomorphic to that of \(\overline{X}(w)\) for the structure sheaf and the canonical bundle [32].
In fact, Lauritzen, Raben-Pedersen and Thomsen showed that Schubert varieties are not only strongly F-regular, but also globally F-regular [33]. A natural question to ask in this direction is that whether \(\overline{X(w)}\) have globally defined singularities.
1.4 Structure of the paper
In Sects. 2 and 3 we recall basic definitions and properties of (generalized) Deligne–Lusztig varieties. Section 4 treats the cases used for the induction on the length of w. The cases used for the induction on the presentation of w are studied in Sect. 5. Section 6 establishes the base case of our induction in the case of \(\textrm{GL}_n\). Section 7 contains the proof of the main theorem 1.1 and corollaries for the mod \(p^m\) and \(\mathbb Z_p\)-cohomology groups. In Sect. 8, we give the proof for Theorem 8.4 and Corollary 8.5 on the compactly supported mod \(p^m\) and \(\mathbb Z_p\)-cohomology of X(w). Appendix A examines the locally defined singularities of \(\overline{X(w)}\) for any connected reducitve group G and an application of a theorem in [32].
2 Deligne–Lusztig varieties
In this section we fix notations and conventions for Deligne–Lusztig varieties in general, and then specifically for the case of \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) in Sect. 2.7. We will conclude this section with some examples of Deligne–Lusztig varieties for \(\textrm{GL}_n\).
2.1 Notations
Let p be a prime number, and \(q=p^r, r\ge 1\). Fix an algebraic closure \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) of the finite field \(\mathbb {F}_p\) that contains the finite field \(\mathbb F_q\). Here we recall some basic notions from the theory of reductive groups. The standard references we have used are [10, 16, 28, 31].
Let G be a reductive algebraic \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-group defined via base change by a connected reductive \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-group \(G_0\). Let F denote the Frobenius endomorphism on G, obtained by extension from the Frobenius endomorphism of \(G_0\). Denote with \(G^F\) the fixed points of G by the Frobenius.
Note that the datum of a maximal torus, a Borel subgroup, and the Weyl group is unique up to unique isomorphism (cf. [9, §1.1]). Fix an F-stable Borel subgroup \(B^*\) of G and an F-stable maximal torus \(T^*\) such that \(T^*\subseteq B^*\).
Let \(W:=N(T^*)/T^*\) be the Weyl group, where \(N(T^*)\) is the normalizer of \(T^*\) in G. At the same time, W is the Weyl group of the root system of \(T^*\), which contains a set of simple roots that is in bijection with a set S of generators of W. In the literature, elements of S are sometimes called elementary reflections or simple reflections. We denote by \(\ell (w)\) the Bruhat length of \(w\in W\). It is the minimal number r such that w can be written as the product \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\), where \(s_{i_j}\in S\), \(j=1,\ldots ,r\). Here we call \(s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\) a reduced expression of w. The Bruhat order \(\le \) on W is defined by: \(w\le v\) whenever \(w,v\in W\) have reduced expressions \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\) and \(v=t_{1}\ldots t_{k},\ t_1,\ldots , t_k\in S\) such that \(1\le i_1\le \cdots \le i_r\le k\), and \(s_{i_j}=t_{i_j}\) for all \(j=1,\ldots ,r\) cf. [15, §1.2.4].
We say that G is split when the maximal torus \(T^*\) fixed above is a split maximal torus and is defined over \(\mathbb {F}_q\). In this case the map \(F:W\rightarrow W\) induced by the Frobenius is the identity [11, §7.1.3, §4.3.1].
Denote the opposite Borel subgroup by \(B^+\), recall that we have decompositions
where \(U^*\) and \(U^+\) are the unipotent radicals of \(B^*\) and \(B^+\) respectively.
Recall that the quotient \(G/B^*\) exists in the category of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes [10, III §3.5.4], and that \(G/B^*\) is an integral, projective and smooth scheme [31, §II.13.3]. Since \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) is algebraically closed, the \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-rational points on \(G/B^*\) correspond bijectively to the elements in \(G\left( \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\right) /B^*\left( \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\right) \). Thus by Borel fixed point theorem, we know that the Borel subgroups of G correspond to the \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-rational points on \(G/B^*\) and they are all conjugate to \(B^*\). Throughout this text, let X be the set of all Borel subgroups of G on which G acts by conjugation. In particular, via the set theoretic identification between \(G/B^*\) and X given by \(gB^*\mapsto gB^*g^{-1}\), one obtains a \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme structure on X with an G-action such that the identification \(G/B^*\cong X\) is G-equivariant. By abuse of notation, we write \(gB^*\in G/B^*\), \(B\in X\) or \(x\in X\) for \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-rational points on \(G/B^*\) and X respectively, when there is no ambiguity.
2.2 Basic constructions
There is a left G-action on the product \(X\times X\) given by the diagonal action:
The quotient \(G\backslash \left( X\times X\right) \) is in bijection with the Weyl group W as a result of the Bruhat decomposition [3, §2.11]. For each \(w\in W\), the orbit O(w) is of the form \(G.\left( B^*, \dot{w}B^*\dot{w}^{-1}\right) \), where \(\dot{w}\in N(T^*)\) is a representative of w. In particular, the orbit corresponding to the identity \(e\in W\) is \(O(e)\cong X\). We refer to [9, §1] for basic properties of the orbits O(w). Since \(F:G\rightarrow G\) induces an automorphism on \(X=G/B\), let \(\Gamma _F\subseteq X\times X\) be the graph of \(F:X\rightarrow X\).
Definition 2.1
The Deligne–Lusztig variety X(w) for G corresponding to \(w\in W\) is defined as the intersection in \(X\times X\) of O(w) and the graph of F.
Remark 1
Note that this intersection is transverse [9, p. 107]. Moreover, the set of (rational) points of X(w) corresponds to the subset of Borel subgroups B in X such that B and F(B) are in relative position w, i.e.,
Additionally, X(w) is a subscheme of X of dimension \(\ell (w)\) that is locally closed and smooth. Considered as a subscheme of X, the Deligne–Lusztig variety X(w) is stable under the \(G^F\)-action. Thus we have a \(G^F\)-action on X(w).
Deligne–Lusztig varieties may alternatively be defined as follows cf. [37, Example 3.10 (c)].
Definition 2.2
Let \(w\in W\) and \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\) with \(s_{i_j}\in S\) be a reduced expression. The Deligne–Lusztig variety associated to this reduced expression is defined as:
Remark 2
The definition above is independent of the reduced expression of w up to canonical isomorphisms [37, Example 3.10 (c)] cf. [12, p. 759].
2.3 Smooth compactifications
In general, the Zariski closure \(\overline{X(w)}\) of X(w) in X is not smooth. For each reduced decomposition \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\) of \(w\in W\) with \(s_{i_j}\in S\), \(j=1,\ldots ,r\), we have a smooth compactification \(\overline{X}(w)\) of X(w) with a normal crossing divisor at infinity [9, §9.10] defined as follows:
Definition 2.3
Let \(w\in W\), and let \(w=s_{i_1}\cdots s_{i_r}\) be a reduced expression with \(s_{i_j}\in S\), \(j=1,\ldots ,r\). We define
where \(\overline{O(s_{i_j})}=O(s_{i_j}){{\dot{\cup }}} O(e)\), and
where \(\overline{O}(s_{i_1},\ldots ,s_{i_r})\rightarrow X\times X\) is the projection map \((B_0,\ldots ,B_r)\mapsto (B_0, B_r)\).
We also use the notation \(\overline{X}(w)\) for \(\overline{X}(s_{i_1},\ldots ,s_{i_r})\) when the reduced expression \(w=s_{i_1}\cdots s_{i_r}\) is specified.
Remark 3
We may alternatively write
2.4 Affiness and irreducibility
2.4.1 Affineness
-
(i)
Let \(G/\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) be any connected reductive group that is defined over \(\mathbb {F}_q\). Let h be the Coxeter number of G, which is the Bruhat length of any Coxeter element of W. If \(q>h\), then X(w) is affine for any \(w\in W\) [9, Theorem 9.7].
-
(ii)
If \(w\in W\) is a Coxeter element, then X(w) is affine [35, Corollary 2.8].
2.4.2 Irreducibility
Whether a Deligne–Lusztig variety is irreducible is completely dependent on the support of the corresponding Weyl group element.
(i) When \(w\in W\) is a Coxeter element, then X(w) is irreducible [35, Proposition 4.8]. For the non-split groups, we say that w is a Coxeter element if w is a product of elements of S which come from distinct F-orbits.
(ii) For \(w\in W\), X(w) is irreducible if w is not contained in any proper F-stable parabolic subgroup of W. There are many proofs for this statement. Here we refer to [2, 17]. Note that for split reductive groups G, this equivalent of saying that X(w) is irreducible if the support of w is S (cf. Definition 3.5).
In addition, X(w) has the same number of irreducible components as its smooth compactification \(\overline{X}(w)\) (when one fixes a reduced expression of w).
(iii) Let \(v,w\in W\) such that
then X(w) and X(v) have the same number of irreducible components. By [12, Proposition 2.3.8], one may write down the irreducible components, as well as the number of irreducible components.
2.5 Fibrations over X
We recall basic constructions and observations from [9, 1.2(b)]. In this section we use the notations from Sect. 2.1. We say a morphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes \(f:Y_1\rightarrow Y_2\) is a bundle with fibre E, if \(Y_2\) admits an open covering with respect to a (Grothendieck) topology \(\tau \) (e.g. Zariski open covering, fppf open covering) such that all (closed) fibres of f are isomorphic to E and f is locally trivial with respect to this covering.
Let \(\pi :G\rightarrow G/B^*\) be the canonical projection map. The Zariski open covering \(\{\dot{w}U^+B^*\}_{w\in W}\) of G gives a Zariski open covering \(\{\pi (\dot{w}U^+B^*)\}_{w\in W}\) of G/B cf. [31, II §1.10].
Lemma 2.4
Let \(s\in W\) be a simple reflection. The projection map \(\text {pr}_i:O(s)\rightarrow X, i=1,2\) is an (Zariski) \(\mathbb A^1\)-bundle with respect to the open covering \(\{\pi (\dot{w}U^+B^*)\}_{w\in W}\) of X. Moreover, O(s) is isomorphic to the homogeneous G-space \(G/(B^*\cap \dot{s} B^*\dot{s})\) over \(G/B^*\), whose fibres are isomorphic to \(B^*/(B^*\cap \dot{s}B^*\dot{s})\cong \mathbb A^1\).
Remark 4
In the situation of the lemma above, the fibre \(B^*/(B^*\cap \dot{s} B^*\dot{s})\) has a natural group action coming from \(\text {Stab}_G(B^*)=B^*\). Since the automorphism group of \(\mathbb {A}^1\) is the affine group \(\mathbb G_a\rtimes \mathbb {G}_m\), there is a morphism of group schemes \(B^*\rightarrow \mathbb {G}_a\rtimes \mathbb G_m\). This morphism is in fact surjective.
The Zariski closure \(\overline{O(s)}\) of O(s) in \(X\times X\) admits a decomposition into the union of O(s) and O(e):
Note that we have an identity section of the projection maps \(\text {pr}_i:\overline{O(s)}\rightarrow X, i=1,2,\) given by \(X\cong O(e)\rightarrow \overline{O(s)}\). The complement of this section gives us \(\text {pr}_i: O(s)\rightarrow X\). We recall the following lemma.
Lemma 2.5
Let \(s\in W\) be a simple reflection. The projection maps \(\text {pr}_i:\overline{O(s)}\rightarrow X, i=1,2,\) are a \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundles and they are locally trivial with respect to the Zariski open covering \(\{\pi (\dot{w}U^+B^*)\}_{w\in W}\) of X.
