<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
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<fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="true"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="true"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1203</fr:anchor><fr:addr>index</fr:addr><fr:route>index.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:title></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
  This is an English translation of <fr:strong>P. Deligne</fr:strong>'s paper:

  <fr:ul><fr:li>
      "Le Groupe Fondamental de la Droite Projective Moins Trois Points".
      In <fr:em>Galois Groups over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex></fr:em>, Springer–Verlag, MSRI Publications <fr:strong>16</fr:strong> (1989), 79–297.
      DOI: <fr:link
href="https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-9649-9_3"
type="external">10.1007/978-1-4613-9649-9_3</fr:link>.
      <fr:link
href="http://publications.ias.edu/node/407"
type="external">[PDF]</fr:link></fr:li></fr:ul></fr:p><fr:p><fr:strong><fr:em>TO-DO: replace fref by ref</fr:em></fr:strong></fr:p><fr:p>
  The translator (<fr:link
href="https://thosgood.com"
type="external">Tim Hosgood</fr:link>) takes full responsibility for any errors introduced, and claims no rights to any of the mathematical content herein.
  You can view the entire source code of this translation (and contribute or submit corrections) in the <fr:link
href="https://github.com/thosgood/minus-three-points"
type="external">GitHub repository</fr:link>.
  Corrections and comments welcome.
</fr:p>
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot; &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-introduction.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-introduction"><fr:strong>Introduction</fr:strong></fr:link> ✓
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;0. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-0.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-0"><fr:strong>Terminology and notation</fr:strong></fr:link> ✓
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;1. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1"><fr:strong>Mixed motives</fr:strong></fr:link> ✓
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;2. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-2"><fr:strong>Examples</fr:strong></fr:link> ✓
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;3. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-3"><fr:strong><fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}(n)</fr:tex>-torsors</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;4. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-4"
type="external"><fr:strong>Reminders on Ind-objects</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;5. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-5"
type="external"><fr:strong>Algebraic geometry in a Tannakian category</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;6. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-6"
type="external"><fr:strong>The fundamental group of a Tannakian category</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;7. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-7"
type="external"><fr:strong>Algebraic geometry in the Tannakian category of realisation systems: interpretations</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;8. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-8"
type="external"><fr:strong>Iterated extensions of Tate motives</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;9. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-9"
type="external"><fr:strong>Reminders on unipotent groups</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;10. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-10"
type="external"><fr:strong>Theories of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex></fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;11. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-11"
type="external"><fr:strong>The crystalline structure of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex></fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;12. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-12"
type="external"><fr:strong>The Hodge filtration of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex></fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;13. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-13"
type="external"><fr:strong>The motivic <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex></fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;14. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-14"
type="external"><fr:strong>Example: the motivic <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex></fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;15. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-15"
type="external"><fr:strong>Basepoints at infinity</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;16. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-16"
type="external"><fr:strong><fr:tex>\mathbb {P}^1</fr:tex> minus three points: a quotient of the motivic <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex></fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;17. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-17"
type="external"><fr:strong>Distribution relations: geometric approach</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;18. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-18"
type="external"><fr:strong>The torsor <fr:tex>P_{d,k}+(-1)^kP_{d,k}</fr:tex> is of finite order: geometric approach</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;19. &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-19"
type="external"><fr:strong>Comparison of the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}(k)</fr:tex>-torsors from sections 3 and 16</fr:strong></fr:link>
  </html:li>

  
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot; &quot;">
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-bibliography.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-bibliography"><fr:strong>Bibliography</fr:strong></fr:link> ✓
  </html:li>

</html:ol>
<fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>817</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Leitfaden</fr:taxon><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
  <fr:embedded-tex
hash="44b7303602dca5cee397811da222885d"><fr:embedded-tex-preamble>\usepackage {amsmath,tikz-cd}</fr:embedded-tex-preamble><fr:embedded-tex-body>\begin {tikzcd} 
    1  \ar [dd, no head] &amp; 4  \ar [d, no head] &amp; &amp; 9  \ar [d, no head] &amp;
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   \\  &amp; &amp; 19 &amp; &amp;
   \end {tikzcd}</fr:embedded-tex-body></fr:embedded-tex>
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter><fr:backmatter><fr:contributions></fr:contributions><fr:context></fr:context><fr:related><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1197</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}(n)</fr:tex>-torsors</fr:title><fr:number>3</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
  The study of the fundamental group of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex> reveals, for each <fr:tex>k \geqslant2</fr:tex>, a torsor <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
  We will describe these torsors in this section.
  The relation with <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> will be explained in [minus-three-points-16] (see [minus-three-points-16.23]) and the calculations to justify this will be given in [minus-three-points-19].
  We will then describe the torsors <fr:tex>P_{d,k}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \sqrt [d]{1}))</fr:tex>, given by an analogous construction ([minus-three-points-16.28]).
</fr:p><fr:p>
  The sum of the <fr:tex>P_{d,k}</fr:tex> and of <fr:tex>(-1)^k</fr:tex> times its symmetry under <fr:tex>\zeta \mapsto \zeta ^{-1}</fr:tex> is torsion.
  This is essentially equivalent to the adelic integral formulas for the value of the Dirichlet <fr:tex>L</fr:tex> functions at negative integers: [minus-three-points-3.6], [minus-three-points-3.8], [minus-three-points-3.9], and [minus-three-points-3.14].
  A geometric interpretation, which allows us to reprove these formulas, will be given in [minus-three-points-18].
</fr:p><fr:p>
  A geometric interpretation of the relations of distributions ([minus-three-points-3.13]) will be given in [minus-three-points-17].
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>825</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote by <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> the torsor <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> that we are going to define.
    At the same time, we will define a trivialisation <fr:tex>u_ { \mathrm {B}} \in  P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> of its Betti realisation.
    Since <fr:tex>F^0 \mathbb {Z} (k)_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>, we necessarily have that <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Z} (k)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    The Betti structure is

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>820</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.1k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.1k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.1k</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {gathered}           P_ { \mathrm {B}}            = u_ { \mathrm {B}}  + (2 \pi  i)^k \mathbb {Z}   \subset   \mathbb {P} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} } =  \mathbb {C}           \\ \text {with} \quad            u_ { \mathrm {B}}            = -(k-1)! \zeta (k)          \end {gathered}       \tag{3.1.1k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    where <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> is the Riemann <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> function.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> be an integer; we will describe <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>z \in \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>z \neq1</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>T_N(z) \coloneqq  K(1-z)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> be the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(1)</fr:tex>-torsor of <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1-z</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>z=1</fr:tex>, we set <fr:tex>T_N(1)=K(1/N)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex>.
    This convention ensures that the sum of the <fr:tex>T_N( \alpha )</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\alpha ^N=1</fr:tex> is trivialised: we have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \frac {1}{N} \prod (1- \alpha )       = 1.     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>\alpha</fr:tex> be an <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th root of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    It defines <fr:tex>\alpha \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}N \to \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>a \mapsto  a \cdot \alpha</fr:tex>.
    We thus obtain <fr:tex>\alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)} \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1) \to \mathbb {Z} {/}N(k)</fr:tex>.
    Note that, for <fr:tex>\alpha =1</fr:tex>, this is the zero map.
    We denote by <fr:tex>\alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T( \alpha )</fr:tex> the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(k)</fr:tex>-torsor induced from <fr:tex>T( \alpha )</fr:tex> by applying <fr:tex>\alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}</fr:tex>.
    We have

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>821</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.2k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.2k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}          \coloneqq   \sum _{ \alpha ^N=1}  \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_N( \alpha ).       \tag{3.1.2k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    
    We can equivalently sum over the <fr:tex>\alpha \neq1</fr:tex>.
    This definition still makes sense in any algebraic closure <fr:tex>\overline {k}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, and the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is given by transport of structure.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We now define the transition morphisms <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(NM)} \to  P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex>.
    We have

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>822</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \prod _{u^M=z} (1-u)         = 1-z       \tag{3.1.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    whence, for <fr:tex>z \neq0 ,1</fr:tex>, we obtain an isomorphism

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>823</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         T_N(z)         =  \prod _{u^M=z} T_N(u).       \tag{3.1.4}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    If <fr:tex>\beta ^N=1</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\alpha ^M= \beta</fr:tex>, then the reduction <fr:tex>\mod  N</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\alpha \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}NM \to \mathbb {Z} {/}NM(1)</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>\beta \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}N \to \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1)</fr:tex>, and that of <fr:tex>T_{NM}( \alpha )</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>T_N( \alpha )</fr:tex>.
    From this, we obtain an isomorphism
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(NM)} \mod  N         &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta ^N=1}  \sum _{ \alpha ^M= \beta }  \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_{NM}( \alpha )  \mod  N        \\ &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta ^N=1}  \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)}  \sum _{ \alpha ^M= \beta } T_N( \alpha )        \\ &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta ^N=1}  \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)} T_N( \beta )        \\ &amp;= P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}.        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    This defines the desired transition morphism.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For non-real negative <fr:tex>z</fr:tex>, we define the <fr:em>principal determination</fr:em> of <fr:tex>z \mapsto  z^{1/N}</fr:tex>, and denote by <fr:tex>z^{1/N}</fr:tex>, that which takes the value of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    The morphism of torsors <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> sends <fr:tex>u_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> to the point <fr:tex>u</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> defined by the <fr:tex>(1- \alpha )^{1/N} \in  T( \alpha )</fr:tex>:
    <fr:tex
display="block">       u_ { \mathrm {B}}         \mapsto  u       =  \sum   \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)} ((1- \alpha )^{1/N}).     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>z</fr:tex> is not real and <fr:tex>\geqslant1</fr:tex>, then we have principal determinations

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>824</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \prod _{u^M=z} (1-u)^{1/N}         = (1-z)^{1/N}       \tag{3.1.5}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    as we verify by analytic continuation from <fr:tex>z=0</fr:tex>, taking <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.1.3"
href="minus-three-points-3.1.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.1.3"></fr:ref> into account.
    It follows from <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.1.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.1.5.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.1.5"></fr:ref> that the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> are compatible with the transition morphisms.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>833</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Some preliminaries, before defining <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
    The <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>-logarithm is defined for <fr:tex>|z| \leqslant1</fr:tex> by

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>826</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k(z)         =  \sum  z^n/n^k.       \tag{3.2.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    The <fr:tex>\zeta (k)</fr:tex> in the formula giving <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> appears in our approach as the value at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\ell _k</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> be a prime number and consider the formal series

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>827</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k^{(p)}         =  \sum _{p \nmid  n} z^n/n^k.       \tag{3.2.2}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    This is the Taylor series expansion of a rigid analytic function on the projective line over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> with the open disc of radius <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> centred at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> removed.
    Indeed, we have

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>828</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k^{(p)}(z)         =  \lim _N  \frac {1}{1-z^{p^N}}  \sum _{n=1, p \nmid  n}^{p^N-1} z^n/n^k.       \tag{3.2.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    From <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.2.3"
href="minus-three-points-3.2.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.2.3"></fr:ref> we get the identity

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>829</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k^{(p)}(1/z)         = -(-1)^k \ell _k^{(p)}(z).       \tag{3.2.4}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    A formal series calculation gives, for <fr:tex>(N,p)=1</fr:tex>,

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>830</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         N^{k-1} \sum _{u^N=z}  \ell _k^{(p)}(u)         =  \ell _k^{(p)}(z).       \tag{3.2.5}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    This leads us to define the "principal value" at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>831</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {vp} \ell _k^{(p)}(1)          \coloneqq   \frac {N^{k-1}}{1-N^{k-1}}  \sum _{ \alpha ^N=1, \alpha \neq1 }  \ell _k^{(p)}( \alpha ).       \tag{3.2.6}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    This number is independent of the choice of <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> coprime to <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
    By <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.2.4"
href="minus-three-points-3.2.4.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.2.4"></fr:ref>, it is zero for <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> even.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    With this notation, the crystalline Frobenius <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> is given by

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>832</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.7k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.7k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.7k</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p^{-1}(0)         = (k-1)!p^k \cdot \operatorname {vp} \ell _k^{(p)}(1).       \tag{3.2.7k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>834</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We have described the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(N)(k)</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> as a sum of torsors indexed by the <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    If <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> is a power of a prime number <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, say <fr:tex>N= \ell ^n</fr:tex>, then we can again, thanks to <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.1.4"
href="minus-three-points-3.1.4.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.1.4"></fr:ref>, write it as a sum indexed by the set <fr:tex>\mu (N)^ \times</fr:tex> of primitive <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    Indeed, we have isomorphisms
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}         &amp;=  \sum _{ \alpha ^N=1} \ldots         \\ &amp;=  \sum _{a=1}^n  \sum _{ \mu ( \ell ^a)^ \times }  \ldots         \\ &amp;=  \sum _{a=1}^n  \sum _{ \alpha \in \mu ( \ell ^a)^ \times } \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}  \sum _{ \beta ^{ \ell ^{n-a}}= \alpha } T_N( \beta ).        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    In this sum, <fr:tex>\beta</fr:tex> runs over, for each <fr:tex>a</fr:tex>, all the primitive <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>, whence
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}         &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta \in \mu (N)^ \times } \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_N( \beta )  \cdot   \sum _{a=1}^n \ell ^{(n-a)(k-1)}        \\ &amp;=  \frac {1}{1- \ell ^{k-1}}  \sum _{ \beta \in \mu (N)^ \times } \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_N( \beta ).        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    The cohomology class of <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> (for <fr:tex>N= \ell ^n</fr:tex>) in <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^1( \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ), \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)(k))</fr:tex> thus admits the following description.
    Let <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )</fr:tex> be the cyclotomic field generated by a primitive <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th root of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    In <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^1( \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )), \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1))</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>\delta (1- \zeta )</fr:tex> be the Kummer coboundary of <fr:tex>1- \zeta</fr:tex>.
    On <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta ))</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> identifies the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(a)</fr:tex> with one another, and we can think of <fr:tex>\delta (1- \zeta )</fr:tex> as a class with values in <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(k)</fr:tex>.
    More precisely, we consider <fr:tex>\zeta ^{ \otimes (k-1)} \cup \partial (1- \zeta ) \in \operatorname {H} ^1( \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )), \mathbb {Z} {/}N(k))</fr:tex>.
    We have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {cl} (P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/} \ell ^n})       =  \frac {1}{1- \ell ^{k-1}}  \operatorname {Tr} _{ \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )/ \mathbb {Q} }( \zeta ^{ \otimes (k-1)} \cup \partial (1- \zeta ))     </fr:tex>
    and the class of <fr:tex>P_ \ell</fr:tex> is the limit of these classes.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>835</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\zeta ^{(p)}(s)</fr:tex> the <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> function with its Eulerian factor at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> removed:
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta ^{(p)}(s)        \coloneqq   \sum _{p \nmid  n} 1/n^s.     </fr:tex>
    We know that the values of <fr:tex>\zeta ^{(p)}(s)</fr:tex> on the negative integers are rational and admit a <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic interpolation.
    More precisely,

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        Let <fr:tex>\mathbb {C} _p</fr:tex> be the completion of an algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
        Then the characters <fr:tex>\chi \colon \mathbb {Z} _p^ \times \to \mathbb {C} _p^ \times</fr:tex> are the points of a rigid analytic space.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        
        There exists exactly one rigid analytic function <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}( \chi )</fr:tex>, with a simple pole at <fr:tex>\chi =(x \mapsto  x^{-1})</fr:tex>, such that
        <fr:tex
display="block">            \zeta _p^{(p)}(x \mapsto  x^{-1})           =  \zeta ^{(p)}(n) \in \mathbb {Q}          </fr:tex>
        for every integer <fr:tex>n&lt;0</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p><fr:p>
    We set, for <fr:tex>n \in \mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>n \neq1</fr:tex>,
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta _p^{(p)}(n)        \coloneqq   \zeta _p^{(p)}(x \mapsto  x^{-1}).     </fr:tex>
    This notation differs from that of [<fr:link
href="C.xml"
type="local"
addr="C">C</fr:link>] or [<fr:link
href="Ko.xml"
type="local"
addr="Ko">Ko</fr:link>]: our <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}</fr:tex> is not a continuous <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic function of the <fr:em>integer</fr:em> <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>.
    Instead, it is a continuous function of the <fr:em>character</fr:em> <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^n</fr:tex>, itself a continuous function of <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> if and only if we restrict <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> to an arithmetic progression of difference <fr:tex>p-1</fr:tex>.
    We have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta _p^{(p)}(n)       =  \lim _a  \zeta ^{(p)}(n-(p-1)p^a).     </fr:tex>
    The trivial zeros of <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> force <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}(n)=0</fr:tex> for even <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>, i.e. for <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^{-n}</fr:tex> an even character.
    More generally, <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}( \chi )=0</fr:tex> for even <fr:tex>\chi</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    With this notation, we have (cf. [<fr:link
href="C.xml"
type="local"
addr="C">C</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Ko.xml"
type="local"
addr="Ko">Ko</fr:link>])
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {vp}   \ell _k^{(p)}(1)       =  \zeta _p^{(p)}(k)     </fr:tex>
    and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.2.7k"
href="minus-three-points-3.2.7k.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.2.7k"></fr:ref> can be rewritten as

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>309</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.4.1k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.4.1k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.4.1k</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p^{-1}(0)         = (k-1)! p^k \zeta _p^{(p)}(k).       \tag{3.4.1k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>836</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Proposition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> even, the torsor <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> is torsion, with order equal to the denominator of <fr:tex>\frac {1}{2} \zeta (1-k)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>846</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Paraphrase</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> be a torsor for a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> with integer coefficients.
    The fact that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-torsion means more than "every realisation is <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-torsion".
    Let <fr:tex>\frac {1}{n}M</fr:tex> be the realisation system <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, endowed with the integer structure <fr:tex>\frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    It is isomorphic to <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, by an isomorphism that sends <fr:tex>M \hookrightarrow \frac {1}{n}M</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>n \colon  M \to  M</fr:tex>.
    The fact that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-torsion thus implies that it becomes trivial under <fr:tex>M \to \frac {1}{2}M</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> of weight <fr:tex>\leqslant-1</fr:tex>, this implies:

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        
        <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} + \frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}} \cap  F^0 P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} \neq \phi</fr:tex> (the intersection in <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>).
        The point of intersection <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> is then unique, since <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \cap  F^0(M_ { \mathrm {DR}} ) \otimes \mathbb {C} =0</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        <fr:tex>x \in  F^0 P_{DR}</fr:tex>, i.e. is defined over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> for the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure <fr:tex>{ \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
        The image of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> under <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ,B}</fr:tex> is fixed by Galois.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;d. &quot;">
        The image of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> under <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex> is fixed by <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p><fr:p>
    Suppose that <fr:tex>F^0 M_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>.
    Then <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, and we can identify <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> with a lateral class of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    Condition (a) then becomes <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset \frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    We have <fr:tex>x=0</fr:tex>, and (b) is automatic.
    We can write (d) as <fr:tex>\phi _p(0)=0</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>p \in  P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    Denote by <fr:tex>p_M</fr:tex> its image in <fr:tex>\frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, and set <fr:tex>p^ \wedge = \operatorname {comp} _{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} , { \mathrm {B}} }(p) \in  P_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>(p_M)^ \wedge = \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }(p_M) \in  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>.
    Condition (c) can then be written as

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>842</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \sigma  p^ \wedge  - p^ \wedge          = ( \sigma-1 )(p_M)^ \wedge .       \tag{3.6.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>M= \mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>k \geqslant1</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>\sigma \in \operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> with image <fr:tex>c</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}} ^ \times</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>\sigma ( \zeta )= \zeta ^c</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> a root of unity.
    <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.6.1"
href="minus-three-points-3.6.1.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.6.1"></fr:ref> can then be written as

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>843</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \sigma  p^ \wedge  - p^ \wedge          = (c^k-1)(p_M)^ \wedge .       \tag{3.6.2}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    Modulo <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>, we obtain: let <fr:tex>c</fr:tex> be an integer coprime to <fr:tex>Nn</fr:tex>, with <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> inducing <fr:tex>\zeta \mapsto \zeta ^c</fr:tex> on the <fr:tex>(Nn)</fr:tex>-th roots of unity.
    Then <fr:tex>(c^k-1)p_M \in  M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, and

