1 Introduction
Let G be a reductive algebraic group defined over a nonarchimedean local field F with finite residue field of characteristic p. Fix a coefficient field k. For every compact open subgroup
$K \subset G(F)$
, let
$\mathcal {H}_K$
be the Hecke algebra of compactly supported functions
$K \backslash G(F) / K \rightarrow k$
. The Hecke algebras
$\mathcal {H}_K$
arise naturally in the study of smooth representations of
$G(F)$
on k-vector spaces (see §1.2).
In the present paper, we focus on the case where k has characteristic p equal to that of the residue field of F. Motivated by recent progress in the mod p Langlands program, as well as recent geometrization programs of Langlands Correspondences, we apply the geometry of Witt vector affine flag varieties to obtain results on mod p Hecke algebras. Our methods are inspired by the geometric Langlands program, especially the geometric Satake equivalence [Reference LusztigLus83, Reference GinzburgGin90, Reference Mirković and VilonenMV07], and its analogue in mixed characteristic [Reference ZhuZhu17a]. When K is a special parahoric subgroup, we recover the mod p Satake isomorphism of Herzig [Reference HerzigHer11b] and Henniart–Vignéras [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15]. The Satake isomorphism in these works is the mod p counterpart of the Satake isomorphism of Haines–Rostami [Reference Haines and RostamiHR10] in characteristic zero. Our methods also yield formulas for the inverse of the mod p Satake isomorphism in [Reference HerzigHer11a, Reference OllivierOll15, Reference Abe, Herzig and VignérasAHV22].
1.1 Main results
Let A be a maximal F-split torus in G and let
$\mathbf {f}$
be a facet in the apartment
$\mathscr {A}(G,A,F)$
in the enlarged building. Let
$\mathcal {O}_F$
be the ring of integers of F and let
$\mathcal {G}$
be the parahoric
$\mathcal {O}_F$
-group scheme such that
$K:=\mathcal {G}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
is the connected fixer of
$\mathbf {f}$
. Then K is a compact open subgroup of
$G(F)$
, and we can form the mod p Hecke algebra
$\mathcal {H}_K$
of compactly supported functions
$K \backslash G(F) / K \rightarrow \mathbb {F}_p$
. The algebra structure is given by the convolution product
$*$
(see (3.2)).
1.1.1 Convolution
Let
$\mathbb {F}_q$
be the residue field of F. If F has characteristic zero, the Witt vector affine flag variety
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
, first constructed in [Reference ZhuZhu17a], is an increasing union of perfections of projective
$\mathbb {F}_q$
-schemes [Reference Bhatt and ScholzeBS17] such that
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(\mathbb {F}_q) = G(F)/K$
. The closures of the left K-orbits in
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
, called perfect Schubert schemes, are enumerated by certain double cosets
$W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
(see §2.1.5). Such Schubert schemes appear as perfections of irreducible components of the mod p fibers of local models of Shimura varieties. If F has characteristic p, for uniformity of exposition, we let
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
be the perfection of the usual (power series) affine flag variety associated to G.
For
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, let
$(\underline {\mathbb {F}}_p)_w$
be the constant sheaf on the associated perfect Schubert scheme
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
. The function-sheaf dictionary associates
$\{(\underline {\mathbb {F}}_p)_w\}_w$
to a certain basis
$\{\phi _w\}_w$
of
$\mathcal {H}_K$
. Specifically,
$\phi _w$
is the sum of the characteristic functions of the double cosets in
$K \backslash G(F) / K $
associated to elements in
$W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
bounded by w in the Bruhat order.
To state our first theorem, we need the convolution map
$m \colon \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
(see (2.8)) arising from the multiplication map on
$G(F)$
. Here,
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
is the positive loop group (see (2.1)), which is a perfect ind-scheme such that
$L^+\mathcal {G}(\mathbb {F}_q) = K$
. The sheaf functor
$Rm_!$
corresponds to the convolution product
$*$
for the Hecke algebra
$\mathcal {H}_K$
under the function-sheaf dictionary (Lemma 2.9, Lemma 3.1).
Theorem 1.1 (Theorem 3.4).
Let
$w_1, w_2 \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, and let
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
be such that
$m(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_1} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_2}) = \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
. Then
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu1.png?pub-status=live)
In particular, the convolution of two elements in
$\{\phi _w\}_w$
is again an element in
$\{\phi _w\}_w$
. For a given pair
$(w_1, w_2)$
, the element w may be computed explicitly by combinatorial computations in the affine Weyl group. The key geometric input in the proof of Theorem 1.1 is the Demazure scheme
$\pi _{\dot {w}} \colon D_{\dot {w}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
(2.4) for possibly non-reduced
$\dot {w}$
. This allows one to show that the fibers of m are built out of Schubert varieties, which in particular have the property that their number of
$\mathbb {F}_q$
-points is congruent to
$1 \ \pmod {p}$
(see the proof of Theorem 2.10).
1.1.2 Satake transform
Now let M be a Levi subgroup of G given by the centralizer of a subtorus of A. To the facet
$\mathbf {f}$
, we may naturally associate a facet in the apartment
$\mathscr {A}(M,A,F)$
whose parahoric group scheme
$\mathcal {M}$
satisfies
$\mathcal {M}(\mathcal {O}_F) = M(F) \cap K$
[Reference RicharzRic16, A.2]. Let P be a parabolic subgroup of G with Levi factor M and unipotent radical U. When K is special, Herzig [Reference HerzigHer11b] and Henniart–Vignéras [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15] defined a Satake transformFootnote
1
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu2.png?pub-status=live)
Our second result is an explicit formula for
$\mathcal {S}$
in the basis
$\{\phi _w\}_w$
, where K is any parahoric subgroup. To state it, note that there exists a cocharacter
$\lambda \colon \mathbb {G}_m \rightarrow G$
such that
$M= G^0$
is the group of fixed points under the corresponding conjugation action of
$\mathbb {G}_m$
, and
$P=G^+$
is the attractor for this
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-action in the sense of (2.10). For an action of the perfection
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
on a perfect
$\mathbb {F}_q$
-scheme, we use the same notation to denote the fixed points and attractors as functors on perfect
$\mathbb {F}_q$
-schemes. Then there is an induced action of
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
such that
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}} \subset (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
. Here,
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
decomposes as a disjoint union of connected components, and
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
is a union of some subset of these components. The natural map
$q^+ \colon (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+ \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
, which is informally
$x \mapsto \lim _{t \rightarrow 0} \lambda (t) \cdot x \cdot \lambda (t)^{-1}$
, induces a bijection on connected components.
The geometrically connected components of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
are indexed by a certain group
$\pi _1(M)^\sigma _I$
(see §2.1.5). For
$c \in \pi _1(M)^\sigma _I$
and
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, let
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
be the corresponding connected component of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
. Let
$\phi _{c,w} \in \mathcal {H}_{\mathcal {M}}$
be the characteristic function of the intersection
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c(\mathbb {F}_q) \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w(\mathbb {F}_q)$
. Here,
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c\cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
is a (geometrically) connected component of
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w)^+$
, i.e. an attractor, and the irreducible components of this intersection are generalized versions of the Mirković–Vilonen cycles in [Reference Mirković and VilonenMV07, Theorem 3.2].
Theorem 1.2 (Theorem 3.5).
The Satake transform
$\mathcal {S} \colon \mathcal {H}_{K} \rightarrow \mathcal {H}_{M(F)\cap K}$
satisfies
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu3.png?pub-status=live)
Over an algebraic closure,
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w, \overline {\mathbb {F}}_q})^+$
has a unique closed attractor (Theorem 2.17), so the element c in Theorem 1.2 is unique if it exists. Furthermore, the element c is characterized by the property that
$q^+$
restricts to an isomorphism from the closed attractor onto its image. If K is special, there is always such an element c, but in general, the inclusion
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}} \subset (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
is strict. Informally, the idea behind the proof of Theorem 1.2 is that point-counting
$(\text {mod } p)$
on Mirković–Vilonen cycles may be performed on
$D_{\dot {w}}$
. Since the map
$(D_{\dot {w}})^+ \rightarrow (D_{\dot {w}})^0$
is a disjoint union of perfected affine bundles, the fibres (when positive-dimensional) have vanishing compactly supported mod p étale cohomology. This makes the point-counting more accessible.