Proof
Let \(P^*:=B^*sB^*\cup B^*\). We have a cartesian diagram of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes:
where \(\pi _P: G/B^*\rightarrow G/P^*\) is the projection map. All maps in this diagram are G-equivariant. Recall that \(\pi _P\) is locally trivial with respect to the the (Zariski) open cover \(\{\pi '(\dot{w} U^+B^*)\}_{w\in W}\) of \(G/P^*\) [31, §II.1.10 (5)], where \(\pi ':G\rightarrow G/P^*\) is the canonical projection map. Since \(\text {pr}_i, i=1,2,\) is the base change of \(\pi _P\), it is a Zariski locally trivial fibre bundle. In particular, the fibres of \(\text {pr}_i\) are isomorphic to \(P^*/B^*\cong \mathbb P^1\). \(\square \)
2.6 The induced finite group action on the cohomology groups
For this section, let \(\Gamma \) be a finite group and let Y be a \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme with \(\Gamma \)-action. Following [42, Definition 1.6], we explain how \(\Gamma \) acts on the cohomology groups of \(\Gamma \)-equivariant \(\mathcal {O}_Y\)-modules.
Definition 2.6
Let Y be a \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme with \(\Gamma \)-action \(\sigma :\Gamma \times Y\rightarrow Y\), and let \({\mathcal {V}}\) be an invertible sheaf of \(\mathcal {O}_Y\)-modules. Denote by \(\mu :\Gamma \times \Gamma \rightarrow \Gamma \) the multiplication. A \(\Gamma \)-linearization of \({\mathcal {V}}\) constists of the datum of an isomorphism of sheaves of \(\mathcal {O}_{\Gamma \times Y}\)-modules,
such that \(\left. \phi \right| _{\{1\}\times Y}\) is the identity and the cocycle condition on \(\Gamma \times \Gamma \times Y\)
is satisfied.
We say that \({\mathcal {V}}\) is \(\Gamma \)-equivariant if it possesses a \(\Gamma \)-linearization.
Example 1
(i) For \({\mathcal {V}}=\mathcal {O}_Y\), we naturally have \(\sigma ^*\mathcal {O}_Y\cong \mathcal {O}_{\Gamma \times Y}\) and \(\text {pr}_2^*\mathcal {O}_Y\cong \mathcal {O}_{\Gamma \times Y}\). Thus \(\phi \) is given by the composition of these two isomorphisms. The cocycle condition follows because the pullback of the structure sheaf is the structure sheaf. Thus \(\mathcal {O}_Y\) is \(\Gamma \)-equivariant.
(ii) There is a natural morphism of sheaves of \(\mathcal {O}_{\Gamma \times Y}\)-modules:
Note that the projection map induces a projection map of sheaves of \(\mathcal {O}_{\Gamma \times Y}\)-modules:
The composition yields a morphism of \(\mathcal {O}_{\Gamma \times Y}\)-modules \(\phi : \sigma ^*\Omega ^1_{Y}\rightarrow \text {pr}_2^*\Omega ^1_{Y}\). By checking on the level of stalks, one sees that \(\phi \) is an isomorphism and the cocycle condition is satisfied.
(iii) Let r be an integer with \(0<r\le \dim _{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}Y\). One shows that \(\Omega _Y^{r}\) is \(\Gamma \)-equivariant by following the steps above and taking rth exterior powers. Note that exterior powers commute with taking the inverse image.
We conclude this subsection with an observation that we will use later. Suppose \(H^0(Y,\mathcal {O}_Y)=\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\). Then \(H^0(Y,\mathcal {O}_Y)\) is the trivial \(\Gamma \)-representation. Indeed, for \(g\in \Gamma \), we have an isomorphism \(\mathcal {O}_Y\overset{\sim }{\rightarrow }g_*\mathcal {O}_Y\). Let \(\varphi \in \mathcal {O}_Y (Y)\), for all \(y\in Y\),
As we have \(\mathcal {O}_Y(Y)=\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\), any \(\varphi \in \mathcal {O}_Y(Y)\) is constant, and so \(g.\varphi =\varphi \). Therefore \(\Gamma \) acts on \(H^0(Y,\mathcal {O}_Y )\) trivially.
2.7 Conventions for \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\)
In the following, we will specifically consider the case \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\). In this case, we have \(G^F={\textrm{GL}_n}(\mathbb F_q)\). Let \(T^*\subseteq \textrm{GL}_n\) be the maximal torus such that \(T^*(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p)\) corresponds to the diagonal matrices and let \(B^*\subseteq \textrm{GL}_n\) be the Borel subgroup such that \(B^*(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p)\) corresponds to the upper triangular matrices. Thus the \(T^*\subseteq B^*\) we fixed are F-stable, so the Frobenius F acts as the identity on W cf. [11, §4.2].
There is a canonical isomorphism between the Weyl group W associated to \(T^*\subseteq B^*\) as above and the symmetric group \(S_n\), in the sense that the elements of W acts on \(T^*(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p)\) by permuting the diagonal entries. We fix a set of generators \(S:=\{s_1,\ldots ,s_{n-1}\}\) of W such that \(s_i\) acts on the elements of \(T^*(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p)\) by permuting the ith and \((i+1)\)th entries. Any product of the \(s_i\)’s in W such that each \(s_i\) shows up exactly once is called a Coxeter element. In particular, we call the product \(s_1\ldots s_{n-1}\) the standard Coxeter element, which we denote by \({\textbf{w}}\). Let \(\{\alpha _1,\ldots ,\alpha _{n-1}\}\) be the (positive) simple roots with each \(\alpha _i\) corresponding to \(s_i\). The the unipotent subgroup \(U_{-\alpha _i}\) has \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-rational points consisting of matrices whose only nonzero entries lie on the diagonal and the \((i+1, i)\)th entry, with the entries on the diagonal all 1’s. Moreover, each \(U_{-\alpha _i}\) is isomorphic to the additive group \(\mathbb G_a\).
For any subset \(I\subseteq S\), denote \(W_I\) the subgroup of W generated by I. We define the associated standard parabolic subgroup cf. [28, Theorem 29.2]:
Let \(L_I\) be the standard Levi subgroup containing \(T^*\) such that we have a Levi decomposition
where \(U_I\) is the unipotent radical of \(P_I\).
2.8 Examples of Deligne–Lusztig varieties for \(\textrm{GL}_n\)
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_{n}\). Note that the standard Coxeter element \({\textbf{w}}\) corresponds to the n-cycle \((1,\ldots ,n)\) in the symmetric group on n-elements. Recall from [9, §2] that \( X({\textbf{w}})\) can be identified with the following subspace of the complete flag variety X:
Via the projection \(D_\bullet \mapsto D_1\), one obtains an embedding of \(X({\textbf{w}})\) into \(\mathbb P^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\). In the notation of algebraic groups, this embedding is obtained from the projection \(G/B^*\rightarrow G/P_I\), where \(I=\{s_2,\ldots , s_{n-1}\}\). Note that \(G/P_I\) is isomorphic to \(\mathbb P^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\). In the former notation, one easily sees that there is an \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant isomorphism
where \({\mathcal {H}}\) is the union of all \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-rational hyperplanes in \(\mathbb P^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\). We denote the scheme on the right hand side by \(\mathcal {X}^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\).
The smooth compactification \(\overline{X}({\textbf{w}})\) associated to the expression \({\textbf{w}}=s_1\ldots s_{n-1}\) is isomorphic to the successive blow up \(\widetilde{\mathcal {X}}^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) of \(\mathbb P^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) along all \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-rational linear subschemes [30, §4.1], [53, §4.1.2], cf. [34, §2.5]:
where \(Y_{i}\rightarrow Y_{i-1}\) is the blow up of \(Y_{i-1}\) along the strict transform of all \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-rational linear subschemes \(H\subseteq \mathbb P^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) with \(\dim H=i\). The maps \(Y_{i}\rightarrow Y_{i-1}\) are \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant, so the map \(\widetilde{\mathcal {X}}^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p} \rightarrow \mathbb P^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) is equivariant under \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action.
Let \(w\in W\) such that \(w< \textbf{w}\). Then \(X_{\textrm{GL}_n}(w)\) is isomorphic to a disjoint union of products of \(\mathcal {X}^{j}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) with \(j< n-1\). This isomorphism extends to the corresponding smooth compactifications. We will discuss this example in more detail in Sect. 6.2.
3 The Weyl group and generalized Deligne–Lusztig varieties
Assume G to be split. The goal of this section is to recall some constructions related to the Weyl group W, and to give the definition of generalized Deligne–Lusztig varieties associated to an element of the free monoid \(F^+\) (resp. \({\hat{F}}^+\)).
3.1 Conjugacy classes and cyclic shifting
We start with reviewing some definitions and theorems from [15, §3].
Definition 3.1
We say \(w,w'\in W\) are conjugate by cyclic shifts when there exists a sequence of elements \(v_0,\ldots ,v_m\in W\) such that \(v_0=w, v_m=w'\) and for all \(i=1,\ldots ,m\), we have \(x_i, y_i\in W\) such that \(v_{i-1}=x_iy_i\), \(v_i=y_ix_i\), and \(\ell (v_{i-1})=\ell (x_i)+\ell (y_i)=\ell (v_i) \).
Remark 5
Note that if \(w, w'\in W\) are conjugate by cyclic shifts, then \(\ell (w)=\ell (w')\).
The following theorem is from [15, Theorem 3.1.4].
Theorem 3.2
(Geck–Pfeiffer) Any two Coxeter elements of W are conjugate by cyclic shifts.
Let C be a conjugacy class of W. We write \(C_{\min }\) for the subset of C that consists of elements with the shortest Bruhat length:
Definition 3.3
Let \(w,v\in W\). We write \(w\rightarrow v\) if and only if there exists elements \(w=w_0, w_1,w_2,\ldots ,w_m=v\in W\), such that \(w_{i}=t_iw_{i-1}t_i\) and \(\ell (w_i)\le \ell (w_{i-1})\) for \(i=1,\ldots , m\), where \(t_i\in S\).
Now we may present a special case of the theorem from [15, Theorem 3.2.9], with wording adapted to our situation.
Theorem 3.4
(Geck-Pfeifer) (i) Let \(w\in W\), and let C be a conjugacy class of W containing w. Then there exists \(w'\in C_{\min }\) such that \(w\rightarrow w'\).
(ii) Let \(w_1 , w_2\in W\) be two Coxeter elements, then \(w_1\rightarrow w_2\) and \(w_2\rightarrow w_1\).
3.2 Support
Definition 3.5
Let \(w\in W\). The support of w is the following set:
Note that \(\vert \text {supp}(w)\vert \le \ell (w)\) and that the equality holds when w has a reduced expression \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\) with \(s_{i_j}\in S\) all distinct.
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_{n}\) and \(w\in W\). Set \(I:=\text {supp}(w)\), and let C be the conjugacy class of w in W. Let \(W_I\subseteq W\) be the subgroup generated by I. Then there exists \(w'\in C_{\text {min}}\) such that \(w\rightarrow w'\) and \(w'\) is a Coxeter element in \(W_I\).
3.3 The free monoid associated to the Weyl group
Let us introduce the free monoid \(F^+\), cf. [12] and [44, §2].
Definition 3.6
We define \(F^+\) as the free monoid generated by the set of standard generators \(S\subseteq W\).
Remark 6
(i) There is a natural surjective morphism of monoids:
with kernel generated by the relations in the group presentation of W.
(ii) There is a partial order \(\preccurlyeq \) on \(F^+\) defined by: \(w'\preccurlyeq w\) whenever \(w'=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\) and \(w=t_{1}\ldots t_{k},\ t_1,\ldots , t_k\in S\) such that \(1\le i_1\le \cdots \le i_r\le k\), and \(s_{i_j}=t_{i_j}\) for all \(j=1,\ldots ,r\). We call this the Bruhat order on \(F^+\). Note that this is not entirely compatible with the Bruhat order on W.
(iii) There is a Bruhat length function on \(F^+\), not compatible with the Bruhat length on W. When \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\in F^+\), we have \(\ell (w)=r\).
(iv) For \(w, v\in F^+\), we always have \(\ell (wv)=\ell (w)+\ell (v)\).
There is also a variant of \(F^+\) defined in [44, p. 22].
Definition 3.7
Let \({\widehat{W}}\) be a copy of W. Define \(\hat{F}^+\) as the free monoid generated by \(S{\dot{\cup }} T'\), where
Remark 7
Note that \(T'\) and W are forced to be disjoint in \(\hat{F}^+\).