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>844</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {comp} _{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} , { \mathrm {B}} }((c^k-1)p_M)          \equiv   \sigma  p^ \wedge  - p^ \wedge   \mod {N}.       \tag{3.6.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    In <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.5.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="3.5"></fr:ref>, <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is even, and we can take <fr:tex>p=-(k-1)! \zeta (k)</fr:tex>, and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.6.3"
href="minus-three-points-3.6.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.6.3"></fr:ref> is a Galois formula for <fr:tex>-(c^k-1)(k-1)! \zeta (k)</fr:tex> modulo <fr:tex>N(2 \pi  i)^k \mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>.
    We recover a known formula expressing <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> on the negative integers as an adelic integral.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>845</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The above description shows that, if <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is of finite order, then its order can be read from its Hodge realisation.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>848</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:em>(Proof of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.5.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="3.5"></fr:ref>).</fr:em></fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>k \geqslant2</fr:tex> be even.
    We have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta (k)       = -(2 \pi  i)^k B_k/2 \cdot  k!     </fr:tex>
    whence
    <fr:tex
display="block">       -(k-1)! \zeta (k)       = - \frac {1}{2} \zeta (1-k) \cdot (2 \pi  i)^k.     </fr:tex>
    This satisfies the description of the order given in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.5.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="3.5"></fr:ref> of <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> if <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> is of finite order.
    We know that the ideal <fr:tex>(d)</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex> is generated by the <fr:tex>c^k-1</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>c \in \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} ^ \times</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Set <fr:tex>Q \coloneqq  2P_{1,k}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>847</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Construction</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.7.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.7.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.7.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      We will construct an isomorphism of torsors
      <fr:tex
display="block">         Q_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}         =  \sum   \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}K(- \alpha )_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}       \tag{3.7.1}       </fr:tex>
      where the sum is taken over the <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> that are not <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> itself.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    Since
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1198</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Bibliography</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-bibliography</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-bibliography.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Complete list of references</fr:title></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:em>Click anywhere on an entry to see the corresponding BibTeX.</fr:em></fr:p>
  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="true"
show-heading="false"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1190</fr:anchor></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1125</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Fa</fr:addr><fr:route>Fa.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Crystalline cohomology and <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic Galois representations</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1998</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>G. Faltings</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Proc. 1st JAMI-conference</fr:em> pp. 25–81</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{Fa,
  author = {Faltings, G.},
  title = {Crystalline cohomology and $p$-adic {{Galois}} representations},
  year = {1998},
  journal = {Proc. 1st JAMI-conference},
  pages = {25--81}
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1127</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>D4</fr:addr><fr:route>D4.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Catégories tannakiennes</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1990</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>P. Deligne</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue">in "Grothendieck Festschrift vol. II" Birkhäuser <fr:em>Prog. in Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>87</fr:strong></fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@incollection{D4,
  author = {Deligne, P.},
  title = {{Cat\'{e}gories tannakiennes}},
  year = {1990}
  booktitle = {{Grothendieck Festschrift II}},
  publisher = {Birkh\"{a}user},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1129</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>B</fr:addr><fr:route>B.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Height pairing between algebraic cycles</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1989</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>A.A. Beilinson</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Contemp. Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>67</fr:strong> pp. 1–24</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{B,
  author = {Beilinson, A.A.},
  title = {Height pairing between algebraic cycles},
  journal = {Contemp. Math.},
  volume = {67},
  year = {1987},
  pages = {1--24},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1131</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>A2</fr:addr><fr:route>A2.xml</fr:route><fr:title>The hyperadelic gamma function</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1989</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>G. Anderson</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Inv. Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>95</fr:strong> pp. 63–131</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{A2,
  author = {Anderson, G.},
  title = {The hyperadelic gamma function},
  journal = {Inv. Math.},
  volume = {95},
  year = {1989},
  pages = {63--131},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1133</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>RSS</fr:addr><fr:route>RSS.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Beilinson's conjectures on special values of <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>-functions</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1988</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>M. Rapaport</fr:author><fr:author>P. Schneider</fr:author><fr:author>N. Schappacher</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue">Acad. Press <fr:em>Perspectives in Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>4</fr:strong></fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@book{RSS,
  title = {Beilinson's conjectures on special values of $L$-functions},
  editor = {Rapaport, M. and Schneider, P. and Schappacher, N.},
  series = {Perspectives in Math.},
  volume = {4},
  year = {1988},
  publisher = {Acad. Press},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1137</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>J</fr:addr><fr:route>J.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Mixed motives and algebraic <fr:tex>K</fr:tex>-theory</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1988</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>U. Jannsen</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>preprint</fr:em> Universität Regensburg</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{J,
  author = {Jannsen, U.},
  title = {Mixed motives and algebraic $K$-theory},
  year = {1988},
  note = {preprint, Universit\"{a}t Regensburg},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1139</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>IKY</fr:addr><fr:route>IKY.xml</fr:route><fr:title>On some properties of the universal power series for Jacobi sums</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1987</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>Y. Ihara</fr:author><fr:author>M. Kaneko</fr:author><fr:author>A. Yukinari</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Adv. Studies in Pure Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>12</fr:strong> pp. 65–86</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{IKY,
  author = {Ihara, Y. and Kaneko, M. and Yukinari, A.},
  title = {On some properties of the universal power series for {Jacobi} sums},
  journal = {Adv. Studies in Pure Math.},
  volume = {12},
  year = {1987},
  pages = {65--86},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1143</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>I</fr:addr><fr:route>I.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Profinite braid groups, Galois representations and complex multiplication</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1986</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>Y. Ihara</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Ann. of Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>123</fr:strong> pp. 3–106</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{I,
  author = {Ihara, Y.},
  title = {Profinite braid groups, {{Galois}} representations and complex multiplication},
  journal = {Ann. of Math.},
  volume = {123},
  year = {1986},
  pages = {3--106},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1145</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>A1</fr:addr><fr:route>A1.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Torsion points on Fermat Jacobians, roots of circular units and relative singular homology</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1986</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>G. Anderson</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Duke Math. J.</fr:em> <fr:strong>53</fr:strong> pp. 457–502</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{A1,
  author = {Anderson, G.},
  title = {Torsion points on {{Fermat Jacobians}}, roots of circular units and relative singular homology},
  journal = {Duke Math. J.},
  volume = {53},
  year = {1986},
  pages = {457--502},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1147</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>SZ</fr:addr><fr:route>SZ.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Variations of mixed Hodge structures I</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1985</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>J. Steenbrink</fr:author><fr:author>S. Zucker</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Inv. Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>80</fr:strong> pp. 489–542</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{SZ,
  author = {J. Steenbrink and S. Zucker},
  title = {{{Variations of mixed Hodge structures I}}},
  journal = {Inv. Math.},
  volume = {80},
  year = {1985},
  pages = {489--542},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1150</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>FL</fr:addr><fr:route>FL.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Construction de représentations <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adiques</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1982</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>J.-M. Fontaine</fr:author><fr:author>G. Laffaille</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Ann. Sci. ENS</fr:em> <fr:strong>15</fr:strong> pp. 547–608</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{FL,
  author = {Fontaine, J.-M. and Laffaille, G.},
  title = {Construction de repr\'{e}sentations $p$-adiques},
  journal = {Ann. Sci. ENS},
  volume = {15},
  year = {1982},
  pages = {547--608},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1153</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>C</fr:addr><fr:route>C.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Dilogarithms, Regulators and <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>-functions</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1982</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>R.F. Coleman</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Inv. Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>69</fr:strong> pp. 171–208</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{C,
  author = {Coleman, R.F.},
  title = {{{Dilogarithms}}, {{Regulators}} and $p$-adic $L$-functions},
  journal = {Inv. Math.},
  volume = {69},
  year = {1982},
  pages = {171--208},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1155</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>DM</fr:addr><fr:route>DM.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Tannakian categories</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1982</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>P. Deligne</fr:author><fr:author>J. Milne</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue">in "Hodge cycles, motives and Shimura varieties" Springer Verlag <fr:em>Lecture Notes in Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>900</fr:strong> pp. 101–228</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@incollection{DM,
  author = {Deligne, P. and Milne, J.},
  title = {{Tannakian categories}},
  booktitle = {{{Hodge}} cycles, motives and {{Shimura}} varieties},
  series = {Lecture Notes in Math.},
  volume = {900},
  year = {1982},
  publisher = {Springer Verlag},
  pages = {101--228},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1158</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Ko</fr:addr><fr:route>Ko.xml</fr:route><fr:title>A new proof of certain formulas for <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>-functions</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1979</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>N. Koblitz</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Duke Math. J.</fr:em> <fr:strong>462</fr:strong> pp. 455–468</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{Ko,
  author = {Koblitz, N.},
  title = {A new proof of certain formulas for $p$-adic $L$-functions},
  journal = {Duke Math. J.},
  volume = {462},
  year = {1979},
  pages = {455--468},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1160</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Mo</fr:addr><fr:route>Mo.xml</fr:route><fr:title>The algebraic topology of smooth algebraic varieties</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1978</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>J. Morgan</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Publ. Math. IHÉS</fr:em> <fr:strong>48</fr:strong> pp. 137–204</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{Mo,
  author = {Morgan, J.},
  title = {The algebraic topology of smooth algebraic varieties},
  journal = {Publ. Math. IH\'{E}S},
  volume = {48},
  year = {1978},
  pages = {137--204},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1162</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Su</fr:addr><fr:route>Su.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Infinitesimal computations in topology</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1977</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>D. Sullivan</fr:author><fr:author>S. Zucker</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Publ. Math. IHÉS</fr:em> <fr:strong>47</fr:strong> pp. 269–332</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{Su,
  author = {Sullivan, D.},
  title = {Infinitesimal computations in topology},
  journal = {Publ. Math. IH\'{E}S},
  volume = {47},
  year = {1977},
  pages = {269--332},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1165</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>R</fr:addr><fr:route>R.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Géométrie analytique rigid d'après Tate, Kiehl, ...</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1974</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>M. Raynaud</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue">in "Table ronde d'analyse non archimédienne (Paris 1972)" Bull. SMF pp. 319–327</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@incollection{R,
  author = {Raynaud, M.},
  title = {{{G\'{e}om\'{e}trie analytique rigid d'apr\`{e}s Tate, Kiehl, \ldots}}},
  booktitle = {Table ronde d'analyse non archim\'{e}dienne ({{Paris}} 1972)},
  publisher = {Bull. SMF},
  year = {1974},
  pages = {319--327},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1167</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>D5</fr:addr><fr:route>D5.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Poids dans la cohomologie des variétés algébriques</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1974</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>P. Deligne</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Actes ICM Vancouver</fr:em> pp. 79–85</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{D5,
  author = {Deligne, P.},
  title = {{Poids dans la cohomologie des vari\'{e}t\'{e}es alg\'{e}briques}},
  journal = {Actes ICM Vancouver},
  year = {1974},
  pages = {79--85},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1169</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>D3</fr:addr><fr:route>D3.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Théorie de Hodge III</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1974</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>P. Deligne</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Publ. Math. IHÉS</fr:em> <fr:strong>44</fr:strong> pp. 5–77</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{D3,
  author = {Deligne, P.},
  title = {Th\'{e}orie de {{Hodge}} {{III}}},
  journal = {Publ. Math. IH\'{E}S},
  volume = {44},
  year = {1974},
  pages = {5--77},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1171</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Sa</fr:addr><fr:route>Sa.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Catégories tannakiennes</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1972</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>N. Saavedra</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue">Springer Verlag <fr:em>Lecture Notes in Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>265</fr:strong></fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@book{Sa,
  author = {Saavedra, N.},
  title = {Cat\'{e}gories tannakiennes},
  series = {Lecture Notes in Math.},
  volume = {265},
  publisher = {Springer Verlag},
  year = {1972},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1173</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Kl</fr:addr><fr:route>Kl.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Motives</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1972</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>S. Kleiman</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue">in "Proc. 5th Nordic Summer School, Oslo 1970" Wolters–Nordhoff</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@incollection{Kl,
  author = {Kleiman, S.},
  title = {Motives},
  booktitle = {{{Proc. 5th Nordic Summer School, Oslo 1970}}},
  publisher = {Wolters--Nordhoff},
  year = {1972},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1175</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>D2</fr:addr><fr:route>D2.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Théorie de Hodge II</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1971</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>P. Deligne</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Publ. Math. IHÉS</fr:em> <fr:strong>40</fr:strong> pp. 5–58</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{D2,
  author = {Deligne, P.},
  title = {Th\'{e}orie de {{Hodge}} {{II}}},
  journal = {Publ. Math. IH\'{E}S},
  volume = {40},
  year = {1971},
  pages = {5--58},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1177</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>D1</fr:addr><fr:route>D1.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Equations différentielles à points singuliers réguliers</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1970</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>P. Deligne</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue">Springer Verlag <fr:em>Lecture Notes in Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>163</fr:strong></fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@book{D1,
  author = {Deligne, P.},
  title = {Equations diff\'{e}rentielles \`{a} points singuliers r\'{e}guliers},
  series = {Lecture Notes in Math.},
  volume = {163},
  year = {1970},
  publisher = {Springer Verlag},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1179</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Man</fr:addr><fr:route>Man.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Correspondences, motives and monoïdal transformations</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1968</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>Y. Manin</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Math. USSE-Sb.</fr:em> <fr:strong>6</fr:strong> pp. 439–470</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{Man,
  author = {Manin, Y.},
  title = {Correspondences, motives and mono\"{i}dal transformations},
  journal = {Mat. Sb.},
  volume = {77},
  year = {1968},
  pages = {475--507},
  note = {Translated: \textit{Math. USSE-Sb.} \textbf{6} (1968) pp. 439--470}
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1181</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Ki</fr:addr><fr:route>Ki.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Der Endlichkeitssatz für eigenliche Abbildungen in der nichtarchimedischen Funktionentheorie</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1967</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>R. Kiehl</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Inv. Math.</fr:em> <fr:strong>2</fr:strong> pp. 191–214</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{Ki,
  author = {Kiehl, R.},
  title = {{{Der Endlichkeitssatz f\"{u}r eigenliche Abbildungen in der nichtarchimedischen Funktionentheorie}}},
  journal = {Inv. Math.},
  volume = {2},
  year = {1967},
  pages = {191--214},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1183</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>G</fr:addr><fr:route>G.xml</fr:route><fr:title>On the de Rham cohomology of algebraic varieties</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1966</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>A. Grothendieck</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Publ. Math. IHÉS</fr:em> <fr:strong>29</fr:strong> pp. 95–103</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{G,
  author = {Grothendieck, A.},
  title = {{On the de Rham cohomology of algebraic varieties}},
  journal = {Publ. Math. IH\'{E}S},
  volume = {29},
  year = {1966},
  pages = {95--103},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1185</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>Mal</fr:addr><fr:route>Mal.xml</fr:route><fr:title>Nilpotent torsion free groups</fr:title><fr:date><fr:year>1949</fr:year></fr:date><fr:authors><fr:author>A.I. Malcev</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>Izv. Akad. Nauk.</fr:em> <fr:strong>13</fr:strong> pp. 201–212</fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{Mal,
  author = {Malcev, A.I.},
  title = {Nilpotent torsion free groups},
  journal = {Izv. Akad. Nauk.},
  volume = {13},
  year = {1949},
  pages = {201--212},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="false"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1187</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Reference</fr:taxon><fr:addr>FM</fr:addr><fr:route>FM.xml</fr:route><fr:authors><fr:author>J.-M. Fontaine</fr:author><fr:author>B. Messing</fr:author></fr:authors><fr:meta
name="venue"><fr:em>to appear</fr:em></fr:meta><fr:meta
name="bibtex">@article{FM,
  author = {Fontaine, J.-M. and Messing, B.},
  note = {to appear},
}</fr:meta></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1199</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Examples</fr:title><fr:number>2</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>730</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    The <fr:em>Tate motive</fr:em> <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> is a motive over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex> (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>) with integer coefficients (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.23"
href="minus-three-points-1.23.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.23"></fr:ref>).
    Here is its description as a realisation system, in the language of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref> (along with <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.25"
href="minus-three-points-1.25.xml"
number="1.25"></fr:ref>):
  </fr:p><fr:ul><fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m1">(M1)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m7.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m7">(M7)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} =2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z} \subset \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F_ \infty =-1</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)=2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z} \subset  C</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m2">(M2)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp2">(M'2)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:p><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m3">(M3)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m9.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m9">(M9)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}n}</fr:tex> is the group <fr:tex>\mu _n \subset \mathbb {C} ^ \times</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-th roots of unity.
        The transition morphisms are the <fr:tex>\mu _n \to \mu _m \colon  x \mapsto  x^{n/m}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>m \mid  n</fr:tex>.
        The action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is its action on the <fr:tex>\mu _n</fr:tex>.
        In the variant <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>, we have <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}n}( \bar {k})= \mu _n( \bar {k})</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p>
      <fr:p>
        We thus have that <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ \ell = \operatorname {lim \, proj} \mu _{ \ell ^n}( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p></fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m4">(M4)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m10.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m10">(M10)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4">(M'4)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} = \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\phi _p=1/p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link>: The canonical comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is induced by the inclusions <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} =2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z} \subset \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q} \subset \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, i.e.
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}   \xrightarrow { \sim }   \mathbb {C}   \xleftarrow { \sim }   \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} .       </fr:tex>
      The isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}n, { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.25"
href="minus-three-points-1.25.xml"
number="1.25"></fr:ref> is induced by
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \exp (x/n) \colon   \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}}   \to   \mathbb {Z} {/}n(1) \subset \mathbb {C} ^ \times .       </fr:tex>
      The isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex> is induced by the inclusion <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} \subset \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5">(M'5)</fr:link>: Replace <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m6.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m6">(M6)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> is of pure weight <fr:tex>-2</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is of pure Hodge filtration <fr:tex>-1</fr:tex>: the Hodge type is <fr:tex>(-1,-1)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li></fr:ul><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>528</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (n) \coloneqq \mathbb {Z} (1)^{ \otimes  n}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (n) \coloneqq \mathbb {Z} (n) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, and, for any motive <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M(n) \coloneqq  M \otimes \mathbb {Z} (n)</fr:tex>.
      Depending on the context, we also denote by <fr:tex>(n)</fr:tex> taking the tensor product with a realisation of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (n)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p><fr:p>
      If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth and projective over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and absolutely irreducible of dimension <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^{2n}(X)</fr:tex> is the motive over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> induced from <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (-n)</fr:tex> by change of base from <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>731</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For an abelian variety <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, we denote by <fr:tex>T(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> the motive <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _1^ \mathrm {mot} (A)</fr:tex> that is dual to <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^1(A)</fr:tex>, and by <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex> the motive with integer coefficients defined by the integer structure <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _1(A( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Z} ) \subset \operatorname {H} _1(A( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} )=(T(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    
    The functor <fr:tex>A \mapsto  T(A)</fr:tex> is fully faithful: from <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex> we can recover <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} (A)=T(A)_ { \mathrm {DR}} {/}F^0</fr:tex> and the complex torus
    <fr:tex
display="block">       A( \mathbb {C} )       = T(A)_ { \mathrm {B}} \setminus \operatorname {Lie} (A)       = T(A)_ { \mathrm {B}} \setminus  T(A)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} {/}F^0.     </fr:tex>
    The complex torus <fr:tex>A( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> determines the abelian variety <fr:tex>A_ \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>, and the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure is uniquely determined by that of the Lie algebra.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    An abelian scheme <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> similarly defines a smooth motive with integer coefficients <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>732</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Recall that a <fr:em>smooth <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive</fr:em> <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over a scheme <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> consists of

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        a group scheme <fr:tex>L</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> that, locally, for the étale topology, is a constant group scheme defined by a free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-module of finite type;
        an abelian scheme <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, and a torus <fr:tex>T</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        an extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>T</fr:tex>, and a morphism <fr:tex>\bar {u} \colon  L \to  A</fr:tex>;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
        a morphism <fr:tex>u \colon  L \to  E</fr:tex> lifting <fr:tex>\bar {u}</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p><fr:p>
    We write <fr:tex>X=[L \xrightarrow {u}E]</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    A <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> defines a motive over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> with integer coefficients <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="D3.xml"
type="local"
addr="D3">D3</fr:link>, Section 10, but the crystalline aspect is missing]), and the functor <fr:tex>X \mapsto  T(X)</fr:tex> is fully faithful (cf. [<fr:link
href="D3.xml"
type="local"
addr="D3">D3</fr:link>, both 10.1.3 and 2.2]).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For <fr:tex>X=[ \mathbb {Z} \to0 ]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> is the unit motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>X=[0 \to \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} ]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> is the Tate motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex>.
    For an abelian variety <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>X=[0 \to  A]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>T(X)=T(A)</fr:tex>.
    Of course, here, as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.2"
href="minus-three-points-2.2.xml"
number="2.2"></fr:ref>, we can take more general bases than <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>733</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    I conjecture that the set of motives with integer coefficients of the form <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> for some <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is stable under extensions.
    If <fr:tex>T'</fr:tex> is a motive with integer coefficients, with <fr:tex>T' \otimes \mathbb {Q} \xrightarrow { \sim }  T(X) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>T'</fr:tex> is of the form <fr:tex>T(X')</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>X'</fr:tex> isogenous to <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
    The conjecture is thus equivalent to the claim that the set of motives <fr:tex>T(X) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, for <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motives <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, is stable under extensions.
    The word "conjecture" is an abuse of terminology, since the statement itself is not precise.
    What is conjectured is that every realisation system <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> (or <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref>, over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>) that is an extension <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>T(Y)</fr:tex> (for <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motives <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>Y</fr:tex>), and "natural", "coming from geometry", is isomorphic to that defined by a <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>Z</fr:tex> that is an extension of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>Y</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    A point <fr:tex>a</fr:tex> of an abelian variety <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> defines a <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>[ \mathbb {Z} \xrightarrow {u}A]</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>u(1)=a</fr:tex>.
    The motive <fr:tex>T([ \mathbb {Z} \xrightarrow {u}A])</fr:tex> is an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex>, and the conjecture, applied to <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex>, implies that
    <fr:tex
display="block">       A( \mathbb {Q} )  \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Z} (0),T(A))     </fr:tex>
    or, equivalently,
    <fr:tex
display="block">       A( \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes \mathbb {Q}   \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Q} (0),T(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q} )     </fr:tex>
    (where <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1</fr:tex> is in the abelian category of motives).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    More generally, if <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is an extension of an abelian variety by a torus, we want
    <fr:tex
display="block">       E( \mathbb {Q} )  \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Z} (0),T(E))     </fr:tex>
    and similarly for more general bases that <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The case <fr:tex>E= \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex> is particularly interesting: for every smooth scheme <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>, we want, in the category of motives with integer coefficients over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>,

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>631</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equations</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.4.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.4.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.4.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \Gamma (S, \mathcal {O} _S^ \times )  \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Z} (0), \mathbb {Z} (1)).       \tag{2.4.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>734</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> be a realisation system <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref>.
    We spell out what a realisation system <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> given by an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is, when <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is of weight <fr:tex>\leqslant-1</fr:tex> (i.e. <fr:tex>M=W_{-1}(M)</fr:tex>).
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>530</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is an extension <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \to  E_ { \mathrm {B}} \xrightarrow {u} \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
      Its data is equivalent to that of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \coloneqq  u^{-1}(1)</fr:tex>, endowed with its structure as a torsor (principal homogeneous space) for <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>m \in  M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> acts on <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> via <fr:tex>p \mapsto  p+m</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>531</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m2p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m2p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M2P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a torsor <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>532</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m3p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m3p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M3P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>E_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a torsor <fr:tex>P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>533</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m4p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m4p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M4P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>E_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a torsor <fr:tex>P_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>534</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m5p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m5p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M5P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The comparison morphisms for <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> can be identified with comparison morphisms <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> that are compatible with the analogous morphisms for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>.

      <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>392</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-m5p</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>, see <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-0.4"
href="minus-three-points-0.4.xml"
number="0.4"></fr:ref>.
        </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>535</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m6p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m6p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M6P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Since <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is, by hypothesis, of weight <fr:tex>\leqslant-1</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> is of pure weight <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, the weight filtration of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is determined by that of <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>W_0(E)=E</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>W_i(E)=W_i(E)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>i&lt;0</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>536</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m7p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m7p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M7P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of an involution of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> that is compatible with that of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
      Axiom <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is that this involution is induced by the <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>-antilinear involution of <fr:tex>P_{ { \mathrm {B}} , \mathbb {C} }= \mathbb {P} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} }</fr:tex> with fixed points <fr:tex>P_{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {R} }</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>537</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m8p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m8p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M8P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of the Hodge filtration of <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of the intersection <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>F^0E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, which is a torsor for <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>: for <fr:tex>p&gt;0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F^pE_ { \mathrm {DR}} =F^pM_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>; for <fr:tex>p=0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F^0E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is generated by <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>; and for <fr:tex>p&lt;0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F^pE_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is the sum of <fr:tex>F^0E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F^pM_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
      In other words, the data <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is that of a reduction of the structure group of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, from <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m1">(M1)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m2">(M2)</fr:link>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} {/} { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link> are equivalent to the data of a torsor <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> and, in the <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> torsor <fr:tex>P_{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} }</fr:tex> which is induced by <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  P_{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} }</fr:tex> that is an <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>538</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m9p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m9p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M9P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>E_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of an action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, which makes <fr:tex>P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> an equivariant <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>539</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m10p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m10p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M10P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Similarly, the automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> corresponds to an automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> such that
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p(x+m)         =  \phi _p(x) +  \phi _p(m).       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We leave to the reader the task of translating axioms <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am5">(AM5)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>.
    We note only that <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link> follow from the same axioms for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, and that <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am5">(AM5)</fr:link> can be expressed at best as functoriality in <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>738</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
      A system of torsors, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1P"
type="external">(M1)P</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m10P"
type="external">(M10)P</fr:link> in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.5"
href="minus-three-points-2.5.xml"
number="2.5"></fr:ref>, that satisfies the conditions required in order to define an extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> by a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is called a <fr:em>torsor in realisation systems</fr:em>.
    </html:li>


    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
      If <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is a motive, then the torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is <fr:em>motivic</fr:em> (or a <fr:em>torsor in motives</fr:em>) if the extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is a motive.
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>739</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> be a realisation system with integer coefficients.
    An <fr:em>extension</fr:em> <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is an extension <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, endowed with an integer structure such that the sequence <fr:tex>0 \to  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \to  E_ { \mathrm {B}} \to \mathbb {Z} \to0</fr:tex> is exact.

    As in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.5"
href="minus-three-points-2.5.xml"
number="2.5"></fr:ref>, such an extension is described by a system of torsors.
    
    As in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.25"
href="minus-three-points-1.25.xml"
number="1.25"></fr:ref>, this corresponds to modifying <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.5"
href="minus-three-points-2.5.xml"
number="2.5"></fr:ref> as follows:
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>633</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1pz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1pz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1PZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>-torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>634</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m39pz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m39pz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M3PZ,M9PZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>P_ \ell</fr:tex> is, for each <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, a <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>-equivariant <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>-torsor.
      Giving a projective system of equivariant <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex>-torsors <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> is equivalent to giving their projective limit <fr:tex>P_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }</fr:tex>, which is an equivariant <fr:tex>M_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }</fr:tex>-torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>635</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m5pz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m5pz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M5PZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Replace <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> for each <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, or <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, or <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    Such a system of torsors, which defines an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, is also called a <fr:em>torsor for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex></fr:em>.
    It is said to be <fr:em>motivic</fr:em> if the corresponding extension is, i.e. if the torsor for <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> that it defines is motivic.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>741</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We leave to the reader the task of understanding the constructions with bases <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> more general than <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    We note only that, in the de Rham realisation, <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>-torsor on <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    It is endowed with a restriction of the structure group <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \subset  P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    It is also endowed with an integrable connection <fr:tex>\nabla</fr:tex>.
    Along each section <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, the vertical tangent space can be identified with <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>;
    the connection <fr:tex>\nabla</fr:tex> is thus a morphism
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \nabla \colon  P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to \Omega ^1 \otimes  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} .     </fr:tex>
    It satisfies <fr:tex>\nabla (p+m)= \nabla  p+ \nabla  m</fr:tex>.
    Transversality becomes the following:

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>740</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.8.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.8.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.8.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.8</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
        For a local section <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\nabla  p \in \Omega ^1 \otimes  F^{-1}(M_ { \mathrm {DR}} )</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>742</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.9</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.9.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.9</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We explicitly describe the torsor in motives <fr:tex>K(x)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> (the <fr:em>Kummer torsor</fr:em>) corresponding to <fr:tex>x \in \mathbb {Q} ^ \times</fr:tex> as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.4.1"
href="minus-three-points-2.4.1.xml"
taxon="Equations"
number="2.4.1"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is the torsor for <fr:tex>2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> of logarithms of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>.
    Since <fr:tex>F^0 \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>, we have <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(n)(1)</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(x)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> is the torsor of <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-th roots of unity of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>.
    The transition morphisms <fr:tex>K(x)/_{ \mathbb {Z} (nm)} \to  K(x)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> are given by <fr:tex>y \mapsto  y^m</fr:tex>.
    The Galois action is evident.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The morphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is induced by the inclusion of <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    The morphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is induced by <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {B}} \to  K(x)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> given by <fr:tex>z \mapsto \exp (z/n)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The crystalline Frobenius <fr:tex>\phi _p \colon  K(x)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p \to  K(x)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p \to \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, is defined for <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> a unit at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
    We denote by <fr:tex>\log</fr:tex> the <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic logarithm, which is characterised by
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \phi _p^{-1}(0)       =  \log (x^{1-p}).     </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>743</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.10</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.10.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.10</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    On <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} = \operatorname {Spec} \mathbb {Z} [q,q^{-1}]</fr:tex>, the universal section <fr:tex>q</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex> also defines a torsor in motives <fr:tex>K(q)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex>, on the base <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex>.
    We now describe it.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>C^ \times</fr:tex> is the local system of logarithms of <fr:tex>q</fr:tex>.
    Since <fr:tex>F^0 \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is trivial: <fr:tex>K(n)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathcal {O}</fr:tex> (on <fr:tex>{ \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} }_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>).
    It is endowed with the integrable connection <fr:tex>\nabla \colon  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to \Omega ^1 \otimes \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \Omega ^1</fr:tex> given by
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \nabla  u       =  \operatorname {d}  u -  \frac { \operatorname {d}  q}{q}.     </fr:tex>
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(n)(1)</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(q)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> is that of the <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>q</fr:tex>.
    This is a locally constant sheaf on <fr:tex>( \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} \otimes \mathbb {Z} [1/n])_ \mathrm {et}</fr:tex>.
    Transition and comparison morphisms are defined as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.9"
href="minus-three-points-2.9.xml"
number="2.9"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We now explain what the <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-crystal structure is at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge</fr:tex> be the completion of <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex> along its fibre of characteristic <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> the corresponding rigid analytic space.
    For a Frobenius lifting <fr:tex>\widetilde {F} \colon G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge \to G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge</fr:tex>, the crystalline Frobenius is a morphism <fr:tex>\phi _p [ \widetilde {F} ]</fr:tex>, over <fr:tex>G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, from <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}^ \bullet  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> that is horizontal and compatible with the torsor structures.
    If we change <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'</fr:tex> have the same reduction modulo <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, the connection <fr:tex>\nabla</fr:tex> gives an isomorphism of <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}^ \bullet  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet } K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, and the diagram
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {CD}          \widetilde {F}^ \bullet  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}  @&gt;{ \phi _p [ \widetilde {F} ] }&gt;&gt; K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}         \\ @| @|        \\ \widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet } K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}  @&gt;&gt;{ \phi _p [ \widetilde {F}' ] }&gt; K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}         \end {CD}     </fr:tex>
    commutes.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In terms of <fr:tex>\phi _p^{-1} \colon  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to \widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet } K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, and via the identifications <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathcal {O}</fr:tex>, whence <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet }= \mathcal {O}</fr:tex>, the compatibility with the torsor structures and with the connections can be written as
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}          \phi _p^{-1}(k+m)         &amp;=  \phi _p^{-1}(k) + pm        \\ \operatorname {d} \phi _p^{-1}(0)         &amp;=  \widetilde {F}^ \bullet \left ( \frac { \operatorname {d}  q}{q} \right ) - p \frac { \operatorname {d}  q}{q}.        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    When we change the Frobenius lifting, we have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \phi _p^{-1} [ \widetilde {F}' ] (0) -  \phi _p^{-1} [ \widetilde {F} ] (0)       =  \log ( \widetilde {F}'/ \widetilde {F}).     </fr:tex>
    For <fr:tex>\widetilde {F} \colon  q \mapsto  q^p</fr:tex>, we have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \phi _p^{-1} [ q \mapsto  q^p ] (0)       = 0.     </fr:tex>
    
    For <fr:tex>x \in \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> a unit at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}(x)=x</fr:tex>, we thus have <fr:tex>\phi _p^{-1} [ \widetilde {F} ] (0)= \log (x/x^p)</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>, as required by <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.9"
href="minus-three-points-2.9.xml"
number="2.9"></fr:ref></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1200</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-introduction.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Introduction</fr:title><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
  The present article owes much to A. Grothendieck.
  He invented the philosophy of motives, which is our guiding thread.
  Around five years ago, he also said to me, with conviction, that the profinite completion <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> of the fundamental group of <fr:tex>X \coloneqq \mathbb {P} ^1( \mathbb {C} ) \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>, with the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, is a remarkable object, and that it must be studied.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Every finite cover of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> can be described by equations with coefficients in the algebraic numbers.
  Applying an element of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> to these coefficients, we obtain the equations of another cover.
  Understanding how <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> permutes the isomorphism classes of finite covers essentially reduces to understanding the Galois action on <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex>.
  "Essentially", since I have omitted mentioning the base points, and since the Galois covers have not been thought of as <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-covers, for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> their automorphism group.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Up until now, we have not had the language necessary to study the Galois action on <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex>.
  A. Grothendieck and his students have developed a combinatorial description ("charts") of finite covers of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, based on a decomposition of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> into the two "spherical triangles" <fr:tex>\Im (z) \geqslant0</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\Im (z) \leqslant0</fr:tex>, with sides <fr:tex>[ \infty ,0]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>[0,1]</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>[1, \infty ]</fr:tex>.
  This has not helped in understanding the Galois action.
  We have only a few unresolved examples of covers whose Galois conjugates have been calculated.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In this article, we only consider when <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> is rendered nilpotent, i.e. quotients <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> by the subgroups of its decreasing central series.
  The profinite group <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}</fr:tex> is a product over primes <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex> of nilpotent pro-<fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-groups: <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)} =  \prod _ \ell   \hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}{}_ \ell</fr:tex>.
  Each <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}{}_ \ell</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic Lie group.
  It admits a Lie algebra <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}{}_ \ell</fr:tex>, which is a Lie algebra over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>.
  If we choose a base point <fr:tex>x \in  X( \mathbb {Q} )= \mathbb {Q} \setminus \{ 0,1 \}</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> acts on these Lie algebras.
  The action, up to inner automorphism, does not depend on the choice of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>.
  We would like to understand these actions.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  The nilpotent versions of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> are very close to cohomology.
  This is most visible in the theory of D. Sullivan [<fr:link
href="Su.xml"
type="local"
addr="Su">Su</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Mo.xml"
type="local"
addr="Mo">Mo</fr:link>].