1.1.3 Special parahorics
Now assume
$M = C_G(A)$
is a minimal Levi subgroup and
$\mathbf {f}$
is a special vertex. Then
$\Lambda : = M(F)/(M(F) \cap K)$
is a finitely generated abelian group, and
$\mathcal {H}_{M(F) \cap K}$
is canonically isomorphic to the group algebra
$\mathbb {F}_p[\Lambda ]$
(see [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15, §6] and [Reference Haines and RostamiHR10, §11] for more details). For
$z \in \Lambda $
, let
$e^z \in \mathbb {F}_p[\Lambda ]$
be the associated element. The choice of P determines a set of anti-dominant representatives
$\Lambda _- \subset \Lambda $
for the orbits of the action of the finite Weyl group
$W(G,A)$
. Moreover, there is a canonical bijection of sets
$\Lambda _- \cong W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
. In this case, Theorem 1.1 and Theorem 1.2 recover the following result, originally due to Herzig [Reference HerzigHer11b, Theorem 1.2] when K is hyperspecial, and Henniart–Vignéras [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15, §1.5] when K is special. Moreover, we recover the explicit formulas in [Reference HerzigHer11a, Proposition 5.1] and [Reference OllivierOll15, Theorem 5.5] (where G is split and K is hyperspecial), and in [Reference Abe, Herzig and VignérasAHV22, Theorem 1.1] (where G is arbitrary and K is special).
Theorem 1.3 (Theorem 3.6).
If K is special, for
$z_1, z_2 \in \Lambda _-$
, we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu4.png?pub-status=live)
In particular,
$\mathcal {H}_{K}$
is commutative. Moreover, the Satake transform
$\mathcal {S} \colon \mathcal {H}_{K} \rightarrow \mathcal {H}_{M(F) \cap K}$
is injective, identifies
$\mathcal {H}_{K}$
with
$\mathbb {F}_p[\Lambda _-]$
and satisfies
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu5.png?pub-status=live)
In comparison, when
$k= \mathbb {C}$
and K is special, the Hecke algebra
$\mathcal {H}_{K}$
is also commutative [Reference Haines and RostamiHR10, Theorem 1.0.1], and the Satake transform identifies it with the
$W(G,A)$
-invariants in
$\mathbb {C}[\Lambda ]$
. Once the geometric preliminaries in Theorem 1.1 and Theorem 1.2 are established, Theorem 1.3 follows from the identification
$\Lambda = \pi _1(M)_I^\sigma $
[Reference Haines and RostamiHR10, Proposition 1.0.2], and the following combinatorial fact [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15, §6.9]:
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn1.png?pub-status=live)
To make the connection with Theorem 1.2 explicit, note that when
$z \in \Lambda _-$
(which may be viewed as a subset of both
$\pi _1(M)_I^\sigma $
and
$W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
), we have
$\phi _{z,z} = e^z$
. The unique closed attractor in
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _z)^+$
is the single
$\mathbb {F}_q$
-point corresponding to
$z \in \Lambda _-$
. Moreover, if
$P \subset P' \subset G$
is any intermediate parabolic with Levi factor
$M' $
, then
$\pi _1(M')_I^\sigma $
is naturally identified with a submonoid of
$\Lambda $
containing
$\Lambda _-$
. For the
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-action induced by a cocharacter such that
$P' = G^+$
, the unique closed attractor in
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _z)^+$
is
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}'})^z \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{z}$
.
Remark 1.4. Let V be a finite-dimensional representation of K over a field k of characteristic
$p>0$
. Associated to V is the Hecke algebra
$\mathcal {H}_K(V)$
of compactly supported functions
$G(F) \rightarrow \operatorname {End}_k(V)$
which intertwine the left and right actions of K. Henniart–Vignéras [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15, §1.8] established a Satake isomorphism for
$\mathcal {H}_K(V)$
similar to Theorem 1.3. When
$V=\mathbb {F}_p$
is the trivial representation, we have
$\mathcal {H}_K = \mathcal {H}_K(V)$
. It is an interesting question to geometrize these Hecke algebras
$\mathcal {H}_K(V)$
with non-trivial weights as well.
1.2 Background
We first comment on the appearance of Hecke algebras in the Local Langlands program, which predicts a relationship between smooth representations of
$G(F)$
and representations of the Weil group of F in the Langlands dual group
${}^LG$
. An important tool in the study of smooth representations of
$G(F)$
is the functor of K-invariants
$V \mapsto V^K$
, where V is a representation of
$G(F)$
over a field k and
$K \subset G(F)$
is a compact open subgroup. The space
$V^K$
is naturally a module over the Hecke algebra
$\mathcal {H}_K$
. When
$k = \mathbb {C}$
, the functor
$V \mapsto V^K$
induces a bijection between isomorphism classes of irreducible smooth representations of
$G(F)$
admitting a K-fixed vector, and irreducible modules over
$\mathcal {H}_K$
. When k has characteristic
$p> 0$
, the functor
$V \mapsto V^K$
no longer induces such a bijection. Nonetheless, the study of mod p Hecke algebras plays an essential role in the mod p Langlands program.
For example, mod p Hecke algebras are used in the classification of irreducible admissible mod p representations of
$G(F)$
in terms of supercuspidals [Reference Abe, Henniart, Herzig and VignérasAHHV17, Reference Henniart and VignérasHV19]. Little is known about mod p supercuspidal representations outside of a few small rank cases [Reference BreuilBre03, Reference AbdellatifAbd14, Reference KoziołKoz16]. However, numerical evidence [Reference VignérasVig05, Reference OllivierOll10], later upgraded to a functor [Reference Grosse-KlönneGK16, Reference Grosse-KlönneGK18, Reference Grosse-KlönneGK20], suggests a correspondence between supersingular modules over the pro-p Iwahori Hecke algebra and mod p Galois representations.
The results in this paper are a first step toward a geometrization program of a mod p Local Langlands Correspondence. We expect that our methods generalize to the pro-p Iwahori Hecke algebra, which is geometrized by sheaves on the affine flag variety of a non-parahoric subgroup (the pro-unipotent radical of the Iwahori loop group). Moreover, our affine flag varieties are the special fibers of Beilinson–Drinfeld Grassmannians arising in p-adic geometry [Reference Scholze and WeinsteinSW20]. In this direction, Mann [Reference MannMan22] has developed a theory of p-adic étale sheaves which is expected to be useful in a p-adic version of the ground-breaking work of Fargues–Scholze [Reference Fargues and ScholzeFS21]. We thus expect a fruitful interplay between our work and the p-adic Langlands correspondence [Reference ColmezCol10], including groups beyond
$\operatorname {GL}_2(\mathbb {Q}_p)$
. We also expect a connection with [Reference Pepin and SchmidtPS23], which relates the Emerton–Gee stack [Reference Emerton and GeeEG23] to a Kazhdan–Lusztig style parametrization (as in [Reference Kazhdan and LusztigKL87]) of mod p Hecke modules for
$\operatorname {GL}_2(\mathbb {Q}_p)$
.
1.2.1 Geometric Satake
Our methods are inspired by Zhu’s geometric Satake equivalence [Reference ZhuZhu17a], where F has characteristic zero. This relates the category
$P_{L^+\mathcal {G}}(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})$
of
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
-equivariant perverse
$\overline {\mathbb {Q}}_\ell $
-sheaves on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
to algebraic representations of
${}^LG$
on finite-dimensional
$\overline {\mathbb {Q}}_\ell $
-vector spaces. The function-sheaf dictionary provides the connection with Hecke algebras by associating to each
$\mathcal {F} \in P_{L^+\mathcal {G}}(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})$
a function
$\mathcal {F}^{\operatorname {Tr}} \colon K \backslash G(F) /K \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb {Q}}_\ell $
. The convolution map
$m \colon \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
encodes the convolution product
$*$
in the following way [Reference ZhuZhu17b, Lemma 5.6.1]: for
$\mathcal {F}_1$
,
$\mathcal {F}_2 \in P_{L^+\mathcal {G}}(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})$
, there is a perverse sheaf
$\mathcal {F}_1 \widetilde \boxtimes \mathcal {F}_2$
on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
which satisfies
$(Rm_!(\mathcal {F}_1 \widetilde \boxtimes \mathcal {F}_2))^{\operatorname {Tr}} = \mathcal {F}_1^{\operatorname {Tr}} * \mathcal {F}_2^{\operatorname {Tr}}$
.