We define the Bruhat length function on \({\hat{F}}^+\) as the function counting the number of elements of S and \({\widehat{S}}\) showing up in the expression, where \({\widehat{S}}\) is the set of generators in \(\widehat{W}\) corresponding to S, instead of counting the number of generators.
3.4 Constructing generalized Deligne–Lusztig varieties
As in Sect. 2, we define generalized Deligne–Lusztig varieties for elements of the free monoids \( F^+\) and \( \hat{F}^+\). They are introduced in [37, Example 3.10 (c)], and one may refer to [12, §2.2.11] and [44, end of §3] for more discussions. We only recall the definitions and properties here.
Definition 3.8
For \(s\in F^+\) with \(\alpha (s)\in S\). We set \(O(s):=O(\alpha (s))\). For each \(w=s_{i_1}\cdots s_{i_r}\in F^+\), define
and the corresponding Deligne–Lusztig variety
where \(O(s_{i_1},\ldots ,s_{i_r})\rightarrow X\times X\) is the projection map \((B_0,\ldots ,B_r)\mapsto (B_0, B_r)\). We may alternatively write
Remark 8
The scheme X(w) is a quasi-projective smooth \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme of dimension r with a left \(G^F\)-action. For any \(t_1,\ldots ,t_k\in W\), the scheme \(O(t_1,\ldots ,t_k)\) is defined analogously as in Definition 3.8. In particular, the isomorphism \(O(t_1)\times _X\cdots \times _X O(t_k)\overset{\sim }{\longrightarrow }O(t_1,\ldots ,t_k)\) reflects the structure of \(F^+\) as a free monoid [12, Definition 2.2.12].
Let \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\in F^+\). If \(\ell (w)=\ell (\alpha (w))\), then there is a \(G^F\)-equivariant isomorphism
of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes [37, Example 3.10 (c)] cf. [12, p. 759]. Note that if we consider \(w\in W\), then for each reduced expression \(s_{i_1}\cdots s_{i_r}\) of w with \(s_{i_j}\in S\), we get an element of \(F^+\) and a corresponding generalized Deligne–Lusztig variety.
Similarly, we define the generalized Deligne–Lusztig variety corresponding to elements in \(\hat{F}^+\). After post composing with the isomorphism \(W\cong {\hat{W}}\), we may extend the surjective map \(\alpha \) to \(\hat{\alpha }: \hat{F}^+ \rightarrow W\).
Definition 3.9
For \(\widehat{sts}\in \hat{F}^+\), we set \(O(\widehat{sts}):=O(\hat{\alpha }(\widehat{sts}))\). For each \(w=t_{1}\cdots t_{r}\in {\hat{F}}^+\), define the corresponding Deligne–Lusztig variety
We may alternatively write
Remark 9
This is a quasi–projective smooth \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme with a left \(G^F\)-action. As before, we have for all \(a, b\in \hat{F}^+\), we have \(O(a)\times _X O(b)\overset{\sim }{\rightarrow }O(a,b)\). Thus X(w) has dimension \(\ell (w)\ge r\).
3.5 Smooth compactifications of generalized Deligne–Lusztig varieties
We write down the smooth compactifications for Deligne–Lusztig varieties corresponding to \(w\in F^+\) and \(w\in \hat{F}^+\). They are the same as the construction in [9, §9] when \(w\in F^+\) or \(w\in \hat{F}^+\) is the reduced expression for some \(w'\in W\).
Definition 3.10
Let \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\in F^+\). Define the following \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme:
Remark 10
The \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme \(\overline{X}(w)\) is smooth projective with a left \(G^F\)-action cf. [9, §9], [12, §2.3.1]. It is a smooth compactification of X(w).
Let \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\) be an element in \( F^+\) such that it corresponds to a reduced expression of \(\alpha (w)\in W\). Then \(\overline{X}(w)\) is the same as \(\overline{X}(\alpha (w))\), corresponding to the reduced expression \(s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\), constructed in Definition 2.3.
Similarly, we have the following definition for \(w\in \hat{F}^+\).
Definition 3.11
For \(\widehat{sts}\in \hat{F}^+\), we set \(\overline{O(\widehat{sts})}:=\overline{O(\hat{\alpha }(\widehat{sts}))}\). Let \(w=t_{1}\ldots t_{r}\in {\hat{F}}^+\). We define the following \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme containing X(w):
Remark 11
As before, the \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme \(\overline{X}(w)\) has a left \(G^F\)-action.
Lemma 3.12
Let \(w=t_{1}\ldots t_{r}\in {\hat{F}}^+\), then \(\overline{X}(w)\) is projective and smooth.
Proof
Since \(\overline{O(t_j)}\) is projective for all \(j=1,\ldots ,r\), it follows from [12, Proposition 2.3.6 (iv)] that \(\overline{X}(w)\) is projective.
Note that \(\overline{O(t)}\) are smooth for all \(t\in S\). We may have \(t_{j}, j=1,\ldots ,r\) to be of the form \(t_{j}=\widehat{sts}\), where \(st\ne ts, s,t,\in W\). Since \(st\ne ts\), we see that s and t do not correspond to non-adjacent simple reflections in \(S_n\). Now let \(I=\{s,t\}\), the parabolic subgroup \(W_I\) of the Weyl group W is thus isomorphic to the symmetric group \(S_3\). In particular, sts is a reduced expression of the longest element in \(W_I\). Observe that the projection maps \(\overline{O(sts)}\rightarrow X\) are both Zariski locally trivial fibre bundles with fibres isomorphic to the flag variety of \(\textrm{GL}_3\). Thus \(\overline{O(sts)}\) is a smooth \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme cf. [12, Corollary 2.2.10].
Hence for all \(j=1,\ldots ,r\), \(\overline{O(t_j)}\) is smooth. By [12, Proposition 2.3.5], we may conclude that \(\overline{X}(w)\) is smooth. \(\square \)
3.6 Stratifications of \(\overline{X(w)}\) and \(\overline{X}(w)\)
Let \(w_1,w_2\in W\) such that \(\ell (w_1w_2)=\ell (w_1)+\ell (w_2)\), recall that we have an isomorphism of schemes \(O(w_1)\times _XO(w_2)\overset{\sim }{\longrightarrow }\ O(w_1w_2)\). Hence for \(w,w'\in W\), \(w'\le w\) if and only if \(\overline{O(w')}\subseteq \overline{O(w)}\). This implies that we have a stratification as follows for any \(w\in W\), cf. [9, §1.2], [31, §II.13.7],
The intersection of the graph of the Frobenius \(\Gamma _F\) and any of strata \(O(w')\) above is transversal. For any \(w\in W\), the intersection of (2) and \(\Gamma _F\) yields a similar stratification of \(\overline{X(w)}\),
Let \(w\in F^+\) or \( \hat{F}^+\), with the expression \(s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_r}\), then for all \(w'\preceq w\) a subword, we know that \(X(w')\) is isomorphic to a locally closed subscheme of \(\overline{X}(w)\), thus we have the following stratification, cf. [44, §3],
Example 2
Let \(G={\textrm{GL}_n}\). Let \(m\le n-1\) be a positive integer and \(w\in W\) with a reduced expression \(s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{m}}\) such that all \(s_{i_j}\), \(j=1,\ldots ,m,\) are distinct. Recall from [9, Lemma 9.11] that
with each \(w'\prec w\) considered as a subword of \(s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{m}}\in F^+\), is the normal crossing divisor of \(\overline{X}(w)\) at infinity.
Note that the projection map
induces an isomorphism on the open subschemes
This map extends to the Zariski closure of X(w) in X, and so we have a surjective morphism
Since \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{m}}\) with all \(s_{i_j}\) distinct, \(\overline{X}(w)\) and \(\overline{X(w)}\) have stratifications indexed by the same set, and each corresponding strata is isomorphic. In fact, they are isomorphic as \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes [23, Lemma 1.9].
4 Geometry of Deligne–Lusztig varieties via \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundles
Assume G to be split. In this section, we consider \(\mathbb P^1\)-bunldes \(\pi _1:\overline{X}(sws)\rightarrow \overline{X}(ws) \) and \(\pi _2:\overline{X}(sws)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\) constructed from the morphism \(\overline{O(s)}\rightarrow X\) from Sect. 2.5.
4.1 The structure of certain morphisms as \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundles
Let \(w=t_{1}\ldots t_{r}\in {\hat{F}}^+\) and \(s\in S\). We fix the notations for the smooth compactifications of the Deligne–Lusztig varieties X(sws), X(ws):
Lemma 4.1
The map \(\pi _1:\overline{X}(sws)\rightarrow \overline{X}(ws)\) defined by
is a \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle over \(\overline{X}(ws)\) locally trivial with respect to a Zariski covering of \(\overline{X}(ws)\). Furthermore, \(\pi _1\) has a section \(\sigma : \overline{X}(ws)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sws)\) defined by
with \(\pi _1\circ \sigma ={\text {id}}_{\overline{X}(ws)}\).
Proof
Let us first check the well-definedness of \(\pi _1\). Take \((B_0,B_1,\ldots ,B_{r+1}, FB_0)\in \overline{X}(sws)\). Since \((B_0,B_1)\in \overline{O(s)}\), and F fixes any \(s\in S\), we know that \((FB_0, FB_1)\in \overline{O(s)}\). As we also have \(( B_{r+1}, FB_0)\in \overline{O(s)}\), by [9, §1.2 (b1)], we have \((B_{r+1}, FB_1)\in \overline{O(s)}\). Thus \((B_1,B_2,\ldots ,B_{r+1}, FB_{1})\in \overline{X}(ws)\).
To see that \(\pi _1\) gives a \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle, take any \((B'_0,\ldots ,B'_{r},FB'_{0})\in \overline{X}(ws)\), and take any \(B_0\in X\) such that \((B_0, B_0')\in \overline{O(s)}\). Since F fixes s, we have \((FB_0, FB_0')\in \overline{O(s)}\). As \((B'_{r},FB_0')\in \overline{O(s)}\), we know by [9, §1.2 (b1)] that \((FB_0, B'_r)\in \overline{O(s)}\). Thus \((B_0,B'_0,\ldots ,B'_{r}, FB_0 )\in \overline{X}(sws)\), and the preimage of \((B'_0,\ldots ,B'_{r},FB'_{0})\) under \(\pi _1\) is
Thus the fibre of \(\pi _1\) at any \((B'_0,\ldots ,B'_{r},FB'_{0})\) is isomorphic to the fibre of \(\overline{O(s)}\rightarrow X\) at \(B_0'\).
Let \(\text {pr}_{2,\ldots ,r+3}: \overline{O(s)}\times X^{r+1}\rightarrow X^{r+2}\) be the projection map to the 2nd to \((r+3)\)th component. If we take the embedding of \(\overline{X}(ws)\) into \(X^{r+2}\), we find that \(\overline{X}(sws)\) is isomorphic to the fibre product of \(\overline{X}(ws)\hookrightarrow X^{r+2}\) and \(\text {pr}_{2,\ldots ,r+3}\).
Let \(\pi _G:G\rightarrow G/B^*\) be the canonical projection map for \(X=G/B^*\). By Lemma 2.5, we know that \(\text {pr}_2: \overline{O(s)}\rightarrow X\) is locally trivial with respect to the Zariski covering \(\{\pi _G(\dot{w}U^+B^*)\}_{w\in W}\) of X. Thus \(\text {pr}_{2,\ldots ,r+3}\) is locally trivial with respect to the Zariski covering \(\{\pi _G(\dot{w}U^+B^*)\times X^{r+1}\}_{w\in W}\) of \(X^{r+2}\). Via embedding \(\overline{X}(ws)\) into \(X^{r+2}\), we see that \(\pi _1\) is locally trivial with respect to a Zariski open covering of X(ws). Therefore \(\overline{X}(sws)\) is a \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle over \(\overline{X}(ws)\).
Finally, the statement \(\pi _1\circ \sigma ={\text {id}}_{\overline{X}(ws)}\) can be easily verified. \(\square \)
We also have a smooth compactification of the Deligne–Lusztig variety X(sw):
Lemma 4.2
The map \(\pi _2:\overline{X}(sws)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\) defined by
is a \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle over \(\overline{X}(sw)\) locally trivial with respect to an fppf-covering of \(\overline{X}(sw)\).