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>259</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For <fr:tex>\Gamma</fr:tex> a finitely generated group, let <fr:tex>Z^i \Gamma</fr:tex> be the decreasing central series, let <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{(N)}= \Gamma {/}Z^{N+1} \Gamma</fr:tex>, and let <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{[N]}= \Gamma ^{(N)}/ \mathrm {torsion}</fr:tex> [minus-three-points-9.3].
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

  The theory of Malcev [<fr:link
href="Mal.xml"
type="local"
addr="Mal">Mal</fr:link>] attaches a nilpotent Lie algebra over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, denoted <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex>, to <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex>, such that <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex> is a congruence subgroup of the unipotent algebraic group over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> of the Lie algebra <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex>.
  By D. Sullivan, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is a differentiable manifold, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X)^{[N]} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> is determined, up to inner automorphism, by the differential-graded algebra <fr:tex>\Omega _X^ \bullet</fr:tex>, taken up to quasi-isomorphism.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  This close relation with cohomology hints that the study of nilpotent versions of <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> is far from the "anabelian" dream of A. Grothendieck.
  It allows us, however, to use his philosophy of motives.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Let <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> be a number field.
  If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is an algebraic variety over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then we have a whole series of parallel cohomology theories for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>: the classical cohomology of <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> (for each complex embedding of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>), crystalline cohomology (which is equal to de Rham cohomology if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth), <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology, ...
  The groups thus obtained are endowed with various additional structures (mixed Hodge, Galois action, ...) and are linked by comparison isomorphism.
  In [minus-three-points-1], we axiomatise the situation by defining "realisation systems over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>".
  The exact definition is not to be taken seriously: considering the applications — and what we are capable of doing — it could be wise to either add or remove data as much as axioms.
  The essential, for us, is that

  
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
      The category of realisation systems is endowed with a <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex> satisfying the usual properties: it is a Tannakian category over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    </html:li>

    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
      ii. Conjecturally, the category of motives is a full subcategory of the category of realisation systems.
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>


  Condition (ii) requires, in particular, that, for every variety <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> and for every <fr:tex>i</fr:tex>, the available cohomology theories, applied to <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, give a realisation system <fr:tex>H^i(X)</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> (which we will denote by <fr:tex>H^i(X)_ \mathrm {mot}</fr:tex>, and call the motivic <fr:tex>H^i</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>).
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Analogous ideas have been independently developed by U. Jannsen [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>].
  In [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>], U. Jannsen defines (mixed) motives over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> as constituting the Tannakian subcategory (of the category of realisation systems) generated by the <fr:tex>H^i(X)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and quasi-projective.
  Here we are still being imprecise, saying that a motive over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is a realisation system "of geometric origin".
  For <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>x \in  X(k)</fr:tex>, we want, for example, to regard <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X( \mathbb {C} ),x)^{[N]}</fr:tex> as a realisation of a motive over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  This article owes much to an unpublished work of Z. Wojtkoviak.
  For <fr:tex>X= \mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>x \in  X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>, I proposed to him a definition of the mixed Hodge structure of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X( \mathbb {C} ),x)^{[N]}</fr:tex>.
  He calculated it in part, for small <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>, and, to my extreme surprise, show that, for <fr:tex>N=4</fr:tex>, its description involves <fr:tex>\zeta (3)</fr:tex>.
  A decanted form of the calculations appear in [minus-three-points-19].
  In fact, the whole article originates from my desire to understand the result of Z. Wojtkoviak.
  
  I have also been helped by the answer by O. Gabber to my question "How can we construct an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell (3)</fr:tex>, uniformly in <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>?": "By a class in <fr:tex>K_5( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>", as well as by the conjectures of A. Beilinson on the values of <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>-functions.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is an algebraic variety over a number field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>x \in  X(k)</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> an integer, then we want to have a realisation system <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
  We can only succeed in constructing this under additional hypotheses on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>: in the general case, certain realisations are missing.
  The case of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1</fr:tex> minus some points — more generally, of smooth rational varieties — is nonetheless covered.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Let <fr:tex>k= \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>X= \mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>x \in  X( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  The associated graded algebra for the weight filtration of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> is the free Lie algebra on <fr:tex>H_1(X)_ \mathrm {mot}</fr:tex>, modulo its <fr:tex>Z^{N+1}</fr:tex> (decreasing central series).
  <fr:tex>H_1(X)_ \mathrm {mot}</fr:tex> is the sum of two copies of the Tate motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (1)</fr:tex>.
  We thus deduce that <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> is an iterated extension of Tate motives <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (n)</fr:tex>.
  The fact that non-trivial extensions appear is what gives it its charm.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  I conjecture that, over a number field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, the group of motivic extensions of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (n)</fr:tex> (for <fr:tex>n&gt;0</fr:tex>) is <fr:tex>K_{2n-1}(k) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  For a general framework into which we can place this conjecture, see [<fr:link
href="B.xml"
type="local"
addr="B">B</fr:link>, §5].
  In particular, for <fr:tex>k= \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, we want <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Q} , \mathbb {Q} (n))</fr:tex> to be zero for <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> even, and of dimension <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>n \geqslant3</fr:tex> odd.
  This is the motivic <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1</fr:tex>: extensions as realisation systems that "come from algebraic geometry".
  This conjecture places severe restrictions on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>, which are far from having been verified.
  What we know concerns, up to now, only the quotient by the second derived group.
  A large part of this article is dedicated to developing a language in which the consequences of the conjecture affecting <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> can be clearly stated.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  We now go through this article, pointing out several shortcuts.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-1], we describe the category of realisation systems over a base <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
  The base <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> can be: <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {F} )</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {F}</fr:tex> a number field, an open subset of the spectrum of the ring of integers of a number field, or smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
  In this category, the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> are <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces.
  We also define a notion of integer structure;
  in the category of realisation systems with integer coefficients (= endowed with an integer structure), the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> are free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-modules of finite type.
  The definition has a crystalline component.
  The reader is invited to ignore this for a first approximation.
  The theory coincides with that of U. Jannsen [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>].
  The crystalline aspect will be neglected in the rest of the introduction.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-2] we give examples.
  We also explain what an extension of the unit realisation system <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> by a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> with integer coefficients is.

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>263</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Terminology</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M</fr:tex>-torsor, or torsor under <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>264</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Example</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      the Kummer <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex>-torsor, where <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> is the Tate motive.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-3] we describe certain remarkable torsors, which can be said to be cyclotomic, for the Tate motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex>.
  [minus-three-points-16] explains how these torsors naturally appear in the study of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>.
  The description here is direct, but unmotivated.
  The claim that some of these torsors are of finite order ([minus-three-points-3.5], [minus-three-points-3.14]) lets us recover the known formulas expressing the Dirichlet <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>-functions in negative integers as integrals of distributions over <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex> with values in <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex>: a version of Kummer congruences.
  In [minus-three-points-18], we prove [minus-three-points-3.5] and [minus-three-points-3.14] using the geometric interpretation of [minus-three-points-16].
  In [minus-three-points-3], we give a direct proof, by using the known formulas for <fr:tex>L( \chi ,1-k)</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>[minus-three-points-4] is a pot-pourri of reminders on Ind-objects and pro-objects.
  The reader is invited to consult this only when needed.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  We want to give a motivic meaning to an assertion like the following: the fundamental group of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1( \mathbb {C} ) \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex> (at the base point <fr:tex>b</fr:tex>) is freely generated by the following loops:

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>265</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Figure</fr:taxon><fr:number>1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
  <fr:embedded-tex
hash="ed735291b9640a90622c0ca55f8b1da5"><fr:embedded-tex-preamble>\usepackage {tikz}</fr:embedded-tex-preamble><fr:embedded-tex-body>\begin {tikzpicture} 
       \node [label=below:{$b$}] at (0,0) {$ \bullet $};
       \node [label={[label distance=-3mm]below right:{ \scriptsize $1$}}] at (3,1) {$ \bullet $};
       \node [label={[label distance=-3mm]below right:{ \scriptsize $0$}}] at (-3,1) {$ \bullet $};
       \draw [thick,domain=-20:130,-&gt;] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )-3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick,domain=130:310] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )-3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick,domain=-130:-50,-&gt;] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )+3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick,domain=-50:200] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )+3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick] (0,0.125) to (-2.52,0.84);
       \draw [thick] (0,0.125) to (2.52,0.84);
       \draw [thick] (0,-0.125) to (-2.69,0.61);
       \draw [thick] (0,-0.125) to (2.69,0.61);
     \end {tikzpicture}</fr:embedded-tex-body></fr:embedded-tex>
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
  The purpose of [minus-three-points-5], [minus-three-points-7], and [minus-three-points-15] is to construct the language which allows us to do this.
  This consists of

  
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
      giving a motivic meaning to <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,x)^{(N)}</fr:tex>, not only to its Lie algebra;
    </html:li>

    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
      giving a motivic meaning to the torsor (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-0.6"
href="minus-three-points-0.6.xml"
number="0.6"></fr:ref>) of homotopy classes of paths from <fr:tex>b_1</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>b_2</fr:tex>;
    </html:li>

    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
      in Figure 1 above, the "monodromy around <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>" loop is only unambiguously determined for <fr:tex>b</fr:tex> "close to <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>"; we must define what it means for a base point to be "close to <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>".
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>


  
  Our solution will be to define a motivic linear group as being an Ind-object in the category of motives, endowed with the structure of a commutative Hopf algebra.
  To avoid speculation: consider the group in realisation systems, and replace "motive" by "realisation system".
  There is an analogous definition for torsors for a group.
  We separately define a notion of "integer" structures.
  This definition has the advantage that the standard constructions in algebraic geometry (decreasing central series, quotients, pushing forward a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor by <fr:tex>G \to  H</fr:tex>, twisting by a torsor, ...) all translate automatically to the motivic case.
  This, in an arbitrary Tannakian category, is explained in [minus-three-points-5].
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-7], we reinterpret these definitions in a language that is closer to that of our applications.
  The reader who is displeased by the general nonsense of [minus-three-points-5] and [minus-three-points-7] can take the interpretations given in [minus-three-points-7] as the definition of groups, torsors, ... in realisation systems.
  Drawback: every standard construction must be redefined in this case.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In the classical definition of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, the role of the base point <fr:tex>b</fr:tex> can be played by a contractible subset <fr:tex>B</fr:tex>.
  It can also be played by a filter <fr:tex>\mathcal {B}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> whose base if given by contractible subsets.
  For example, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is a Riemann surface <fr:tex>\overline {X}</fr:tex> minus a point <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> is a non-zero tangent vector at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>, with <fr:tex>z</fr:tex> being a local coordinates centred at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>, then we can take the contractible subsets
  <fr:tex
display="block">     0&lt; |z/v| &lt;  \varepsilon ,      \quad      | \arg (z/v)|&lt; \eta    </fr:tex>
  
  <fr:embedded-tex
hash="4c81549d37f6f2ff8942bad2db7cd714"><fr:embedded-tex-preamble>\usepackage {tikz}</fr:embedded-tex-preamble><fr:embedded-tex-body>\begin {tikzpicture} 
     \node [label={below:{$s$}}] at (0,0) {$ \bullet $};
     \draw [thick,-latex] (0,0) to (0,2) node [label={above:{$v$}}] {};
     \draw  (0,0) to (50:1.5);
     \draw  (0,0) to (130:1.5);
     \draw  [domain=50:130] plot ({1.5*cos( \x )}, {1.5*sin( \x )});
   \end {tikzpicture}</fr:embedded-tex-body></fr:embedded-tex>


  The filter <fr:tex>\mathcal {B}(v)</fr:tex> that they generate is independent of the chosen coordinate.
  By this construction, a non-zero tangent vector at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex> can act as a base point in the definition of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  The same phenomenon occurs in the profinite theory of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, and in the "de Rham" theory.
  Be aware that <fr:tex>\mathcal {B}(v)= \mathcal {B}( \lambda  v)</fr:tex> for real <fr:tex>\lambda &gt;0</fr:tex>, but that this fact has no analogue in the other theories.
  There constructions are explained in [minus-three-points-15].
  
  They allow us, in the definition of the motivic <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, to take a base point "at infinity", like the tangent vector <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Let <fr:tex>X= \mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>.
  An algebraic meaning of "base point close to <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>" is "non-zero tangent vector at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>".
  For such a base point <fr:tex>b</fr:tex>, the monodromy around <fr:tex>0</fr:tex> has a motivic meaning: it is a morphism of motivic groups
  <fr:tex
display="block">      \mathbb {Z} (1)  \to   \pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} .   </fr:tex>
  Here and later on, <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> is the pro-unipotent <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, defined as the projective limit of the motivic groups <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  We take the base point to be the tangent vector <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>.
  We have a good reduction <fr:tex>\mod  p</fr:tex> for every <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> is a linear group in the Tannakian category of motives over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex> that are iterated extensions of Tate motives.
  [minus-three-points-8] states a conjecture on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Q} , \mathbb {Q} (k))</fr:tex> in this category, as well as some consequences.
  At the end of [minus-three-points-16], we make these explicit in the case of <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
  I hope that this places the <fr:tex>\zeta (3)</fr:tex> discovered by Z. Wojtkoviak in its natural setting.
  [minus-three-points-6] is preliminary.
  For the essential idea, see [minus-three-points-6.2].
</fr:p><fr:p>
  To define the motivic <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, we need to patch together the various theories of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> that we have at our disposal, guided by the goal of constructing a motivic group in the sense of [minus-three-points-5], explained in [minus-three-points-7].
  This is done in [minus-three-points-10] to [minus-three-points-13], after a reminder ([minus-three-points-9]) on the Malčev theory of nilpotent groups and their Lie algebras.
  The result leaves much to be desired.
  It is only completely studied for smooth algebraic varieties whose smooth compactifications <fr:tex>\overline {X}</fr:tex> satisfy <fr:tex>H^1( \overline {X}, \mathcal {O} )=0</fr:tex>.
  Another complaint: I sometimes only sketch the definition of structures that will be used in future calculations.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-16], we finally explain what the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex>-torsors from [minus-three-points-3] have to do with the <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of the projective line minus three points.
  The justifying calculations are given in [minus-three-points-19].
  We give, in [minus-three-points-17] and [minus-three-points-18], a geometric explanation of some of their properties.
</fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1201</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Mixed motives</fr:title><fr:number>1</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>412</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For algebraic varieties, we have various parallel cohomology theories.
    The most important for us will be de Rham and <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology.
  </fr:p><fr:ul><fr:li><fr:strong>De Rham cohomology.</fr:strong>
      Let <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> be a field of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> an algebraic variety over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
      Suppose that <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth.
      The de Rham cohomology groups <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)</fr:tex> are the hypercohomology groups of the de Rham complex:
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)          \coloneqq   \mathbb {H} ^i(X, \Omega _{X/k}^ \bullet )       </fr:tex>
      cf. [<fr:link
href="G.xml"
type="local"
addr="G">G</fr:link>].
      These are vector spaces over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
      If <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is an extension of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>X'</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is given by extension of scalars of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, then
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X')         =  \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X) \otimes _k k'.       </fr:tex>
      If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is not smooth, then the de Rham complex no longer gives a reasonable theory.
      We can define the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)</fr:tex> by reduction to the smooth case, by the methods of [<fr:link
href="D3.xml"
type="local"
addr="D3">D3</fr:link>], or, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> admits an embedding into a smooth variety <fr:tex>Z</fr:tex>, as the hypercohomology of the de Rham complex of the formal completion of <fr:tex>Z</fr:tex> along <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> (R. Hartshorne, <fr:em>On the de Rham cohomology of algebraic varieties</fr:em>, Publ. Math. IHÉS <fr:strong>45</fr:strong> (1975), p. 5–99);
      more intrinsically, it is the crystalline cohomology of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> (A. Grothendieck, <fr:em>Crystals and the de Rham cohomology of schemes</fr:em>, Notes by J. Coates and O. Jussila, in: "Dix exposés sur la cohomologie des schémas", North Holland (1968)).
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:strong><fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology.</fr:strong>
      Let <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex> be a prime number;
      if <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is an algebraically closed field of characteristic <fr:tex>\neq \ell</fr:tex>, then we have the <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic theory <fr:tex>X \mapsto \operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex> that associates, to <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, cohomology groups which are vector spaces over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> (cf. SGA 5, VI).
      They are defined from the cohomology groups with coefficients in <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}( \ell ^n)</fr:tex>, and we allow ourselves to give, as reference for a theorem in <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology, the place where its <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}( \ell ^n)</fr:tex> analogue is proved.
      The <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex> depend only on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
      In particular, if <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>k_0</fr:tex>, and if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is given by extension of scalars of some <fr:tex>X_0</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k_0</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} (k/k_0)</fr:tex> acts (semi-<fr:tex>k</fr:tex>-linearly) on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, and thus acts on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex>.
      This action is continuous.
      If <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is an algebraically closed extension of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and if <fr:tex>X'</fr:tex> is given by extension of scalars of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell ) \xrightarrow { \sim } \operatorname {H} ^i(X', \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex>.
      
      This follows by passing to the limit in the base change theorem for a smooth morphism [SGA 4, XVI, 1.2]: <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is the filtrant inductive limit of the <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>-algebras <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (A)</fr:tex> smooth over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li></fr:ul><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>k= \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, then we have the topological space <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> of points of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, as well as its rational cohomology <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^ \bullet (X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    We have canonical isomorphisms from [<fr:link
href="G.xml"
type="local"
addr="G">G</fr:link>] and [SGA4, XVI, 4.1]:

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>251</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)         =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {C}        \tag{1.1.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>252</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )         =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {Q} _ \ell .       \tag{1.1.2}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is a field of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\sigma \colon  k \to \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> a complex embedding, with <fr:tex>\bar {k}</fr:tex> the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> via <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex>, then we obtain the isomorphisms

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>253</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X) \otimes _{k, \sigma } \mathbb {C}          =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {C}        \tag{1.1.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>254</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} ^i(X \otimes \bar {k}, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )         =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {Q} _ \ell        \tag{1.1.4}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    where <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> is the topological space of points of the complex algebraic variety given by the extension of scalars via <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The existence of parallel cohomology theories lead A. Grothendieck to conjecture the existence, for all base fields <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, of a motivic theory <fr:tex>X \mapsto \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, defined on algebraic varieties (i.e. schemes of finite type) over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> and with values in a category <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> (to be defined) of motives over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
    The known theories would then be deduced from the motivic theory by applying <fr:em>realisation</fr:em> functors.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The category <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> should be an abelian category, with <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> groups of finite dimension over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    It should be endowed with a tensor product <fr:tex>\otimes \colon \mathcal {M}(k) \times \mathcal {M}(k) \to \mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> and associativity and commutative data <fr:tex>(X \otimes  Y) \otimes  Z \xrightarrow { \sim }  X \otimes (Y \otimes  Z)</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>X \otimes  Y \to  Y \otimes  X</fr:tex> satisfying the usual properties
    — more precisely, making <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> into a Tannakian category [<fr:link
href="Sa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Sa">Sa</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="DM.xml"
type="local"
addr="DM">DM</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="D4.xml"
type="local"
addr="D4">D4</fr:link>].
    By the theory of Tannakian categories, <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> would be the category of representations of a gerbe whose band is affine over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, the category <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> with its tensor product should be equivalent to the category of representations of an scheme in affine groups (i.e. a pro-algebraically affine group) over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Each <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> would be a contravariant functor in <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
    We should also have Künneth isomorphisms

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>255</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X \times  Y)          \simeq   \bigoplus _{i=j+k}  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y)       \tag{1.1.5}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    
    giving rise to commutative diagrams
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {CD}          \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X \times  Y) @&gt; \longleftarrow &gt;&gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(Y \times  X)        \\ @VVV @VVV        \\ \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y) @&gt;&gt;{(-i)^{jk}}&gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X)        \end {CD}     </fr:tex>
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {CD}          \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i((X \times  Y) \times  Z) @&gt; \longleftarrow &gt;&gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X \times (Y \times  X))        \\ @VVV @VVV        \\ ( \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y)) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^ \ell (Z) @&gt;&gt; \longleftarrow &gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes ( \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^ \ell (Z)).        \end {CD}     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    Each of the known cohomological theories should give rise to a "realisation" functor, compatible with the tensor product.
    For example, for <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, we would have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {real} _ { \mathrm {DR}} \colon \mathcal {M}(k)        \to   \text {vector spaces over }k     </fr:tex>
    and, for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> an algebraic variety over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, a functorial isomorphism
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)       =  \operatorname {real} _ { \mathrm {DR}} \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)     </fr:tex>
    compatible with the Künneth isomorphisms.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The subcategory of <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> <fr:em>generated</fr:em> by a set <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}</fr:tex> of motives is defined to be the smallest full subcategory of <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> containing <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}</fr:tex> that is stable under <fr:tex>\oplus</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>, taking the dual, and sub-quotients.
    If we only consider certain algebraic varieties <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then it can be useful to consider, instead of <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex>, the subcategory generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>413</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    If we only consider smooth and projective varieties over a field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and we assume the "standard" conjectures on algebraic cycles, then Grothendieck has shown how to define the category of motives generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="Kl.xml"
type="local"
addr="Kl">Kl</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Man.xml"
type="local"
addr="Man">Man</fr:link>]);
    it is a semi-simple abelian category.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    If we do not restrict ourselves to the category generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and projective over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then we no longer have even a conjectural definition of what the category of motives over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> should be.
    However, the philosophy of motives is not made any less useful by this fact:
    it organises known facts, poses questions, and suggests precise conjectures.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>414</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    In each of the known theories, the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X)</fr:tex> are endowed with an increasing filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>, known as the <fr:em>weight filtration</fr:em> [<fr:link
href="D5.xml"
type="local"
addr="D5">D5</fr:link>], as well as comparison isomorphisms such that <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.1"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.1.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.1"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.2"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.2.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.2"></fr:ref> are compatible with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    Furthermore, every natural map is strictly compatible with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    From this, we get a new requirement for the category of motives:
    every motive is endowed with a weight filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>, compatible with the tensor product, and strictly compatible with every morphism <fr:tex>f \colon  M \to  N</fr:tex>, i.e.
    <fr:tex
display="block">       f(M) \cap  W_i(N)       = f(W_i(M)).     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    We say that a motive <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is <fr:em>pure of weight <fr:tex>i</fr:tex></fr:em> if <fr:tex>W_i(M)=M</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>W_{i-1}(M)=0</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and projective, <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> is pure of weight <fr:tex>i</fr:tex>.
    We want for the <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>-category generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and projective over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, to be the sum of pure motives.
    In terms of pure motives, the properties of <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> can be written as follows:
    every motive is the iterated extension of pure motives, and, for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> pure of weights <fr:tex>m</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> (respectively),

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        <fr:tex>M \otimes  N</fr:tex> is pure of weight <fr:tex>m+n</fr:tex>;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        for <fr:tex>m \neq  n</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom} (M,N)=0</fr:tex>; and
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
        for <fr:tex>m \leqslant  n</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1(M,N)=0</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol>


    Often, pure motives (or direct sums of pure motives) are simply called <fr:em>motives</fr:em>, and their category admits the conjectural description [<fr:link
href="Kl.xml"
type="local"
addr="Kl">Kl</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Man.xml"
type="local"
addr="Man">Man</fr:link>];
    the more general motives, considered here, are then called <fr:em>mixed motives</fr:em></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>431</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    If we cannot define the category of motives, we can at least describe a sequence of compatibilities between the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X)</fr:tex> taken in the various cohomological theories, i.e. describe compatibilities that should exist between the various realisations of a motive.
    We will explain the case of motives over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>:
    a motive over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> should give rise to a system <fr:link
href="M1"
type="external">(M1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="M10"
type="external">(M10)</fr:link> as below, satisfying axioms <fr:link
href="AM1"
type="external">(AM1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="AM5"
type="external">(AM5)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>415</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Terminology</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      all vector spaces are assumed to be of finite dimension;
      
      "<fr:em>almost every</fr:em> prime number" means "all, except for a finite number".
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>416</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A vector space <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>Betti realisation</fr:em>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>417</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A vector space <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>de Rham realisation</fr:em>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>418</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A module <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>étale cohomology realisation</fr:em>, which is of finite type, by <fr:link
href="M5"
type="external">(M5)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>419</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For almost every prime number <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>crystalline realisation</fr:em> of the mod-<fr:tex>p</fr:tex> reduction.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>420</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}           \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}           \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }          \end {aligned}       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>421</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> are endowed with a finite increasing filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>weight filtration</fr:em>.
      We also denote by <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> the filtrations that are induced by extension of scalars.
      The comparison isomorphisms respect <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>422</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is endowed with an involution <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>Frobenius at infinity</fr:em>, which respects <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>423</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is endowed with a finite decreasing filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>Hodge filtration</fr:em>.
      We also denote by <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> the filtrations that are induced by extension of scalars.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>424</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m9</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m9.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M9</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is endowed with an action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> which respects <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>425</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m10</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m10.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M10</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> is endowed with an automorphism
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p \colon  M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} } \to  M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }       </fr:tex>
      called the <fr:em>crystalline Frobenius</fr:em>, which respects <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>426</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, endowed with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and with the filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, is a mixed Hodge <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Definition 2.3.8].
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>427</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      We have two real structures on <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> (identified with <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> by the comparison isomorphism), namely <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex>;
      these define antilinear involutions <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, of which <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> are (respectively) the fixed points.
      These involutions, as well as the linear involution extending <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>, all commute with one another, and satisfy
      <fr:tex
display="block">         F_ \infty          = c_ { \mathrm {B}}  c_ { \mathrm {DR}} .       </fr:tex>
      
      In other words, <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> respects <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}} |M_ { \mathrm {B}} =F_ \infty</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>428</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each prime number <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> be given by extension of scalars of <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, so that <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is then a restricted product of the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
      There exists a finite set <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> of prime numbers such that, for each <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, the representation <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is unramified outside of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>429</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For large enough <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, if <fr:tex>p \not \in  S</fr:tex>, then, for all <fr:tex>\ell \neq  p</fr:tex>, the eigenvalues of a geometric Frobenius at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ \ell )</fr:tex>, and those of <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} })</fr:tex>, are algebraic numbers whose complex conjugates are all of absolute value <fr:tex>p^{n/2}</fr:tex>, and are <fr:tex>\ell '</fr:tex>-adic units for <fr:tex>\ell ' \neq  p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>430</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Let <fr:tex>c \in \operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> be complex conjugation.
      Then <fr:tex>c</fr:tex> acts on <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> respecting <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, and induces the involution <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>436</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remarks</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
      If <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is given, then the data of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> satisfying <fr:link
href="AM2"
type="external">(AM2)</fr:link> is equivalent to that of a new rational structure <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> that is stable under complex conjugation <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> (set <fr:tex>F_ \infty =c_ { \mathrm {DR}} |M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>).
      By <fr:link
href="M6"
type="external">(M6)</fr:link>, the filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> must remain rational for this new rational structure.
    </html:li>


    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
      <fr:p>
        The data of <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and the Galois action, all together, are equivalent to the data of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-vector space <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> for all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, along with a Galois action on <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> and comparison isomorphisms <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
        We have to assume the existence of a lattice <fr:tex>L \subset  M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> such that the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }(L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex> are Galois stable.
        We define <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> from the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> as the restricted product of the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> with respect to the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }(L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex> for an arbitrary lattice <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>: this restricted product is Galois stable, and the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> induce <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p>
      <fr:p>
        The data of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and the Galois action (resp. <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and the action), all together, are also equivalent to the data of a Galois action on <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>).
        By <fr:link
href="M6"
type="external">(M6)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="M9"
type="external">(M9)</fr:link>, the filtration of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>) induced by <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> must be stable under <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p>
    </html:li>


    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;iii. &quot;">
      If <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is given, then the data of <fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex>, along with its crystalline Frobenius and <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex>, is equivalent to the data of an automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
      By <fr:link
href="M6"
type="external">(M6)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="M10"
type="external">(M10)</fr:link>, the filtration of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> must be stable under <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>
<fr:p>
    We will often tacitly use these remarks to describe a system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>437</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    A scheme <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> of finite type over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> should define, for each <fr:tex>i</fr:tex>, a motive <fr:tex>M \coloneqq   \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>.
    
    In this section, we will partially describe the system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> of realisations of <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> in the case where <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is separated and smooth over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} = \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> is induced by the complex conjugation of <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>;
    <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X) \coloneqq \mathbb {H} ^i(X, \Omega _X^ \bullet )</fr:tex>, and the Hodge filtration that that of the mixed Hodge theory [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Section 3.2];
    <fr:tex>M_ \ell = \operatorname {H} ^i(X \otimes \bar { \mathbb {Q} }, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex> is the <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic étale cohomology of the scheme over <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex> induced from <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> by extension of scalars, and the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }, \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is given by structure transport.

