Rigid Cohomology

Dating back to work of Berthelot, rigid cohomology appeared as a common generalization of Monsky-Washnitzer cohomology and crystalline cohomology. It is a p-adic Weil cohomology suitable for computing Zeta and L-functions for algebraic varieties on finite fields. Moreover, it is effective, in the sense that it gives algorithms to compute the number of rational points of such varieties. This is the first book to give a complete treatment of the theory, from full discussion of all the basics to descriptions of the very latest developments. Results and proofs are included that are not available elsewhere, local computations are explained, and many worked examples are given. This accessible tract will be of interest to researchers working in arithmetic geometry, p-adic cohomology theory, and related cryptographic areas.

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33 primary books

#172 in Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics

Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics is a 33-book series with 33 released primary works first released in 1990 with contributions by Peter Sarnak, Michael Aschbacher, and Yoshiyuki Kitaoka.

#99
Some Applications of Modular Forms
#104
Sporadic Groups
#106
Arithmetic of Quadratic Forms
#107
Duality and Perturbation Methods in Critical Point Theory
#112
Schur Algebras and Representation Theory
#132
Mixed Hodge Structures and Singularities
#134
Birational Geometry Algebraic Var
#139
Typical Dynamics of Volume Preserving Homeomorphisms
#147
Floer Homology Groups in Yang-Mills Theory
#150
Harmonic Maps, Conservation Laws and Moving Frames
#153
Abelian Varieties, Theta Functions and the Fourier Transform

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