Proof
We first check the well-definedness of \(\pi _2\). Take \((B_0,B_1,\ldots ,B_{r+1}, FB_0)\in \overline{X}(sws)\). Since \((B_{r+1}, FB_0)\in \overline{O(s)}\) and \((FB_0, FB_1)\in \overline{O(s)}\), we know that \((B_{r+1}, FB_1)\in \overline{O(s)}\). Thus \((B_{r+1}, FB_1,\ldots ,FB_{r+1})\in \overline{X}(sw)\).
Note that \(F:\overline{X}(sw)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\) is a flat and finite morphism. Via flat base change by \(F:\overline{X}(sw)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\), \(\overline{X}(sws)\) becomes a fppf \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle over \(\overline{X}(sw)\). More precisely, we have a cartesian square:
where
and \(\pi _2'\) is projection to the second component cf. [9, Theorem 1.6]. Moreover, \(\pi _2'\) fits into another cartesian square:
Let \(B=(B_0,\ldots ,B_{r+1},FB_0)\) and \(B'=(B_0',B_1',\ldots ,B_r', FB_0')\) such that \((B, B')\in Y\). The map \(\text {pr}_0\) is given by
Also note that \(\iota \) is the map defined by
Since \(F(s)=s\), we know that \((B_0, B_0')\) and \((FB_0, FB_0')\) must belong to the same orbit in \(X\times X\). The condition \(FB_0'=B_{r+1}\) implies that \((FB_0, FB_0')\in \overline{O(s)}\), so \((B_0, B_0')\in \overline{O(s)}\).
For all \(B'=(B_0',B_1',\ldots ,B_r', FB_0')\in \overline{X}(sw)\), we have by the condition \(FB'=\pi _2(B)\) that \(\pi _2'^{-1}(B')=(B, B')\) where \(B=(B_0,\ldots ,B_{r+1}, FB_0)\) such that \(FB_0'=B_{r+1}\). In particular, \((B_0, B_1')\in \overline{O(s)}\). Conversely, for any \(B_0\in X\) such that \((B_0, B_0')\in \overline{O(s)}\), we have \((FB_0,FB_0')\in \overline{O(s)}\) and \((B_0,B_1')\in \overline{O(s)}\). Thus \((B_0, B_1',\ldots ,B_r',FB_0', FB_0)\in \overline{X}(sws)\). In particular,
Hence via this cartesian square, we know that \(\pi _2'\) is a \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle over \(\overline{X}(sw)\). The argument that \(\pi _2'\) is locally trivial with respect to the Zariski topology is analogous to the one used in Lemma 4.1.
Finally, we return to the cartesian diagram (3). Since \(\overline{X}(sw)\) is a \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme of finite type, we know that the Frobenius endomorphism \(F:\overline{X}(sw)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\) is flat, and is a universal homeomorphism. Thus the base change \(\text {pr}_1'\) of F is also flat, and is a universal homeomorphism. Since \(\pi _2'\) gives a Zariski locally trivial \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle, and the fppf topology is finer than the Zariski topology, there exists a fppf open covering \({\mathcal {U}}:=\{f_i:U_i\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\}_i\) such that \(\pi _2'\) is locally trivial with respect to \(\pi _2'\). We get a composition of cartesian diagrams for each i:
Since F is flat and surjective, we see that the composition morphism \(F\circ f_i\) is flat, locally of finite presentation for all i and
Thus \({\mathcal {U}}':=\{F\circ f_i: U_i\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\}\) gives a fppf covering for \(\overline{X}(sw)\) such that \(\pi _2\) is locally trivial with respect to \({\mathcal {U}}'\). \(\square \)
Remark 12
Recall that proper morphisms are preserved under fpqc (hence fppf) base change and descent [19, Exposé VIII, Corollary 4.8]. We see that the map \(\pi _1\) and \(\pi _2\) in Lemma 4.1 and 4.2 are also proper morphisms of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes.
Note that the constructions of \(\pi _1\) and \(\pi _2\) in Lemma 4.1 and 4.2 use the fact that \(F(s)=s\).
Lemma 4.3
The maps \(\pi _1:\overline{X}(sws)\rightarrow \overline{X}(ws)\) and \(\pi _2:\overline{X}(sws)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw)\) defined above are \(G(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant.
Proof
Take \((B_0,B_1,\ldots ,B_{r+1}, FB_0)\in \overline{X}(sws)\). Recall that \(G(\mathbb {F}_q)\) acts on \(\overline{X}(sws)\) via conjugation in each component. Let \(g\in G(\mathbb {F}_q)\).
Since any \(g\in G(\mathbb {F}_q)\) is fixed by F, we have \(F(gB_1g^{-1})=g(FB_1)g^{-1}\) and thus
For \(\pi _2\), let \((B_0,B_1,\ldots ,B_{r+1}, FB_0)\in \overline{X}(sws)\), and \(g\in G(\mathbb {F}_q)\). Consider the following:
Since F fixes g and \(g^{-1}\), we have \(F(g^{-1}B_i g)=B_i\) for all i. Thus
\(\square \)
4.2 Cohomology of the structure sheaf of the \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundles
Recall that the smooth compactifications of Deligne–Lusztig varieties are smooth, separated schemes of finite type over \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\).
Proposition 4.4
Let \(w\in {\hat{F}}^+\), \( s\in S\). Then for all \(k\ge 0\), there are \(G(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant isomorphisms of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
and
Proof
To simplify our notations, we use \(X:=\overline{X}(sws), Y:= \overline{X}(ws)\) (resp. \(Y:=\overline{X}(sw)\)). Let \(\pi \) be \(\pi _1\) as in Lemma 4.1 (resp. be \(\pi _2\) as in Lemma 4.2), and consider the Leray spectral sequence for \({\mathcal {O}}_X\):
Note that X, Y are smooth schemes of finite type over \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\). Since the (closed) fibres of \(\pi \) are equidimentional and \(\dim _{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p} X=\dim _{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}Y+\dim _{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\mathbb {P}^1_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\), by miracle flatness [39, Theorem 23.1], we know that \(\pi :X\rightarrow Y\) is a flat morphism. Since the fibres are isomorphic to \(\mathbb P^1_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\), they are geometrically connected and geometrically reduced. By [14, §9.3.11], we know that \(\pi _*{\mathcal {O}}_X\cong {\mathcal {O}}_Y\).
Note that X is geometrically reduced and \(\pi \) has connected fibres. By [22, Prop 1.4.10], we know that for \(j>0\), \(R^j\pi _*({\mathcal {O}}_X)\) are coherent \(\mathcal {O}_Y\)-modules. We shall show that \(R^j\pi _*\mathcal {O}_X=0\) for all \(j>0\). For all \(y\in Y\), we have \(X\times _Y y\cong \mathbb {P}^1\), so \(H^j(X\times _Y y, \mathcal {O}_{X\times _Y y})=0\) for all \(j>0\). Since in addition \(\pi \) is proper and flat, it follows from [52, §25.1.5, §25.1.6] that \(\psi _y^*R^j\pi _*({\mathcal {O}}_X)=0\) for all \(j>0\), where \(\psi _y:y\rightarrow Y\) is the inclusion map. This implies that \(R^j\pi _*({\mathcal {O}}_X)\) has trivial stalks for all \(y\in Y\) and \(j>0\). Hence \(R^j\pi _*({\mathcal {O}}_X)=0\) for all \(j>0\).
Therefore the Leray spectral sequence (4) degenerates and we have
for all \(i\ge 0\). Since \(\pi \) is a \(G(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant morphism, these isomorphisms are \(G(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant. \(\square \)
5 Towards induction steps
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) as in Sect. 2.7. We now set the stage for the (double) induction. Our goal is to reduce the problem of computing the cohomology groups of coherent sheaves on the smooth compactifications of Deligne–Lusztig varieties to those corresponding to a Coxeter element of W or a Coxeter element corresponding to a standard parabolic subgroup \(P\subseteq \textrm{GL}_{n}\).
In loose terms, we may describe the strategy as follows: Let w be an element of the free monoid \(F^+\) or \({\hat{F}}^+\). Its expression may contain a repeating \(s\in S\). We introduce operations C, K, R on \(F^+\) and \({\hat{F}}^+\) so that after applying finitely many such operations on w, we obtain a word of the form \(sw's\). The operations C, K, R preserve the length of w, so we will still have \(\ell (w)=\ell (sw's)=\ell (w')+2\). Then Sect. 4 helps us to reduce this to the case of \(sw'\) and thus removing one of the repeating s. This process has finitely many steps and we will eventually reduce it to the case of \(v\in W\) being a product of non-repeating simple reflections with \(\ell (v)=\vert \text {supp}(w)\vert \).
We will introduce each of the operations C, K, R and discuss how they affect the cohomology groups of the corresponding smooth compactifications of Deligne–Lusztig varieties.
One can find the original definitions of these operations and the double induction strategy in [44, before Proposition 7.9] for the case of \(\ell \)-adic cohomology with compact support.
5.1 The cyclic shifting operation
The elements \(sw', w's\in W\) are conjugated by \(s\in S\). Recall from Definitions 3.1 and 3.3 that this can be generalized to elements of W being conjugate by cyclic shift. The following operator is constructed to impose the concept of elements being conjugate by cyclic shift on \(F^+\) and \({\hat{F}}^+\).
Definition 5.1
Let \(w\in F^+\) (resp. \(\hat{F}^+\)). If \(w=sw'\), where \(w'\in F^+\) (resp. \(\hat{F}^+\)) and \(s\in S\), we define the operator C on \(F^+\) (resp. \(\hat{F}^+\)) by \(C(w):=w's\).
Proposition 5.2
Let \(w\in \hat{F}^+\), such that \(w=sw'\) with \(s\in S\). Then we have isomorphisms of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces for all \(k\ge 0\):
Furthermore, the isomorphism are \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant.
Proof
Let \(w\in \hat{F}^+\), such that \(w=sw'\) with \(s\in S\) and \( w'\in \hat{F}^+\).
Consider the product \(ws=sw's\) in \(\hat{F}^+\). We consider from Sect. 4.1 the surjective morphisms \(\pi _1: \overline{X}(sw's)\rightarrow \overline{X}(w's)\) and \(\pi _2:\overline{X}(sw's)\rightarrow \overline{X}(sw')\) that make \(\overline{X}(sw's)\) a fppf \(\mathbb P^1\)-bundle over \(\overline{X}(w's)\) and \(\overline{X}(sw')\) respectively.
By Proposition 4.4, we have \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant isomorphisms for all \(k\ge 0\),
Thus
and this concludes the proof. \(\square \)
5.2 Operations corresponding to relations
Recall from Definition 3.7 that \(\hat{F}^+\) is generated by \(S{\dot{\cup }} T'\).
Definition 5.3
Let \(w\in \hat{F}^+\), such that \(w=w_1stw_2\) with \(w_1,w_2\in \hat{F}^+\), \(s,t\in S\). Define the operator K on this expression by
Let \(w\in \hat{F}^+\), such that \(w=w_1sts w_2\) with \(w_1, w_2\in \hat{F}^+\), \(s,t\in S\). Define the operator R on this expression by
When an expression of w is specified as above and there is no ambiguity, we would use the notations K(w) for \(K(w;w_1,w_2)\) and R(w) for \(R(w;w_1,w_2)\).
Remark 13
We clearly have \(K(w), R(w)\in \hat{F}^+\). Also observe that the operators K and R are analogous to two of the relations in the presentation of the symmetric group \(S_n\).
Proposition 5.4
(i) Let \(w=w_1stw_2\) such that \(w_1,w_2\in {\hat{F}}^+\) and \(s,t\in S\) with \(st=ts\) in W. Then for all \(i\ge 0\), we have isomorphisms of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
(ii) Let \(w=w_1sts w_2\) such that \(w_1, w_2\in {\hat{F}}^+\) and \(s,t\in S\) with \(sts=tst\) in W. For all \(i\ge 0\), we have isomorphisms of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
Proof
Let w be as in the assumption of (ii). Recall that \(\overline{X}(w)\) is smooth and projective over \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\). Recall from Definition 3.7 that we have \(\widehat{sts}\in T'\) because \(st\ne ts\). The \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme \( \overline{X}(w_1\widehat{sts}w_2)\) is projective and smooth by Lemma 3.12. In particular, points of \( \overline{X}(w_1\widehat{sts}w_2)\) are of the form \((B_0',\ldots ,B_j', B_{j+1}',\ldots ,FB_0')\), where \((B_j',B_{j+1}')\in \overline{O(sts)}\) for some j. Now we have a cartesian square:
where the horizontal maps are projections, and the vertical map on the right is the resolution of singularities from [9, §9.1]. Thus the projection map f is proper.