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>246</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>X \otimes \bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex>, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-0.4"
href="minus-three-points-0.4.xml"
number="0.4"></fr:ref>.
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    Suppose that <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth and proper, and let <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> be a finite set of prime numbers such that <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is the general fibre of <fr:tex>X^ \sim</fr:tex>, which is smooth and proper over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  S</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>p \not \in  S</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is the crystalline cohomology of the reduction <fr:tex>X^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> modulo <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, tensored over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _p</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
    The crystalline Frobenius <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> is induced by the inverse image morphism of the Frobenius <fr:tex>\operatorname {Fr} \colon  X^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {F} _p \to  X^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    More generally, suppose that we have some smooth and proper <fr:tex>\overline {X}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  S</fr:tex>, as well as a relative normal crossing divisor <fr:tex>D</fr:tex>;
    let <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> be the general fibre of <fr:tex>\overline {X} \setminus  D</fr:tex>.
    Then the realisation <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is defined for <fr:tex>p \not \in  S</fr:tex>;
    its most natural definition is given by the generalisation of the crystalline theory, considered by Faltings in [<fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>, IV], to the "logarithmic poles" case.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.3"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.3"></fr:ref>, and the comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.4"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.4.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.4"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the smooth and proper case, the comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex> comes from §7.26 of [P. Berthelot and A. Ogus, <fr:em>Notes on crystalline cohomology</fr:em>, Princeton University Press and Tokyo University Press, 1978].
    For the general case, see [<fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>, IV].
    Finally, the weight filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> is that of the mixed Hodge theory from [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Section 3.2].
    See also [<fr:link
href="D5.xml"
type="local"
addr="D5">D5</fr:link>].
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>438</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    An additional data that we have on the cohomology <fr:tex>M \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> when <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> is that of a comparison isomorphism, for almost all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, in the sense of Fontaine–Messing (cf. [<fr:link
href="FM.xml"
type="local"
addr="FM">FM</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>]), relating <fr:tex>M_p</fr:tex>, endowed with the action of a decomposition group of <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, to <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, endowed with its Hodge filtration and its crystalline Frobenius.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, we should also have a "crystalline" structure of the following type.

    <fr:ul><fr:li><fr:strong>Semi-stable case.</fr:strong>
        Let <fr:tex>T_p</fr:tex> be the Zariski tangent space of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} _p)</fr:tex> at its closed point.
        
        We complete it to a projective line <fr:tex>\overline {T}_p</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex>, and we can lift <fr:tex>( \overline {T}_p,0, \infty )</fr:tex> to a projective line endowed with two marked points over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _p</fr:tex>: <fr:tex>( \overline {T}_p^ \sim ,0, \infty )</fr:tex>.
        We want an <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-isocrystal with logarithmic poles on <fr:tex>( \overline {T}_p,0, \infty )</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>]).
        Such an object induces, on <fr:tex>\overline {T}_p^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, a module with connection <fr:tex>\mathcal {V}</fr:tex> with logarithmic poles at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex> and at <fr:tex>\infty</fr:tex>, and we want for the residue of the connection at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex> and at <fr:tex>\infty</fr:tex> to be nilpotent.
        If <fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex> is a section of <fr:tex>\overline {T}_p^ \sim</fr:tex>, over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} _p)</fr:tex>, with derivative equal to <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> at the closed point, then <fr:tex>\varphi ^* \mathcal {V}</fr:tex> is independent of the choice of <fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> should then be identified with the de Rham realisation <fr:tex>\otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>

      <fr:li><fr:strong>General case.</fr:strong>
        The data of the previous type, over a large-enough finite Galois extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> that is <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} (E/ \mathbb {Q} _p)</fr:tex>-equivariant.
      </fr:li></fr:ul></fr:p><fr:p>
    A Fontaine–Messing comparison isomorphism should again link this object and <fr:tex>M_p</fr:tex> endowed with the action of a decomposition group of <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>439</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Variant</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We should also have <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>M \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, where <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is not necessarily smooth.
    The crystalline data pose a problem.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We would also like to have <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> for cohomology with proper support.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>440</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.9</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.9.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.9</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    A <fr:em>realisation system</fr:em> is a system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> that satisfies <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(A1)–(A5)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  We understand <fr:link
href="M4"
type="external">(M4)</fr:link>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex>, and <fr:link
href="M10"
type="external">(M10)</fr:link> as a germ — in the filter of complements of finite sets of prime numbers — of systems of automorphisms <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of the <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex></fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>441</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Proposition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.10</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.10.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.10</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Realisation systems form a Tannakian category.
  </fr:p>
  
    
    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>279</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Proof</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.10</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
    <fr:p>
      As in [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>], the key point is that a morphism of mixed Hodge <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structures is strictly compatible with the filtrations <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>, and that its kernel and cokernel are mixed Hodge <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structures [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Theorem 2.3.5].
      We thus deduce that every morphism of realisation systems is strictly compatible with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>.
      (For <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>, we can instead use <fr:link
href="AM4"
type="external">(AM4)</fr:link>.)
    </fr:p>

    <fr:p>
      So it is clear that the kernels and cokernels again form realisation systems, and that a bijective morphism is an isomorphism.
      We have direct sums, and so the category is abelian.
    </fr:p>

    <fr:p>
      We have an obvious tensor product, which is associative and commutative, and a way of taking duals.
      We also have a fibre functor, or, indeed, two: <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, with values in <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces.
      The category of realisation systems is thus Tannakian and neutral: the fibre functor <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>) identifies it with the category of representations of the group scheme <fr:tex>G_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>G_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>) of its automorphisms (cf. [<fr:link
href="Sa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Sa">Sa</fr:link>] or [<fr:link
href="DM.xml"
type="local"
addr="DM">DM</fr:link>, Theorem 2.11]).
    </fr:p>
  </fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>
  
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  We hope that the realisation functors define a fully faithful functor from the category of motives over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> to the category of realisation systems.
  If this were not the case, then the philosophy of motives would lose much of its interest.
  This leads to the following provisional "definition":
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>442</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.11</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.11.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.11</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    The <fr:em>category of motives</fr:em> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> is the subcategory of the category of realisation systems <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> generated (under <fr:tex>\oplus</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>, dual, and sub-quotient) by the category of systems of geometric origin.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  This definition is not really a definition, since "of geometric origin" has not been defined.
  Worse still, I do not have any definition to propose that I can confidently say is good.
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>450</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.12</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.12.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.12</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We would hope that the realisations of motives have properties not included in the definition <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> of realisation systems.
    Some reasons for not including them:

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        we do not know how to verify them in practice;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        we no longer know how to prove <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.10"
href="minus-three-points-1.10.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="1.10"></fr:ref> if we do include them.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol>


    Thus:

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
        We would like that, for almost all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, the Frobenius characteristic polynomial <fr:tex>\det (1-F_pt,M_ \ell )</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> have rational coefficients that are independent of <fr:tex>\ell \neq  p</fr:tex>.
        It should also agree with <fr:tex>\det (1- \phi _pt,M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} )</fr:tex>.
        We do not know how to verify this for <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> (with <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth), nor for a direct factor of <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> (with <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> an abelian variety), and reason (b) above also applies.
      </html:li>


      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
        We would like to complete <fr:link
href="AM4"
type="external">(AM4)</fr:link> by a condition for all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, cf. 1.8.5 in [P. Deligne, "La conjecture de Weil II", <fr:em>Publ. Math. IHÉS</fr:em> <fr:strong>52</fr:strong> (1980) pp. 137–252].
        Reasons (a) and (b) above also apply.
      </html:li>


      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;iii. &quot;">
        The Hodge structure <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ { \mathrm {B}} )</fr:tex> should be polarisable.
        More precisely, there should exist, for all <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>, a morphism of realisation systems
        <fr:tex
display="block">            \operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M) \otimes \operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M)  \to   \mathbb {Q} (-n)         </fr:tex>
        (see [minus-three-points-2.1] for the definition of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (-n)</fr:tex>) that induces a polarisation of the weight-<fr:tex>n</fr:tex> Hodge structure <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ { \mathrm {B}} )= \operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ { \mathrm {B}} )</fr:tex>.
        Here, neither reason (a) nor reason (b) apply.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>451</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.13</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.13.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.13</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    The treatment of crystalline structures is not satisfying.
    In the definition of realisation systems, I have not included the data  given in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.7"
href="minus-three-points-1.7.xml"
number="1.7"></fr:ref>, for the want of verifying their existence in the case of Lie algebras of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> that interest us.
    I have nevertheless included the data of <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>, despite its appearance as a bizarre addition, because the calculations in [minus-three-points-19] give an interesting result.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>460</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.14.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.14</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Here is a variant of the statement of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.4"
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
number="1.4"></fr:ref>.
    This formulation, which is less elementary, highlights the role of <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>452</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      To every algebraic closure <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex> is attached, in a functorial way, <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    From <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> we deduce the data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m1">(M1)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m7.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m7">(M7)</fr:link> by setting <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \coloneqq  M_ { \mathrm {B}} ( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>, and the taking <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>z \mapsto \bar {z} \colon \mathbb {C} \to \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>M= \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, we will have <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)= \operatorname {H} ^i(X(C), \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>453</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The same as <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m2">(M2)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>454</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The same as <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>455</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      An <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    By "<fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf" we mean the data, for all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex>, and, for almost all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell } \subset \mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex> which generates <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex>: the germ of the system of the <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex> is given.
    On the spectrum of a field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, the data of <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex>) is equivalent to that of, for every algebraic closure <fr:tex>\bar {k}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-vector space <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell ( \bar {k})</fr:tex> (resp. a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-module <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }( \bar {k})</fr:tex> of finite type), functorially in <fr:tex>\bar {k}</fr:tex>, and such that the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar {k}/k)</fr:tex> is continuous.
    Note that <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar {k})</fr:tex> is the restricted product of the <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell ( \bar {k})</fr:tex> with respect to the <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }( \bar {k})</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    From <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>, we deduce the data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m3">(M3)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m9.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m9">(M9)</fr:link> by setting <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \coloneqq (M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} })</fr:tex>.

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>456</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
        We write <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>) for <fr:tex>(M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>(M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>(M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>).
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>M= \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>a</fr:tex> is the morphism <fr:tex>X \to \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>M_ \ell = \mathbb {R} ^ia_* \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex> is equal to the image of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R} ^ia_* \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
    We have that <fr:tex>\mathbb {R} ^ia_* \mathbb {Z} _ \ell ( \bar {k})= \operatorname {H} ^i(X \otimes _ \mathbb {Q} \bar {k}, \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>457</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For almost all primes <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, an <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-isocrystal <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex>, i.e. a vector space <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> endowed with an automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>458</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }&amp; \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C) \otimes  C  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  C          \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }&amp; \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C) \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }_C)          \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }&amp; \colon  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}           \end {aligned}       </fr:tex>
      that are functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>, where <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }_C</fr:tex> is the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>.
      The first is equivalent to the data of <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> as in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link> satisfying <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link>;
      the second is equivalent to the data of <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> as in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link> satisfying <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am5">(AM5)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>, instead of giving the <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, we could have given only the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaves <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>, replacing <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon  M_B(C) \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \ell ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }_C)</fr:tex> and requiring the existence of an integer lattice <fr:tex>L \subset  M_B( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> such that the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }(L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex> be stable under <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    They define the <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex> of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>459</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>W</fr:tex> is a filtration of the objects of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4">(M'4)</fr:link>, respected by the comparison isomorphisms.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    A definition essentially equivalent to <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> is then the following: a <fr:em>realisation system</fr:em> is a system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp6.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp6">(M'6)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp8">(M'8)</fr:link>, satisfying axioms <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link> (suitably modified in the evident way).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> is equivalent to a sheaf of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces on the étale site of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} \mathbb {R}</fr:tex>.
    From this point of view, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is an isomorphism to <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {R} )_ \mathrm {et}</fr:tex> between the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> and the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf induced by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the language of sheaves, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link> implies that <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> comes from a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  S \setminus \{ \ell \}</fr:tex>.
    The language of sheaves makes it clear that, for all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> defines a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} _p)</fr:tex> (cf. the analogous case of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex> below).
    The choice of a decomposition group is not required.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>461</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Variant</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.15</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.15.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.15</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> be a finite set of prime numbers.
    The category of <fr:em>smooth realisation systems on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex></fr:em> is defined as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref>, taking <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> to be the exceptional set <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link>, and replacing "almost all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>" in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m4">(M4)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link> by "all <fr:tex>p \not \in  P</fr:tex>".
    This treatment of crystalline structures is not satisfying, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.7"
href="minus-three-points-1.7.xml"
number="1.7"></fr:ref>.
    The category (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref>) of realisation systems on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is the inductive limit of these categories for <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> growing larger and larger.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Instead of saying "smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>", we also say "of good reduction outside of <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>".
    This terminology is erroneous in that the categories in question are not subcategories of the category of realisation systems on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.7"
href="minus-three-points-1.7.xml"
number="1.7"></fr:ref> again).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the language of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>, in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link> we need to give <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> as a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} [1/ \ell ]) \setminus  P</fr:tex> instead of on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, and we need to modify <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4">(M'4)</fr:link> like <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m4">(M4)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The objects (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>) belonging to the subcategory generated by the objects of geometric origin (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.11"
href="minus-three-points-1.11.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.11"></fr:ref>) will be called <fr:em>smooth (mixed) motives on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex></fr:em>.
    We hope that this gives a full subcategory of the category of motives on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We would like to have a notion of smooth motive on <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> for more general base spaces than <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>.
    Our methods, where the Betti realisation plays a central role, require that <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> be dense in <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
    We will outline a provisional definition of smooth realisation systems on <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, for <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
    The case where <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> is open in the spectrum of the ring of integers of a number field can be dealt with using natural modifications of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.4"
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
number="1.4"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>.
    For <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> finite and étale over an open of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>, we can also reduce to <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>: see [minus-three-points-1.17].
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>463</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Example</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.16</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.16.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.16</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    (The motivic <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^0</fr:tex> of the spectrum of a number field).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> be a finite extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, unramified outside of a finite set <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> of prime numbers.
    We are going to expand on <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.6"
href="minus-three-points-1.6.xml"
number="1.6"></fr:ref> for <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (E)</fr:tex> and, more precisely, define a realisation system <fr:tex>A \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^0( \operatorname {Spec} (E))</fr:tex> that is smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>.
    The motive <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> is of Hodge type <fr:tex>(0,0)</fr:tex>.
    This determines <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>.
    We have that <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}} =E</fr:tex>, viewed as a vector space over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )= \operatorname {Spec} (E)( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> be the set of homomorphisms (which are automatically embeddings) from <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    We have that <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}} = \mathbb {Q} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}</fr:tex>, with <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> induced by the complex conjugation of <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    The comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>{ \mathrm {DR}} {/} { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> from <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} = \mathbb {C} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =E \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> is the <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>-linear extension of the map
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         E &amp; \longrightarrow   \mathbb {C} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}        \\ e &amp; \longmapsto  ( \sigma \mapsto \sigma (e)).        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    Since every embedding of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> factors through <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> acts on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>,
    This action induces the Galois action on <fr:tex>A_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \coloneqq  A_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> (cf. (ii) of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.5"
href="minus-three-points-1.5.xml"
taxon="Remarks"
number="1.5"></fr:ref>).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For <fr:tex>p \not \in  P</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> running over the places of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, we have that <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p= \prod  E_v</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> is the automorphism of <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> that induces on each <fr:tex>E_v</fr:tex> the unique lift of the Frobenius <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^p</fr:tex> of the residue field (cf. (iii) of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.5"
href="minus-three-points-1.5.xml"
taxon="Remarks"
number="1.5"></fr:ref>).

    
    The motive <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> is endowed with a product

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>462</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.16.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.16.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.16.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.16</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         A \otimes  A \to  A       \tag{1.16.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    namely the cup product, which makes <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> a commutative ring with unit in the Tannakian category of motives (cf. [minus-three-points-5.3]).
    On <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}} =E</fr:tex>, it is the product.
    On <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, it is given by <fr:tex>(q_1( \sigma ))(q_2( \sigma ))=(q_1( \sigma )q_2( \sigma ))</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>464</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.17</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.17.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.17</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>\mathcal {O}</fr:tex> be the ring of <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>-integers of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>.
    With the above notation, a <fr:em>smooth realisation system on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathcal {O} )</fr:tex></fr:em> is a realisation system <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex> (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>) endowed with the structure of an <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>-module <fr:tex>A \otimes  N \to  N</fr:tex> (cf. [minus-three-points-5.3]) over <fr:tex>A \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^0( \operatorname {Spec} (E))</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  Similarly for "motive" and "over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (E)</fr:tex>" (taking the limit over <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>).
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>474</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.18.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.18</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We will now show how a realisation system <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>, smooth over <fr:tex>S= \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathcal {O} )</fr:tex> (as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.17"
href="minus-three-points-1.17.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.17"></fr:ref>), can be described in terms of a <fr:em>realisation system over <fr:tex>E</fr:tex></fr:em>, of the following type.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>465</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each embedding <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_ \sigma</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, the Betti realisation with respect to <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>466</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m7e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m7e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M7E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each embedding <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, an involutive system of isomorphisms <fr:tex>F_ \infty \colon  M_ \sigma \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_{ \bar { \sigma }}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>N_ { \mathrm {B}} = \bigoplus  M_ \sigma</fr:tex>, with the evident structure of a module over <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}} = \mathbb {Q} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> is the sum of the <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>.
    As in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>, we have a variant:
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>467</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each embedding of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into an algebraic closure <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_ \sigma</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>468</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp2e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp2e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'2E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      An <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>-vector space <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>469</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp8e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp8e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'8E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, the Hodge filtration.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>N_ { \mathrm {DR}} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, with the structure of an <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>-module given by that of the vector space over <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>470</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      (cf. <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m3">(M3)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m9.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m9">(M9)</fr:link>) An <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (E)</fr:tex> (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>).
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We define <fr:tex>N_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> as its direct image over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>: <fr:tex>N_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} })</fr:tex> is the sum over the <fr:tex>\sigma \colon  E \to \bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex> of the <fr:tex>M_AAf( \bar { \mathbb {Q} })</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>471</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp4e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp4e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'4E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each place <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>p \not \in  P</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex> over the completion <fr:tex>E_v</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>v</fr:tex>.
      Let <fr:tex>F_v^*</fr:tex> be the automorphism of <fr:tex>E_v</fr:tex> that induces <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^p</fr:tex> on the residue field.
      We give an <fr:tex>F_v^*</fr:tex>-linear <fr:tex>\phi _v \colon  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} \mapsto  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p= \bigoplus _{v \mid  p}E_v</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>N_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is the sum of the <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>472</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \sigma } \colon  M_ \sigma (C) \otimes  C           &amp; \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes _{E, \sigma }C          \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , \sigma } \colon  M_{ \sigma } \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}            &amp; \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar {E}_C)          \end {aligned}       </fr:tex>
      both functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> (where <fr:tex>\bar {E}_C</fr:tex> is the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>, with respect to <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex>), as well as
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} , { \mathrm {DR}} } \colon  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes _E E_v  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} .       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    By summing over <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>v</fr:tex>), these give <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5">(M'5)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>473</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp6e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp6e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'6E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> of the objects <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1e">(M'1)E</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp2e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp2e">(M'2)E</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3e">(M'3)E</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4e">(M'4)E</fr:link>, respected by the comparison isomorphisms.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We leave to the reader the task of translating axioms <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link>, which remain to be imposed, into this language (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>).
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>475</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.19</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.19.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.19</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    With the definition <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.17"
href="minus-three-points-1.17.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.17"></fr:ref> of smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>S= \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathcal {O} )</fr:tex>, the functor given by forgetting the <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>-module structure, which takes values in smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>, is called the "<fr:em>direct image of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex></fr:em>".
    In the various realisations of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.18"
href="minus-three-points-1.18.xml"
number="1.18"></fr:ref>, it corresponds to the direct image.
    Its left adjoint, <fr:tex>M \mapsto  A \otimes  M</fr:tex> (cf. [minus-three-points-5.3]), is the <fr:em>inverse image</fr:em>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>476</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.20</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.20.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.20</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> is an open of the spectrum of the ring of integers of a finite extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, then we can modify the description in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.18"
href="minus-three-points-1.18.xml"
number="1.18"></fr:ref> as follows to define smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.

    <fr:ul><fr:li>
        In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link>, we ask for each <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> to come from a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>
      <fr:li>
        In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4e">(M'4)E</fr:link>, for each residue field <fr:tex>k(v)</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, we ask for <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex> over the field of fractions <fr:tex>K_v</fr:tex> of Witt vectors over <fr:tex>k(v)</fr:tex>, endowed with a semi-linear <fr:tex>\phi _v</fr:tex>.
        The crystalline comparison isomorphism of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5e">(M'5)E</fr:link> then becomes
        <fr:tex
display="block">           M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  E_v  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} \otimes _{K_v}E_v.         </fr:tex></fr:li></fr:ul></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>477</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.21.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.21</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> be smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
    Here is a provisional definition of smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, inspired by <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.18"
href="minus-three-points-1.18.xml"
number="1.18"></fr:ref>.
    The data is as follows:
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>292</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> an algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex>, a locally constant sheaf <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>, functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>.
      We set <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \coloneqq  M_ { \mathrm {B}} ( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>293</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp2s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp2s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'2S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A vector bundle <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> with integrable connection on <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, assumed to be regularly singular at infinity.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>294</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp8s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp8s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'8S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> by vector sub-bundles: the Hodge filtration.
      We assume "transversality":
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \nabla  F^p  \subset   \Omega ^1 \otimes  F^{p-1}.       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>295</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>296</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp4s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp4s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'4S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For every prime number <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, an <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-isocrystal <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> on the reduction <fr:tex>S_p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> <fr:tex>\mod  p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>297</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C) \otimes  C  \xrightarrow { \sim }  (M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  C)^ \nabla           \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} ^{(C)} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}   \to   \text {inverse image of }M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \text { on }S(C)          \end {aligned}       </fr:tex>
      that are functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>, where we denote by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  C</fr:tex> the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S_C</fr:tex>, and by <fr:tex>(-) \nabla</fr:tex> the sheaf of its horizontal sections on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>.
      Instead of giving <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3s">(M'3)S</fr:link>, we can just give the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> sheaves <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> that are deduced from it, along with the comparison isomorphisms <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> from <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> to the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>, and impose the existence of a lattice <fr:tex>L</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> corresponds to a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>L_ \ell</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>L_ \ell \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \ell</fr:tex>, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>.
    </fr:p><fr:p>
      As for <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>S_{(p)}^ \mathrm {an}</fr:tex> be the rigid analytic space that is the general fibre of the formal scheme over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _p</fr:tex> given by the formal completion of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> along <fr:tex>S_p</fr:tex>;
      we want an isomorphism between bundles with connection on <fr:tex>S_{(p)}^ \mathrm {an}</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>298</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp6s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp6s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'6S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> of the objects <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1s">(M'1)S</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4s">(M'4)S</fr:link>, respected by the comparison isomorphisms.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    The axioms are modified as follows.
    In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link>, we want a variation of mixed Hodge structures;
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link> becomes: <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> comes from a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>;
    for <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link>, a condition is imposed for every closed point of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    As a catch-all, this category does the job (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.13"
href="minus-three-points-1.13.xml"
taxon="Remark"
number="1.13"></fr:ref> nonetheless).
    Additional axioms will always be natural, notably concerning the behaviour at infinity of the variation of mixed Hodge structures <fr:tex>H_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="SZ.xml"
type="local"
addr="SZ">SZ</fr:link>]).
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>478</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.22</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.22.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.22</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> be a finite extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    Then a realisation system <fr:em>with coefficients in <fr:tex>E</fr:tex></fr:em> is a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> endowed with the structure of an <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>-modules, <fr:tex>E \to \operatorname {End} (M)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  Up until now, our motives have been "isomotives": the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> are vector spaces over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  For motives with integer coefficients, I propose the following definitions.
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>479</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.23</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.23.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.23</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    A realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} \mathbb {Z} \setminus  P</fr:tex>) <fr:em>with integer coefficients</fr:em> is a realisation system, denoted by <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, endowed with a lattice <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> such that, for all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \ell \coloneqq  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ \ell</fr:tex> is stable under <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>483</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.24.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.24</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    On a more general base <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, a realisation system <fr:em>with integer coefficients</fr:em> is a realisation system <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> endowed with a local system of torsion-free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-modules <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> satisfying <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} \xrightarrow { \sim } (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (a "lattice") and such that the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> corresponds, under <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, to a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \ell \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    This causes us to modify <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1s">(M'1)S</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3s">(M'3)S</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5s">(M'5)S</fr:link> as follows.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>480</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1sz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1sz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1SZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex> is a local system of free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-modules.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>481</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3sz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3sz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3SZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>482</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5sz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5sz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5SZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Replace <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> by isomorphisms <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> from <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> to the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>484</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.25</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.25.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.25</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    In <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref>, the data of the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a projective system of sheaves of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(n)</fr:tex>-modules on the <fr:tex>S[1/n]</fr:tex>:
    <fr:tex
display="block">       M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)} \colon   \prod _{ \ell \mid  n}M_ \ell {/}n M_ \ell      </fr:tex>
    and the data of the comparison morphisms is equivalent to that of an isomorphism of projective systems from <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} {/}n, { \mathrm {B}} } \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)</fr:tex> to the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the setting of <fr:link
href="#chunk-1.23"
type="external">(1.23)</fr:link>, we can prefer to think of the <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> as representations of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    We again set <fr:tex>M_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }= \operatorname {lim \, proj}  M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}= \prod  M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>485</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.26</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.26.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.26</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Combining the variants in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.22"
href="minus-three-points-1.22.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.22"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref>, we similarly define motives over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> with coefficients in the ring of integers of a finite extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1202</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Terminology and notation</fr:title><fr:number>0</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>378</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote inductive limits and projective limits by <fr:tex>\operatorname {lim \, ind}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\operatorname {lim \, proj}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>379</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For a prime number <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, we denote by <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> the completions of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> for the <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic topology:
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}          \mathbb {Z} _ \ell  &amp;=  \operatorname {lim \, proj}   \mathbb {Z} {/} \ell ^n \mathbb {Z} ,        \\ \mathbb {Q} _ \ell  &amp;=  \mathbb {Z} _ \ell \otimes \mathbb {Q} .        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex> the profinite completion of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>, and by <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> the ring of finite adeles:
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {gathered}          \widehat { \mathbb {Z}}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  \prod _ \ell   \mathbb {Z} _ \ell ,        \\ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}  =  \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} .        \end {gathered}     </fr:tex>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex> the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>380</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For an abstract group, algebraic group, profinite group, or Lie algebra <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>, we denote by <fr:tex>Z^i(A)</fr:tex> the descending central series.
    We use the numbering for which <fr:tex>A=Z^1(A)</fr:tex>.
    We denote by <fr:tex>A^{(N)}</fr:tex> the quotient of <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>Z^{N+1}(A)</fr:tex>.
    In the case of abstract or profinite groups, we denote by <fr:tex>A^{[N]}</fr:tex> the largest torsion-free quotient of <fr:tex>A^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>381</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex> an extension of scalars.
    For example, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is a scheme over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is an extension of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then we set
    <fr:tex
display="block">       X \otimes  k'        \coloneqq  X \times _{ \operatorname {Spec} (k)} \operatorname {Spec} (k').     </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>382</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Given an affine scheme <fr:tex>f \colon  X \to  S</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, the quasi-coherent sheaf of algebras <fr:tex>f_* \mathcal {O} _X</fr:tex> will be called the <fr:em>affine algebra</fr:em> of <fr:tex>X/S</fr:tex>, or simply of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> will be called its <fr:em>spectrum</fr:em>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>384</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> be a sheaf of groups on a site <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex>, or, equivalently, in a topos <fr:tex>T</fr:tex>.
    Useful particular case: if <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex> is a point, then a sheaf is a set and <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> is a group.
    A <fr:em><fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor</fr:em>, or <fr:em>torsor for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex></fr:em>, is a sheaf <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> endowed with a right <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-action such that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is locally isomorphic to <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> acting on itself by translations on the right.
    We also call such an object a <fr:em>right <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-principal homogeneous space</fr:em>, or a <fr:em>right principal homogeneous space for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex></fr:em>.
    If <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor, then a sheaf <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> on which <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> acts can be <fr:em>twisted</fr:em> by <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>.
    The twisting <fr:tex>X^P</fr:tex> is the contracted product <fr:tex>P \times ^G X=(P \times  X)/G</fr:tex>, and is endowed with <fr:tex>\alpha \colon  P \to \underline { \operatorname {Isom}} (X,X^P)</fr:tex> satisfying <fr:tex>\alpha (pg)= \alpha (p)g</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    An <fr:em><fr:tex>(H,G)</fr:tex>-bitorsor</fr:em> (cf. SGA 7, VII.1, or Girard, <fr:em>Cohomologie non abelienne</fr:em>, III 1.5) is a space which is simultaneously a left principal homogeneous space for <fr:tex>H</fr:tex> and a right principal homogeneous space for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>, with the <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>- and <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-actions commuting with one another.
    If <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor, then the sheaf of automorphisms of <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is the twisting <fr:tex>G^P</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> (under the action of <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> on itself by inner automorphisms), and <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is a <fr:tex>(G^P,P)</fr:tex>-bitorsor.
    By this construction, the data of an <fr:tex>(H,G)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is equivalent to the data of a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> along with an isomorphism between <fr:tex>H</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>G^P</fr:tex>.

