Rational cohomology and Zariski dense subgroups of solvable linear algebraic groups
Pith reviewed 2026-05-23 21:14 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
For irreducible solvable Q-defined linear algebraic groups, the rational cohomology rings of the group and its Zariski dense subgroups are isomorphic when the subgroups intersect the Q-split maximal torus discretely.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
For an irreducible solvable Q-defined linear algebraic group G there is an isomorphism between the cohomology rings with coefficients in a finite dimensional rational G-module M of the associated Q-defined Lie algebra g_Q and of Zariski dense subgroups Gamma less than or equal to G(Q) that intersect the Q-split maximal torus discretely. The restriction map in rational cohomology from G to Gamma is an injection.
What carries the argument
The restriction map in rational cohomology from G to Gamma, which induces an isomorphism with the Lie algebra cohomology of g_Q.
If this is right
- The restriction map from G to Gamma is injective in rational cohomology with coefficients in M.
- The identification produces results on the cohomology representations of finitely generated solvable groups of finite abelian rank.
- Cohomology computations for such discrete subgroups reduce to computations on the associated Lie algebra.
- The isomorphism preserves the ring structure of the cohomology.
- Results extend to several classes of representations on the cohomology of these groups.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Lie algebra cohomology methods become available for computing the rational cohomology of certain discrete solvable groups.
- The result may connect to questions about when cohomology detects Zariski density or discreteness conditions in other algebraic groups.
- It opens the possibility of transferring finiteness or generation properties from the Lie algebra side to the discrete group side.
Load-bearing premise
The algebraic group G must be irreducible and solvable and defined over Q, while the subgroups Gamma must be Zariski dense in G(Q) and intersect the Q-split maximal torus discretely.
What would settle it
An explicit counterexample of an irreducible solvable Q-defined G, a finite dimensional rational G-module M, and a qualifying Zariski dense Gamma where the cohomology rings of g_Q and Gamma with coefficients in M differ or the restriction map fails to be injective.
read the original abstract
In this article, we establish results concerning the cohomology of Zariski dense subgroups of solvable linear algebraic groups. We show that for an irreducible solvable $\mathbb{Q}$-defined linear algebraic group $\mathbf{G}$, there exists an isomorphism between the cohomology rings with coefficients in a finite dimensional rational $\mathbf{G}$-module $M$ of the associated $\mathbb{Q}$-defined Lie algebra $\mathfrak{g_\mathbb{Q}}$ and Zariski dense subgroups $\Gamma \leq \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{Q})$ that satisfy the condition that they intersect the $\mathbb{Q}$-split maximal torus discretely. We further prove that the restriction map in rational cohomology from $\mathbf{G}$ to a Zariski dense subgroup $\Gamma \leq \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{Q})$ with coefficients in $M$ is an injection. We then derive several results regarding finitely generated solvable groups of finite abelian rank and their representations on cohomology.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims that for an irreducible solvable ℚ-defined linear algebraic group G, the rational cohomology rings H^*(𝔤_ℚ, M) and H^*(Γ, M) are isomorphic when Γ ≤ G(ℚ) is Zariski dense and intersects the ℚ-split maximal torus discretely, for any finite-dimensional rational G-module M. It further asserts that the restriction map H^*(G(ℚ), M) → H^*(Γ, M) is injective, and derives consequences for the cohomology of finitely generated solvable groups of finite abelian rank.
Significance. If the isomorphism and injectivity hold, the work supplies a concrete bridge between Lie-algebra cohomology and discrete-group cohomology in the solvable setting by reducing via the discrete-torus condition to a virtually unipotent situation where the exponential map identifies the two theories. This could be useful for computing cohomology rings of arithmetic subgroups of solvable groups and for studying their representations.
minor comments (2)
- The abstract states the main theorems but does not indicate the key technical steps (e.g., how the discrete-intersection hypothesis is used to invoke the BCH correspondence); a one-sentence outline of the reduction would improve readability.
- Notation for the Lie algebra 𝔤_ℚ and the group G(ℚ) is introduced without an explicit reference to the standard definitions of rational points and Q-defined structures; adding a short preliminary paragraph on these conventions would help readers outside algebraic groups.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading and positive evaluation of the manuscript, including the recommendation for minor revision. No major comments appear in the report, so there are no specific points requiring point-by-point response at this stage. We will incorporate any minor suggestions in the revised version.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity detected
full rationale
The paper establishes an isomorphism between rational cohomology of the Lie algebra g_Q and that of Zariski-dense subgroups Γ of an irreducible solvable Q-defined algebraic group G, under the explicit hypothesis that Γ intersects the Q-split maximal torus discretely, plus injectivity of the restriction map from G(Q) to Γ. These results are derived from standard external theorems on algebraic groups, Lie algebra cohomology, and solvable group representations; the discrete-intersection condition is stated as an input hypothesis rather than derived internally. No self-definitional steps, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations appear in the derivation chain. The central claims remain independent of the paper's own inputs and rest on externally verifiable mathematical structures.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- standard math Standard definitions and functoriality properties of rational cohomology for algebraic groups and their Lie algebras.
- domain assumption Zariski density and discrete intersection with the Q-split maximal torus are well-defined and compatible with the module action.
Reference graph
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