Observe that the open subscheme X(w) of \(\overline{X}(w)\) is also contained in \(\overline{X}(w_1\widehat{sts}w_2)\) such that the restriction of f to X(w) is the identity. Hence f is a birational morphism. By [5, Theorem 3.2.8], we have for all \(i\ge 0\), an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
For \(\widehat{tst}\in T'\), we use the same argument as above to construct a proper birational morphism \(f':\overline{X}(R(w))\rightarrow \overline{X}(w_1\widehat{sts}w_2)\). The key observation is that as \(sts=tst\) in W, \(st\ne ts\), the scheme \(\overline{O}(t,s,t)\) gives a smooth compactification of \(\overline{O(sts)}\). By [5, Theorem 3.2.8], we have for all \(i\ge 0\), an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
This concludes (ii).
Let w be as in the assumption of (i), and set \(\ell (w_1)=r_1\) and \(\ell (w_2)=r_2\). For this proof, we define the following projective \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme:
If \(s=t\), then the statement is clear. Assume \( s\ne t\) in the following. Since \(st= ts\), we see that they are associated to non-adjacent simple reflections. By [12, Proposition 2.2.16 (iii), (iv)], there exists an isomorphism \(\overline{O}(s,t)\rightarrow \overline{O(st)}\) such that the restriction to the open subschemes \(O(s,t)\rightarrow O(st)\) remains an isomorphism. Then \(\overline{O(st)}\) is smooth and thus Y is smooth.
We have an cartesian square:
Thus the projection map f on the left is proper. As the restriction of f to X(w) is the identity morphism, we see that f is birational. By [5, Theorem 3.2.8], for all \(i\ge 0\), there is an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
On the other hand, since \(st=ts\), we have \(O(st)=O(ts)\) and thus \(\overline{O(st)}=\overline{O(ts)}\). As in [9, §9.1], there is a resolution of singularity \(\overline{O}(t,s)\rightarrow \overline{O(ts)}\). Hence we have a proper birational morphism \(\overline{O}(t,s)\rightarrow \overline{O(st)}\). We have a cartesian square with horizontal maps being projections:
Thus \(f'\) is proper. Note that the restriction of \(f'\) to \(X(w_1tsw_2)\) gives an isomorphism between the respective open subschemes \(X(w_1tsw_2)\) and \(X(w_1stw_2)\) of \(\overline{X}(K(w))\) and Y. So \(f'\) is birational. By [5, Theorem 3.2.8], for all \(i\ge 0\), there is an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
This concludes the proof of (i). \(\square \)
Remark 14
In order to apply [5, Theorem 3.2.8], we require both schemes in the birational morphism to be smooth over a perfect field. In fact, this theorem has been generalized to the case where the schemes are allowed to have pseudo-rational singularities [32, Theorem 8.13]. In Appendix A we shall see how to use this generalization to show that in the case of arbitrary G as in Sect. 2.1, the cohomology groups of \(\overline{X}(w)\) and \(\overline{X(w)}\) for the structure sheaves (resp. canonical bundles) are isomorphic. The proposition above then follows from Corollary A.7.
Since we will only encounter representations induced from the trivial representation for the proofs of our main results (see Corollary 6.2 and Proposition 7.2), we do not need the statement that the isomorphisms in Proposition 5.4 are \(G^F\)-equivariant.
6 The base case
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_{n}\). Sections 4 and 5 have reduced the study of \(H^k\big ( \overline{X}(w),{\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)} \big )\) to the case in which w is a Coxeter element or a Coxeter element corresponding to a standard parabolic subgroup \(P\subseteq \textrm{GL}_{n}\). We shall now treat these cases.
6.1 Cohomology of \(\overline{X}(w)\) for w a Coxeter element
We use the notations of Sects. 2.7 and 2.8. Recall that \({\textbf{w}}\) denotes the standard Coxeter element \(s_1\ldots s_{n-1}\).
Proposition 6.1
For \(k>0\), we have \(H^k\big (\overline{X}({\textbf{w}}), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}({\textbf{w}})}\big )=0\). Then the space of global sections
is the trivial \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation.
Proof
Recall that \(\overline{X}({\textbf{w}})\) is isomorphic to the successive blow up \({\tilde{Y}}\) of \(\mathbb {P}^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) along all \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-rational linear subschemes [30, §4.1], [53, §4.1.2]. Thus there exists a birational morphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes \(\overline{X}({\textbf{w}})\rightarrow \mathbb {P}^{n-1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\). By [5, Theorem 3.2.8], for all \(k\ge 0\), there is an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
Hence we have
Therefore it follows that \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\) acts on \(H^0\big (\overline{X}({\textbf{w}}), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}({\textbf{w}})}\big )\) trivially cf. Sect. 2.6. \(\square \)
Remark 15
The above proposition also follows from [18, Theorem 2.3] after base change from \(\mathbb {F}_q\) to \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\).
Corollary 6.2
Let \(w\in F^+\) be an arbitrary Coxeter element. Then the cohomology of \(\overline{X}(w)\) is as follows:
In particular, \(H^0\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}( w)}\big )\) is the trivial \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation.
Proof
By [15, Theorem 3.2.9], for any two Coxeter elements \(w_1, w_2\in W \), we have \(w_1\rightarrow w_2\) and \(w_2\rightarrow w_1\) cf. Definition 3.3. Thus we have \(C^k(w')={\textbf{w}}\) for some integer \(k\ge 0\). We may apply Proposition 5.2 to reduce to the case when w is a standard Coxeter element. Use Proposition 6.1 to get the result on the cohomology groups, and it follows that \(H^0\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}( w)}\big )\) is a trivial \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation. \(\square \)
6.2 Cohomology of \(\overline{X}_{L_I}(w)\) for \(w\le {\textbf{w}}\) and \(L_I\subseteq \textrm{GL}_n\)
Lemma 6.3
Let \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{m}}\in F^+\) and \(I={\text {supp}}(w)\). Then there is an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes compatible with \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action:
where \(w_a\) is an element in the free monoid associated to the Weyl group of \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\), \(L_I\cong \prod _{a=1}^r\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\) and \(n=\sum _{a=1}^r n_a\).
When the \(s_{i_j}\)’s do not repeat, \(w_a\) is a Coxeter element in the Weyl group of \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\) for all a. In particular, when \(w\le \textbf{w}\), \(w_1\ldots w_r=w\).
Proof
For \(a=1,\ldots ,r\), denote the Weyl group of \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\) by \(W_a\). The intersection \(L_I\cap B^*\) is a Borel subgroup of \(L_I\), and it is a product \(B_1\times \cdots \times B_r\), where \(B_a\) is a Borel subgroup of \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\). Then we have the homogeneous spaces \(X_a:=\textrm{GL}_{n_a}/B_a\), and the orbit of \(v\in W_a\) in \(X_a\times X_a\) is \(O_a(v)\).
Note that the Weyl group \(W_I\) of \(L_I\) is isomorphic to the product of symmetric groups \(S_{n_1}\times \cdots \times S_{n_r}\). Hence the Bruhat decomposition of \(L_I\) is compatible with the Bruhat decomposition of each \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\), and thus the orbit \(O_{L_I}(w)\) is the product \(O_1(w_1)\times \cdots \times O_r(w_r)\) over \(\text {Spec } \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\). Thus by construction, when \(s_{i_j}\) are all distinct, they will each show up exactly once in \(w_a\) for exactly one a. When \(w\le \textbf{w}\), we have \(w_1\ldots w_r=w\).
The restriction of the Frobenius endomorphism from \(\textrm{GL}_n\) to \(L_I\) respects the product as well. To finish the proof, it suffices to go through the definitions of Deligne–Lusztig varieties with respect to products over \(\text {Spec } \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\). \(\square \)
The same applies to the corresponding smooth compactifications with respect to the expression \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{m}}\).
Lemma 6.4
Using notations as in Lemma 6.3, we have an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes equivariant under \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action.
Proof
It suffices check the definitions of smooth compactifications for Deligne–Lusztig varieties with respect to the product of reductive groups. \(\square \)
Remark 16
If \({\text {supp}}(w)\) is a proper subset of S, then sometimes we could have \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}=\textrm{GL}_1\) for some a, thus \(\overline{X}_{\textrm{GL}_{n_a}}(e)\) is the point corresponding to the only Borel subgroup.
Proposition 6.5
Let \(w\le \textbf{w}\) and \(I={\text {supp}}(w)\). Then
for \(k>0\), and
is the trivial \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation.
Proof
By Lemma 6.4, we may compute the cohomology for \(\overline{X}_{\textrm{GL}_{n_1}}(w_1)\times \cdots \times \overline{X}_{\textrm{GL}_{n_r}}(w_r)\), with notations as before. To simplify the notation, set
By applying induction on the Künneth formula for coherent sheaves [21, Theorem 6.7.8], we have
By Proposition 6.1, we know that for all \(j=1,\ldots ,r\),
Thus,
Hence by induction on j we know that for any j,
The case \(j=r\) yields the desired result. It follows from
that \(H^0\big (\overline{X}_{L_I}(w),{\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}_{L_I}(w)}\big )\) is the trivial \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation cf. Sect. 2.6. \(\square \)
Corollary 6.6
Let \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{m}}\in F^+\) and \(I=\text {supp}(w)\), such that the \(s_{i_j}\)’s are all distinct. Then
Furthermore, \(H^0\left( \overline{X}_{L_I}(w),{\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}_{L_I}(w)}\right) \) is the trivial \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation.
Proof
This is analogous to the proof of Proposition 6.5 and uses Corollary 6.2. \(\square \)
We conclude this section by recalling the following lemma.
Lemma 6.7
Let \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{m}}\in F^+\) and \(I={\text {supp}}(w)\). Then the irreducible components of X(w) (resp. \(\overline{X}(w)\)) are \(\vert G(\mathbb F_q)/P_I(\mathbb F_q)\vert \) isomorphic copies of \(X_{L_I}(s_{i_1},\ldots ,s_{i_{m}})\) (resp. \(\overline{X}_{L_I}(s_{i_1},\ldots ,s_{i_{m}})\)).
Remark 17
We see from this lemma that for any \(w\in F^+\), after fixing a reduced expression, the number of irreducible components of X(w) (resp. \(\overline{X}(w)\)) depends only on \({\text {supp}}(w)\).
7 The main theorem
7.1 Cohomology of the structure sheaf on \(\overline{X}(w)\)
We now prove our main theorem.
Proof of Theorem 1.1
After fixing a support of w, we may apply the induction steps. First, suppose that \({\text {supp}}(w)=S\). If \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_m}\in F^+\) and the \(s_{i_j}\)’s are not all distinct, then we apply Propositions 5.2 and 5.4 to transform w into the shape \(sw's\) with \(s\in S\). We use Proposition 4.4 to reduce its length. After repeating this procedure of changing the presentation of w and reducing the length finitely many times, we have for all \(k\ge 0\), an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
where \(v\in F^+\) corresponds to a Coxeter element and \(\text {supp}(v)=\text {supp}(w)\). By Corollary 6.2, we know that for \(k>0\), \(H^k\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\big )\) vanish, and
Thus we know that \(H^0\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\big )\) is the trivial \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation cf. Sect. 2.6.