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>383</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
        We will write <fr:tex>{}_HP_G</fr:tex> to mean that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>(H,G)</fr:tex>-bitorsor.
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    We will use the following operations on torsors and bitorsors.

    <fr:ul><fr:li><fr:strong>Pushing forward</fr:strong> (or <fr:strong>transporting</fr:strong>) a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\varphi \colon  G \to  H</fr:tex> to obtain an <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>\varphi (P)</fr:tex>.
        A <fr:em><fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex>-morphism</fr:em> from the <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> to the <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex> is some <fr:tex>u \colon  P \to  Q</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>u(pg)=u(p) \varphi (g)</fr:tex>.
        A <fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex>-morphism factors uniquely through an isomorphism of <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-torsors between <fr:tex>\varphi (P)</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>

      <fr:li><fr:strong>Composition</fr:strong> of a <fr:tex>(G_1,G_2)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> and a <fr:tex>(G_2,G_3)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex>:
        the <fr:tex>(G_1,G_3)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P \circ  Q</fr:tex> given by the contracted product <fr:tex>P \times ^{G_2}Q=(P \times  Q)/G_2</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>

      <fr:li><fr:strong>Inverse</fr:strong> of <fr:tex>{}_{G_1}P_{G_2}</fr:tex>:
        the <fr:tex>(G_2,G_1)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P^{-1}</fr:tex>, unique up to isomorphism, endowed with <fr:tex>(p \mapsto  p^{-1}) \colon  P \to  P^{-1}</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>(g_1pg_2)^{-1}=g_2^{-1}p^{-1}g_1^{-1}</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li></fr:ul>

    For <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsors <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex>, the sheaf <fr:tex>\underline { \operatorname {Isom}} (P,Q)</fr:tex> of isomorphisms of <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsors from <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex> is the <fr:tex>(G^Q,G^P)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>G \circ  P^{-1}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    If the site <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex> is such that the representable functors <fr:tex>h_S</fr:tex> are sheaves, then we can transport these operations to <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex> via the fully faithful functor <fr:tex>S \mapsto  h_S</fr:tex>, with each construction only being defined if it does not leave the collection of representable sheaves.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:related><fr:backlinks><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1192</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}(n)</fr:tex>-torsors</fr:title><fr:number>3</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
  The study of the fundamental group of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex> reveals, for each <fr:tex>k \geqslant2</fr:tex>, a torsor <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
  We will describe these torsors in this section.
  The relation with <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> will be explained in [minus-three-points-16] (see [minus-three-points-16.23]) and the calculations to justify this will be given in [minus-three-points-19].
  We will then describe the torsors <fr:tex>P_{d,k}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \sqrt [d]{1}))</fr:tex>, given by an analogous construction ([minus-three-points-16.28]).
</fr:p><fr:p>
  The sum of the <fr:tex>P_{d,k}</fr:tex> and of <fr:tex>(-1)^k</fr:tex> times its symmetry under <fr:tex>\zeta \mapsto \zeta ^{-1}</fr:tex> is torsion.
  This is essentially equivalent to the adelic integral formulas for the value of the Dirichlet <fr:tex>L</fr:tex> functions at negative integers: [minus-three-points-3.6], [minus-three-points-3.8], [minus-three-points-3.9], and [minus-three-points-3.14].
  A geometric interpretation, which allows us to reprove these formulas, will be given in [minus-three-points-18].
</fr:p><fr:p>
  A geometric interpretation of the relations of distributions ([minus-three-points-3.13]) will be given in [minus-three-points-17].
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>825</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote by <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> the torsor <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> that we are going to define.
    At the same time, we will define a trivialisation <fr:tex>u_ { \mathrm {B}} \in  P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> of its Betti realisation.
    Since <fr:tex>F^0 \mathbb {Z} (k)_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>, we necessarily have that <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Z} (k)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    The Betti structure is

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>820</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.1k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.1k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.1k</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {gathered}           P_ { \mathrm {B}}            = u_ { \mathrm {B}}  + (2 \pi  i)^k \mathbb {Z}   \subset   \mathbb {P} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} } =  \mathbb {C}           \\ \text {with} \quad            u_ { \mathrm {B}}            = -(k-1)! \zeta (k)          \end {gathered}       \tag{3.1.1k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    where <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> is the Riemann <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> function.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> be an integer; we will describe <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>z \in \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>z \neq1</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>T_N(z) \coloneqq  K(1-z)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> be the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(1)</fr:tex>-torsor of <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1-z</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>z=1</fr:tex>, we set <fr:tex>T_N(1)=K(1/N)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex>.
    This convention ensures that the sum of the <fr:tex>T_N( \alpha )</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\alpha ^N=1</fr:tex> is trivialised: we have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \frac {1}{N} \prod (1- \alpha )       = 1.     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>\alpha</fr:tex> be an <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th root of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    It defines <fr:tex>\alpha \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}N \to \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>a \mapsto  a \cdot \alpha</fr:tex>.
    We thus obtain <fr:tex>\alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)} \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1) \to \mathbb {Z} {/}N(k)</fr:tex>.
    Note that, for <fr:tex>\alpha =1</fr:tex>, this is the zero map.
    We denote by <fr:tex>\alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T( \alpha )</fr:tex> the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(k)</fr:tex>-torsor induced from <fr:tex>T( \alpha )</fr:tex> by applying <fr:tex>\alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}</fr:tex>.
    We have

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>821</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.2k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.2k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}          \coloneqq   \sum _{ \alpha ^N=1}  \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_N( \alpha ).       \tag{3.1.2k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    
    We can equivalently sum over the <fr:tex>\alpha \neq1</fr:tex>.
    This definition still makes sense in any algebraic closure <fr:tex>\overline {k}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, and the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is given by transport of structure.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We now define the transition morphisms <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(NM)} \to  P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex>.
    We have

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>822</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \prod _{u^M=z} (1-u)         = 1-z       \tag{3.1.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    whence, for <fr:tex>z \neq0 ,1</fr:tex>, we obtain an isomorphism

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>823</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         T_N(z)         =  \prod _{u^M=z} T_N(u).       \tag{3.1.4}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    If <fr:tex>\beta ^N=1</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\alpha ^M= \beta</fr:tex>, then the reduction <fr:tex>\mod  N</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\alpha \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}NM \to \mathbb {Z} {/}NM(1)</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>\beta \colon \mathbb {Z} {/}N \to \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1)</fr:tex>, and that of <fr:tex>T_{NM}( \alpha )</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>T_N( \alpha )</fr:tex>.
    From this, we obtain an isomorphism
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(NM)} \mod  N         &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta ^N=1}  \sum _{ \alpha ^M= \beta }  \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_{NM}( \alpha )  \mod  N        \\ &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta ^N=1}  \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)}  \sum _{ \alpha ^M= \beta } T_N( \alpha )        \\ &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta ^N=1}  \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)} T_N( \beta )        \\ &amp;= P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}.        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    This defines the desired transition morphism.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For non-real negative <fr:tex>z</fr:tex>, we define the <fr:em>principal determination</fr:em> of <fr:tex>z \mapsto  z^{1/N}</fr:tex>, and denote by <fr:tex>z^{1/N}</fr:tex>, that which takes the value of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    The morphism of torsors <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> sends <fr:tex>u_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> to the point <fr:tex>u</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> defined by the <fr:tex>(1- \alpha )^{1/N} \in  T( \alpha )</fr:tex>:
    <fr:tex
display="block">       u_ { \mathrm {B}}         \mapsto  u       =  \sum   \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)} ((1- \alpha )^{1/N}).     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>z</fr:tex> is not real and <fr:tex>\geqslant1</fr:tex>, then we have principal determinations

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>824</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.1.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.1.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.1.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \prod _{u^M=z} (1-u)^{1/N}         = (1-z)^{1/N}       \tag{3.1.5}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    as we verify by analytic continuation from <fr:tex>z=0</fr:tex>, taking <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.1.3"
href="minus-three-points-3.1.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.1.3"></fr:ref> into account.
    It follows from <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.1.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.1.5.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.1.5"></fr:ref> that the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> are compatible with the transition morphisms.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>833</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Some preliminaries, before defining <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
    The <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>-logarithm is defined for <fr:tex>|z| \leqslant1</fr:tex> by

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>826</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k(z)         =  \sum  z^n/n^k.       \tag{3.2.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    The <fr:tex>\zeta (k)</fr:tex> in the formula giving <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> appears in our approach as the value at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\ell _k</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> be a prime number and consider the formal series

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>827</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k^{(p)}         =  \sum _{p \nmid  n} z^n/n^k.       \tag{3.2.2}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    This is the Taylor series expansion of a rigid analytic function on the projective line over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> with the open disc of radius <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> centred at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> removed.
    Indeed, we have

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>828</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k^{(p)}(z)         =  \lim _N  \frac {1}{1-z^{p^N}}  \sum _{n=1, p \nmid  n}^{p^N-1} z^n/n^k.       \tag{3.2.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    From <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.2.3"
href="minus-three-points-3.2.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.2.3"></fr:ref> we get the identity

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>829</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \ell _k^{(p)}(1/z)         = -(-1)^k \ell _k^{(p)}(z).       \tag{3.2.4}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    A formal series calculation gives, for <fr:tex>(N,p)=1</fr:tex>,

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>830</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         N^{k-1} \sum _{u^N=z}  \ell _k^{(p)}(u)         =  \ell _k^{(p)}(z).       \tag{3.2.5}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    This leads us to define the "principal value" at <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>831</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {vp} \ell _k^{(p)}(1)          \coloneqq   \frac {N^{k-1}}{1-N^{k-1}}  \sum _{ \alpha ^N=1, \alpha \neq1 }  \ell _k^{(p)}( \alpha ).       \tag{3.2.6}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    This number is independent of the choice of <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> coprime to <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
    By <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.2.4"
href="minus-three-points-3.2.4.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.2.4"></fr:ref>, it is zero for <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> even.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    With this notation, the crystalline Frobenius <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> is given by

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>832</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.2.7k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.2.7k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.2.7k</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p^{-1}(0)         = (k-1)!p^k \cdot \operatorname {vp} \ell _k^{(p)}(1).       \tag{3.2.7k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>834</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We have described the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(N)(k)</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> as a sum of torsors indexed by the <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    If <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> is a power of a prime number <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, say <fr:tex>N= \ell ^n</fr:tex>, then we can again, thanks to <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.1.4"
href="minus-three-points-3.1.4.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.1.4"></fr:ref>, write it as a sum indexed by the set <fr:tex>\mu (N)^ \times</fr:tex> of primitive <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    Indeed, we have isomorphisms
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}         &amp;=  \sum _{ \alpha ^N=1} \ldots         \\ &amp;=  \sum _{a=1}^n  \sum _{ \mu ( \ell ^a)^ \times }  \ldots         \\ &amp;=  \sum _{a=1}^n  \sum _{ \alpha \in \mu ( \ell ^a)^ \times } \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}  \sum _{ \beta ^{ \ell ^{n-a}}= \alpha } T_N( \beta ).        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    In this sum, <fr:tex>\beta</fr:tex> runs over, for each <fr:tex>a</fr:tex>, all the primitive <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>, whence
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}         &amp;=  \sum _{ \beta \in \mu (N)^ \times } \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_N( \beta )  \cdot   \sum _{a=1}^n \ell ^{(n-a)(k-1)}        \\ &amp;=  \frac {1}{1- \ell ^{k-1}}  \sum _{ \beta \in \mu (N)^ \times } \beta ^{ \otimes (k-1)}T_N( \beta ).        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    The cohomology class of <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}</fr:tex> (for <fr:tex>N= \ell ^n</fr:tex>) in <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^1( \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ), \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)(k))</fr:tex> thus admits the following description.
    Let <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )</fr:tex> be the cyclotomic field generated by a primitive <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th root of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>.
    In <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^1( \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )), \mathbb {Z} {/}N(1))</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>\delta (1- \zeta )</fr:tex> be the Kummer coboundary of <fr:tex>1- \zeta</fr:tex>.
    On <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta ))</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> identifies the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(a)</fr:tex> with one another, and we can think of <fr:tex>\delta (1- \zeta )</fr:tex> as a class with values in <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}N(k)</fr:tex>.
    More precisely, we consider <fr:tex>\zeta ^{ \otimes (k-1)} \cup \partial (1- \zeta ) \in \operatorname {H} ^1( \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )), \mathbb {Z} {/}N(k))</fr:tex>.
    We have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {cl} (P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/} \ell ^n})       =  \frac {1}{1- \ell ^{k-1}}  \operatorname {Tr} _{ \mathbb {Q} ( \zeta )/ \mathbb {Q} }( \zeta ^{ \otimes (k-1)} \cup \partial (1- \zeta ))     </fr:tex>
    and the class of <fr:tex>P_ \ell</fr:tex> is the limit of these classes.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>835</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\zeta ^{(p)}(s)</fr:tex> the <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> function with its Eulerian factor at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> removed:
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta ^{(p)}(s)        \coloneqq   \sum _{p \nmid  n} 1/n^s.     </fr:tex>
    We know that the values of <fr:tex>\zeta ^{(p)}(s)</fr:tex> on the negative integers are rational and admit a <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic interpolation.
    More precisely,

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        Let <fr:tex>\mathbb {C} _p</fr:tex> be the completion of an algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
        Then the characters <fr:tex>\chi \colon \mathbb {Z} _p^ \times \to \mathbb {C} _p^ \times</fr:tex> are the points of a rigid analytic space.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        
        There exists exactly one rigid analytic function <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}( \chi )</fr:tex>, with a simple pole at <fr:tex>\chi =(x \mapsto  x^{-1})</fr:tex>, such that
        <fr:tex
display="block">            \zeta _p^{(p)}(x \mapsto  x^{-1})           =  \zeta ^{(p)}(n) \in \mathbb {Q}          </fr:tex>
        for every integer <fr:tex>n&lt;0</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p><fr:p>
    We set, for <fr:tex>n \in \mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>n \neq1</fr:tex>,
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta _p^{(p)}(n)        \coloneqq   \zeta _p^{(p)}(x \mapsto  x^{-1}).     </fr:tex>
    This notation differs from that of [<fr:link
href="C.xml"
type="local"
addr="C">C</fr:link>] or [<fr:link
href="Ko.xml"
type="local"
addr="Ko">Ko</fr:link>]: our <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}</fr:tex> is not a continuous <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic function of the <fr:em>integer</fr:em> <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>.
    Instead, it is a continuous function of the <fr:em>character</fr:em> <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^n</fr:tex>, itself a continuous function of <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> if and only if we restrict <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> to an arithmetic progression of difference <fr:tex>p-1</fr:tex>.
    We have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta _p^{(p)}(n)       =  \lim _a  \zeta ^{(p)}(n-(p-1)p^a).     </fr:tex>
    The trivial zeros of <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> force <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}(n)=0</fr:tex> for even <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>, i.e. for <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^{-n}</fr:tex> an even character.
    More generally, <fr:tex>\zeta _p^{(p)}( \chi )=0</fr:tex> for even <fr:tex>\chi</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    With this notation, we have (cf. [<fr:link
href="C.xml"
type="local"
addr="C">C</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Ko.xml"
type="local"
addr="Ko">Ko</fr:link>])
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {vp}   \ell _k^{(p)}(1)       =  \zeta _p^{(p)}(k)     </fr:tex>
    and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.2.7k"
href="minus-three-points-3.2.7k.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.2.7k"></fr:ref> can be rewritten as

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>309</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.4.1k</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.4.1k.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.4.1k</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p^{-1}(0)         = (k-1)! p^k \zeta _p^{(p)}(k).       \tag{3.4.1k}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>836</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Proposition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> even, the torsor <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> is torsion, with order equal to the denominator of <fr:tex>\frac {1}{2} \zeta (1-k)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>846</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Paraphrase</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> be a torsor for a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> with integer coefficients.
    The fact that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-torsion means more than "every realisation is <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-torsion".
    Let <fr:tex>\frac {1}{n}M</fr:tex> be the realisation system <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, endowed with the integer structure <fr:tex>\frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    It is isomorphic to <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, by an isomorphism that sends <fr:tex>M \hookrightarrow \frac {1}{n}M</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>n \colon  M \to  M</fr:tex>.
    The fact that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-torsion thus implies that it becomes trivial under <fr:tex>M \to \frac {1}{2}M</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> of weight <fr:tex>\leqslant-1</fr:tex>, this implies:

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        
        <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} + \frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}} \cap  F^0 P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} \neq \phi</fr:tex> (the intersection in <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>).
        The point of intersection <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> is then unique, since <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \cap  F^0(M_ { \mathrm {DR}} ) \otimes \mathbb {C} =0</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        <fr:tex>x \in  F^0 P_{DR}</fr:tex>, i.e. is defined over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> for the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure <fr:tex>{ \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
        The image of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> under <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ,B}</fr:tex> is fixed by Galois.
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;d. &quot;">
        The image of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> under <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex> is fixed by <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p><fr:p>
    Suppose that <fr:tex>F^0 M_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>.
    Then <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, and we can identify <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> with a lateral class of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    Condition (a) then becomes <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset \frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    We have <fr:tex>x=0</fr:tex>, and (b) is automatic.
    We can write (d) as <fr:tex>\phi _p(0)=0</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>p \in  P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    Denote by <fr:tex>p_M</fr:tex> its image in <fr:tex>\frac {1}{n}M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, and set <fr:tex>p^ \wedge = \operatorname {comp} _{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} , { \mathrm {B}} }(p) \in  P_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>(p_M)^ \wedge = \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }(p_M) \in  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>.
    Condition (c) can then be written as

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>842</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \sigma  p^ \wedge  - p^ \wedge          = ( \sigma-1 )(p_M)^ \wedge .       \tag{3.6.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>M= \mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>k \geqslant1</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>\sigma \in \operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> with image <fr:tex>c</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}} ^ \times</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>\sigma ( \zeta )= \zeta ^c</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> a root of unity.
    <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.6.1"
href="minus-three-points-3.6.1.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.6.1"></fr:ref> can then be written as

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>843</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \sigma  p^ \wedge  - p^ \wedge          = (c^k-1)(p_M)^ \wedge .       \tag{3.6.2}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    Modulo <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>, we obtain: let <fr:tex>c</fr:tex> be an integer coprime to <fr:tex>Nn</fr:tex>, with <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> inducing <fr:tex>\zeta \mapsto \zeta ^c</fr:tex> on the <fr:tex>(Nn)</fr:tex>-th roots of unity.
    Then <fr:tex>(c^k-1)p_M \in  M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, and

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>844</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.6.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.6.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.6.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {comp} _{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} , { \mathrm {B}} }((c^k-1)p_M)          \equiv   \sigma  p^ \wedge  - p^ \wedge   \mod {N}.       \tag{3.6.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    In <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.5.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="3.5"></fr:ref>, <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is even, and we can take <fr:tex>p=-(k-1)! \zeta (k)</fr:tex>, and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.6.3"
href="minus-three-points-3.6.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="3.6.3"></fr:ref> is a Galois formula for <fr:tex>-(c^k-1)(k-1)! \zeta (k)</fr:tex> modulo <fr:tex>N(2 \pi  i)^k \mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>.
    We recover a known formula expressing <fr:tex>\zeta</fr:tex> on the negative integers as an adelic integral.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>845</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The above description shows that, if <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is of finite order, then its order can be read from its Hodge realisation.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>848</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:em>(Proof of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.5.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="3.5"></fr:ref>).</fr:em></fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>k \geqslant2</fr:tex> be even.
    We have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \zeta (k)       = -(2 \pi  i)^k B_k/2 \cdot  k!     </fr:tex>
    whence
    <fr:tex
display="block">       -(k-1)! \zeta (k)       = - \frac {1}{2} \zeta (1-k) \cdot (2 \pi  i)^k.     </fr:tex>
    This satisfies the description of the order given in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-3.5"
href="minus-three-points-3.5.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="3.5"></fr:ref> of <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> if <fr:tex>P_{1,k}</fr:tex> is of finite order.
    We know that the ideal <fr:tex>(d)</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex> is generated by the <fr:tex>c^k-1</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>c \in \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} ^ \times</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Set <fr:tex>Q \coloneqq  2P_{1,k}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>847</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Construction</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-3.7.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-3.7.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>3.7.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-3.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      We will construct an isomorphism of torsors
      <fr:tex
display="block">         Q_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}         =  \sum   \alpha ^{ \otimes (k-1)}K(- \alpha )_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(N)}       \tag{3.7.1}       </fr:tex>
      where the sum is taken over the <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> that are not <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> itself.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    Since
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1193</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Examples</fr:title><fr:number>2</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>730</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    The <fr:em>Tate motive</fr:em> <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> is a motive over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex> (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>) with integer coefficients (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.23"
href="minus-three-points-1.23.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.23"></fr:ref>).
    Here is its description as a realisation system, in the language of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref> (along with <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.25"
href="minus-three-points-1.25.xml"
number="1.25"></fr:ref>):
  </fr:p><fr:ul><fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m1">(M1)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m7.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m7">(M7)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} =2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z} \subset \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F_ \infty =-1</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)=2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z} \subset  C</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m2">(M2)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp2">(M'2)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:p><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m3">(M3)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m9.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m9">(M9)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}n}</fr:tex> is the group <fr:tex>\mu _n \subset \mathbb {C} ^ \times</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-th roots of unity.
        The transition morphisms are the <fr:tex>\mu _n \to \mu _m \colon  x \mapsto  x^{n/m}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>m \mid  n</fr:tex>.
        The action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is its action on the <fr:tex>\mu _n</fr:tex>.
        In the variant <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>, we have <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}n}( \bar {k})= \mu _n( \bar {k})</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p>
      <fr:p>
        We thus have that <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ \ell = \operatorname {lim \, proj} \mu _{ \ell ^n}( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p></fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m4">(M4)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m10.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m10">(M10)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4">(M'4)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} = \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\phi _p=1/p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link>: The canonical comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is induced by the inclusions <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} =2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z} \subset \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q} \subset \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, i.e.
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}   \xrightarrow { \sim }   \mathbb {C}   \xleftarrow { \sim }   \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} .       </fr:tex>
      The isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}n, { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.25"
href="minus-three-points-1.25.xml"
number="1.25"></fr:ref> is induced by
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \exp (x/n) \colon   \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}}   \to   \mathbb {Z} {/}n(1) \subset \mathbb {C} ^ \times .       </fr:tex>
      The isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex> is induced by the inclusion <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} \subset \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5">(M'5)</fr:link>: Replace <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link>.
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m6.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m6">(M6)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link>: <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> is of pure weight <fr:tex>-2</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is of pure Hodge filtration <fr:tex>-1</fr:tex>: the Hodge type is <fr:tex>(-1,-1)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li></fr:ul><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>528</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (n) \coloneqq \mathbb {Z} (1)^{ \otimes  n}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (n) \coloneqq \mathbb {Z} (n) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, and, for any motive <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M(n) \coloneqq  M \otimes \mathbb {Z} (n)</fr:tex>.
      Depending on the context, we also denote by <fr:tex>(n)</fr:tex> taking the tensor product with a realisation of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (n)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p><fr:p>
      If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth and projective over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and absolutely irreducible of dimension <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^{2n}(X)</fr:tex> is the motive over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> induced from <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (-n)</fr:tex> by change of base from <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>731</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For an abelian variety <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, we denote by <fr:tex>T(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> the motive <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _1^ \mathrm {mot} (A)</fr:tex> that is dual to <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^1(A)</fr:tex>, and by <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex> the motive with integer coefficients defined by the integer structure <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _1(A( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Z} ) \subset \operatorname {H} _1(A( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} )=(T(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    
    The functor <fr:tex>A \mapsto  T(A)</fr:tex> is fully faithful: from <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex> we can recover <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} (A)=T(A)_ { \mathrm {DR}} {/}F^0</fr:tex> and the complex torus
    <fr:tex
display="block">       A( \mathbb {C} )       = T(A)_ { \mathrm {B}} \setminus \operatorname {Lie} (A)       = T(A)_ { \mathrm {B}} \setminus  T(A)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} {/}F^0.     </fr:tex>
    The complex torus <fr:tex>A( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> determines the abelian variety <fr:tex>A_ \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>, and the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure is uniquely determined by that of the Lie algebra.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    An abelian scheme <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> similarly defines a smooth motive with integer coefficients <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>732</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Recall that a <fr:em>smooth <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive</fr:em> <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over a scheme <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> consists of

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        a group scheme <fr:tex>L</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> that, locally, for the étale topology, is a constant group scheme defined by a free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-module of finite type;
        an abelian scheme <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, and a torus <fr:tex>T</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        an extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>T</fr:tex>, and a morphism <fr:tex>\bar {u} \colon  L \to  A</fr:tex>;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
        a morphism <fr:tex>u \colon  L \to  E</fr:tex> lifting <fr:tex>\bar {u}</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p><fr:p>
    We write <fr:tex>X=[L \xrightarrow {u}E]</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    A <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> defines a motive over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> with integer coefficients <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="D3.xml"
type="local"
addr="D3">D3</fr:link>, Section 10, but the crystalline aspect is missing]), and the functor <fr:tex>X \mapsto  T(X)</fr:tex> is fully faithful (cf. [<fr:link
href="D3.xml"
type="local"
addr="D3">D3</fr:link>, both 10.1.3 and 2.2]).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For <fr:tex>X=[ \mathbb {Z} \to0 ]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> is the unit motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>X=[0 \to \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} ]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> is the Tate motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex>.
    For an abelian variety <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>X=[0 \to  A]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>T(X)=T(A)</fr:tex>.
    Of course, here, as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.2"
href="minus-three-points-2.2.xml"
number="2.2"></fr:ref>, we can take more general bases than <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>733</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    I conjecture that the set of motives with integer coefficients of the form <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> for some <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is stable under extensions.
    If <fr:tex>T'</fr:tex> is a motive with integer coefficients, with <fr:tex>T' \otimes \mathbb {Q} \xrightarrow { \sim }  T(X) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>T'</fr:tex> is of the form <fr:tex>T(X')</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>X'</fr:tex> isogenous to <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
    The conjecture is thus equivalent to the claim that the set of motives <fr:tex>T(X) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, for <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motives <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, is stable under extensions.
    The word "conjecture" is an abuse of terminology, since the statement itself is not precise.
    What is conjectured is that every realisation system <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> (or <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref>, over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>) that is an extension <fr:tex>T(X)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>T(Y)</fr:tex> (for <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motives <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>Y</fr:tex>), and "natural", "coming from geometry", is isomorphic to that defined by a <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>Z</fr:tex> that is an extension of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>Y</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    A point <fr:tex>a</fr:tex> of an abelian variety <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> defines a <fr:tex>1</fr:tex>-motive <fr:tex>[ \mathbb {Z} \xrightarrow {u}A]</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>u(1)=a</fr:tex>.
    The motive <fr:tex>T([ \mathbb {Z} \xrightarrow {u}A])</fr:tex> is an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex>, and the conjecture, applied to <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>T(A)</fr:tex>, implies that
    <fr:tex
display="block">       A( \mathbb {Q} )  \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Z} (0),T(A))     </fr:tex>
    or, equivalently,
    <fr:tex
display="block">       A( \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes \mathbb {Q}   \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Q} (0),T(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q} )     </fr:tex>
    (where <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1</fr:tex> is in the abelian category of motives).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    More generally, if <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is an extension of an abelian variety by a torus, we want
    <fr:tex
display="block">       E( \mathbb {Q} )  \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Z} (0),T(E))     </fr:tex>
    and similarly for more general bases that <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The case <fr:tex>E= \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex> is particularly interesting: for every smooth scheme <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>, we want, in the category of motives with integer coefficients over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>,

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>631</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equations</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.4.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.4.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.4.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \Gamma (S, \mathcal {O} _S^ \times )  \xrightarrow { \sim }   \operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Z} (0), \mathbb {Z} (1)).       \tag{2.4.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>734</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> be a realisation system <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref>.
    We spell out what a realisation system <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> given by an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is, when <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is of weight <fr:tex>\leqslant-1</fr:tex> (i.e. <fr:tex>M=W_{-1}(M)</fr:tex>).
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>530</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is an extension <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \to  E_ { \mathrm {B}} \xrightarrow {u} \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
      Its data is equivalent to that of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \coloneqq  u^{-1}(1)</fr:tex>, endowed with its structure as a torsor (principal homogeneous space) for <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>m \in  M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> acts on <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> via <fr:tex>p \mapsto  p+m</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>531</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m2p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m2p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M2P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a torsor <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>532</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m3p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m3p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M3P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>E_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a torsor <fr:tex>P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>533</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m4p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m4p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M4P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>E_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a torsor <fr:tex>P_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>534</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m5p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m5p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M5P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The comparison morphisms for <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> can be identified with comparison morphisms <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p \xrightarrow { \sim }  P_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> that are compatible with the analogous morphisms for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>.