The papers [Reference CassCas22, Reference Cass and PépinCP24] established a similar story for perverse
$\mathbb {F}_p$
-sheaves on the affine Grassmannian, where F has characteristic p (again for K hyperspecial). Notably, a monoid related to
$\operatorname {Spec}(\mathcal {H}_K)$
appears rather than
${}^LG$
, and the simple perverse
$\mathbb {F}_p$
-sheaves turn out to be constant sheaves supported on Schubert varieties. This reflects the nature of the singularities of these Schubert varieties [Reference CassCas22, Theorem 1.4, Theorem 1.7] – namely, their seminormalizations are Cohen-Macaulay and F-rational (see also [Reference Fakhruddin, Haines, Lourenço and RicharzFHLR22, Theorem 4.1]). No appropriate analogue of these properties is currently known for Witt vector Schubert schemes, so in this paper, we work directly with constant sheaves rather than perverse sheaves. Our results also generalize the mod p Hecke algebra results in [Reference CassCas22, Reference Cass and PépinCP24] (where F has equal characteristic) to non-split groups and arbitrary parahoric subgroups. Due to the lack of smooth
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-equivariant deperfections of Witt vector Demazure schemes, we cannot apply all the foundational results of [Reference Cass and PépinCP24, §2] (cf. the proof of Theorem 2.17).
In another direction, the papers [Reference Richarz and ScholbachRS21a, Reference Richarz and ScholbachRS21b] (for rational coefficients) and [Reference Cass, van den Hove and ScholbachCvdHS22] (for integral coefficients and F of equal characteristic) gave a motivic refinement of the geometric Satake equivalence for split reductive groups. The latter provides a geometrization of the generic hyperspecial Hecke algebra, i.e. the Hecke algebra with coefficients in
$\mathbb {Z}[\mathbf {q}]$
, where
$\mathbf {q}$
is an indeterminate (see for example [Reference Cass, van den Hove and ScholbachCvdHS22, §6.3]). Such generic Hecke algebras were first studied by Vignéras [Reference VignérasVig06] in the Iwahori case, and by Pépin–Schmidt [Reference Pepin and SchmidtPS23] when
$K = \operatorname {GL}_2(\mathcal {O}_F)$
. Specialization along the quotient map
$p \mapsto \mathbf {q} \mapsto 0$
recovers the hyperspecial mod p Hecke algebra. It would be interesting to generalize [Reference Cass, van den Hove and ScholbachCvdHS22] to F of mixed characteristic and to find a realization functor from motivic sheaves to the mod p étale sheaves in the current paper which lifts the specialization map on Hecke algebras.
1.2.2 Constant terms
Recall the parabolic with Levi decomposition
$P = MU$
arising from the cocharacter
$\lambda $
. Associated to K there are integral models
$\mathcal {P}$
of P and
$\mathcal {M}$
of M. The natural maps
$\mathcal {M} \leftarrow \mathcal {P}$
,
$\mathcal {P} \rightarrow \mathcal {G}$
and the fixed points
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0 $
and attractors
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+$
for the resulting
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-action on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
are related by the following commutative diagram.
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu6.png?pub-status=live)
The maps
$p^0$
and
$p^+$
are open and closed immersions [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Theorem 5.2], so they are inclusions of some connected components. The sheaf functor
$Rq_! \circ \iota ^*$
is called a constant term functor in the geometric Langlands program, and it corresponds to the Satake transform under the function-sheaf dictionary (Theorem 2.22). In particular, the fibers of q are
$U(F)$
-orbits. The term ‘constant term functor’ reflects the fact that
$Rq_! \circ \iota ^*$
is a local analogue of a functor, obtained by replacing
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
with the moduli stack of G-bundles on a global curve in positive characteristic, which encodes the constant term operation on automorphic functions under the function-sheaf dictionary [Reference Braverman and GaitsgoryBG02, Reference Drinfeld and GaitsgoryDG16]. In the text, we work only with the bottom row of this diagram, which is sufficient since
$Rq_! \circ \iota ^*$
is a direct summand of
$Rq^+_! \circ (\iota ^+)^*$
. Furthermore, because the
$*$
-pullback of a constant sheaf is constant, we will focus our attention on the functor
$Rq^+_!$
.
2 Geometric results
2.1 Witt vector affine flag varieties
2.1.1 Notations
Let F be a complete discrete valuation field with ring of integers
$\mathcal {O}_F$
and perfect residue field k of characteristic
$p>0$
. We assume that k is a finite field or an algebraic closure thereof. Fix a uniformizer
$\varpi \in \mathcal {O}_F$
. If F has characteristic zero, for a k-algebra R, let
$W(R)$
be its ring of Witt vectors, and let
$W_{\mathcal {O}_F}(R) = W(R) \otimes _{W(k)} \mathcal {O}_F$
. Let
$W_{\mathcal {O}_F, n}(R) = W(R) \otimes _{W(k)} \mathcal {O}_F/ \varpi ^n$
. If F has characteristic p, the choice of
$\varpi $
induces an isomorphism
$F \cong k ( \!(t) \!)$
. For a k-scheme X, we denote its perfection by
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu7.png?pub-status=live)
where
$\text {Fr}$
is the absolute Frobenius morphism. The underlying topological spaces of X and
$X_{\operatorname {perf}}$
are canonically isomorphic. Moreover, there is a natural equivalence of small étale sites
$X_{\operatorname {\acute {e}t}} \cong (X_{\operatorname {perf}})_{\operatorname {\acute {e}t}}$
[Sta24, Tag 04DY]. In particular, the étale cohomology groups of X and
$X_{\operatorname {perf}}$
are canonically isomorphic.
2.1.2 The affine flag variety
Let G be a connected reductive group over F and let
$\mathscr {B}(G,F)$
be its Bruhat–Tits building. For each facet
$\mathbf {f} \subset \mathscr {B}(G,F)$
, let
$\mathcal {G} := \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}$
be the parahoric
$\mathcal {O}_F$
-group scheme with generic fiber G as in [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT84, Définition 5.2.6 ff.]. Let
$K := \mathcal {G}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
. If F has characteristic zero, following [Reference ZhuZhu17a], we define the following functors on perfect k-algebras:
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn2.png?pub-status=live)
The functor
$LG$
is called the loop group, and
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
is called the positive loop group. We also define the functor
$L^n\mathcal {G} \colon R \mapsto \mathcal {G}(W_{\mathcal {O}_F, n}(R)).$
Then
$L^+\mathcal {G} = \displaystyle \lim _{\longleftarrow } L^n\mathcal {G}$
. The affine flag variety of
$\mathcal {G}$
is the functor on perfect k-algebras given by the étale-quotient
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu8.png?pub-status=live)
By [Reference Bhatt and ScholzeBS17],
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
is represented by an increasing union of perfections of projective k-schemes.
If F has characteristic p, the loop group (resp. positive loop group) is
$LG(R) = G(R(\!(t)\!))$
(resp.
$L^+\mathcal {G}(R) = \mathcal {G}(R[\![t]\!])$
. We set
$L^n\mathcal {G}(R) = G(R[t]/t^n)$
. These functors are usually defined on all k-algebras, but for uniformity of exposition, we restrict to perfect k-algebras. Then the étale-quotient
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} = LG/L^+\mathcal {G}$
is represented by the perfection of the ind-projective k-scheme constructed in [Reference Pappas and RapoportPR08].