Next, let \(I:={\text {supp}}(w)\) such that \(I\subsetneq S\). If \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_m}\in F^+\) and the \(s_{i_j}\)’s are not all distinct, then we apply Propositions 5.2 and 5.4 to transform w into the shape \(sw's\) with \(s\in S\). We use Proposition 4.4 to reduce its length. After repeating this procedure finitely many times, we have for all \(k\ge 0\), an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector spaces:
where \(v\in F^+\) corresponds to a Coxeter element in \(W_I\) and \(\text {supp}(v)=\text {supp}(w)\). By [12, Proposition 2.3.8], we have an \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes:
Precomposing this with the morphism
where \(\pi : \textrm{GL}_n^F/U_I^F\rightarrow \textrm{GL}_n^F/P_I^F\) is the natural projection map, gives a \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant morphism \(\overline{X}(v)\rightarrow \textrm{GL}_n^F/P_I^F\) such that \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\) acts on the set of fibres transitively and the stablizer of each fibre corresponds to a conjugate of \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\) in \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\). It follows that
for all \(k\ge 0\). Thus Corollary 6.6 implies the vanishing of \(H^k\left( \overline{X}(w), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) for \(k>0\).
Finally, we analyze the global sections of \(\mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\) as a \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation. By Lemma 6.4, we know that
is an isomorphism of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes equivariant under \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action, where \(n_1+\cdots +n_r=n\) and \(w_a\) is an element in the Weyl group of \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\), \(a=1,\ldots ,r\). This gives an isomorphism of \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-modules:
Since w has full support in \(W_I\), we know that \(w_a\) has full support in \(W_a\) for all \(a=1,\ldots ,r\), where \(W_a\) is the Weyl group of \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}\). It follows from Corollary 6.2 that
is the trivial representation for \(\textrm{GL}_{n_a}(\mathbb {F}_q)\), so we know that
gives the trivial \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation. Therefore
where \(\mathbb {1}_{\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p}\) is the trivial \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation with coefficients in \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\). \(\square \)
Remark 18
For \(w\in W\), if we fix a reduced expression \(w=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_m}\) with \(s_{i_j}\in S\), then \(s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_m}\) can be considered as an element of \(F^+\). Theorem 1.1 thus applies to \(\overline{X}(w)\) via the \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant isomorphism \(\overline{X}(s_{i_1},\ldots , s_{i_m})\cong \overline{X}(w)\).
7.2 The \({\textrm{mod}}\ p^m\) and \(\mathbb Z_p\) étale cohomology of \(\overline{X}(w)\)
For the rest of this paper, if the finite group H is clear from the context and R is a ring, we fix the notation \(\mathbb {1}_R\) for the free 1-dimensional trivial H-module with coefficients in R.
Let X be a k-scheme with k being a field of characteristic \(p>0\). We have the constant sheaf \(\mathbb {Z}/p\mathbb {Z}\) on \(X_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}\). Note that the associated presheaf of the group scheme \(\mathbb G_a\) is a sheaf on both \(X_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}\) and \(X_{{\text {Zar}}}\) [41, p. 52]. In particular, it gives the structure sheaf on \(X_{{\text {Zar}}}\). Recall the Artin–Schreier sequence [41, p. 67].
Lemma/Definition 7.1
Let X be a k-scheme with k being a field of characteristic \(p>0\). Let \(F_p\) be the p-Frobenius on \(\mathcal {O}_X\) sending \(x\mapsto x^p\). There exists a short exact sequence of sheaves on \(X_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}\):
We call this the Artin–Schreier sequence.
Note that by [41, p. 114], the cohomology of \(\mathbb G_a\) on \(X_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}\) and \(X_{{\text {Zar}}}\) are isomorphic.
Remark 19
Recall that for \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\), we have
where \(I=\text {supp}(w)\) and \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\). Note that p-Frobenius \(F_p\) on \(\overline{X}(w)\) is given by the identity on the topological space and p-power map on sections of \(\mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\). Thus the p-power map given by \(F_p\) on the global sections \(H^0\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\big )\) on the left hand side is induced by the p-power map on \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\).
Proposition 7.2
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\), and \(w\in F^+\) with \(I=\text {supp}(w)\) and \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\). For any integer \(m>0\), we have
Proof
Let \(m=1\), and consider the long exact sequence associated to the Artin–Schreier sequence on \(\overline{X}(w)\).
By Theorem 1.1, we know that
for all \(k>0\), and
As a consequence, the long exact sequence above becomes
Since \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) is algebraically closed, the polynomial \(x^p-x\in \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p[x]\) always splits. Note that \({\text {ind}}_{P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)}^{\textrm{GL}_n (\mathbb {F}_q)}\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) is a finite dimensional \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-vector space, so \(F_p-1\) is the map \(x\mapsto x^p-x\) on each coordinate. Hence \(F_p-1\) is surjective. Therefore \(H^1_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathbb {Z}/p\mathbb {Z}\big )=0\).
For every integer \(m\ge 2\), we have the short exact sequence
where
We get an induced long exact sequence for every \(m\ge 2\),
We know that \(H^k_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathbb {Z}/p\mathbb {Z}\big )=0\) for all \(k>0\). By induction on m, assume that \(H^k_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathbb {Z}/p^{m-1}\mathbb {Z}\big )=0\) for all \(k>0\), so the long exact sequence yields that \(H^k_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathbb {Z}/p^m\mathbb {Z}\big )=0\) for all \(k>0\). Therefore for any integer \(m>0\), we have
for all \(k>0\).
For any commutative ring A of characteristic p, denote \(W_j(A)\) to be the ring of Witt vectors of length j with coefficients in A. Recall that \(W_j(A)\) is set-theoretically in bijection with the product \(A^j\), but the bijection is not an isomorphism of rings when \(j>1\). However, the p-Frobenius \(F_p\) on \(W_j(A)\) is compatible with the p-Frobenius on A, in the sense that \(F_p\) on \(W_j(A)\) is the map \(x\mapsto x^p\) on each coordinate. See [29, §0.1] for an introduction on the ring of Witt vectors.
For any integer \(m>0\), let \(W_m\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) be the sheaf of Witt vectors of length m on \(\overline{X}(w)\) [29, §0.1.5]. The stalk of \(W_m\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) at a point \(x\in X\) is \(W_m\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w), x}\right) \) [29, (01.5.6)]. Note that \(W_m\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) are coherent sheaves on \(\overline{X}(w)\) [47, §2]. Similar to the ring of Witt vectors, the sections of the coherent sheaf \(W_m\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) are set-theoretically in bijection with the corresponding sections of \({\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}^m\), but the bijection is not an isomorphism of rings when \(m>1\). The p-Frobenius \(F_p\) on \(W_m\left( {\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) is compatible with the p-Frobenius on \({\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}\), in the sense that it is \(x\mapsto x^p\) on each coordinate.
On \(\overline{X}(w)_{{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}}\), we have the Artin–Schreier–Witt exact sequence, cf. [29, Proposition 3.28],
One attains the long exact sequence
We see that \(H^0\left( \overline{X}(w), \mathbb Z/p^j\mathbb Z\right) =\ker (F_p-1)\).
First, let \({\text {supp}}(w)=S\). Since \(\overline{X}(w)\) is smooth projective over \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) and
we know that \(H^0\left( \overline{X}(w), W_m\left( \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \right) = W_m\left( \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\right) \). Note that the p-Frobenius \(F_p\) on \(W_m\left( \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) \) is compatible with taking sections, so it is compatible with the Frobenius on \(W_m\left( \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\right) \). Thus we have
for all \(m>0\). We know that \(W_m(\mathbb F_p)=\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\) for all \(m>0\). Since \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\) acts trivially on \(H^0\left( \overline{X}(w), {\mathcal {O}}_{\overline{X}(w)}\right) =\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) and \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\) acts trivially on each of the coordinate of \(W_m\left( \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\right) \), we see that \(W_m\left( \overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\right) \) inherits a trivial \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action.
Now let \(w\in W\) be an arbitrary element and set \(I={\text {supp}}(w)\). Via [12, Proposition 2.3.8] (cf. Theorem 1.1) we have a \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant surjective morphism
such that the fibres are \(\overline{X}_{L_I}(w)\). In particular, \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\) acts on the set of fibres transitively and the stablizer of each fibre corresponds to a conjugate of \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\) in \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\).
By definition one has
and since the functor \(W_m\) is a finite limit, we have
It follows from the proof of Theorem 1.1 that \(\mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}_{L_I}(w)}\left( \overline{X}_{L_I}(w)\right) =\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\), so \(\mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}_{L_I}(w)}\left( \overline{X}_{L_I}(w)\right) \) is the trivial \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation. As before, this makes \(W_m\left( \mathcal {O}_{\overline{X}_{L_I}(w)}\left( \overline{X}_{L_I}(w)\right) \right) \) the 1-dimensional trivial \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-module. Thus we have
where \(\mathbb {1}_{\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z}\) is the trivial \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-representation with coefficients in \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\). This finishes the proof. \(\square \)
Corollary 7.3
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\), and \(w\in F^+\) with \(I=\text {supp}(w)\). Let \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\). Then one has
Proof
By Proposition 7.2, since for all \(k>0\) and \(m>0\), we have \(H_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}^k\big (\overline{X}(w), \mathbb {Z}/p^m\mathbb {Z}\big )=0\), the tower \(\left\{ H_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}^k\left( \overline{X}(w),\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\right) \right\} _m\) of abelian groups satisfy the Mittag–Leffler condition trivially. Thus for all \(k>0\), we have
On the other hand, the higher vanishing implies that whenever we have \(m>l\) and a \(\textrm{mod}\ p^{l}\) map
Take the induced short exact sequence of sheaves on \(\overline{X}(w)\):
Take the associated long exact sequence of cohomology groups
By the higher vanishing from Proposition 7.2, we see that the morphism
is surjective. Therefore the tower \(\{H_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}^0\left( \overline{X}(w),\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\right) \}_m\) of abelian groups satisfies the Mittag–Leffler condition. Thus we have
and the identification
\(\square \)
7.3 Cohomology of \(\Omega ^{\ell (w)}\) on \(\overline{X}(w)\)
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) and \(w\in W\). Recall that \(\overline{X}(w)\) is smooth projective of dimension \(\ell (w)\). Let \(\Omega \) be the sheaf of differentials on \(\overline{X}(w)\) and write \(\Omega ^p=\wedge ^p \Omega \) for the sheaf of differential p-forms. In particular, \(\omega :=\wedge ^{\ell (w)}\Omega =\Omega ^{\ell (w)}\) is the dualizing sheaf on \(\overline{X}(w)\).
Proposition 7.4
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n, w\in F^+\), \(I={\text {supp}}(w)\) and \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\), then
Proof
Since \(\overline{X}(w)\) is a smooth projective \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme of dimension \(\ell (w)\), Serre duality implies that there is an isomorphism of \(\mathbb {F}_p\)-schemes
for all \(p, q\ge 0\). Fix \(p=0\) and we may apply Theorem 1.1 to get
when \(k\ne \ell (w)\). Setting \(p=0\) and \(q=0\), we get by Theorem 1.1 that
This isomorphism is equivariant under \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action by [25, Theorem 29.5]. Finally, recall that since \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\) is a finite group, the induction functor commutes with taking the dual of a representation. \(\square \)
8 The compactly supported \(\textrm{mod} \ p^m\) and \(\mathbb Z_p\) étale cohomology of X(w)
Throughout this section, let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) and \(w\in W\) as in Sect. 2.7. Fix a reduced expression \(w=t_1\ldots t_r,\) \(t_j\in S\). This reduced expression determines a smooth compactification \(\overline{X}(w)\) for X(w). We also have an isomorphism \(X\left( t_1,\ldots , t_r\right) \overset{\sim }{\rightarrow }X(w)\) cf. Remark 8. By [12, Proposition 3.2.2], we have the following decomposition:
where \(\prec \) is the Bruhat order on \( F^+\). Let us denote \(Y:= \overline{X}(w)\Big \backslash X\left( t_1,\ldots , t_r\right) \) in this section. We use this stratification and Proposition 7.2 to obtain the compactly supported \(\mathbb {Z}/p^m\mathbb {Z}\)-cohomology of X(w). In order to do this, we construct an exact sequence similar to Mayer–Vietoris spectral sequence with respect to the stratification of Y. The method has been used to compute the compactly supported \(\ell \)-adic cohomology groups of X(w) in [44, §5, §7].
