Arf invariant

Arf and a formula for the Arf invariant appear on the reverse side of the 2009 Turkish 10 Lira note

In mathematics, the Arf invariant of a nonsingular quadratic form over a field of characteristic 2 was defined by Turkish mathematician Cahit Arf (1941) when he started the systematic study of quadratic forms over arbitrary fields of characteristic 2. The Arf invariant is the substitute, in characteristic 2, for the discriminant for quadratic forms in characteristic not 2. Arf used his invariant, among others, in his endeavor to classify quadratic forms in characteristic 2.

In the special case of the 2-element field F2 the Arf invariant can be described as the element of F2 that occurs most often among the values of the form. Two nonsingular quadratic forms over F2 are isomorphic if and only if they have the same dimension and the same Arf invariant. This fact was essentially known to Dickson (1901), even for any finite field of characteristic 2, and Arf proved it for an arbitrary perfect field. An assessment of Arf's results in the framework of the theory of quadratic forms can be found in.[1]

The Arf invariant is particularly applied in geometric topology, where it is primarily used to define an invariant of (4k + 2)-dimensional manifolds (singly even-dimensional manifolds: surfaces (2-manifolds), 6-manifolds, 10-manifolds, etc.) with certain additional structure called a framing, and thus the Arf–Kervaire invariant and the Arf invariant of a knot. The Arf invariant is analogous to the signature of a manifold, which is defined for 4k-dimensional manifolds (doubly even-dimensional); this 4-fold periodicity corresponds to the 4-fold periodicity of L-theory. The Arf invariant can also be defined more generally for certain 2k-dimensional manifolds.

Definitions

The Arf invariant is defined for a quadratic form q over a field K of characteristic 2 such that q is nonsingular, in the sense that the associated bilinear form is nondegenerate. The form is alternating since K has characteristic 2; it follows that a nonsingular quadratic form in characteristic 2 must have even dimension. Any binary (2-dimensional) nonsingular quadratic form over K is equivalent to a form with in K. The Arf invariant is defined to be the product . If the form is equivalent to , then the products and differ by an element of the form with in K. These elements form an additive subgroup U of K. Hence the coset of modulo U is an invariant of , which means that it is not changed when is replaced by an equivalent form.

Every nonsingular quadratic form over K is equivalent to a direct sum of nonsingular binary forms. This was shown by Arf, but it had been earlier observed by Dickson in the case of finite fields of characteristic 2. The Arf invariant Arf() is defined to be the sum of the Arf invariants of the . By definition, this is a coset of K modulo U. Arf[2] showed that indeed Arf() does not change if is replaced by an equivalent quadratic form, which is to say that it is an invariant of .

The Arf invariant is additive; in other words, the Arf invariant of an orthogonal sum of two quadratic forms is the sum of their Arf invariants.

For a field K of characteristic 2, Artin-Schreier theory identifies the quotient group of K by the subgroup U above with the Galois cohomology group H1(K, F2). In other words, the nonzero elements of K/U are in one-to-one correspondence with the separable quadratic extension fields of K. So the Arf invariant of a nonsingular quadratic form over K is either zero or it describes a separable quadratic extension field of K. This is analogous to the discriminant of a nonsingular quadratic form over a field F of characteristic not 2. In that case, the discriminant takes values in F*/(F*)2, which can be identified with H1(F, F2) by Kummer theory.

Arf's main results

If the field K is perfect, then every nonsingular quadratic form over K is uniquely determined (up to equivalence) by its dimension and its Arf invariant. In particular, this holds over the field F2. In this case, the subgroup U above is zero, and hence the Arf invariant is an element of the base field F2; it is either 0 or 1.

If the field K of characteristic 2 is not perfect (that is, K is different from its subfield K2 of squares), then the Clifford algebra is another important invariant of a quadratic form. A corrected version of Arf's original statement is that if the degree [K: K2] is at most 2, then every quadratic form over K is completely characterized by its dimension, its Arf invariant and its Clifford algebra.[3] Examples of such fields are function fields (or power series fields) of one variable over perfect base fields.

Quadratic forms over F2

Over F2, the Arf invariant is 0 if the quadratic form is equivalent to a direct sum of copies of the binary form , and it is 1 if the form is a direct sum of with a number of copies of .

William Browder has called the Arf invariant the democratic invariant[4] because it is the value which is assumed most often by the quadratic form.[5] Another characterization: q has Arf invariant 0 if and only if the underlying 2k-dimensional vector space over the field F2 has a k-dimensional subspace on which q is identically 0 – that is, a totally isotropic subspace of half the dimension. In other words, a nonsingular quadratic form of dimension 2k has Arf invariant 0 if and only if its isotropy index is k (this is the maximum dimension of a totally isotropic subspace of a nonsingular form).

The Arf invariant in topology


Let M be a compact, connected 2k-dimensional manifold with a boundary such that the induced morphisms in -coefficient homology

,

are both zero (e.g. if is closed). The intersection form

is non-singular. (Topologists usually write F2 as .) A quadratic refinement for is a function which satisfies

Let be any 2-dimensional subspace of , such that . Then there are two possibilities. Either all of are 1, or else just one of them is 1, and the other two are 0. Call the first case , and the second case . Since every form is equivalent to a symplectic form, we can always find subspaces with x and y being -dual. We can therefore split into a direct sum of subspaces isomorphic to either or . Furthermore, by a clever change of basis, . We therefore define the Arf invariant

= (number of copies of in a decomposition Mod 2) .

Examples

Note that , so we had to stabilise, taking to be at least 4, in order to get an element of . The case is also admissible as long as we take the residue modulo 2 of the framing.

refining the homological intersection form . The Arf invariant of this form is the Kervaire invariant of (f,b). In the special case this is the Kervaire invariant of M. The Kervaire invariant features in the classification of exotic spheres by Kervaire and Milnor, and more generally in the classification of manifolds by surgery theory. Browder defined using functional Steenrod squares, and Wall defined using framed immersions. The quadratic enhancement crucially provides more information than  : it is possible to kill x by surgery if and only if . The corresponding Kervaire invariant detects the surgery obstruction of in the L-group .

See also

Notes

  1. F. Lorenz and P. Roquette. Cahit Arf and his invariant.
  2. Arf (1941)
  3. F. Lorenz and P. Roquette. Cahit Arf and his invariant. Section 9.
  4. Martino and Priddy, p.61
  5. Browder, Proposition III.1.8

References

Further reading

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