2.1.3 Greenberg functors
If F has characteristic zero, there is no canonical ind-projective k-scheme whose perfection is
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
. The problem is that the natural extension of the functor
$LG$
to non-perfect k-algebras is not well-behaved. (For example, if R is non-perfect,
$W_{\mathcal {O}_F}(R)$
can have p-torsion, in which case
$W_{\mathcal {O}_F}(R)$
is not a submodule of
$W_{\mathcal {O}_F}(R)[1/p]$
.) However, as observed by Greenberg [Reference GreenbergGre61], the functor
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
is well-behaved on all k-algebras. Following [Reference ZhuZhu17a], we define the following functors on all k-algebras:
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu9.png?pub-status=live)
Then
$L^+_p\mathcal {G} = \displaystyle \lim _{\longleftarrow } L^n_p\mathcal {G}$
and
$L^+\mathcal {G} = (L^+_p\mathcal {G})_{\operatorname {perf}}$
. The functor
$L^n_p\mathcal {G}$
is represented by a k-scheme of finite-type. If F has characteristic p, let
$L_pG$
,
$L^+_p\mathcal {G}$
, and
$L^n_p \mathcal {G}$
be the extensions of
$LG$
,
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
, and
$L^n \mathcal {G}$
to all k-algebras. There are no issues with
$L_pG$
because
$R[\![t]\!]$
never has t-torsion. We will use these functors to construct deperfections of finite-dimensional subschemes of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
, i.e., finite-type k-schemes whose perfections are subschemes of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
.
2.1.4 Rational points
Let
$\breve {F}$
be the completion of a maximal unramified extension of F and let
$\overline {k}$
be its residue field. Since
$\overline {k}$
is local for the étale topology,
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu10.png?pub-status=live)
Lemma 2.1. We have
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(k) = G(F)/\mathcal {G}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
.
Proof. This follows from the fact that
$H^1(\operatorname {Gal}(\overline {k}/k), \mathcal {G}(\mathcal {O}_{\breve {F}})) = 0$
[Reference Kaletha and PrasadKP23, Lemma 8.1.4] and the exact sequence in Galois cohomology [Reference SerreSer94, Proposition 36].
2.1.5 Perfect Schubert schemes
Choose a maximal F-split torus A such that
$\mathbf {f}$
is contained in the apartment
$\mathscr {A}(G,A,F)$
. Let
$\mathbf {f}' \subset \mathscr {A}(G,A,F)$
be another facet. For
$w \in L^+ \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}'}(k) \backslash LG(k) / L^+ \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}(k)$
, define the orbit
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu11.png?pub-status=live)
where
$\widetilde {w} \in LG(k)$
is any lift of w and e is the basepoint of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}}$
. Let
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
be the closure of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^\circ (\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
. The stabilizer of
$\widetilde {w} \cdot e$
in
$L^+ \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}'}$
is the positive loop group of the parahoric
$\mathcal {O}_{F}$
-group scheme associated to
$\mathbf {f}' \cup w \mathbf {f}$
(cf. [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Proposition 3.7]). It follows that
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^\circ (\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is canonically isomorphic to the perfection of a smooth quasi-projective k-scheme. Furthermore,
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is the perfection of a projective k-scheme by [Reference Bhatt and ScholzeBS17] (if F has characteristic zero) and [Reference Pappas and RapoportPR08] (if F has characteristic p). We call
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^\circ (\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
a perfect Schubert cell and
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
a perfect Schubert scheme.
Following [Reference Haines and RapoportHR08, Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22], the perfect Schubert schemes can be parametrized as follows. Fix a maximal
$\breve {F}$
-split torus
$S \subset G$
containing A and let
$T = C_G(S)$
. Then T is a maximal torus, and we obtain a chain of F-tori
$A \subset S \subset T.$
The connected Néron model
$\mathcal {T}$
of T over
$\mathcal {O}_F$
is contained in
$\mathcal {G}$
[Reference Kaletha and PrasadKP23, Proposition 8.2.4], and
$\mathcal {T}(\mathcal {O}_{\breve {F}})$
is the unique parahoric subgroup of
$T(\breve {F})$
. The Iwahori–Weyl group is
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn3.png?pub-status=live)
Choose an alcove
$\mathbf {a}$
in the apartment
$\mathscr {A}(G,A,F)$
. This determines a splitting
$W = W_{\operatorname {af}} \rtimes \pi _1(G)_I$
. Here,
$W_{\operatorname {af}} \subset W$
is the affine Weyl group, I is the inertia group of F, and
$\pi _1(G)$
is the algebraic fundamental group. As
$W_{\operatorname {af}}$
is a Coxeter group, we may use this splitting to extend the length function
$\ell $
and partial Bruhat order to W by declaring elements of
$\pi _1(G)_I$
to have length
$0$
. The Iwahori group scheme over
$\mathcal {O}_F$
associated to the alcove
$\mathbf {a}$
will be denoted by
$\mathcal {I} : = \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {a}}.$
The facets
$\mathbf {f}, \mathbf {f}'$
are contained in unique facets
$\breve {\mathbf {f}}, \breve {\mathbf {f}}'$
in
$\mathscr {A}(G,\breve {F},S)$
. Then
$\mathcal {G}_{\breve {\mathbf {f}}} = \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}} \times \operatorname {Spec}(\mathcal {O}_{\breve {F}})$
. Let
$W_{\breve {\mathbf {f}}} = (N_G(S)(\breve {F}) \cap \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}} (\mathcal {O}_{\breve {F}}))/\mathcal {T}(\mathcal {O}_{\breve {F}})$
. By the Bruhat decomposition (see [Reference Haines and RapoportHR08, Proposition 8]),
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu12.png?pub-status=live)
Let
$\sigma \in \operatorname {Gal}(\overline {k}/k)$
be a geometric Frobenius element (if
$\overline {k} = k$
, then we let
$\sigma $
be the identity) and let
$W_{\mathbf {f}} := W_{\breve {\mathbf {f}}}^\sigma $
. By [Reference Haines and RapoportHR08, Remark 9], passing to
$\sigma $
-invariants induces a bijection
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn4.png?pub-status=live)
2.1.6 Closure relations and dimensions
From now on, we assume that
$\mathbf {f}$
and
$\mathbf {f}'$
are contained in the closure of the alcove
$\mathbf {a}$
. By the reduction steps in [Reference Haines and RicharzHR23, §3.1], over
$\overline {k}$
, every
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is isomorphic to a perfect Schubert scheme for a pair
$(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
satisfying this assumption.
For the remainder of Section 2, we assume
$k = \overline {k}$
unless otherwise stated. This implies
$F= \breve {F}$
. The results still apply when k is finite if we restrict to perfect Schubert schemes defined over k. In this subsection, we recall one of the main results in [Reference RicharzRic13]. We note that the results in op. cit. are stated in the case where F has equal characteristic, but the proofs apply verbatim in mixed characteristic.
By [Reference RicharzRic13, Lemma 1.6], for
$w \in W$
, there is a unique element
$w ^{\mathbf {f}}$
of minimal length in
$w W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, and a unique element
$_{\mathbf {f}'} w ^{\mathbf {f}}$
of maximal length in
$\{(vw)^{\mathbf {f}} \: : \: v \in W_{\mathbf {f}'}\}$
. Taking equivalence classes gives a natural bijection
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu13.png?pub-status=live)
Lemma 2.2. The perfect Schubert scheme
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is set-theoretically the following union of locally closed perfect Schubert cells.
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu14.png?pub-status=live)
The dimension of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is
$\ell (_{\mathbf {f}'} w ^{\mathbf {f}})$
.
Proof. This is [Reference RicharzRic13, Proposition 2.8]. When
$\mathbf {f}=\mathbf {a}$
, this is proved using the Demazure resolution (2.4). For general
$\mathbf {f}$
, one analyzes the fibers of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {I}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
using that
$L^+\mathcal {G}/L^+\mathcal {I}$
is the perfection of a flag variety
$\overline {P}^{\text {red}}/\overline {B}$
(see, for example, (2.7)).
2.1.7 Deperfections
An integral domain A is said to be p-closed if for every
$a \in \operatorname {Frac}(A)$
such that
$a^p \in A$
, we have
$a \in A$
. An integral scheme is p-closed if it has a covering by open affines which are p-closed. We recall the following special case of the construction in [Reference ZhuZhu17a, Proposition A.15].