8.1 An acyclic resolution for the Steinberg representation for a Levi subgroup of \(\textrm{GL}_n\)
Let \(w\in W\) such that \(w=t_1\ldots t_r\) with \(t_{j}\in S\) are all distinct from one another. We have the associated parabolic subgroup \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\), where \(I={\text {supp}}(w)\). Set \(I_u={\text {supp}}(u)\) for \(u\preceq w\). Consider the following sequence:
For all \(u_{i+1}\preceq u_{i}\preceq w\) with \(\ell (u_{i+1})=\ell (u_i)-1\), let
be the inclusion map, where \(P_{u_i}:=P_{{\text {supp}}(u_i)}\). Then the map \(d_i\) is defined by
where \(\alpha (u_i\rightarrow u_{i+1})\) is an integer determined as follows: if \(u_{i+1}\) is obtained from \(u_i\) by deleting the rth \(s\in S\) in its product expression, then \(\alpha (u_i\rightarrow u_{i+1})=r\).
We will see in the following proposition that this sequence is an acyclic complex. In particular, if \(w\in W\) is a Coxeter element, then (up to augmentation) the complex (5) gives a resolution for the Steinberg representation \({ \text {St}}_{\textrm{GL}_n}\).
Proposition 8.1
Let \(w=t_1\ldots t_r\) such that \(t_j\) are all distinct. Let \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\), where \(I={\text {supp}}(w)\). Set \(I_u={\text {supp}}(u)\) for \(u\preceq w\). Then the sequence (5) is an acyclic complex. Furthermore, \(d_0\) is injective and the cokernel of \(d_{\ell (w)-1}\) is \({\text {ind}}_{P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)}^{\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)}{\text {St}_{L_I}}\), where
Proof
We denote \({\text {ind}}_{H(\mathbb {F}_q)}^{G(\mathbb {F}_q)}\mathbb {1}_{\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z}\) by \(i_H^G\) for any subgroup H of a group G when there is no ambiguity. Recall that we have \(P_I=L_I\ltimes U_I\), where \(L_I\) is a Levi subgroup of \(\textrm{GL}_n\). In particular, \(L_I\) is a reductive algebraic group over \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) defined over \(\mathbb {F}_q\). Note that the Weyl group of \(L_I\) is exactly \(W_I\). Since \(L_I\) is reductive, by [51, Theorem 1] cf. [7, §7], the following sequence
identifies with the combinatorial Tits complex \(\Delta \) of \(L_I\) tensored with \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\). In particular,
where \(U_{L_I}\) is a maximal \(\mathbb {F}_q\)-split unipotent subgroup of \(L_I\), and \(H_j(\Delta , \mathbb Z)=0\) otherwise. By the Universal Coefficients Theorem, we know that \(\ker (d_1)=i_{L_I}^{L_I}\) and \(\text { coker}(d_{\ell (w)-1})={ \text {St}}_{L_I}\).
We have the following identification
for all \(u\preceq w\). Hence may rewrite the acyclic complex (6) as follows:
Recall that since \(P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\) is a finite subgroup of \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\), the functor \({\text {ind}}_{P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)}^{\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)}\) is exact. Thus we may apply the functor \({\text {ind}}_{P_I(\mathbb {F}_q)}^{\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)}\) to the acyclic complex (7) and obtain the complex (5). Therefore the complex (5) is acyclic and \(d_{\ell (w)-1}\) has the cokernel as desired. \(\square \)
We can also prove Proposition 8.1 algebraically.
Alternative proof
Denote the induced representations \({\text {ind}}_{H(\mathbb {F}_q)}^{G(\mathbb {F}_q)}\mathbb {1}_{\mathbb Q}\) by \(i_H^G(\mathbb Q)\) when there is no ambiguity. Set \(A_k=i_{P_{u_k}\cap L_I}^{L_I}(\mathbb Q)\) with \(k=1,\ldots ,\ell (w)\) such that \(u_k\prec w, \ell (u_k)=\ell (w)-1\) and \(P_{u_k}=P_{{\text {supp}}(u_k)}\). It is verified in [8, Theorem 3.2.5] that for any subsets \(I,J\subseteq \{1,\ldots ,\ell (w)\}\),
Note that loc.cit. proved this for generalized Steinberg representations, but it does apply for the scenario of the Steinberg representation itself. By [45, Proposition 2.6], one obtains an acyclic complex:
where \({ \text {St}}_{L_I}(\mathbb Q)\) is the Steinberg representation with coefficients in \(\mathbb Q\). The complex (9) gives a basis for \(i_{B^*\cap L_I}^{L_I} (\mathbb Q)\) such that for all \(P\supset B\), the subrepresentation \(i_{P\cap L_I}^{L_I} (\mathbb Q)\) is generated by a subset of this basis. More precisely, one starts with fixing a basis for \(i_{L_I}^{L_I}(\mathbb Q)\) and inductively fix bases for each constituent of the next term in the complex. This ensures that the intersections would still be free modules generated by a basis element.
Taking the \(\mathbb Z\)-lattice with respect to this basis yields the sub-representations \(i_{P\cap L_I}^{L_I} (\mathbb Z)\). In particular, the equality (8) holds after intersecting with the \(\mathbb Z\)-lattice and the intersections are free \(\mathbb {Z}\)-modules generated by basis elements. Thus we can tensor this \(\mathbb Z\)-lattice with \(\mathbb Z/p^m \mathbb Z\) to obtain \( B_k:=i_{P_{u_k}\cap L_I}^{L_I}(\mathbb Z/p^m \mathbb Z)\), such that \(B_k\)’s satisfy the condition (8). Thus by [45, Proposition 2.6], we obtain the acyclic complex as desired. \(\square \)
8.2 A spectral sequence associated to the stratification
Let w be as in Sect. 8.1. Denote the category of sheaves on \(\overline{X}(w)_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}\) by \(\text {Sh}(\overline{X}(w)_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}})\). For any closed subscheme Z of \(\overline{X}(w)\) with the inclusion map \(\iota :Z\rightarrow \overline{X}(w)\), we denote \(\iota _*\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\) by \(\left( \mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\right) _{Z}\). Again, since \(\iota _*\) is exact, we have an isomorphism of \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\)-modules:
In addition, if we assume that Z is stable under \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-action, then the above isomorphism is \(\textrm{GL}_n(\mathbb {F}_q)\)-equivariant.
Let \(R=\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\), for any \(m> 0\). For \(u\preceq w\), we denote the constant sheaf R on \(\overline{X}(u)\) by \(R_{\overline{X}(u)}\). We have a sequence of constant sheaves on \(\overline{X}(w)_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}\):
Let \(\{U_{\gamma }\rightarrow \overline{X}(w)\}_{\gamma }\) be an étale cover of \(\overline{X}(w)\), and consider the \(i-1, i, i+1\)th terms of this complex
We now describe the maps \(d_i\). Label each summand of the ith term in the complex by \(u_i\), by abuse of notation. Let
be a section, then we have
where \(\alpha (u_i\rightarrow u_{i+1})\) is as defined in Sect. 8.1. Here the restriction of \(f_{u_i}\) to \(\overline{X}(u_{i+1})\) can be nonzero if and only if \(\overline{X}(u_{i+1})\subseteq \overline{X}(u_i)\).
When we fix \(u_{i+1}\preceq u_{i-1}\preceq w\), as \(\ell (u_{i-1})=\ell (u_{i+1})-2\), there are only two ways to take restrictions from \(\overline{X}(u_{i-1})\) to \(\overline{X}(u_{i+1})\) via \(\overline{X}(u_i')\) for some \(u_{i-1}\preceq u_i'\preceq u_{i+1}\). Thus by the definition of the function \(\alpha \), we may conclude that \(d_i\circ d_{i-1}=0\). Therefore (10) is a complex.
Lemma 8.2
Let \(w=t_1\ldots t_r\) such that \(t_j\) are all distinct. Then the complex (10) of sheaves on \(\overline{X}(w)_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}\) is acyclic.
Proof
It suffices to check the acyclicity of the complex (10) on the stalks. Let \(x\in \overline{X}(w)\), then the complex would simplify depending on which closed subscheme x lives in.
If we have \(x\in X(u_{i-1})\) for some \(u_{i-1}\prec w\), \(\ell (u_{i-1})=\ell (w)-i+1\). Then we know that \(x\notin \overline{X}(u)\) for all \(u\preceq w\) with \(\ell (u)\le i\) and thus \(R_{\overline{X}(u),x}=0\). Then the complex 11 is trivially exact at the ith term.
If we have \(x\in X(u_i)\) for some \(u_i\prec w\), \(\ell (u_i)=\ell (w)-i\). Then for all \(R_{\overline{X}(u),x}=0\) for \(u\prec w\), \(\ell (u)\le i-1\). The complex 11 becomes
Since \(d_{i-1}\) is obviously surjective, this complex is exact at the ith term in this case.
If \(x\in \overline{X}(u_{i+1})\), then for any \(f\in { \text {Ker}}(d_i)\), all the summand of \(d_i(f)\) are 0. Now if \(f=(f_t)_t\), then for each summand of \(d_i(f)\), there exists an even number of nonzero \(f_t\)’s that maps to it. Each such pair of \(f_t, f_t'\) would have the property \(f_t=-f_t'\) or \(f_t=f_t'\). This is because all summands of \(d_i(f)\) are 0. Now by the definition of \(d_{i-1}\), we may build an element of the \(i-1\)th term of below using the nonzero terms of \(f_t\).
\(\square \)
Corollary 8.3
Let \(j:X(w)\hookrightarrow \overline{X}(w)\) be the open immersion. Then the complex (10) gives a resolution for \(j_!\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\).
Proof
We need to verify that the following complex is exact at R:
We verify on the stalks. When \(x\in X(w)\), we have \(j_! R_x\cong R_x\). When \(x\in \overline{X}(w)\backslash X(w)\), then
is injective. \(\square \)
Since the category \(\text {Sh}_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}(\overline{X}(w))\) has enough injective objects, by Corollary 8.3, the complex (10) is quasi-isomorphic to an injective resolution of \(j_!\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\). Take the spectral sequence associated to the complex (10), we have
8.3 The étale cohomology with compact support for X(w) with coefficients in \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\) and \(\mathbb Z_p\)
Theorem 8.4
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\), and \(w=t_1\ldots t_r\in W\) such that \(t_j\in S\) are distinct from one another. Set \(I={\text {supp}}(w), I_u={\text {supp}}(u)\) and \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*=U_I\rtimes L_I\). Then for \(k\ne \ell (w), m>0\),
and
In particular,
where \(\text {St}_{L_I}\) is the Steinberg representation for \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\) with coefficients in \(\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\).
Proof
By Proposition 7.2, we know that the \(E_1^{i,0}\)-terms of the spectral sequence 12 agree with the sequence 5. In addition, for all \(j>0\) and \(u\preceq w\), we have
so there is no nonzero terms at \(E^{i,j}_1\) when \(j\ne 0\) and \(E_2=E_\infty \). It follows from Proposition 8.1 that
and \(E_2^{i,j}=0\) otherwise. The proof is thus concluded because \(E_2^{i,0}\cong H^{i}_{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}, \text {c}}\left( X(w),\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\right) \). \(\square \)
Corollary 8.5
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\), and \(w=t_1\ldots t_r\in W\) such that the \(t_j\)’s are distinct from one another. Denote \(I={\text {supp}}(w), I_u={\text {supp}}(u), u\preceq w\) and \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\). Then for \(k\ne \ell (w), m>0\),
and
In particular,
where \(\text {St}_{L_I}\) is the Steinberg representation for \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\) with coefficients in \(\mathbb Z_p\).