      <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>392</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-m5p</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>, see <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-0.4"
href="minus-three-points-0.4.xml"
number="0.4"></fr:ref>.
        </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>535</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m6p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m6p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M6P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Since <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is, by hypothesis, of weight <fr:tex>\leqslant-1</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> is of pure weight <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, the weight filtration of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is determined by that of <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>W_0(E)=E</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>W_i(E)=W_i(E)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>i&lt;0</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>536</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m7p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m7p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M7P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of an involution of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> that is compatible with that of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
      Axiom <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is that this involution is induced by the <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>-antilinear involution of <fr:tex>P_{ { \mathrm {B}} , \mathbb {C} }= \mathbb {P} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} }</fr:tex> with fixed points <fr:tex>P_{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {R} }</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>537</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m8p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m8p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M8P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of the Hodge filtration of <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of the intersection <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>F^0E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, which is a torsor for <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>: for <fr:tex>p&gt;0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F^pE_ { \mathrm {DR}} =F^pM_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>; for <fr:tex>p=0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F^0E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is generated by <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>; and for <fr:tex>p&lt;0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F^pE_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is the sum of <fr:tex>F^0E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F^pM_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
      In other words, the data <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is that of a reduction of the structure group of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, from <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p><fr:p>
      The data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m1">(M1)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m2">(M2)</fr:link>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} {/} { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link> are equivalent to the data of a torsor <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> and, in the <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> torsor <fr:tex>P_{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} }</fr:tex> which is induced by <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  P_{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \mathbb {C} }</fr:tex> that is an <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>538</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m9p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m9p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M9P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>E_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of an action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, which makes <fr:tex>P_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> an equivariant <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>539</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m10p</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m10p.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M10P</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.5</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Similarly, the automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> corresponds to an automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> such that
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p(x+m)         =  \phi _p(x) +  \phi _p(m).       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We leave to the reader the task of translating axioms <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am5">(AM5)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>.
    We note only that <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link> follow from the same axioms for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, and that <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am5">(AM5)</fr:link> can be expressed at best as functoriality in <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>738</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
      A system of torsors, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1P"
type="external">(M1)P</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m10P"
type="external">(M10)P</fr:link> in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.5"
href="minus-three-points-2.5.xml"
number="2.5"></fr:ref>, that satisfies the conditions required in order to define an extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> by a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is called a <fr:em>torsor in realisation systems</fr:em>.
    </html:li>


    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
      If <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is a motive, then the torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is <fr:em>motivic</fr:em> (or a <fr:em>torsor in motives</fr:em>) if the extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> is a motive.
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>739</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> be a realisation system with integer coefficients.
    An <fr:em>extension</fr:em> <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is an extension <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, endowed with an integer structure such that the sequence <fr:tex>0 \to  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \to  E_ { \mathrm {B}} \to \mathbb {Z} \to0</fr:tex> is exact.

    As in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.5"
href="minus-three-points-2.5.xml"
number="2.5"></fr:ref>, such an extension is described by a system of torsors.
    
    As in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.25"
href="minus-three-points-1.25.xml"
number="1.25"></fr:ref>, this corresponds to modifying <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.5"
href="minus-three-points-2.5.xml"
number="2.5"></fr:ref> as follows:
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>633</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1pz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1pz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1PZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>-torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>634</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m39pz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m39pz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M3PZ,M9PZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>P_ \ell</fr:tex> is, for each <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, a <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>-equivariant <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>-torsor.
      Giving a projective system of equivariant <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex>-torsors <fr:tex>P_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> is equivalent to giving their projective limit <fr:tex>P_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }</fr:tex>, which is an equivariant <fr:tex>M_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }</fr:tex>-torsor.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>635</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m5pz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m5pz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M5PZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.7</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Replace <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> for each <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, or <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, or <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    Such a system of torsors, which defines an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (0)</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>, is also called a <fr:em>torsor for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex></fr:em>.
    It is said to be <fr:em>motivic</fr:em> if the corresponding extension is, i.e. if the torsor for <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> that it defines is motivic.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>741</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We leave to the reader the task of understanding the constructions with bases <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> more general than <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    We note only that, in the de Rham realisation, <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>-torsor on <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    It is endowed with a restriction of the structure group <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \subset  P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>F^0M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    It is also endowed with an integrable connection <fr:tex>\nabla</fr:tex>.
    Along each section <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, the vertical tangent space can be identified with <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>;
    the connection <fr:tex>\nabla</fr:tex> is thus a morphism
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \nabla \colon  P_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to \Omega ^1 \otimes  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} .     </fr:tex>
    It satisfies <fr:tex>\nabla (p+m)= \nabla  p+ \nabla  m</fr:tex>.
    Transversality becomes the following:

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>740</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.8.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.8.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.8.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2.8</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
        For a local section <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>F^0P_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\nabla  p \in \Omega ^1 \otimes  F^{-1}(M_ { \mathrm {DR}} )</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>742</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.9</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.9.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.9</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We explicitly describe the torsor in motives <fr:tex>K(x)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> (the <fr:em>Kummer torsor</fr:em>) corresponding to <fr:tex>x \in \mathbb {Q} ^ \times</fr:tex> as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.4.1"
href="minus-three-points-2.4.1.xml"
taxon="Equations"
number="2.4.1"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is the torsor for <fr:tex>2 \pi  i \mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> of logarithms of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>.
    Since <fr:tex>F^0 \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>, we have <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(n)(1)</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(x)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> is the torsor of <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-th roots of unity of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>.
    The transition morphisms <fr:tex>K(x)/_{ \mathbb {Z} (nm)} \to  K(x)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> are given by <fr:tex>y \mapsto  y^m</fr:tex>.
    The Galois action is evident.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The morphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is induced by the inclusion of <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    The morphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n), { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is induced by <fr:tex>K(x)_ { \mathrm {B}} \to  K(x)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> given by <fr:tex>z \mapsto \exp (z/n)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The crystalline Frobenius <fr:tex>\phi _p \colon  K(x)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p \to  K(x)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, i.e. <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p \to \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, is defined for <fr:tex>x</fr:tex> a unit at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
    We denote by <fr:tex>\log</fr:tex> the <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>-adic logarithm, which is characterised by
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \phi _p^{-1}(0)       =  \log (x^{1-p}).     </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>743</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-2.10</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-2.10.xml</fr:route><fr:number>2.10</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-2</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    On <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} = \operatorname {Spec} \mathbb {Z} [q,q^{-1}]</fr:tex>, the universal section <fr:tex>q</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex> also defines a torsor in motives <fr:tex>K(q)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex>, on the base <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex>.
    We now describe it.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>C^ \times</fr:tex> is the local system of logarithms of <fr:tex>q</fr:tex>.
    Since <fr:tex>F^0 \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} =0</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is trivial: <fr:tex>K(n)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathcal {O}</fr:tex> (on <fr:tex>{ \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} }_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>).
    It is endowed with the integrable connection <fr:tex>\nabla \colon  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to \Omega ^1 \otimes \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \Omega ^1</fr:tex> given by
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \nabla  u       =  \operatorname {d}  u -  \frac { \operatorname {d}  q}{q}.     </fr:tex>
    The <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(n)(1)</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>K(q)_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> is that of the <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>-th roots of <fr:tex>q</fr:tex>.
    This is a locally constant sheaf on <fr:tex>( \mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m} \otimes \mathbb {Z} [1/n])_ \mathrm {et}</fr:tex>.
    Transition and comparison morphisms are defined as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.9"
href="minus-three-points-2.9.xml"
number="2.9"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We now explain what the <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-crystal structure is at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
    Let <fr:tex>G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge</fr:tex> be the completion of <fr:tex>\mathbb {G}_ \mathrm {m}</fr:tex> along its fibre of characteristic <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> the corresponding rigid analytic space.
    For a Frobenius lifting <fr:tex>\widetilde {F} \colon G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge \to G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge</fr:tex>, the crystalline Frobenius is a morphism <fr:tex>\phi _p [ \widetilde {F} ]</fr:tex>, over <fr:tex>G_ \mathrm {m}^ \wedge \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, from <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}^ \bullet  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> that is horizontal and compatible with the torsor structures.
    If we change <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'</fr:tex> have the same reduction modulo <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, the connection <fr:tex>\nabla</fr:tex> gives an isomorphism of <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}^ \bullet  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet } K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, and the diagram
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {CD}          \widetilde {F}^ \bullet  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}  @&gt;{ \phi _p [ \widetilde {F} ] }&gt;&gt; K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}         \\ @| @|        \\ \widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet } K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}  @&gt;&gt;{ \phi _p [ \widetilde {F}' ] }&gt; K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}         \end {CD}     </fr:tex>
    commutes.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In terms of <fr:tex>\phi _p^{-1} \colon  K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}} \to \widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet } K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, and via the identifications <fr:tex>K(q)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathbb {Z} (1)_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \mathcal {O}</fr:tex>, whence <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}'^{ \bullet }= \mathcal {O}</fr:tex>, the compatibility with the torsor structures and with the connections can be written as
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}          \phi _p^{-1}(k+m)         &amp;=  \phi _p^{-1}(k) + pm        \\ \operatorname {d} \phi _p^{-1}(0)         &amp;=  \widetilde {F}^ \bullet \left ( \frac { \operatorname {d}  q}{q} \right ) - p \frac { \operatorname {d}  q}{q}.        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    When we change the Frobenius lifting, we have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \phi _p^{-1} [ \widetilde {F}' ] (0) -  \phi _p^{-1} [ \widetilde {F} ] (0)       =  \log ( \widetilde {F}'/ \widetilde {F}).     </fr:tex>
    For <fr:tex>\widetilde {F} \colon  q \mapsto  q^p</fr:tex>, we have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \phi _p^{-1} [ q \mapsto  q^p ] (0)       = 0.     </fr:tex>
    
    For <fr:tex>x \in \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> a unit at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>\widetilde {F}(x)=x</fr:tex>, we thus have <fr:tex>\phi _p^{-1} [ \widetilde {F} ] (0)= \log (x/x^p)</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>, as required by <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-2.9"
href="minus-three-points-2.9.xml"
number="2.9"></fr:ref></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1194</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-introduction.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Introduction</fr:title><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
  The present article owes much to A. Grothendieck.
  He invented the philosophy of motives, which is our guiding thread.
  Around five years ago, he also said to me, with conviction, that the profinite completion <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> of the fundamental group of <fr:tex>X \coloneqq \mathbb {P} ^1( \mathbb {C} ) \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>, with the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, is a remarkable object, and that it must be studied.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Every finite cover of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> can be described by equations with coefficients in the algebraic numbers.
  Applying an element of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> to these coefficients, we obtain the equations of another cover.
  Understanding how <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> permutes the isomorphism classes of finite covers essentially reduces to understanding the Galois action on <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex>.
  "Essentially", since I have omitted mentioning the base points, and since the Galois covers have not been thought of as <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-covers, for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> their automorphism group.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Up until now, we have not had the language necessary to study the Galois action on <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex>.
  A. Grothendieck and his students have developed a combinatorial description ("charts") of finite covers of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, based on a decomposition of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> into the two "spherical triangles" <fr:tex>\Im (z) \geqslant0</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\Im (z) \leqslant0</fr:tex>, with sides <fr:tex>[ \infty ,0]</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>[0,1]</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>[1, \infty ]</fr:tex>.
  This has not helped in understanding the Galois action.
  We have only a few unresolved examples of covers whose Galois conjugates have been calculated.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In this article, we only consider when <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> is rendered nilpotent, i.e. quotients <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> by the subgroups of its decreasing central series.
  The profinite group <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}</fr:tex> is a product over primes <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex> of nilpotent pro-<fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-groups: <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)} =  \prod _ \ell   \hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}{}_ \ell</fr:tex>.
  Each <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}{}_ \ell</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic Lie group.
  It admits a Lie algebra <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \hat { \pi }_1^{(N)}{}_ \ell</fr:tex>, which is a Lie algebra over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>.
  If we choose a base point <fr:tex>x \in  X( \mathbb {Q} )= \mathbb {Q} \setminus \{ 0,1 \}</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> acts on these Lie algebras.
  The action, up to inner automorphism, does not depend on the choice of <fr:tex>x</fr:tex>.
  We would like to understand these actions.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  The nilpotent versions of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> are very close to cohomology.
  This is most visible in the theory of D. Sullivan [<fr:link
href="Su.xml"
type="local"
addr="Su">Su</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Mo.xml"
type="local"
addr="Mo">Mo</fr:link>].

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>259</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For <fr:tex>\Gamma</fr:tex> a finitely generated group, let <fr:tex>Z^i \Gamma</fr:tex> be the decreasing central series, let <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{(N)}= \Gamma {/}Z^{N+1} \Gamma</fr:tex>, and let <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{[N]}= \Gamma ^{(N)}/ \mathrm {torsion}</fr:tex> [minus-three-points-9.3].
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

  The theory of Malcev [<fr:link
href="Mal.xml"
type="local"
addr="Mal">Mal</fr:link>] attaches a nilpotent Lie algebra over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, denoted <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex>, to <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex>, such that <fr:tex>\Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex> is a congruence subgroup of the unipotent algebraic group over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> of the Lie algebra <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \Gamma ^{[N]}</fr:tex>.
  By D. Sullivan, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is a differentiable manifold, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X)^{[N]} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> is determined, up to inner automorphism, by the differential-graded algebra <fr:tex>\Omega _X^ \bullet</fr:tex>, taken up to quasi-isomorphism.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  This close relation with cohomology hints that the study of nilpotent versions of <fr:tex>\hat { \pi }_1</fr:tex> is far from the "anabelian" dream of A. Grothendieck.
  It allows us, however, to use his philosophy of motives.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Let <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> be a number field.
  If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is an algebraic variety over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then we have a whole series of parallel cohomology theories for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>: the classical cohomology of <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> (for each complex embedding of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>), crystalline cohomology (which is equal to de Rham cohomology if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth), <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology, ...
  The groups thus obtained are endowed with various additional structures (mixed Hodge, Galois action, ...) and are linked by comparison isomorphism.
  In [minus-three-points-1], we axiomatise the situation by defining "realisation systems over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>".
  The exact definition is not to be taken seriously: considering the applications — and what we are capable of doing — it could be wise to either add or remove data as much as axioms.
  The essential, for us, is that

  
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
      The category of realisation systems is endowed with a <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex> satisfying the usual properties: it is a Tannakian category over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    </html:li>

    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
      ii. Conjecturally, the category of motives is a full subcategory of the category of realisation systems.
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>


  Condition (ii) requires, in particular, that, for every variety <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> and for every <fr:tex>i</fr:tex>, the available cohomology theories, applied to <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, give a realisation system <fr:tex>H^i(X)</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> (which we will denote by <fr:tex>H^i(X)_ \mathrm {mot}</fr:tex>, and call the motivic <fr:tex>H^i</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>).
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Analogous ideas have been independently developed by U. Jannsen [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>].
  In [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>], U. Jannsen defines (mixed) motives over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> as constituting the Tannakian subcategory (of the category of realisation systems) generated by the <fr:tex>H^i(X)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and quasi-projective.
  Here we are still being imprecise, saying that a motive over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is a realisation system "of geometric origin".
  For <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>x \in  X(k)</fr:tex>, we want, for example, to regard <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X( \mathbb {C} ),x)^{[N]}</fr:tex> as a realisation of a motive over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  This article owes much to an unpublished work of Z. Wojtkoviak.
  For <fr:tex>X= \mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>x \in  X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>, I proposed to him a definition of the mixed Hodge structure of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X( \mathbb {C} ),x)^{[N]}</fr:tex>.
  He calculated it in part, for small <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>, and, to my extreme surprise, show that, for <fr:tex>N=4</fr:tex>, its description involves <fr:tex>\zeta (3)</fr:tex>.
  A decanted form of the calculations appear in [minus-three-points-19].
  In fact, the whole article originates from my desire to understand the result of Z. Wojtkoviak.
  
  I have also been helped by the answer by O. Gabber to my question "How can we construct an extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell (3)</fr:tex>, uniformly in <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>?": "By a class in <fr:tex>K_5( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>", as well as by the conjectures of A. Beilinson on the values of <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>-functions.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is an algebraic variety over a number field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>x \in  X(k)</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> an integer, then we want to have a realisation system <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
  We can only succeed in constructing this under additional hypotheses on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>: in the general case, certain realisations are missing.
  The case of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1</fr:tex> minus some points — more generally, of smooth rational varieties — is nonetheless covered.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Let <fr:tex>k= \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>X= \mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>x \in  X( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  The associated graded algebra for the weight filtration of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> is the free Lie algebra on <fr:tex>H_1(X)_ \mathrm {mot}</fr:tex>, modulo its <fr:tex>Z^{N+1}</fr:tex> (decreasing central series).
  <fr:tex>H_1(X)_ \mathrm {mot}</fr:tex> is the sum of two copies of the Tate motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (1)</fr:tex>.
  We thus deduce that <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> is an iterated extension of Tate motives <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (n)</fr:tex>.
  The fact that non-trivial extensions appear is what gives it its charm.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  I conjecture that, over a number field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, the group of motivic extensions of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (n)</fr:tex> (for <fr:tex>n&gt;0</fr:tex>) is <fr:tex>K_{2n-1}(k) \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  For a general framework into which we can place this conjecture, see [<fr:link
href="B.xml"
type="local"
addr="B">B</fr:link>, §5].
  In particular, for <fr:tex>k= \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, we want <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Q} , \mathbb {Q} (n))</fr:tex> to be zero for <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> even, and of dimension <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>n \geqslant3</fr:tex> odd.
  This is the motivic <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1</fr:tex>: extensions as realisation systems that "come from algebraic geometry".
  This conjecture places severe restrictions on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>, which are far from having been verified.
  What we know concerns, up to now, only the quotient by the second derived group.
  A large part of this article is dedicated to developing a language in which the consequences of the conjecture affecting <fr:tex>\operatorname {Lie} \pi _1(X,x)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> can be clearly stated.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  We now go through this article, pointing out several shortcuts.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-1], we describe the category of realisation systems over a base <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
  The base <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> can be: <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {F} )</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>\mathbb {F}</fr:tex> a number field, an open subset of the spectrum of the ring of integers of a number field, or smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
  In this category, the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> are <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces.
  We also define a notion of integer structure;
  in the category of realisation systems with integer coefficients (= endowed with an integer structure), the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> are free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-modules of finite type.
  The definition has a crystalline component.
  The reader is invited to ignore this for a first approximation.
  The theory coincides with that of U. Jannsen [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>].
  The crystalline aspect will be neglected in the rest of the introduction.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-2] we give examples.
  We also explain what an extension of the unit realisation system <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> by a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> with integer coefficients is.

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>263</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Terminology</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M</fr:tex>-torsor, or torsor under <fr:tex>M</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>264</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Example</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      the Kummer <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex>-torsor, where <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (1)</fr:tex> is the Tate motive.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-3] we describe certain remarkable torsors, which can be said to be cyclotomic, for the Tate motive <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex>.
  [minus-three-points-16] explains how these torsors naturally appear in the study of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>.
  The description here is direct, but unmotivated.
  The claim that some of these torsors are of finite order ([minus-three-points-3.5], [minus-three-points-3.14]) lets us recover the known formulas expressing the Dirichlet <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>-functions in negative integers as integrals of distributions over <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex> with values in <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex>: a version of Kummer congruences.
  In [minus-three-points-18], we prove [minus-three-points-3.5] and [minus-three-points-3.14] using the geometric interpretation of [minus-three-points-16].
  In [minus-three-points-3], we give a direct proof, by using the known formulas for <fr:tex>L( \chi ,1-k)</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>[minus-three-points-4] is a pot-pourri of reminders on Ind-objects and pro-objects.
  The reader is invited to consult this only when needed.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  We want to give a motivic meaning to an assertion like the following: the fundamental group of <fr:tex>\mathbb {P} ^1( \mathbb {C} ) \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex> (at the base point <fr:tex>b</fr:tex>) is freely generated by the following loops:

  <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>265</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Figure</fr:taxon><fr:number>1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-introduction</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
  <fr:embedded-tex
hash="ed735291b9640a90622c0ca55f8b1da5"><fr:embedded-tex-preamble>\usepackage {tikz}</fr:embedded-tex-preamble><fr:embedded-tex-body>\begin {tikzpicture} 
       \node [label=below:{$b$}] at (0,0) {$ \bullet $};
       \node [label={[label distance=-3mm]below right:{ \scriptsize $1$}}] at (3,1) {$ \bullet $};
       \node [label={[label distance=-3mm]below right:{ \scriptsize $0$}}] at (-3,1) {$ \bullet $};
       \draw [thick,domain=-20:130,-&gt;] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )-3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick,domain=130:310] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )-3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick,domain=-130:-50,-&gt;] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )+3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick,domain=-50:200] plot ({0.5*cos( \x )+3}, {0.5*sin( \x )+1});
       \draw [thick] (0,0.125) to (-2.52,0.84);
       \draw [thick] (0,0.125) to (2.52,0.84);
       \draw [thick] (0,-0.125) to (-2.69,0.61);
       \draw [thick] (0,-0.125) to (2.69,0.61);
     \end {tikzpicture}</fr:embedded-tex-body></fr:embedded-tex>
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
  The purpose of [minus-three-points-5], [minus-three-points-7], and [minus-three-points-15] is to construct the language which allows us to do this.
  This consists of

  
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
      giving a motivic meaning to <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,x)^{(N)}</fr:tex>, not only to its Lie algebra;
    </html:li>

    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
      giving a motivic meaning to the torsor (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-0.6"
href="minus-three-points-0.6.xml"
number="0.6"></fr:ref>) of homotopy classes of paths from <fr:tex>b_1</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>b_2</fr:tex>;
    </html:li>

    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
      in Figure 1 above, the "monodromy around <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>" loop is only unambiguously determined for <fr:tex>b</fr:tex> "close to <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>"; we must define what it means for a base point to be "close to <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>".
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>


  
  Our solution will be to define a motivic linear group as being an Ind-object in the category of motives, endowed with the structure of a commutative Hopf algebra.
  To avoid speculation: consider the group in realisation systems, and replace "motive" by "realisation system".
  There is an analogous definition for torsors for a group.
  We separately define a notion of "integer" structures.
  This definition has the advantage that the standard constructions in algebraic geometry (decreasing central series, quotients, pushing forward a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor by <fr:tex>G \to  H</fr:tex>, twisting by a torsor, ...) all translate automatically to the motivic case.
  This, in an arbitrary Tannakian category, is explained in [minus-three-points-5].
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-7], we reinterpret these definitions in a language that is closer to that of our applications.
  The reader who is displeased by the general nonsense of [minus-three-points-5] and [minus-three-points-7] can take the interpretations given in [minus-three-points-7] as the definition of groups, torsors, ... in realisation systems.
  Drawback: every standard construction must be redefined in this case.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In the classical definition of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, the role of the base point <fr:tex>b</fr:tex> can be played by a contractible subset <fr:tex>B</fr:tex>.
  It can also be played by a filter <fr:tex>\mathcal {B}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> whose base if given by contractible subsets.
  For example, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is a Riemann surface <fr:tex>\overline {X}</fr:tex> minus a point <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> is a non-zero tangent vector at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>, with <fr:tex>z</fr:tex> being a local coordinates centred at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>, then we can take the contractible subsets
  <fr:tex
display="block">     0&lt; |z/v| &lt;  \varepsilon ,      \quad      | \arg (z/v)|&lt; \eta    </fr:tex>
  
  <fr:embedded-tex
hash="4c81549d37f6f2ff8942bad2db7cd714"><fr:embedded-tex-preamble>\usepackage {tikz}</fr:embedded-tex-preamble><fr:embedded-tex-body>\begin {tikzpicture} 
     \node [label={below:{$s$}}] at (0,0) {$ \bullet $};
     \draw [thick,-latex] (0,0) to (0,2) node [label={above:{$v$}}] {};
     \draw  (0,0) to (50:1.5);
     \draw  (0,0) to (130:1.5);
     \draw  [domain=50:130] plot ({1.5*cos( \x )}, {1.5*sin( \x )});
   \end {tikzpicture}</fr:embedded-tex-body></fr:embedded-tex>


  The filter <fr:tex>\mathcal {B}(v)</fr:tex> that they generate is independent of the chosen coordinate.
  By this construction, a non-zero tangent vector at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex> can act as a base point in the definition of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  The same phenomenon occurs in the profinite theory of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, and in the "de Rham" theory.
  Be aware that <fr:tex>\mathcal {B}(v)= \mathcal {B}( \lambda  v)</fr:tex> for real <fr:tex>\lambda &gt;0</fr:tex>, but that this fact has no analogue in the other theories.
  There constructions are explained in [minus-three-points-15].
  