Proposition 2.3. Let X be a perfect scheme over k which is isomorphic to the perfection of an integral projective k-scheme, and let
$k(X)$
be the field of rational functions on X.
Then for each subfield
$L \subset k(X)$
which is finitely generated over k and whose perfection is
$k(X)$
, there exists a unique p-closedFootnote
2
projective k-scheme
$X'$
such that
$k(X') = L$
and
$(X')_{\operatorname {perf}} = X$
.
Proof. The scheme
$X'$
is the ringed space with underlying topological space the same as X and the sheaf of rings
$\mathcal {O}_{X'}(U) = \{f \in \mathcal {O}_X(U) \: : \: f \in L\}.$
By the proof of [Reference ZhuZhu17a, Proposition A.15],
$X'$
is the unique p-closed scheme such that
$k(X') = L$
and
$(X')_{\operatorname {perf}} = X$
. It remains to see that
$X'$
projective. By assumption, X has an ample line bundle
$\mathcal {L}$
. Because
$X'$
is of finite-type, some power of
$\mathcal {L}$
descends along the natural map
$X \rightarrow X'$
. By [Reference Bhatt and ScholzeBS17, Lemma 3.6], the line bundle on
$X'$
is ample.
In [Reference ZhuZhu17a, §B.2], Zhu constructed canonical deperfections of Witt vector Schubert schemes when
$\mathcal {G}$
is a split reductive group and conjectured that these are normal and Cohen-Macaulay. Canonical deperfections for general parahorics were constructed in [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22]. In [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Theorem 1.10], it was shown that canonical deperfections occurring in the
$\mu $
-admissible locus of a minuscule cocharacter
$\mu $
(with a minor technical assumption when
$p=2$
) satisfy Zhu’s conjecture. We now show that every p-closed deperfection of a perfect Schubert scheme is normal (this result is also implicit in [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22]).
Lemma 2.4. Let A be a domain of characteristic p that is p-closed. Then if
$A_{\operatorname {perf}}$
is normal, so is A.
Proof. Let
$f(x) \in A[x]$
be a monic polynomial and let
$a \in \operatorname {Frac}(A)$
be an element such that
$f(a) = 0.$
Then
$a \in A_{\operatorname {perf}}$
by normality, so
$a \in A$
because A is p-closed.
Lemma 2.5. Every perfect Schubert scheme
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is normal.
Proof. This is stated in [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Proposition 3.7] when
$\mathbf {f} = \mathbf {f}'$
and F has characteristic zero, but the proof applies verbatim to the general case. The key ingredients are the fact that the Demazure resolution
$D_{\dot {w}}$
(2.4) is normal, satisfies
$\pi _{\dot {w}, *}(\mathcal {O}_{D_{\dot {w}}}) \cong \mathcal {O}_{\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})}$
, and the fact that the ring of global functions on a normal scheme is normal [Sta24, Tag 0358].
Theorem 2.6. Every deperfectionFootnote
3
of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
in the sense of Proposition 2.3 is normal.
Remark 2.7. If F has characteristic p,
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is isomorphic to the perfection of a canonical projective variety
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
. To construct
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
, form the affine flag variety as the étale quotient
$(L_pG/L_p^+\mathcal {G})_{\operatorname {\acute {e}t}}$
on all k-algebras. This is an ind-projective k-scheme by [Reference Pappas and RapoportPR08], and
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is the scheme-theoretic image of the
$L^+_p\mathcal {G}$
-orbit associated to w. If
$p \nmid |\pi _1(G_{\text {der}})|$
(and the relative root system is reduced if
$p =2$
),
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is normal by [Reference Fakhruddin, Haines, Lourenço and RicharzFHLR22, Theorem 4.23] (see also [Reference FaltingsFal03, Theorem 8] and [Reference Pappas and RapoportPR08, Theorem 0.3]). In general,
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
need not be normal by [Reference Haines, Lourenço and RicharzHLR24, Theorem 1.1], but the seminormalization of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is normal by [Reference Fakhruddin, Haines, Lourenço and RicharzFHLR22, Theorem 4.1]. The seminormalization [Sta24, Tag 0EUK] is the universal scheme mapping universally homeomorphically onto
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
with the same residue fields. The deperfection of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
associated by Proposition 2.3 to the function field of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
is the seminormalization of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {can}}(\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
.
2.2 Demazure resolutions and convolution Grassmannians
2.2.1 Demazure resolutions
Let
$w \in W$
and write
$w = w_{\operatorname {af}} \tau $
for
$w_{\operatorname {af}} \in W_{\operatorname {af}}$
and
$\tau \in \pi _1(G)_I$
. Choose a (not necessarily reduced) decomposition
$\dot {w} = s_1 \cdots s_n$
of
$w_{\operatorname {af}}$
as a product of simple reflections along the walls of
$\mathbf {a}$
. For each i, let
$\mathcal {P}_i$
be the minimal parahoric group scheme attached to
$s_i$
, so that
$\mathcal {P}_i(\mathcal {O}_F) = \mathcal {I}(\mathcal {O}_F) \sqcup \mathcal {I}(\mathcal {O}_F) s_i \mathcal {I}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
for any lift of
$s_i$
to
$N_G(S)(F)$
. The perfect Demazure scheme associated to
$\dot {w}$
is
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn5.png?pub-status=live)
Here, we have taken étale quotient of
$\prod _{i=1}^n L^+\mathcal {P}_i$
by the right action of
$\prod _{i=1}^n L^+\mathcal {I}$
given by
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu15.png?pub-status=live)
Since any lift of
$\tau $
to
$N_G(S)(F)$
normalizes
$L^+\mathcal {I}$
, the multiplication map
$(p_1, \cdots , p_n) \mapsto p_1 \cdots p_n \tau $
induces a map
$D_{\dot {w}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}}$
. We define
$\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})$
to be the image of this map, which is isomorphic to
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {f})$
for some
$w' \in W$
. Let
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn6.png?pub-status=live)
be the resulting surjective map.
The following result is well-known in equal characteristic [Reference FaltingsFal03, Lemma 9], [Reference Pappas and RapoportPR08, Proposition 9.7] and in mixed-characteristic [Reference He and ZhouHZ20, Proposition 3.8], [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Proposition 3.7]. Below we assemble the arguments in one place for the reader’s convenience.
Lemma 2.8.
(1) The perfect Demazure scheme
$D_{\dot {w}}$
is the perfection of a smooth, projective k-scheme. The multiplication map
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
satisfies
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu16.png?pub-status=live)
(2) Furthermore, if
$w \in {}_{\mathbf {f}'} W ^{\mathbf {f}}$
and
$\dot {w}$
is a reduced expression, then
$\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})= \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f'}, \mathbf {f})$
and
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
is an isomorphism over
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^\circ (\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
.
Proof. By the arguments in [Reference Pappas and RapoportPR08, Proposition 8.7] (which apply verbatim in mixed characteristic),
$L^n_p\mathcal {P}_i/ L_p^n \mathcal {I} \cong \mathbb {P}^1_k$
for
$n \gg 0$
, and this quotient admits sections Zariski-locally. As in [Reference He and ZhouHZ20, Proposition 3.5], this implies that
$D_{\dot {w}}$
is the perfection of an iterated
$\mathbb {P}^1_k$
-bundle which is smooth and projective. By [Reference Bhatt and ScholzeBS17, Lemma 6.9], to show that
$R\pi _{\dot {w}, *}(\mathcal {O}_{D_{\dot {w}}}) \cong \mathcal {O}_{\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})}[0]$
, it suffices to check this on geometric fibers.