Proof
By Theorem 8.4, we have for all \(k\ne \ell (w)\) and \(m>0\), \(H_{{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}, c}^k\left( X(w),\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\right) =0\). Thus the tower \(\left\{ H_{{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}, c}^k\left( X(w),\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\right) \right\} _m\) of abelian groups satisfy the Mittag–Leffler condition. Thus for all \(k\ne \ell (w)\), we have
On the other hand, whenever we have \(m>l\) and a \(\textrm{mod}\ p^{l}\) map
there is a short exact sequence of sheaves on \(\overline{X}(w)_{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}\):
By [40, Corollary 8.14], since \(j: X(w)\rightarrow \overline{X}(w)\) is an open immersion, we know that \(j_!\) is an exact functor, so there is a short exact sequence
Taking the associated long exact sequence yields
The vanishing result for \(k\ne \ell (w)\) from Theorem 8.4 implies that
is surjective. Hence the tower of abelian groups \(\left\{ H_{{{\acute{\text {e}}\text {t}}}, c}^{\ell (w)}\left( X(w),\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\right) \right\} _m\) satisfies the Mittag–Leffler condition. Therefore
and
\(\square \)
Corollary 8.6
Let \(G=\textrm{GL}_n\) and \(w\in F^+\). Let \(v\in F^+\) such that \({\text {supp}}(v)={\text {supp}}(w)\) and \(v=s_{\alpha _1}\ldots s_{\alpha _{r}}\in W\) with \(s_{\alpha _t}\) all distinct. Let \(R=\mathbb Z/p^m\mathbb Z\) or \(\mathbb Z_p\), \(m>0\). Set \(I={\text {supp}}(w), I_u={\text {supp}}(u),\) and \(P_I=B^*W_IB^*\). Then for \(k\ne \ell (w)\),
and
In particular,
where \(\text {St}_{L_I}\) is the Steinberg representation for \(L_I(\mathbb {F}_q)\) with coefficients in R.
Proof
Analogous to [44, Proposition 2.11], by induction on \(\ell (w)-\ell (v)\), the complex (5) we get for \(w\in F^+\) is homotopic to the complex (5) for any \(v\in F^+\) such that \( {\text {supp}}(v)={\text {supp}}(w)\). The rest follows from Theorem 8.4 and Corollary 8.5. \(\square \)
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Acknowledgements
I thank my advisor, Sascha Orlik, for suggesting projects related to Deligne–Lusztig varieties, and for his guidance on during my PhD. I would like to thank Kay Rülling for explaining his work [5] to me during the writing of my thesis and suggesting the paper [32] to me at my defense, which contributed to Appendix A. Moreover, I wish to thank Pierre Deligne for answering my questions about constructions used in [9]. I want to express my gratitude to the anonymous referee for many helpful remarks. Many thanks to Georg Linden and Thomas Hudson for giving detailed comments on earlier drafts of this paper. Thanks to Sándor Kovács, George Lusztig, and Stefan Schröer for helpful comments and discussions.
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The author, Yingying Wang, has no conflict of interest to declare. The work of this paper was carried out while the author was a doctorate student at the Bergische Universität Wuppertal. This paper is based on the author’s doctorate thesis, with Appendix A added after the doctoral defense when the author was a postdoc at the Bergische Universität Wuppertal. The author was funded by the research training group GRK 2240: Algebro-Geometric Methods in Algebra, Arithmetic and Topology, which is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG). The author ackowledges the support by the Open Access Publication Fund of the University of Duisburg-Essen.
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F-singularities and pseudo-rational singularities of \(\overline{X(w)}\)
F-singularities and pseudo-rational singularities of \(\overline{X(w)}\)
In [33, Theorem 2.2], it was shown that Schubert varieties are globally F-regular. As already seen in [38, §4.3], certain local properties of Schubert varieties can be carried over to local properties of the Zariski closure of Deligne–Lusztig varieties \(\overline{X(w)}\) via the Lang map. This allows us to show that \(\overline{X(w)}\) has pseudorational singularities. There is a generalization of the result of [5, Theorem 3.2.8] relaxing the requirement of smoothness to pseudo-rational singularity [32, Theorem 8.13]. This allows us to obtain the result in Proposition 5.4 for all connected reductive G defined over a finite field \(\mathbb {F}_q\).
Throughout this section, let G be an arbitrary reductive group as defined in Sect. 2.1.
1.1 Review of definitions
We recall some relevant definitions of F-singularities of commutative rings and schemes in positive characteristic. More detailed discussions can be found in [48, Chapter 3], for example.
Definition A.1
[48, p.14, Definition 1.17] Let R be a ring of characteristic \(p>0\) and \(F:R\rightarrow R\) be the p-Frobenius morphism. We say that R is F-finite if F is a finite map.
By [48, p. 47], finitely generated algebras over a perfect field as well as their localizations and completions are always F-finite. Thus if Y is a scheme locally of finite type over a perfect field, then the local rings \(\mathcal {O}_{Y, y}\) for all \(y\in Y\) are F-finite.
Definition A.2
[26, p. 128] Let R be a F-finite ring. If for every \(r\in R\) not contained in any minimal prime ideals of R, there exists some positive integer e such that the map of R-modules \(R\rightarrow R^{1/{p^e}}\) given by \(1\mapsto r^{1/{p^e}}\) splits, then we say that R is strongly F-regular.
Definition A.3
Let Y be a locally of finite type in characteristic \(p>0\) with geometric Frobenius F. We say that Y is strongly F-regular if the local ring \(\mathcal {O}_{Y,y}\) is strongly F-regular for all \(y\in Y\).
The property of being strongly F-regular is indeed a local condition by [48, p. 56, Proposition 4.12] cf. [27, Theorem 5.5]. Note that in the literature, the strongly F-regular property for schemes may also be called locally F-regular in order to distinguish from the globally F-regular property, which is defined via the section ring of an ample line bundle [50].
Definition A.4
Let Y be a locally of finite type in characteristic \(p>0\) with geometric Frobenius F. Then Y is said to be F-rational when the local ring \(\mathcal {O}_{Y,y}\) is F-rational for all \(y\in Y\).
The definition of F-rationality for a ring of characteristic \(p>0\) involves more definitions, which we will not directly work with, so we refer to [49, Definition 1.3] for its precise statement. It then follows from the definitions that strongly F-regular rings are F-rational.
Remark 20
In the literature, the notion of excellent rings and schemes are sometimes used to make more general statements. We remark that locally of finite type \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes excellent schemes by [20, Prop 7.8.6, p. 217]. As localization of local sections of excellent schemes remain to be excellent rings, all the local rings we work with in this section are in fact excellent rings.
1.2 Cohomology of \(\overline{X(w)}\)
For any \(w\in W\), the Zariski closure \(\overline{B^*wB^*}\) of a Bruhat cell in G are large Schubert varieties in the sense of [4, p. 956]. We shall use this fact to show the Zariski closure of Deligne–Lusztig varieties have pseudo-rational singularities. As before, we work in the more general setting with generalized Deligne–Lusztig varieties.
Recall that we have the natural quotient map \(\alpha : F^+\rightarrow W\). Let \(w_1,w_2\in F^+\) and \(v\in F^+\) such that v corresponds to a reduced expression of an element in \(\alpha (v)\in W\). Write \(w_1=s_{i_1}\ldots s_{i_{l(w_1)}}\) and \(w_2=s_{i_{l(w_1)+2}}\ldots s_{i_{l(w_1)+l(w_2)+1}}\). We may then fix a notation:
Note that if \(w_1\) and \(w_2\) are trivial, then \(\overline{X}(w_1\underline{v}w_2)=\overline{X(v)}\).
Definition A.5
For any integer \(r>0\), define a partial Frobenius endomrophism \(F_1: G^{r+1}\rightarrow G^{r+1}\) on the \(r+1\)-fold fibre product of G over \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) by
Observe that \(F_1^{r+1}\) is the Frobenius endomorphism of \(G^{r+1}\), and that \(G^{r+1}\) is again connected reductive. Denote the associated Lang map of \(F_1\) by \({\mathcal {L}}_1\), which is defined by \(h\mapsto h^{-1}F_1(h)\) for all \(h\in G^{r+1}(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p)\). It follows from the Lang–Steinberg theorem that \({\mathcal {L}}_1\) is surjective. By [12, Proposition 2.3.3], we get an isomorphism
where \(r=l(w_1)+l(w_2)+1\).
Proposition A.6
The scheme \(\overline{X}(w_1\underline{v}w_2)\) for \(w_1, w_2\in F^+\) and \(v\in F^+\) being a reduced expression for an element in W, is strongly F-regular.
Proof
By [4, p. 958, Corollary 4.1], for all \(w\in W\), \(\overline{B^*\dot{w}B^*}\) is strongly F-regular. As strongly F-regularity is preserved under faithfully flat descent [27, Theorem 5.5], we see that the product
is again strongly F-regular. Denote this product by \(Z_{v}\), and we have the following diagram
Since \({\mathcal {L}}_1\) is étale, the fibres of \({\mathcal {L}}_1\) are smooth. Thus \(\mathcal {L}_1^{-1}\left( Z_v\right) \) is strongly F-regular by [1, Theorem 3.6]. We apply to \(\pi \) the faithfully flat descent of strong F-regularity [27, Theorem 5.5]. Therefore \(\overline{X}(w_1\underline{v}w_2)\) is strongly F-regular. \(\square \)
Remark 21
(i) The argument above is analogous to the argument in [38, §4.3]. In particular, Proposition A.6 implies that \(\overline{X}(w_1\underline{v}w_2)\) are normal and Cohen–Macaulay cf. [12, Proposition 2.3.5]. The reason is that F-rational excellent local rings are normal and Cohen–Macaulay [27, Theorem 4.2, Theorem 6.27].
(ii) Instead of using the result that the Zariski closure of Bruhat cells are strongly F-regular, one may alternatively use the fact that the Schubert varieties \(\overline{B^*\dot{w}B^*}/B^*\) are globally F-regular, which is shown in [33, Theorem 2.2] and [24, Theorem 8].
The global F-regularity of \(\overline{B^*\dot{w}B^*}/B^*\) implies that it is strongly F-regular [48, p. 75, Proposition 6.22]. Consider the quotient map \(\pi : \overline{B^*\dot{w}B^*} \rightarrow \overline{B^*\dot{w}B^*}/B^*\). Since \(\pi \) is a Zariski locally trivial fibre bundle with all fibres isomorphic to \(B^*\), it is a faithfully flat morphism. We may apply faithfully flat descent of strong F-regularity [27, Theorem 5.5] because \(B^*\) is a smooth \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-scheme. Thus \(\overline{B^*\dot{w}B^*}\) is strongly F-regular. The rest of the proof is the same as the proof of Proposition A.6.
Proposition A.7
For any \(w\in F^+\) of the form \(w=w_1vw_2\), where \(w_1,w_2,v\in F^+\) and v has the same expression with a reduced expression of \(\alpha (v)\in W\). Let \(v'\in F^+\) be another reduced expression of \(\alpha (v)\), then we have the following isomorphisms of cohomology for structure sheaves and canonical bundles:
and
for all \(k\ge 0\).
Proof
For schemes locally of finite type over \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\), the local rings being strongly F-regular implies them being pseudo-rational [49, Theorem 3.1]. Then by Proposition A.6, we know that the scheme \(\overline{X}(w_1\underline{v}w_2)\) has pseudo-rational singularities cf. [32, Definition 9.4]. Furthermore, the \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes \(\overline{X}(w_1vw_2)\) and \(\overline{X}(w_1v'w_2)\) are regular, so they also have pseudo-rational singularities.
By assumption, we know that v and \(v'\) have expressions corresponding to two different reduced expressions of \(\alpha (v)\). Thus \(\overline{O(v)}\) is isomorphic to \(\overline{O(v')}\). Furthermore, \(\overline{O}(v)\) and \(\overline{O}(v')\) give two smooth compactifications of \(\overline{O(v)}\). Hence we have the following cartesian squares via projections
and
where f and \(f'\) are proper birational morphisms of \(\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\)-schemes. Via [32, Theorem 8.13] we see that \(\overline{X}(w_1vw_2)\) (resp. \(\overline{X}(w_1v'w_2)\)) has isomorphic cohomology groups for the structure sheaf and the canonical bundle with \(\overline{X}(w_1\underline{v}w_2)\) via f (resp. \(f'\)). Therefore we have
and
for all \(k\ge 0\). \(\square \)
Remark 22
As an upshot, Proposition A.7 implies Proposition 5.4 if we set \(v=sts\) and \(v'=tst\) (resp. \(v=st\) and \(v'=ts\)) whenever \(sts=tst\) (resp. \(st=ts\)) in W. Furthermore, Proposition A.6 and A.7 work for any connected reductive group \(G/\overline{\mathbb {F}}_p\) defined over \(\mathbb {F}_q\).
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Wang, Y. Cohomology and geometry of Deligne–Lusztig varieties for \(\textrm{GL}_n\). Math. Z. 306, 69 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00209-024-03455-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00209-024-03455-2