  They allow us, in the definition of the motivic <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, to take a base point "at infinity", like the tangent vector <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>s</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  Let <fr:tex>X= \mathbb {P} ^1 \setminus \{ 0,1, \infty \}</fr:tex>.
  An algebraic meaning of "base point close to <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>" is "non-zero tangent vector at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>".
  For such a base point <fr:tex>b</fr:tex>, the monodromy around <fr:tex>0</fr:tex> has a motivic meaning: it is a morphism of motivic groups
  <fr:tex
display="block">      \mathbb {Z} (1)  \to   \pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} .   </fr:tex>
  Here and later on, <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> is the pro-unipotent <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, defined as the projective limit of the motivic groups <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  We take the base point to be the tangent vector <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>.
  We have a good reduction <fr:tex>\mod  p</fr:tex> for every <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex> is a linear group in the Tannakian category of motives over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex> that are iterated extensions of Tate motives.
  [minus-three-points-8] states a conjecture on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1( \mathbb {Q} , \mathbb {Q} (k))</fr:tex> in this category, as well as some consequences.
  At the end of [minus-three-points-16], we make these explicit in the case of <fr:tex>\pi _1(X,b)_ \mathrm {mot} ^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
  I hope that this places the <fr:tex>\zeta (3)</fr:tex> discovered by Z. Wojtkoviak in its natural setting.
  [minus-three-points-6] is preliminary.
  For the essential idea, see [minus-three-points-6.2].
</fr:p><fr:p>
  To define the motivic <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex>, we need to patch together the various theories of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> that we have at our disposal, guided by the goal of constructing a motivic group in the sense of [minus-three-points-5], explained in [minus-three-points-7].
  This is done in [minus-three-points-10] to [minus-three-points-13], after a reminder ([minus-three-points-9]) on the Malčev theory of nilpotent groups and their Lie algebras.
  The result leaves much to be desired.
  It is only completely studied for smooth algebraic varieties whose smooth compactifications <fr:tex>\overline {X}</fr:tex> satisfy <fr:tex>H^1( \overline {X}, \mathcal {O} )=0</fr:tex>.
  Another complaint: I sometimes only sketch the definition of structures that will be used in future calculations.
</fr:p><fr:p>
  In [minus-three-points-16], we finally explain what the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} (k)</fr:tex>-torsors from [minus-three-points-3] have to do with the <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> of the projective line minus three points.
  The justifying calculations are given in [minus-three-points-19].
  We give, in [minus-three-points-17] and [minus-three-points-18], a geometric explanation of some of their properties.
</fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1195</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Mixed motives</fr:title><fr:number>1</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>412</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For algebraic varieties, we have various parallel cohomology theories.
    The most important for us will be de Rham and <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology.
  </fr:p><fr:ul><fr:li><fr:strong>De Rham cohomology.</fr:strong>
      Let <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> be a field of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> an algebraic variety over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
      Suppose that <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth.
      The de Rham cohomology groups <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)</fr:tex> are the hypercohomology groups of the de Rham complex:
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)          \coloneqq   \mathbb {H} ^i(X, \Omega _{X/k}^ \bullet )       </fr:tex>
      cf. [<fr:link
href="G.xml"
type="local"
addr="G">G</fr:link>].
      These are vector spaces over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
      If <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is an extension of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>X'</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is given by extension of scalars of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, then
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X')         =  \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X) \otimes _k k'.       </fr:tex>
      If <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is not smooth, then the de Rham complex no longer gives a reasonable theory.
      We can define the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)</fr:tex> by reduction to the smooth case, by the methods of [<fr:link
href="D3.xml"
type="local"
addr="D3">D3</fr:link>], or, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> admits an embedding into a smooth variety <fr:tex>Z</fr:tex>, as the hypercohomology of the de Rham complex of the formal completion of <fr:tex>Z</fr:tex> along <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> (R. Hartshorne, <fr:em>On the de Rham cohomology of algebraic varieties</fr:em>, Publ. Math. IHÉS <fr:strong>45</fr:strong> (1975), p. 5–99);
      more intrinsically, it is the crystalline cohomology of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> (A. Grothendieck, <fr:em>Crystals and the de Rham cohomology of schemes</fr:em>, Notes by J. Coates and O. Jussila, in: "Dix exposés sur la cohomologie des schémas", North Holland (1968)).
    </fr:li>

    <fr:li><fr:strong><fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology.</fr:strong>
      Let <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex> be a prime number;
      if <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is an algebraically closed field of characteristic <fr:tex>\neq \ell</fr:tex>, then we have the <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic theory <fr:tex>X \mapsto \operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex> that associates, to <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, cohomology groups which are vector spaces over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> (cf. SGA 5, VI).
      They are defined from the cohomology groups with coefficients in <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}( \ell ^n)</fr:tex>, and we allow ourselves to give, as reference for a theorem in <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic cohomology, the place where its <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}( \ell ^n)</fr:tex> analogue is proved.
      The <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex> depend only on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
      In particular, if <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>k_0</fr:tex>, and if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is given by extension of scalars of some <fr:tex>X_0</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k_0</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} (k/k_0)</fr:tex> acts (semi-<fr:tex>k</fr:tex>-linearly) on <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, and thus acts on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex>.
      This action is continuous.
      If <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is an algebraically closed extension of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and if <fr:tex>X'</fr:tex> is given by extension of scalars of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell ) \xrightarrow { \sim } \operatorname {H} ^i(X', \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex>.
      
      This follows by passing to the limit in the base change theorem for a smooth morphism [SGA 4, XVI, 1.2]: <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is the filtrant inductive limit of the <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>-algebras <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (A)</fr:tex> smooth over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
    </fr:li></fr:ul><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>k= \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, then we have the topological space <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> of points of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, as well as its rational cohomology <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^ \bullet (X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    We have canonical isomorphisms from [<fr:link
href="G.xml"
type="local"
addr="G">G</fr:link>] and [SGA4, XVI, 4.1]:

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>251</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)         =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {C}        \tag{1.1.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>252</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} ^i(X, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )         =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {Q} _ \ell .       \tag{1.1.2}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> is a field of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\sigma \colon  k \to \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> a complex embedding, with <fr:tex>\bar {k}</fr:tex> the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> via <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex>, then we obtain the isomorphisms

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>253</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X) \otimes _{k, \sigma } \mathbb {C}          =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {C}        \tag{1.1.3}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>254</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} ^i(X \otimes \bar {k}, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )         =  \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} ) \otimes _{ \mathbb {Q} } \mathbb {Q} _ \ell        \tag{1.1.4}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    where <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> is the topological space of points of the complex algebraic variety given by the extension of scalars via <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The existence of parallel cohomology theories lead A. Grothendieck to conjecture the existence, for all base fields <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, of a motivic theory <fr:tex>X \mapsto \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, defined on algebraic varieties (i.e. schemes of finite type) over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> and with values in a category <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> (to be defined) of motives over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>.
    The known theories would then be deduced from the motivic theory by applying <fr:em>realisation</fr:em> functors.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The category <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> should be an abelian category, with <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> groups of finite dimension over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    It should be endowed with a tensor product <fr:tex>\otimes \colon \mathcal {M}(k) \times \mathcal {M}(k) \to \mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> and associativity and commutative data <fr:tex>(X \otimes  Y) \otimes  Z \xrightarrow { \sim }  X \otimes (Y \otimes  Z)</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>X \otimes  Y \to  Y \otimes  X</fr:tex> satisfying the usual properties
    — more precisely, making <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> into a Tannakian category [<fr:link
href="Sa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Sa">Sa</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="DM.xml"
type="local"
addr="DM">DM</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="D4.xml"
type="local"
addr="D4">D4</fr:link>].
    By the theory of Tannakian categories, <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> would be the category of representations of a gerbe whose band is affine over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, the category <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> with its tensor product should be equivalent to the category of representations of an scheme in affine groups (i.e. a pro-algebraically affine group) over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Each <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> would be a contravariant functor in <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>.
    We should also have Künneth isomorphisms

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>255</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.1.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.1.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.1.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X \times  Y)          \simeq   \bigoplus _{i=j+k}  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y)       \tag{1.1.5}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    
    giving rise to commutative diagrams
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {CD}          \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X \times  Y) @&gt; \longleftarrow &gt;&gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(Y \times  X)        \\ @VVV @VVV        \\ \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y) @&gt;&gt;{(-i)^{jk}}&gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X)        \end {CD}     </fr:tex>
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {CD}          \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i((X \times  Y) \times  Z) @&gt; \longleftarrow &gt;&gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X \times (Y \times  X))        \\ @VVV @VVV        \\ ( \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y)) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^ \ell (Z) @&gt;&gt; \longleftarrow &gt;  \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^j(X) \otimes ( \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^k(Y) \otimes \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^ \ell (Z)).        \end {CD}     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    Each of the known cohomological theories should give rise to a "realisation" functor, compatible with the tensor product.
    For example, for <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> of characteristic <fr:tex>0</fr:tex>, we would have
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {real} _ { \mathrm {DR}} \colon \mathcal {M}(k)        \to   \text {vector spaces over }k     </fr:tex>
    and, for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> an algebraic variety over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, a functorial isomorphism
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X)       =  \operatorname {real} _ { \mathrm {DR}} \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)     </fr:tex>
    compatible with the Künneth isomorphisms.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The subcategory of <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> <fr:em>generated</fr:em> by a set <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}</fr:tex> of motives is defined to be the smallest full subcategory of <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex> containing <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}</fr:tex> that is stable under <fr:tex>\oplus</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>, taking the dual, and sub-quotients.
    If we only consider certain algebraic varieties <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then it can be useful to consider, instead of <fr:tex>\mathcal {M}(k)</fr:tex>, the subcategory generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>413</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    If we only consider smooth and projective varieties over a field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and we assume the "standard" conjectures on algebraic cycles, then Grothendieck has shown how to define the category of motives generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="Kl.xml"
type="local"
addr="Kl">Kl</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Man.xml"
type="local"
addr="Man">Man</fr:link>]);
    it is a semi-simple abelian category.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    If we do not restrict ourselves to the category generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and projective over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then we no longer have even a conjectural definition of what the category of motives over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex> should be.
    However, the philosophy of motives is not made any less useful by this fact:
    it organises known facts, poses questions, and suggests precise conjectures.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>414</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    In each of the known theories, the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X)</fr:tex> are endowed with an increasing filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>, known as the <fr:em>weight filtration</fr:em> [<fr:link
href="D5.xml"
type="local"
addr="D5">D5</fr:link>], as well as comparison isomorphisms such that <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.1"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.1.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.1"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.2"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.2.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.2"></fr:ref> are compatible with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    Furthermore, every natural map is strictly compatible with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    From this, we get a new requirement for the category of motives:
    every motive is endowed with a weight filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>, compatible with the tensor product, and strictly compatible with every morphism <fr:tex>f \colon  M \to  N</fr:tex>, i.e.
    <fr:tex
display="block">       f(M) \cap  W_i(N)       = f(W_i(M)).     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    We say that a motive <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> is <fr:em>pure of weight <fr:tex>i</fr:tex></fr:em> if <fr:tex>W_i(M)=M</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>W_{i-1}(M)=0</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and projective, <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> is pure of weight <fr:tex>i</fr:tex>.
    We want for the <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>-category generated by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, for <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth and projective over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, to be the sum of pure motives.
    In terms of pure motives, the properties of <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> can be written as follows:
    every motive is the iterated extension of pure motives, and, for <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> pure of weights <fr:tex>m</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>n</fr:tex> (respectively),

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        <fr:tex>M \otimes  N</fr:tex> is pure of weight <fr:tex>m+n</fr:tex>;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        for <fr:tex>m \neq  n</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom} (M,N)=0</fr:tex>; and
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;c. &quot;">
        for <fr:tex>m \leqslant  n</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Ext} ^1(M,N)=0</fr:tex>.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol>


    Often, pure motives (or direct sums of pure motives) are simply called <fr:em>motives</fr:em>, and their category admits the conjectural description [<fr:link
href="Kl.xml"
type="local"
addr="Kl">Kl</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Man.xml"
type="local"
addr="Man">Man</fr:link>];
    the more general motives, considered here, are then called <fr:em>mixed motives</fr:em></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>431</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    If we cannot define the category of motives, we can at least describe a sequence of compatibilities between the <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^i(X)</fr:tex> taken in the various cohomological theories, i.e. describe compatibilities that should exist between the various realisations of a motive.
    We will explain the case of motives over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>:
    a motive over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> should give rise to a system <fr:link
href="M1"
type="external">(M1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="M10"
type="external">(M10)</fr:link> as below, satisfying axioms <fr:link
href="AM1"
type="external">(AM1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="AM5"
type="external">(AM5)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>415</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Terminology</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      all vector spaces are assumed to be of finite dimension;
      
      "<fr:em>almost every</fr:em> prime number" means "all, except for a finite number".
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>416</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A vector space <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>Betti realisation</fr:em>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>417</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A vector space <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>de Rham realisation</fr:em>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>418</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A module <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>étale cohomology realisation</fr:em>, which is of finite type, by <fr:link
href="M5"
type="external">(M5)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>419</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For almost every prime number <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>crystalline realisation</fr:em> of the mod-<fr:tex>p</fr:tex> reduction.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>420</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}           \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}           \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }          \end {aligned}       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>421</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> are endowed with a finite increasing filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>weight filtration</fr:em>.
      We also denote by <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> the filtrations that are induced by extension of scalars.
      The comparison isomorphisms respect <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>422</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> is endowed with an involution <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>Frobenius at infinity</fr:em>, which respects <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>423</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is endowed with a finite decreasing filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> called the <fr:em>Hodge filtration</fr:em>.
      We also denote by <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> the filtrations that are induced by extension of scalars.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>424</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m9</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m9.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M9</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is endowed with an action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> which respects <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>425</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m10</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m10.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M10</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> is endowed with an automorphism
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \phi _p \colon  M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} } \to  M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }       </fr:tex>
      called the <fr:em>crystalline Frobenius</fr:em>, which respects <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>426</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, endowed with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and with the filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, is a mixed Hodge <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structure [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Definition 2.3.8].
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>427</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      We have two real structures on <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> (identified with <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> by the comparison isomorphism), namely <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex>;
      these define antilinear involutions <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, of which <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {R}</fr:tex> are (respectively) the fixed points.
      These involutions, as well as the linear involution extending <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>, all commute with one another, and satisfy
      <fr:tex
display="block">         F_ \infty          = c_ { \mathrm {B}}  c_ { \mathrm {DR}} .       </fr:tex>
      
      In other words, <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> respects <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}} |M_ { \mathrm {B}} =F_ \infty</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>428</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each prime number <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> be given by extension of scalars of <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, so that <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> is then a restricted product of the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
      There exists a finite set <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> of prime numbers such that, for each <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, the representation <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is unramified outside of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>429</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For large enough <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, if <fr:tex>p \not \in  S</fr:tex>, then, for all <fr:tex>\ell \neq  p</fr:tex>, the eigenvalues of a geometric Frobenius at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ \ell )</fr:tex>, and those of <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> on the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} })</fr:tex>, are algebraic numbers whose complex conjugates are all of absolute value <fr:tex>p^{n/2}</fr:tex>, and are <fr:tex>\ell '</fr:tex>-adic units for <fr:tex>\ell ' \neq  p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>430</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-am5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-am5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>AM5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.4</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Let <fr:tex>c \in \operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> be complex conjugation.
      Then <fr:tex>c</fr:tex> acts on <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> respecting <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, and induces the involution <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>436</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remarks</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
      If <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is given, then the data of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> satisfying <fr:link
href="AM2"
type="external">(AM2)</fr:link> is equivalent to that of a new rational structure <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> that is stable under complex conjugation <fr:tex>c_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> (set <fr:tex>F_ \infty =c_ { \mathrm {DR}} |M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>).
      By <fr:link
href="M6"
type="external">(M6)</fr:link>, the filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> must remain rational for this new rational structure.
    </html:li>


    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
      <fr:p>
        The data of <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and the Galois action, all together, are equivalent to the data of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-vector space <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> for all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, along with a Galois action on <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> and comparison isomorphisms <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
        We have to assume the existence of a lattice <fr:tex>L \subset  M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> such that the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }(L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex> are Galois stable.
        We define <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> from the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> as the restricted product of the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> with respect to the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }(L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex> for an arbitrary lattice <fr:tex>L</fr:tex>: this restricted product is Galois stable, and the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> induce <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p>
      <fr:p>
        The data of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and the Galois action (resp. <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, and the action), all together, are also equivalent to the data of a Galois action on <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>).
        By <fr:link
href="M6"
type="external">(M6)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="M9"
type="external">(M9)</fr:link>, the filtration of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>) induced by <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> must be stable under <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
      </fr:p>
    </html:li>


    
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;iii. &quot;">
      If <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> is given, then the data of <fr:tex>M_{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex>, along with its crystalline Frobenius and <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex>, is equivalent to the data of an automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
      By <fr:link
href="M6"
type="external">(M6)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="M10"
type="external">(M10)</fr:link>, the filtration of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> must be stable under <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
    </html:li>

  </html:ol>
<fr:p>
    We will often tacitly use these remarks to describe a system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>437</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    A scheme <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> of finite type over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> should define, for each <fr:tex>i</fr:tex>, a motive <fr:tex>M \coloneqq   \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>.
    
    In this section, we will partially describe the system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> of realisations of <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> in the case where <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is separated and smooth over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} = \operatorname {H} ^i(X( \mathbb {C} ), \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> is induced by the complex conjugation of <fr:tex>X( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>;
    <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} = \operatorname {H} _ { \mathrm {DR}} ^i(X) \coloneqq \mathbb {H} ^i(X, \Omega _X^ \bullet )</fr:tex>, and the Hodge filtration that that of the mixed Hodge theory [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Section 3.2];
    <fr:tex>M_ \ell = \operatorname {H} ^i(X \otimes \bar { \mathbb {Q} }, \mathbb {Q} _ \ell )</fr:tex> is the <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic étale cohomology of the scheme over <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex> induced from <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> by extension of scalars, and the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }, \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is given by structure transport.

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>246</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>X \otimes \bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex>, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-0.4"
href="minus-three-points-0.4.xml"
number="0.4"></fr:ref>.
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    Suppose that <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth and proper, and let <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> be a finite set of prime numbers such that <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is the general fibre of <fr:tex>X^ \sim</fr:tex>, which is smooth and proper over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  S</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>p \not \in  S</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is the crystalline cohomology of the reduction <fr:tex>X^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> modulo <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, tensored over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _p</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
    The crystalline Frobenius <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> is induced by the inverse image morphism of the Frobenius <fr:tex>\operatorname {Fr} \colon  X^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {F} _p \to  X^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    More generally, suppose that we have some smooth and proper <fr:tex>\overline {X}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  S</fr:tex>, as well as a relative normal crossing divisor <fr:tex>D</fr:tex>;
    let <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> be the general fibre of <fr:tex>\overline {X} \setminus  D</fr:tex>.
    Then the realisation <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is defined for <fr:tex>p \not \in  S</fr:tex>;
    its most natural definition is given by the generalisation of the crystalline theory, considered by Faltings in [<fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>, IV], to the "logarithmic poles" case.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.3"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.3.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.3"></fr:ref>, and the comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.1.4"
href="minus-three-points-1.1.4.xml"
taxon="Equation"
number="1.1.4"></fr:ref>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the smooth and proper case, the comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex> comes from §7.26 of [P. Berthelot and A. Ogus, <fr:em>Notes on crystalline cohomology</fr:em>, Princeton University Press and Tokyo University Press, 1978].
    For the general case, see [<fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>, IV].
    Finally, the weight filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> is that of the mixed Hodge theory from [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Section 3.2].
    See also [<fr:link
href="D5.xml"
type="local"
addr="D5">D5</fr:link>].
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>438</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.7</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.7.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.7</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    An additional data that we have on the cohomology <fr:tex>M \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> when <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is smooth over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> is that of a comparison isomorphism, for almost all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, in the sense of Fontaine–Messing (cf. [<fr:link
href="FM.xml"
type="local"
addr="FM">FM</fr:link>; <fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>]), relating <fr:tex>M_p</fr:tex>, endowed with the action of a decomposition group of <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, to <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, endowed with its Hodge filtration and its crystalline Frobenius.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, we should also have a "crystalline" structure of the following type.

    <fr:ul><fr:li><fr:strong>Semi-stable case.</fr:strong>
        Let <fr:tex>T_p</fr:tex> be the Zariski tangent space of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} _p)</fr:tex> at its closed point.
        
        We complete it to a projective line <fr:tex>\overline {T}_p</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex>, and we can lift <fr:tex>( \overline {T}_p,0, \infty )</fr:tex> to a projective line endowed with two marked points over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _p</fr:tex>: <fr:tex>( \overline {T}_p^ \sim ,0, \infty )</fr:tex>.
        We want an <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-isocrystal with logarithmic poles on <fr:tex>( \overline {T}_p,0, \infty )</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="Fa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Fa">Fa</fr:link>]).
        Such an object induces, on <fr:tex>\overline {T}_p^ \sim \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>, a module with connection <fr:tex>\mathcal {V}</fr:tex> with logarithmic poles at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex> and at <fr:tex>\infty</fr:tex>, and we want for the residue of the connection at <fr:tex>0</fr:tex> and at <fr:tex>\infty</fr:tex> to be nilpotent.
        If <fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex> is a section of <fr:tex>\overline {T}_p^ \sim</fr:tex>, over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} _p)</fr:tex>, with derivative equal to <fr:tex>1</fr:tex> at the closed point, then <fr:tex>\varphi ^* \mathcal {V}</fr:tex> is independent of the choice of <fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} }</fr:tex> should then be identified with the de Rham realisation <fr:tex>\otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>

      <fr:li><fr:strong>General case.</fr:strong>
        The data of the previous type, over a large-enough finite Galois extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> that is <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} (E/ \mathbb {Q} _p)</fr:tex>-equivariant.
      </fr:li></fr:ul></fr:p><fr:p>
    A Fontaine–Messing comparison isomorphism should again link this object and <fr:tex>M_p</fr:tex> endowed with the action of a decomposition group of <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>439</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Variant</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We should also have <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> for <fr:tex>M \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, where <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is not necessarily smooth.
    The crystalline data pose a problem.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We would also like to have <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> for cohomology with proper support.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>440</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.9</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.9.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.9</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    A <fr:em>realisation system</fr:em> is a system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(M1)–(M10)</fr:link> that satisfies <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-1.4">(A1)–(A5)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  We understand <fr:link
href="M4"
type="external">(M4)</fr:link>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex>, and <fr:link
href="M10"
type="external">(M10)</fr:link> as a germ — in the filter of complements of finite sets of prime numbers — of systems of automorphisms <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> of the <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex></fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>441</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Proposition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.10</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.10.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.10</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Realisation systems form a Tannakian category.
  </fr:p>
  
    
    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="false"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>279</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Proof</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.10</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter>
    <fr:p>
      As in [<fr:link
href="J.xml"
type="local"
addr="J">J</fr:link>], the key point is that a morphism of mixed Hodge <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structures is strictly compatible with the filtrations <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>, and that its kernel and cokernel are mixed Hodge <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-structures [<fr:link
href="D2.xml"
type="local"
addr="D2">D2</fr:link>, Theorem 2.3.5].
      We thus deduce that every morphism of realisation systems is strictly compatible with <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>.
      (For <fr:tex>W</fr:tex>, we can instead use <fr:link
href="AM4"
type="external">(AM4)</fr:link>.)
    </fr:p>

    <fr:p>
      So it is clear that the kernels and cokernels again form realisation systems, and that a bijective morphism is an isomorphism.
      We have direct sums, and so the category is abelian.
    </fr:p>

    <fr:p>
      We have an obvious tensor product, which is associative and commutative, and a way of taking duals.
      We also have a fibre functor, or, indeed, two: <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, with values in <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces.
      The category of realisation systems is thus Tannakian and neutral: the fibre functor <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>{}_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>) identifies it with the category of representations of the group scheme <fr:tex>G_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>G_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>) of its automorphisms (cf. [<fr:link
href="Sa.xml"
type="local"
addr="Sa">Sa</fr:link>] or [<fr:link
href="DM.xml"
type="local"
addr="DM">DM</fr:link>, Theorem 2.11]).
    </fr:p>
  </fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>
  
</fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  We hope that the realisation functors define a fully faithful functor from the category of motives over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> to the category of realisation systems.
  If this were not the case, then the philosophy of motives would lose much of its interest.
  This leads to the following provisional "definition":
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>442</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.11</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.11.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.11</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    The <fr:em>category of motives</fr:em> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> is the subcategory of the category of realisation systems <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> generated (under <fr:tex>\oplus</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex>, dual, and sub-quotient) by the category of systems of geometric origin.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  This definition is not really a definition, since "of geometric origin" has not been defined.
  Worse still, I do not have any definition to propose that I can confidently say is good.
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>450</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.12</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.12.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.12</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We would hope that the realisations of motives have properties not included in the definition <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> of realisation systems.
    Some reasons for not including them:

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;a. &quot;">
        we do not know how to verify them in practice;
      </html:li>

      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;b. &quot;">
        we no longer know how to prove <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.10"
href="minus-three-points-1.10.xml"
taxon="Proposition"
number="1.10"></fr:ref> if we do include them.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol>


    Thus:

    
 <html:ol
xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;i. &quot;">
        We would like that, for almost all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, the Frobenius characteristic polynomial <fr:tex>\det (1-F_pt,M_ \ell )</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>p</fr:tex> have rational coefficients that are independent of <fr:tex>\ell \neq  p</fr:tex>.
        It should also agree with <fr:tex>\det (1- \phi _pt,M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} )</fr:tex>.
        We do not know how to verify this for <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> (with <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> smooth), nor for a direct factor of <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex> (with <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> an abelian variety), and reason (b) above also applies.
      </html:li>


      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;ii. &quot;">
        We would like to complete <fr:link
href="AM4"
type="external">(AM4)</fr:link> by a condition for all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, cf. 1.8.5 in [P. Deligne, "La conjecture de Weil II", <fr:em>Publ. Math. IHÉS</fr:em> <fr:strong>52</fr:strong> (1980) pp. 137–252].
        Reasons (a) and (b) above also apply.
      </html:li>


      
 <html:li
style="list-style-type: &quot;iii. &quot;">
        The Hodge structure <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ { \mathrm {B}} )</fr:tex> should be polarisable.
        More precisely, there should exist, for all <fr:tex>n</fr:tex>, a morphism of realisation systems
        <fr:tex
display="block">            \operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M) \otimes \operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M)  \to   \mathbb {Q} (-n)         </fr:tex>
        (see [minus-three-points-2.1] for the definition of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} (-n)</fr:tex>) that induces a polarisation of the weight-<fr:tex>n</fr:tex> Hodge structure <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ { \mathrm {B}} )= \operatorname {Gr} _n^W(M_ { \mathrm {B}} )</fr:tex>.
        Here, neither reason (a) nor reason (b) apply.
      </html:li>

    </html:ol></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>451</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Remark</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.13</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.13.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.13</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    The treatment of crystalline structures is not satisfying.
    In the definition of realisation systems, I have not included the data  given in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.7"
href="minus-three-points-1.7.xml"
number="1.7"></fr:ref>, for the want of verifying their existence in the case of Lie algebras of <fr:tex>\pi _1</fr:tex> that interest us.
    I have nevertheless included the data of <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>, despite its appearance as a bizarre addition, because the calculations in [minus-three-points-19] give an interesting result.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>460</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.14.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.14</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Here is a variant of the statement of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.4"
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
number="1.4"></fr:ref>.
    This formulation, which is less elementary, highlights the role of <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>452</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      To every algebraic closure <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex> is attached, in a functorial way, <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    From <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> we deduce the data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m1">(M1)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m7.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m7">(M7)</fr:link> by setting <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \coloneqq  M_ { \mathrm {B}} ( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>, and the taking <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>z \mapsto \bar {z} \colon \mathbb {C} \to \mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    For <fr:tex>M= \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, we will have <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)= \operatorname {H} ^i(X(C), \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>453</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The same as <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m2">(M2)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>454</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp8</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp8.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'8</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The same as <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m8">(M8)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>455</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      An <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    By "<fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf" we mean the data, for all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex>, and, for almost all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell } \subset \mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex> which generates <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex>: the germ of the system of the <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex> is given.
    On the spectrum of a field <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, the data of <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex>) is equivalent to that of, for every algebraic closure <fr:tex>\bar {k}</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-vector space <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell ( \bar {k})</fr:tex> (resp. a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-module <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }( \bar {k})</fr:tex> of finite type), functorially in <fr:tex>\bar {k}</fr:tex>, and such that the action of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar {k}/k)</fr:tex> is continuous.
    Note that <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar {k})</fr:tex> is the restricted product of the <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_ \ell ( \bar {k})</fr:tex> with respect to the <fr:tex>\mathcal {F}_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }( \bar {k})</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    From <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>, we deduce the data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m3">(M3)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m9.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m9">(M9)</fr:link> by setting <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \coloneqq (M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} })</fr:tex>.