We first suppose
$\mathbf {f} = \mathbf {f}' = \mathbf {a}$
, and we induct on the length of
$\dot {w}$
. Let
$\dot {v} = s_2 \cdots s_{n} \tau $
. Since
$\pi _{\dot {v}}(D_{\dot {v}})$
is irreducible and
$L^+\mathcal {I}$
-stable, it is of the form
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{v'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a})$
for some
$v' \in W$
. As in [Reference FaltingsFal03, Lemma 9], by performing the multiplication in two steps
$(p_1, \cdots , p_n) \mapsto (p_1, p_2 \cdots p_n \tau ) \mapsto p_1 \cdots p_n \tau $
, we may factor
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
as
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu17.png?pub-status=live)
By induction, pushforward along the first map preserves the structure sheaf. By properties of Tits systems [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT72, (1.2.6)] (especially T 3), if
$s_1 v' < v'$
, then
$\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}}) = \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{v'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a})$
, and the second map has fibers isomorphic to
$(\mathbb {P}^1)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
. Otherwise, if
$s_1 v'> v'$
, then
$\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}}) = \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{s_1v'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a})$
. To describe the fibers in this case, consider the union
$Z = \cup _{v" < v'} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{v"}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a})$
of those perfect Schubert schemes in
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{v'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a})$
for which
$s_1 v" < v"$
. Then the second map is an isomorphism away from Z and has fibers isomorphic to
$(\mathbb {P}^1)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
over Z. Thus, in either case, the result follows since
$R\Gamma ((\mathbb {P}^1_L)_{\operatorname {perf}}, \mathcal {O}_{(\mathbb {P}^1_L)_{\operatorname {perf}}}) = L[0]$
for any perfect field L.
For general
$\mathbf {f}, \mathbf {f}'$
, we factor
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
as
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn7.png?pub-status=live)
where the first map is a Demazure map with
$\mathbf {f} = \mathbf {f}' = \mathbf {a}$
, and the second map is the quotient. The image of the first map is of the form
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a})$
for some
$w' \in W$
. Thus, it suffices to show that pushforward along the natural surjection
$\pi \colon \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a}) \rightarrow \pi _{\dot {w}}({D_{\dot {w}}})$
preserves the structure sheaf. For this, let
$\overline {P}^{\operatorname {red}}$
be the maximal reductive quotient of the special fiber of
$\mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}$
. By [Reference RicharzRic13, Remark 2.9], the image of the special fiber of
$\mathcal {I} \rightarrow \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}$
in
$\overline {P}^{\operatorname {red}}$
is a Borel subgroup
$\overline {B}$
, and we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn8.png?pub-status=live)
Furthermore, the maximal F-split torus S has a natural
$\mathcal {O}_F$
-structure whose special fiber
$\overline {S}$
is a maximal torus in
$\overline {P}^{\operatorname {red}}$
. The group
$W_{\mathbf {f}}$
identifies with the Weyl group of
$(\overline {P}^{\operatorname {red}}, \overline {S})$
. Thus, since
$\pi $
is
$L^+\mathcal {I}$
-equivariant, the fibers of
$\pi $
are isomorphic to perfections of unions of
$\overline {B}$
-orbit closures in
$\overline {P}^{\operatorname {red}} / \overline {B}$
. Such a union is connected, so by normality of
$\pi _{\dot {w}}({D_{\dot{w}}})$
this implies that
$\pi _{*}(\mathcal {O}_{\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w'}(\mathbf {a}, \mathbf {a})}) \cong \mathcal {O}_{\pi _{\dot {w}}({D_{\dot {w}}})}$
. For the higher direct images, it is well-known that the structure sheaves of
$\overline {B}$
-orbit closures (i.e, Schubert varieties), have vanishing higher cohomology. (For example, this follows because the Demazure resolution is a rational resolution by an iterated
$\mathbb {P}^1$
-bundle [Reference Brion and KumarBK05, Theorem 3.3.4]). If our fiber in
$\overline {P}^{\operatorname {red}} / \overline {B}$
is not irreducible, we induct on its support in
$\overline {P}^{\operatorname {red}} / \overline {B}$
. Write an arbitrary union of
$\overline {B}$
-orbit closures in terms of its irreducible components as
$X = X_1 \cup \cdots \cup X_m$
. If
$Y = X_2 \cup \cdots \cup X_m$
, we conclude by induction and the exact sequenceFootnote
4
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu18.png?pub-status=live)
This proves that
$R\pi _{\dot {w}, *}(\mathcal {O}_{D_{\dot {w}}}) \cong \mathcal {O}_{\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})}$
for general
$\mathbf {f}, \mathbf {f}'$
.Footnote
5
To compute
$\pi _{\dot {w}, !}(\mathbb {F}_p)$
, we first note that since
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
is the perfection of a proper map, we can replace
$\pi _{\dot {w}, !}$
by
$\pi _{\dot {w}, *}$
. Then we apply
$R\pi _{\dot {w}, *}$
to the Artin–Schreier sequence
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu19.png?pub-status=live)
Finally, the proof of [Reference RicharzRic13, Proposition 2.8] shows that
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu20.png?pub-status=live)
Thus, if
$w \in {}_{\mathbf {f}'} W ^{\mathbf {f}}$
and
$\dot {w}$
is a reduced expression, by tracing through our proof that
$R\pi _{\dot {w}, *}(\mathcal {O}_{D_{\dot {w}}}) \cong \mathcal {O}_{\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})}$
, it follows that
$\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})= \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}(\mathbf {f'}, \mathbf {f})$
and
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
and is an isomorphism over
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^\circ (\mathbf {f}', \mathbf {f})$
.
2.2.2 Convolution
In this subsection, we let
$\mathcal {G} = \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}$
and
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w = \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w(\mathbf {f}, \mathbf {f})$
. The convolution diagram is as follows:
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn9.png?pub-status=live)
Here, p is the quotient map on the first factor and the identity on the second, q is the quotient by the diagonal action of
$L^+ \mathcal {G}$
, and m is the multiplication map. The map
$LG \times ^{L^+ \mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \times \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
,
$(g_1, g_2) \mapsto (g_1, g_1g_2)$
is an isomorphism, so the convolution Grassmannian
$LG \times ^{L^+ \mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
is represented by an increasing union of perfections of projective k-schemes.
Lemma 2.9. If k is a finite field or an algebraic closure thereof and
$x \in \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(k)$
,
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu21.png?pub-status=live)
Proof. This follows from the isomorphism
$LG \times ^{L^+ \mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} \times \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
and Lemma 2.1 (cf. also [Reference ZhuZhu17b, Lemma 5.6.1]).
We now define the following finite-dimensional perfect subschemes (2.9) of the convolution Grassmannian. Fix
$w_1, w_2 \in W$
. Let
$n \gg 0 $
be an integer such that
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
acts on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_2}$
through the quotient
$L^+ \mathcal {G} \rightarrow L^n\mathcal {G}$
. Let
$\pi ^{(n)} \colon L^{(n)}G \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
be the reduction of the
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
-torsor
$LG \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
to an
$L^n\mathcal {G}$
-torsor. Then we define
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn10.png?pub-status=live)
This is a closed subscheme of
$LG \times \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
, isomorphic to the perfection of a projective k-scheme, and independent of
$n \gg 0$
.
Theorem 2.10. Let
$w_1, w_2 \in {}_{\mathbf {f}} W ^{\mathbf {f}}$
. Fix reduced expressions
$\dot {w}_1 = \tau _1 s_1 \cdots s_n$
and
$\dot {w}_2 = t_1 \cdots t_m \tau _2$
, where the
$s_i$
,
$t_j$
are simple reflections and
$\tau _i \in \pi _1(G)_I$
. Let
$\dot {w} = s_1 \cdots s_n t_1 \cdots t_m \tau _2$
.
-
1. The image of the restriction of m to
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_1} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_2}$ is the left
$\tau _1$ -translate
$\tau _1 \cdot \pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})$ .
-
2. The resulting convolution map
$$ \begin{align*}m \colon \mathcal{F}\!\ell_{w_1} \times^{L^+\mathcal{G}} \mathcal{F}\!\ell_{w_2} \longrightarrow \tau_1 \cdot \pi_{\dot{w}}(D_{\dot{w}})\end{align*} $$
$Rm_*(\mathcal {O}_{\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_1} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_2}}) \cong \mathcal {O}_{\tau _1 \cdot \pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})}[0]$ and
$Rm_!(\mathbb {F}_p) \cong \mathbb {F}_p[0]$ .
Proof. Any lift
$\widetilde \tau _1 \in N_G(S)(F)$
acts on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
by multiplication on the left, and this action preserves
$L^+\mathcal {I}$
-orbits, so
$\tau _1 \cdot \pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})$
is well-defined. Since m is
$LG$
-equivariant, after multiplying on the left by
$\widetilde \tau _1$
, we can assume
$w_1 \in W_{\operatorname {af}}$
. Now consider the following commutative diagram.
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu23.png?pub-status=live)
Here, we have factored
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
as the composition
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu24.png?pub-status=live)
By Lemma 2.8, each map (except possibly m) is surjective, and pushforward preserves the structure sheaf. For the bottom two maps, we also use flat base change and the fact that both properties can be checked étale-locally. It follows that m maps
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_1} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {I}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_2}$
onto
$\pi _{\dot {w}}(D_{\dot {w}})$
, and
$Rm_*$
preserves the structure sheaf. It also follows that
$Rm_!(\mathbb {F}_p) \cong \mathbb {F}_p[0]$
.
2.3 Geometry of generalized Mirković–Vilonen cycles
2.3.1 Attractors and fixed points
Let R be a ring, and let
$\mathbb {G}_{m}$
be the multiplicative group over
$\operatorname {Spec}(R)$
. For an R-scheme X with an action of
$\mathbb {G}_m$
, we have the following functors on R-algebras (cf. [Reference DrinfeldDri13, Reference RicharzRic19]).
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn11.png?pub-status=live)
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn12.png?pub-status=live)
Here,
$\operatorname {Spec}(R')$
has the trivial
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-action and
$\mathbb {A}^1_{R'}$
has the usual (multiplicative) action. These are the functors of fixed-points and attractors, respectively (we will not need the repellers). There are natural maps
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu25.png?pub-status=live)
Here,
$q^+$
is induced by the zero section
$\operatorname {Spec}(R') \rightarrow \mathbb {A}^1_{R'}$
. If X is an (ind)-perfect k-scheme with an action of
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
, we also use the notation
$X^0$
and
$X^+$
to denote the restriction of these functors to perfect k-algebras. The domain of these functors will be clear from the context, and their formation commutes with the passage from X to
$X_{\operatorname {perf}}$
.
For the rest of subsection 2.3.1, we assume
$R=k$
and that X is a separated k-scheme of finite-type.
Lemma 2.11.
(1) The functors
$X^0$
and
$X^+$
are represented by k-schemes of finite-type.
(2) The map
$\iota ^0$
is a closed immersion and
$\iota ^+$
is a monomorphism.
(3) The map
$q^+$
is affine, has geometrically connected fibers, and induces a bijection
$\pi _0(X^+) \cong \pi _0(X^0)$
.
Proof. This is [Reference DrinfeldDri13, 1.2.2, 1.3.3, 1.4.2] and [Reference RicharzRic19, Corollary 1.12].
We write the connected components of
$X^+$
as
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu26.png?pub-status=live)
Similarly, let
$\{X_i^0\}_{i \in \pi _0(X^0)}$
be the connected components of
$X^0$
. Let
$q^+_i \colon X^+_i \rightarrow X^0_i$
be the restriction of
$q^+$
to the corresponding connected component.
A sequence
$Z_0 \subset Z_1 \subset \cdots \subset Z_n = X$
of closed subschemes is called a filtration of X, and the schemes
$Z_i \setminus Z_{i-1}$
are the cells of the filtration. With additional assumptions, we can say more about
$X^+$
as in the following lemma.
Lemma 2.12. Suppose k is algebraically closed and that X is normal, projective and connected. Then
$q^+$
is bijective on points, and each
$q_i^+$
is a locally closed immersion. Furthermore, there exists a filtration of X having the
$X_i^+$
as its cells.
Proof. This is a special case of [Reference Cass and PépinCP24, §2.3]. We mention that the hypotheses on X are used to ensure that there exists a
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-equivariant embedding of X into a projective space
$\mathbb {P}(V)$
, where
$\mathbb {G}_m$
acts linearly on V. The existence of such an embedding is a result of Sumihiro [Reference SumihiroSum74]. Since the
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-action on V can be diagonalized, the filtration can be explicitly constructed as in the works of Białynicki-Birula [Reference Białynicki-BirulaBB73, Reference Białynicki-BirulaBB76].
For applications to mod p Hecke algebras, we will apply the following result to a deperfection of the Demazure resolution (2.5) in Proposition 2.17 when F has characteristic p. When F has characteristic zero, we will verify directly that the conclusion of the lemma is still true for the perfect Witt vector Demazure resolution.
Lemma 2.13. In addition to the assumptions of Lemma 2.12, suppose moreover that there exists a smooth projective k-scheme
$\widetilde X$
equipped with a
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-action and a
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-equivariant surjection
$\pi \colon \widetilde X \rightarrow X$
. (1) There is exactly one
$i_0 \in \pi _0(X^+)$
such that
$X_{i_0}^+$
is closed in X, and it is characterized by the property that
$q^+_{i_0}$
is a universal homeomorphism. (2) Furthermore, if
$R\pi _!(\mathbb {F}_p) = \mathbb {F}_p[0]$
, we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu27.png?pub-status=live)
Proof. This is [Reference Cass and PépinCP24, Corollary 2.3.5]; we sketch the argument here. For (1), we note that by Lemma 2.12, there exists some
$i_0 \in \pi _0(X^+)$
such that
$X_{i_0}^+$
is closed in X. For general
$i \in \pi _0(X^+)$
, the fiber
$\pi ^{-1}(X_i)$
is a union of connected components of
$\widetilde {X}^+$
. Since
$\pi ^{-1}(X_{i_0})$
is projective, it contains a closed attractor by [Reference Białynicki-BirulaBB76], which is necessarily also closed in
$\widetilde {X}$
. As
$\widetilde {X}$
is smooth and projective, it has a unique closed attractor by [Reference Białynicki-BirulaBB73, §4], so
$i_0$
is uniquely determined. By Lemma 2.11 (3), the restriction of
$q^+$
to any connected component of
$X^+$
which is also proper maps bijectively onto its image in
$X^0$
. Since
$q^+$
admits a section, it follows that
$i_0$
is uniquely characterized by property that
$q^+_{i_0}$
is an isomorphism on reduced loci and hence is a universal homeomorphism.
For (2),
$Rq_{{i_0}!}^+(\mathbb {F}_p)=\mathbb {F}_p[0]$
because
$q^+_{i_0}$
is a universal homeomorphism. It remains to show that
$Rq_{i!}^+(\mathbb {F}_p)=\mathbb {F}_p[0]$
for all other i. Let
$\pi _i$
be the restriction of
$\pi $
to
$\pi ^{-1}(X_i)$
. For
$j \in \pi _0((\pi ^{-1}(X_i))^+)$
, let
$\widetilde {q}^+_j \colon \widetilde {X}_j^+ \rightarrow \widetilde {X}_j^0$
be the restriction of
$\widetilde {q}^+ \colon \widetilde {X}^+ \rightarrow \widetilde X^0$
to
$\widetilde {X}_j^+$
. Let
$\widetilde {\iota } \colon \widetilde {X}^0 \rightarrow \widetilde {X}$
be the inclusion. By Lemma 2.12,
$\pi ^{-1}(X_i)$
has a filtration with cells isomorphic to the
$\widetilde {X}_j^+$
(obtained by intersecting a filtration of
$\widetilde {X}$
with
$\pi ^{-1}(X_i)$
). Since
$R\pi _!(\mathbb {F}_p) = \mathbb {F}_p[0]$
, then
$Rq_{{i}!}^+(\mathbb {F}_p) = R\pi _{i!}( Rq_{{i!}}^+(\mathbb {F}_p))$
. Hence, by excision, the object
$Rq_{{i}!}^+(\mathbb {F}_p) \in D_{\operatorname {\acute {e}t}}(X^0_i, \mathbb {F}_p)$
lies in the subcategory generated under taking cones of morphisms between the objects
$R\pi _{!} \circ \widetilde \iota _! \circ R\widetilde q_{j!}^+ (\mathbb {F}_p)$
for
$j \in \pi _0((\pi ^{-1}(X_i))^+)$
(see also [Reference Cass and PépinCP24, Corollary 2.3.5] for an argument using exact sequences). It therefore suffices to prove that
$R\widetilde q_{j!}^+ (\mathbb {F}_p) = 0$
. For this, we note that because
$\widetilde {X}$
is smooth, then
$\widetilde q_{j}^+$
is an affine bundle by [Reference Białynicki-BirulaBB73, §4], and because
$i \neq i_0$
, then
$\widetilde q_{j}^+$
has positive relative dimension. The desired vanishing then follows from the fact that
$R\Gamma _c(\mathbb {A}^n, \mathbb {F}_p) = 0$
if
$n> 0$
, which may be computed from excision and the quasi-coherent cohomology of
$\mathbb {P}^n$
(cf. [Reference Cass and PépinCP24, Lemma 2.1.1]).