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>456</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
        We write <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>) for <fr:tex>(M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_ \ell</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>(M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>(M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} )_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>).
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>M= \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^i(X)</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>a</fr:tex> is the morphism <fr:tex>X \to \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, then <fr:tex>M_ \ell = \mathbb {R} ^ia_* \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex> is equal to the image of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R} ^ia_* \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
    We have that <fr:tex>\mathbb {R} ^ia_* \mathbb {Z} _ \ell ( \bar {k})= \operatorname {H} ^i(X \otimes _ \mathbb {Q} \bar {k}, \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>457</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For almost all primes <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, an <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-isocrystal <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\mathbb {F} _p</fr:tex>, i.e. a vector space <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> endowed with an automorphism <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>458</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }&amp; \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C) \otimes  C  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  C          \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }&amp; \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C) \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }_C)          \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }&amp; \colon  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}           \end {aligned}       </fr:tex>
      that are functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>, where <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }_C</fr:tex> is the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>.
      The first is equivalent to the data of <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> as in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link> satisfying <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link>;
      the second is equivalent to the data of <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> as in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m5">(M5)</fr:link> satisfying <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am5">(AM5)</fr:link>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>, instead of giving the <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>, we could have given only the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaves <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>, replacing <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> by the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon  M_B(C) \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \ell ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }_C)</fr:tex> and requiring the existence of an integer lattice <fr:tex>L \subset  M_B( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> such that the <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }(L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell )</fr:tex> be stable under <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    They define the <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} _ \ell }</fr:tex> of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>459</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.14</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>W</fr:tex> is a filtration of the objects of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4">(M'4)</fr:link>, respected by the comparison isomorphisms.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    A definition essentially equivalent to <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref> is then the following: a <fr:em>realisation system</fr:em> is a system <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp6.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp6">(M'6)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp8.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp8">(M'8)</fr:link>, satisfying axioms <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am2.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am2">(AM2)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link> (suitably modified in the evident way).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The data of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1">(M'1)</fr:link> is equivalent to a sheaf of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces on the étale site of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} \mathbb {R}</fr:tex>.
    From this point of view, <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> is an isomorphism to <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {R} )_ \mathrm {et}</fr:tex> between the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> and the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf induced by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the language of sheaves, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link> implies that <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> comes from a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  S \setminus \{ \ell \}</fr:tex>.
    The language of sheaves makes it clear that, for all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> defines a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} _p)</fr:tex> (cf. the analogous case of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex> below).
    The choice of a decomposition group is not required.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>461</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Variant</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.15</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.15.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.15</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> be a finite set of prime numbers.
    The category of <fr:em>smooth realisation systems on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex></fr:em> is defined as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref>, taking <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> to be the exceptional set <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link>, and replacing "almost all <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>" in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m4">(M4)</fr:link> and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link> by "all <fr:tex>p \not \in  P</fr:tex>".
    This treatment of crystalline structures is not satisfying, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.7"
href="minus-three-points-1.7.xml"
number="1.7"></fr:ref>.
    The category (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.9"
href="minus-three-points-1.9.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.9"></fr:ref>) of realisation systems on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> is the inductive limit of these categories for <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> growing larger and larger.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Instead of saying "smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>", we also say "of good reduction outside of <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>".
    This terminology is erroneous in that the categories in question are not subcategories of the category of realisation systems on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.7"
href="minus-three-points-1.7.xml"
number="1.7"></fr:ref> again).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the language of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>, in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3">(M'3)</fr:link> we need to give <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> as a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} [1/ \ell ]) \setminus  P</fr:tex> instead of on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>, and we need to modify <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4">(M'4)</fr:link> like <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m4">(M4)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    The objects (<fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>) belonging to the subcategory generated by the objects of geometric origin (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.11"
href="minus-three-points-1.11.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.11"></fr:ref>) will be called <fr:em>smooth (mixed) motives on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex></fr:em>.
    We hope that this gives a full subcategory of the category of motives on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    We would like to have a notion of smooth motive on <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> for more general base spaces than <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>.
    Our methods, where the Betti realisation plays a central role, require that <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> be dense in <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
    We will outline a provisional definition of smooth realisation systems on <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, for <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
    The case where <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> is open in the spectrum of the ring of integers of a number field can be dealt with using natural modifications of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.4"
href="minus-three-points-1.4.xml"
number="1.4"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>.
    For <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> finite and étale over an open of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>, we can also reduce to <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>: see [minus-three-points-1.17].
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>463</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Example</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.16</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.16.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.16</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    (The motivic <fr:tex>\operatorname {H} ^0</fr:tex> of the spectrum of a number field).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> be a finite extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, unramified outside of a finite set <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> of prime numbers.
    We are going to expand on <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.6"
href="minus-three-points-1.6.xml"
number="1.6"></fr:ref> for <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (E)</fr:tex> and, more precisely, define a realisation system <fr:tex>A \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^0( \operatorname {Spec} (E))</fr:tex> that is smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>.
    The motive <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> is of Hodge type <fr:tex>(0,0)</fr:tex>.
    This determines <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>.
    We have that <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}} =E</fr:tex>, viewed as a vector space over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )= \operatorname {Spec} (E)( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> be the set of homomorphisms (which are automatically embeddings) from <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    We have that <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}} = \mathbb {Q} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}</fr:tex>, with <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> induced by the complex conjugation of <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
    The comparison isomorphism <fr:tex>{ \mathrm {DR}} {/} { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> from <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {C} = \mathbb {C} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes \mathbb {C} =E \otimes \mathbb {C}</fr:tex> is the <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>-linear extension of the map
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}         E &amp; \longrightarrow   \mathbb {C} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}        \\ e &amp; \longmapsto  ( \sigma \mapsto \sigma (e)).        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex></fr:p><fr:p>
    Since every embedding of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex> factors through <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex> acts on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>,
    This action induces the Galois action on <fr:tex>A_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \coloneqq  A_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> (cf. (ii) of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.5"
href="minus-three-points-1.5.xml"
taxon="Remarks"
number="1.5"></fr:ref>).
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    For <fr:tex>p \not \in  P</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> running over the places of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, we have that <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p= \prod  E_v</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>\phi _p</fr:tex> is the automorphism of <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p</fr:tex> that induces on each <fr:tex>E_v</fr:tex> the unique lift of the Frobenius <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^p</fr:tex> of the residue field (cf. (iii) of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.5"
href="minus-three-points-1.5.xml"
taxon="Remarks"
number="1.5"></fr:ref>).

    
    The motive <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> is endowed with a product

    <fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>462</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Equation</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.16.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.16.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.16.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.16</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tex
display="block">         A \otimes  A \to  A       \tag{1.16.1}       </fr:tex></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree>

    namely the cup product, which makes <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> a commutative ring with unit in the Tannakian category of motives (cf. [minus-three-points-5.3]).
    On <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}} =E</fr:tex>, it is the product.
    On <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex>, it is given by <fr:tex>(q_1( \sigma ))(q_2( \sigma ))=(q_1( \sigma )q_2( \sigma ))</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>464</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.17</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.17.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.17</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>\mathcal {O}</fr:tex> be the ring of <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>-integers of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>.
    With the above notation, a <fr:em>smooth realisation system on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathcal {O} )</fr:tex></fr:em> is a realisation system <fr:tex>N</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex> (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.15"
href="minus-three-points-1.15.xml"
taxon="Variant"
number="1.15"></fr:ref>) endowed with the structure of an <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>-module <fr:tex>A \otimes  N \to  N</fr:tex> (cf. [minus-three-points-5.3]) over <fr:tex>A \coloneqq \operatorname {H} _ \mathrm {mot} ^0( \operatorname {Spec} (E))</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  Similarly for "motive" and "over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (E)</fr:tex>" (taking the limit over <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>).
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>474</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.18.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.18</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We will now show how a realisation system <fr:tex>N</fr:tex>, smooth over <fr:tex>S= \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathcal {O} )</fr:tex> (as in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.17"
href="minus-three-points-1.17.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.17"></fr:ref>), can be described in terms of a <fr:em>realisation system over <fr:tex>E</fr:tex></fr:em>, of the following type.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>465</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m1e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m1e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M1E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each embedding <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_ \sigma</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, the Betti realisation with respect to <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>466</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-m7e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-m7e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M7E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each embedding <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>, an involutive system of isomorphisms <fr:tex>F_ \infty \colon  M_ \sigma \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_{ \bar { \sigma }}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>N_ { \mathrm {B}} = \bigoplus  M_ \sigma</fr:tex>, with the evident structure of a module over <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {B}} = \mathbb {Q} ^{ \operatorname {Hom} (E, \mathbb {C} )}</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex> is the sum of the <fr:tex>F_ \infty</fr:tex>.
    As in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>, we have a variant:
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>467</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each embedding of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> into an algebraic closure <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_ \sigma</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>468</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp2e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp2e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'2E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      An <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>-vector space <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>469</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp8e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp8e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'8E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, the Hodge filtration.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>N_ { \mathrm {DR}} =M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>, with the structure of an <fr:tex>A_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex>-module given by that of the vector space over <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>470</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      (cf. <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m3">(M3)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-m9.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-m9">(M9)</fr:link>) An <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} (E)</fr:tex> (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>).
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We define <fr:tex>N_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> as its direct image over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>: <fr:tex>N_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} })</fr:tex> is the sum over the <fr:tex>\sigma \colon  E \to \bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex> of the <fr:tex>M_AAf( \bar { \mathbb {Q} })</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>471</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp4e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp4e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'4E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For each place <fr:tex>v</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>p \not \in  P</fr:tex>, a vector space <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex> over the completion <fr:tex>E_v</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> at <fr:tex>v</fr:tex>.
      Let <fr:tex>F_v^*</fr:tex> be the automorphism of <fr:tex>E_v</fr:tex> that induces <fr:tex>x \mapsto  x^p</fr:tex> on the residue field.
      We give an <fr:tex>F_v^*</fr:tex>-linear <fr:tex>\phi _v \colon  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} \mapsto  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We have <fr:tex>E \otimes \mathbb {Q} _p= \bigoplus _{v \mid  p}E_v</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>N_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> is the sum of the <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>472</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , \sigma } \colon  M_ \sigma (C) \otimes  C           &amp; \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes _{E, \sigma }C          \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , \sigma } \colon  M_{ \sigma } \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}            &amp; \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} ( \bar {E}_C)          \end {aligned}       </fr:tex>
      both functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> (where <fr:tex>\bar {E}_C</fr:tex> is the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>, with respect to <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex>), as well as
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} , { \mathrm {DR}} } \colon  M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes _E E_v  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} .       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    By summing over <fr:tex>\sigma</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>v</fr:tex>), these give <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5">(M'5)</fr:link>.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>473</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp6e</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp6e.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'6E</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.18</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> of the objects <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1e">(M'1)E</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp2e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp2e">(M'2)E</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3e">(M'3)E</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4e">(M'4)E</fr:link>, respected by the comparison isomorphisms.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    We leave to the reader the task of translating axioms <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link>, which remain to be imposed, into this language (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>).
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>475</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.19</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.19.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.19</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    With the definition <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.17"
href="minus-three-points-1.17.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.17"></fr:ref> of smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>S= \operatorname {Spec} ( \mathcal {O} )</fr:tex>, the functor given by forgetting the <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>-module structure, which takes values in smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex>, is called the "<fr:em>direct image of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} ) \setminus  P</fr:tex></fr:em>".
    In the various realisations of <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.18"
href="minus-three-points-1.18.xml"
number="1.18"></fr:ref>, it corresponds to the direct image.
    Its left adjoint, <fr:tex>M \mapsto  A \otimes  M</fr:tex> (cf. [minus-three-points-5.3]), is the <fr:em>inverse image</fr:em>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>476</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.20</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.20.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.20</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    If <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> is an open of the spectrum of the ring of integers of a finite extension <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, then we can modify the description in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.18"
href="minus-three-points-1.18.xml"
number="1.18"></fr:ref> as follows to define smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.

    <fr:ul><fr:li>
        In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link>, we ask for each <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> to come from a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>
      <fr:li>
        In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4e">(M'4)E</fr:link>, for each residue field <fr:tex>k(v)</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, we ask for <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v}</fr:tex> over the field of fractions <fr:tex>K_v</fr:tex> of Witt vectors over <fr:tex>k(v)</fr:tex>, endowed with a semi-linear <fr:tex>\phi _v</fr:tex>.
        The crystalline comparison isomorphism of <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5e.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5e">(M'5)E</fr:link> then becomes
        <fr:tex
display="block">           M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  E_v  \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, v} \otimes _{K_v}E_v.         </fr:tex></fr:li></fr:ul></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>477</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.21.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.21</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> be smooth over <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} ( \mathbb {Z} )</fr:tex>.
    Here is a provisional definition of smooth realisation systems over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, inspired by <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.18"
href="minus-three-points-1.18.xml"
number="1.18"></fr:ref>.
    The data is as follows:
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>292</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For <fr:tex>C</fr:tex> an algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {R}</fr:tex>, a locally constant sheaf <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>-vector spaces on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>, functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>.
      We set <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \coloneqq  M_ { \mathrm {B}} ( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>293</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp2s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp2s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'2S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A vector bundle <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> with integrable connection on <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, assumed to be regularly singular at infinity.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>294</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp8s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp8s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'8S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>F</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> by vector sub-bundles: the Hodge filtration.
      We assume "transversality":
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \nabla  F^p  \subset   \Omega ^1 \otimes  F^{p-1}.       </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>295</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S_ \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>296</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp4s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp4s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'4S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      For every prime number <fr:tex>p</fr:tex>, an <fr:tex>F</fr:tex>-isocrystal <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex> on the reduction <fr:tex>S_p</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> <fr:tex>\mod  p</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>297</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Comparison isomorphisms
      <fr:tex
display="block">          \begin {aligned}            \operatorname {comp} _{ { \mathrm {DR}} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C) \otimes  C  \xrightarrow { \sim }  (M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  C)^ \nabla           \\ \operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} } \colon            &amp;M_ { \mathrm {B}} ^{(C)} \otimes \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}   \to   \text {inverse image of }M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} \text { on }S(C)          \end {aligned}       </fr:tex>
      that are functorial in <fr:tex>C</fr:tex>, where we denote by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}} \otimes  C</fr:tex> the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S_C</fr:tex>, and by <fr:tex>(-) \nabla</fr:tex> the sheaf of its horizontal sections on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>.
      Instead of giving <fr:tex>M_ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> in <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3s">(M'3)S</fr:link>, we can just give the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> sheaves <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> that are deduced from it, along with the comparison isomorphisms <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> from <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> to the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex>, and impose the existence of a lattice <fr:tex>L</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>L \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> corresponds to a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>L_ \ell</fr:tex> with <fr:tex>L_ \ell \otimes \mathbb {Q} _ \ell \xrightarrow { \sim }  M_ \ell</fr:tex>, cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.14"
href="minus-three-points-1.14.xml"
number="1.14"></fr:ref>.
    </fr:p><fr:p>
      As for <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p} , { \mathrm {DR}} }</fr:tex>, let <fr:tex>S_{(p)}^ \mathrm {an}</fr:tex> be the rigid analytic space that is the general fibre of the formal scheme over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _p</fr:tex> given by the formal completion of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> along <fr:tex>S_p</fr:tex>;
      we want an isomorphism between bundles with connection on <fr:tex>S_{(p)}^ \mathrm {an}</fr:tex> induced by <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {DR}}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>M_ { { \mathrm {cris}} \, \, p}</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>298</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp6s</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp6s.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'6S</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.21</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      A filtration <fr:tex>W</fr:tex> of the objects <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1s">(M'1)S</fr:link> to <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp4s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp4s">(M'4)S</fr:link>, respected by the comparison isomorphisms.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
    The axioms are modified as follows.
    In <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am1.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am1">(AM1)</fr:link>, we want a variation of mixed Hodge structures;
    <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am3.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am3">(AM3)</fr:link> becomes: <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> comes from a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>;
    for <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-am4.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-am4">(AM4)</fr:link>, a condition is imposed for every closed point of <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    As a catch-all, this category does the job (cf. <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.13"
href="minus-three-points-1.13.xml"
taxon="Remark"
number="1.13"></fr:ref> nonetheless).
    Additional axioms will always be natural, notably concerning the behaviour at infinity of the variation of mixed Hodge structures <fr:tex>H_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (cf. [<fr:link
href="SZ.xml"
type="local"
addr="SZ">SZ</fr:link>]).
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>478</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.22</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.22.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.22</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>E</fr:tex> be a finite extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
    Then a realisation system <fr:em>with coefficients in <fr:tex>E</fr:tex></fr:em> is a realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> endowed with the structure of an <fr:tex>E</fr:tex>-modules, <fr:tex>E \to \operatorname {End} (M)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:p>
  Up until now, our motives have been "isomotives": the <fr:tex>\operatorname {Hom}</fr:tex> are vector spaces over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  For motives with integer coefficients, I propose the following definitions.
</fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>479</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Definition</fr:taxon><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.23</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.23.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.23</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    A realisation system <fr:tex>M</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> (resp. <fr:tex>\operatorname {Spec} \mathbb {Z} \setminus  P</fr:tex>) <fr:em>with integer coefficients</fr:em> is a realisation system, denoted by <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>, endowed with a lattice <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> such that, for all <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, <fr:tex>M_ \ell \coloneqq  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ \ell</fr:tex> is stable under <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>483</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.24.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.24</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    On a more general base <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, a realisation system <fr:em>with integer coefficients</fr:em> is a realisation system <fr:tex>M \otimes \mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> endowed with a local system of torsion-free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-modules <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> satisfying <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} \xrightarrow { \sim } (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ { \mathrm {B}}</fr:tex> (a "lattice") and such that the <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S( \mathbb {C} )</fr:tex> corresponds, under <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex>, to a smooth <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \ell \subset (M \otimes \mathbb {Q} )_ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    This causes us to modify <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp1s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp1s">(M'1)S</fr:link>, <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp3s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp3s">(M'3)S</fr:link>, and <fr:link
href="minus-three-points-mp5s.xml"
type="local"
addr="minus-three-points-mp5s">(M'5)S</fr:link> as follows.
  </fr:p><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>480</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp1sz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp1sz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'1SZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p><fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} (C)</fr:tex> is a local system of free <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>-modules.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>481</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp3sz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp3sz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'3SZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      The data of a <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex>-sheaf <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S[1/ \ell ]</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>482</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-mp5sz</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-mp5sz.xml</fr:route><fr:number>M'5SZ</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1.24</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
      Replace <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f} , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> by isomorphisms <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \ell , { \mathrm {B}} }</fr:tex> from <fr:tex>M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> to the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>.
    </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>484</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.25</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.25.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.25</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    In <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref>, the data of the <fr:tex>M_ \ell</fr:tex> is equivalent to that of a projective system of sheaves of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} {/}(n)</fr:tex>-modules on the <fr:tex>S[1/n]</fr:tex>:
    <fr:tex
display="block">       M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)} \colon   \prod _{ \ell \mid  n}M_ \ell {/}n M_ \ell      </fr:tex>
    and the data of the comparison morphisms is equivalent to that of an isomorphism of projective systems from <fr:tex>\operatorname {comp} _{ \mathbb {A} {/}n, { \mathrm {B}} } \colon  M_ { \mathrm {B}} \otimes \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)</fr:tex> to the inverse image of <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> on <fr:tex>S(C)</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    In the setting of <fr:link
href="#chunk-1.23"
type="external">(1.23)</fr:link>, we can prefer to think of the <fr:tex>M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}</fr:tex> as representations of <fr:tex>\operatorname {Gal} ( \bar { \mathbb {Q} }/ \mathbb {Q} )</fr:tex>.
    We again set <fr:tex>M_{ \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} }= \operatorname {lim \, proj}  M_{ \mathbb {Z} {/}(n)}= \prod  M_ \ell</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>485</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-1.26</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-1.26.xml</fr:route><fr:number>1.26</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-1</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Combining the variants in <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.22"
href="minus-three-points-1.22.xml"
taxon="Definition"
number="1.22"></fr:ref> and <fr:ref
addr="minus-three-points-1.24"
href="minus-three-points-1.24.xml"
number="1.24"></fr:ref>, we similarly define motives over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex> with coefficients in the ring of integers of a finite extension of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="true"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>1196</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.xml</fr:route><fr:title><fr:link
href="index.xml"
type="local"
addr="index">Deligne's "The fundamental group of the projective line minus three points"</fr:link> › Terminology and notation</fr:title><fr:number>0</fr:number><fr:parent>index</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>378</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.1</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.1.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.1</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote inductive limits and projective limits by <fr:tex>\operatorname {lim \, ind}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\operatorname {lim \, proj}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>379</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.2</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.2.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.2</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For a prime number <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>, we denote by <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z} _ \ell</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q} _ \ell</fr:tex> the completions of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> for the <fr:tex>\ell</fr:tex>-adic topology:
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {aligned}          \mathbb {Z} _ \ell  &amp;=  \operatorname {lim \, proj}   \mathbb {Z} {/} \ell ^n \mathbb {Z} ,        \\ \mathbb {Q} _ \ell  &amp;=  \mathbb {Z} _ \ell \otimes \mathbb {Q} .        \end {aligned}     </fr:tex>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\widehat { \mathbb {Z}}</fr:tex> the profinite completion of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Z}</fr:tex>, and by <fr:tex>\mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}</fr:tex> the ring of finite adeles:
    <fr:tex
display="block">        \begin {gathered}          \widehat { \mathbb {Z}}   \xrightarrow { \sim }  \prod _ \ell   \mathbb {Z} _ \ell ,        \\ \mathbb {A} ^ \mathrm {f}  =  \widehat { \mathbb {Z}} \otimes \mathbb {Q} .        \end {gathered}     </fr:tex>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\bar { \mathbb {Q} }</fr:tex> the algebraic closure of <fr:tex>\mathbb {Q}</fr:tex> in <fr:tex>\mathbb {C}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
show-metadata="false"
expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>380</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.3</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.3.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.3</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    For an abstract group, algebraic group, profinite group, or Lie algebra <fr:tex>A</fr:tex>, we denote by <fr:tex>Z^i(A)</fr:tex> the descending central series.
    We use the numbering for which <fr:tex>A=Z^1(A)</fr:tex>.
    We denote by <fr:tex>A^{(N)}</fr:tex> the quotient of <fr:tex>A</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>Z^{N+1}(A)</fr:tex>.
    In the case of abstract or profinite groups, we denote by <fr:tex>A^{[N]}</fr:tex> the largest torsion-free quotient of <fr:tex>A^{(N)}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
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toc="true"
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root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>381</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.4</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.4.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.4</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    We denote by <fr:tex>\otimes</fr:tex> an extension of scalars.
    For example, if <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> is a scheme over <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>k'</fr:tex> is an extension of <fr:tex>k</fr:tex>, then we set
    <fr:tex
display="block">       X \otimes  k'        \coloneqq  X \times _{ \operatorname {Spec} (k)} \operatorname {Spec} (k').     </fr:tex></fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
xmlns:fr="http://www.jonmsterling.com/jms-005P.xml"
toc="true"
numbered="false"
show-heading="true"
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expanded="true"
root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>382</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.5</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.5.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.5</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Given an affine scheme <fr:tex>f \colon  X \to  S</fr:tex> over <fr:tex>S</fr:tex>, the quasi-coherent sheaf of algebras <fr:tex>f_* \mathcal {O} _X</fr:tex> will be called the <fr:em>affine algebra</fr:em> of <fr:tex>X/S</fr:tex>, or simply of <fr:tex>X</fr:tex>, and <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> will be called its <fr:em>spectrum</fr:em>.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree><fr:tree
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toc="true"
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root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>384</fr:anchor><fr:addr>minus-three-points-0.6</fr:addr><fr:route>minus-three-points-0.6.xml</fr:route><fr:number>0.6</fr:number><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
    Let <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> be a sheaf of groups on a site <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex>, or, equivalently, in a topos <fr:tex>T</fr:tex>.
    Useful particular case: if <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex> is a point, then a sheaf is a set and <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> is a group.
    A <fr:em><fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor</fr:em>, or <fr:em>torsor for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex></fr:em>, is a sheaf <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> endowed with a right <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-action such that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is locally isomorphic to <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> acting on itself by translations on the right.
    We also call such an object a <fr:em>right <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-principal homogeneous space</fr:em>, or a <fr:em>right principal homogeneous space for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex></fr:em>.
    If <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor, then a sheaf <fr:tex>X</fr:tex> on which <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> acts can be <fr:em>twisted</fr:em> by <fr:tex>P</fr:tex>.
    The twisting <fr:tex>X^P</fr:tex> is the contracted product <fr:tex>P \times ^G X=(P \times  X)/G</fr:tex>, and is endowed with <fr:tex>\alpha \colon  P \to \underline { \operatorname {Isom}} (X,X^P)</fr:tex> satisfying <fr:tex>\alpha (pg)= \alpha (p)g</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    An <fr:em><fr:tex>(H,G)</fr:tex>-bitorsor</fr:em> (cf. SGA 7, VII.1, or Girard, <fr:em>Cohomologie non abelienne</fr:em>, III 1.5) is a space which is simultaneously a left principal homogeneous space for <fr:tex>H</fr:tex> and a right principal homogeneous space for <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>, with the <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>- and <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-actions commuting with one another.
    If <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor, then the sheaf of automorphisms of <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is the twisting <fr:tex>G^P</fr:tex> of <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> (under the action of <fr:tex>G</fr:tex> on itself by inner automorphisms), and <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is a <fr:tex>(G^P,P)</fr:tex>-bitorsor.
    By this construction, the data of an <fr:tex>(H,G)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is equivalent to the data of a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> along with an isomorphism between <fr:tex>H</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>G^P</fr:tex>.

    <fr:tree
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root="false"><fr:frontmatter><fr:anchor>383</fr:anchor><fr:taxon>Notation</fr:taxon><fr:parent>minus-three-points-0.6</fr:parent></fr:frontmatter><fr:mainmatter><fr:p>
        We will write <fr:tex>{}_HP_G</fr:tex> to mean that <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> is an <fr:tex>(H,G)</fr:tex>-bitorsor.
      </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:p><fr:p>
    We will use the following operations on torsors and bitorsors.

    <fr:ul><fr:li><fr:strong>Pushing forward</fr:strong> (or <fr:strong>transporting</fr:strong>) a <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> by <fr:tex>\varphi \colon  G \to  H</fr:tex> to obtain an <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>\varphi (P)</fr:tex>.
        A <fr:em><fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex>-morphism</fr:em> from the <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> to the <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-torsor <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex> is some <fr:tex>u \colon  P \to  Q</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>u(pg)=u(p) \varphi (g)</fr:tex>.
        A <fr:tex>\varphi</fr:tex>-morphism factors uniquely through an isomorphism of <fr:tex>H</fr:tex>-torsors between <fr:tex>\varphi (P)</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>

      <fr:li><fr:strong>Composition</fr:strong> of a <fr:tex>(G_1,G_2)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> and a <fr:tex>(G_2,G_3)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex>:
        the <fr:tex>(G_1,G_3)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P \circ  Q</fr:tex> given by the contracted product <fr:tex>P \times ^{G_2}Q=(P \times  Q)/G_2</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li>

      <fr:li><fr:strong>Inverse</fr:strong> of <fr:tex>{}_{G_1}P_{G_2}</fr:tex>:
        the <fr:tex>(G_2,G_1)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>P^{-1}</fr:tex>, unique up to isomorphism, endowed with <fr:tex>(p \mapsto  p^{-1}) \colon  P \to  P^{-1}</fr:tex> such that <fr:tex>(g_1pg_2)^{-1}=g_2^{-1}p^{-1}g_1^{-1}</fr:tex>.
      </fr:li></fr:ul>

    For <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsors <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> and <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex>, the sheaf <fr:tex>\underline { \operatorname {Isom}} (P,Q)</fr:tex> of isomorphisms of <fr:tex>G</fr:tex>-torsors from <fr:tex>P</fr:tex> to <fr:tex>Q</fr:tex> is the <fr:tex>(G^Q,G^P)</fr:tex>-bitorsor <fr:tex>G \circ  P^{-1}</fr:tex>.
  </fr:p><fr:p>
    If the site <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex> is such that the representable functors <fr:tex>h_S</fr:tex> are sheaves, then we can transport these operations to <fr:tex>\mathcal {S}</fr:tex> via the fully faithful functor <fr:tex>S \mapsto  h_S</fr:tex>, with each construction only being defined if it does not leave the collection of representable sheaves.
  </fr:p></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:mainmatter></fr:tree></fr:backlinks><fr:references></fr:references></fr:backmatter></fr:tree>