2.3.2 Parabolic subgroups
For the rest of the paper, we assume
$\mathbf {f} = \mathbf {f}'$
. We let
$\mathcal {G} = \mathcal {G}_{\mathbf {f}}$
and
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w = \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w(\mathbf {f}, \mathbf {f})$
.
Fix a semi-standard F-Levi subgroup
$M \subset G$
, i.e., the centralizer of a subtorus of A. Let
$\lambda \colon \mathbb {G}_m \rightarrow T$
be a cocharacter defined over F. By conjugation, this gives rise to a
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-action on G. Then the attractor
$P:=G^+$
as in (2.11) is a parabolic F-subgroup of G. We may choose
$\lambda $
so that
$G^0 = M$
is the fixed point functor as in (2.10) for this
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-action defined by
$\lambda $
. The k-points of the unipotent radical
$U \subset P$
are
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn13.png?pub-status=live)
Lemma 2.14. Let
$\mathcal {P} := \mathcal {G}^+$
and
$\mathcal {M} := \mathcal {G}^0$
for the unique extension of
$\lambda $
to a cocharacter
$\mathbb {G}_{m, \mathcal {O}_F} \rightarrow \mathcal {T}$
. Suppose k is a finite field or an algebraic closure thereof.
(1) The attractor functor
$\mathcal {P}$
and fixed-point functor
$\mathcal {M}$
are smooth, closed subgroup schemes of
$\mathcal {G}$
with geometrically connected fibers.
(2) Furthermore,
$\mathcal {M}$
is a parahoric group scheme for M, the natural map
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
is a closed immersion and
$\mathcal {M}(\mathcal {O}_F) = \mathcal {G}(\mathcal {O}_F) \cap M(F).$
Proof. The first part follows from [Reference Haines and RicharzHR21, Lemma 4.5, Lemma 4.6]. The proof that
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
is a closed immersion in equal characteristic applies verbatim in mixed characteristic (cf. [Reference ZhuZhu17a, Proposition 1.20]). Finally, the description of
$\mathcal {M}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
is [Reference RicharzRic16, Lemma A.1].
If F has characteristic zero, the Teichmüller map induces a homomorphism
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}} \rightarrow L^+\mathbb {G}_m$
. The cocharacter
$\lambda \colon \mathbb {G}_{m, \mathcal {O}_F} \rightarrow \mathcal {T}$
also induces a homomorphism
$L^+\mathbb {G}_m \rightarrow L^+\mathcal {T}$
. Since
$\mathcal {T} \subset \mathcal {I}$
and
$L^+\mathcal {I}$
acts on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
, this induces a
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-action on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
. We may then define the fixed points
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
and attractors
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+$
as functors on perfect k-algebras. If F has characteristic p, we replace the Teichmüller map with natural inclusion of units
$R^{\times } = \mathbb {G}_m(R) \rightarrow \mathbb {G}_m(R[\![t]\!]) = L^+\mathbb {G}_m(R)$
for a k-algebra R.
2.3.3 Equivariant resolutions
Theorem 2.15. Let
$w \in {}_{\mathbf {f}} W ^{\mathbf {f}}$
and fix a reduced decomposition
$\dot {w}$
as in 2.2.1. Then there exists a
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-equivariant deperfection (2.13) of the map
$\pi _{\dot w} \colon D_{\dot w} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}$
.
Proof. First, assume F has characteristic p. Then
$D_{\dot {w}}$
has a canonical deperfection
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu28.png?pub-status=live)
This is a smooth, projective, iterated
$\mathbb {P}^1$
-bundle. By considering the birational map
$\pi _{\dot {w}}$
, we can view
$k(D_{\dot {w}}^{\operatorname {dep}})$
as a subfield of
$k(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w})$
. By Proposition 2.3, this gives us a particular deperfection
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}$
, equipped with a birational map
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn14.png?pub-status=live)
which is a deperfection of (2.5). In fact,
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
is the seminormalization of the usual affine Schubert variety associated to w as in [Reference Pappas and RapoportPR08]. Moreover,
$\pi _{\dot {w}}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
is
$L_p^+ \mathcal {I}$
-equivariant, so it is also
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-equivariant for the action induced by
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn15.png?pub-status=live)
If F has characteristic zero, the maps
${L^+_p \mathcal {I}} \rightarrow L^+\mathcal {P}_{i,p}$
have non-reduced kernels, so we cannot define
$D_{\dot {w}}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
as above (the following method also works if F has characteristic p). Instead, let n be an integer large enough so that
$L^+\mathcal {I}$
acts on
$D_{\dot w}$
and
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}$
through the quotient
$L^n\mathcal {I}$
. Let
$H \subset L^n_p\mathcal {I}$
be the unique reduced closed subgroup whose perfection is the stabilizer of a chosen point in the open orbit in
$D_{\dot {w}}$
(and hence also in
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}$
because
$\pi _{\dot w}$
is an isomorphism over the open orbit). Then H is a smooth affine k-group by [Reference ZhuZhu17a, Lemma A.26]. Let
$D_{\dot {w}}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
and
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
be the deperfections associated to
$k(L^n_p\mathcal {I}/H)$
by Proposition 2.3. Since these deperfections are normal, they admit
$L^n_p\mathcal {I}$
-actions which extend the action over the open orbit (cf. [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Proposition 3.3]). The map
$\pi _{\dot w}$
also deperfects to an
$L^n_p\mathcal {I}$
-equivariant map as in (2.13) because
$\pi _{\dot w}$
is
$L^n\mathcal {I}$
-equivariant and birational. Then we get the desired
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-action from the composition (2.14).
Remark 2.16. We do not assert that
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
is the canonical deperfection of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}$
in [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22], which is constructed from the quotient of
$L_p^+ \mathcal {G}$
by the stabilizer of its action on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^\circ $
.
Theorem 2.17. The resolution constructed in (2.13) satisfies all the conclusions of Lemma 2.12 and Lemma 2.13.
Proof. If F has characteristic p, (2.13) satisfies all the hypotheses of these lemmas. Here, we use topological invariance of the étale site [Sta24, 04DY] which implies that
$R\pi _{\dot {w} ,!}^{\operatorname {dep}}(\mathbb {F}_p) \cong \mathbb {F}_p[0]$
can be checked after passing to perfections, so it follows from Lemma 2.8.
If F has characteristic zero, (2.13) satisfies all the hypotheses of Lemma 2.12, but it is possible that
$D_{\dot {w}}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
is not smooth. However, the proof of Lemma 2.13 applies verbatim provided that we verify the following:
-
1. There is a unique closed attractor in
$(D_{\dot {w}}^{\operatorname {dep}})^+$ .
-
2. For each non-closed attractor
$\widetilde {X}_i^+ \subset (D_{\dot {w}}^{\operatorname {dep}})^+$ , the map
$\widetilde {q}_i^+ \colon \widetilde {X}_i^+ \rightarrow \widetilde {X}_i^0$ satisfies
$R\widetilde q_{i!}^+ (\mathbb {F}_p) \cong \mathbb {F}_p[0].$
Both of these properties may be checked after passing to the
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-action on
$D_{\dot {w}}$
. We proceed by induction on the length of w. We may assume
$w \in W_{\operatorname {af}}$
. Write
$\dot {w} = s_1 \ldots s_n$
. Then
$D_{\dot {s_i}} \cong (\mathbb {P}^1)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
, and we have a decomposition
$D_{\dot {s_i}} = \operatorname {Spec}(k) \sqcup \mathbb {A}^1_{\operatorname {perf}}$
, where
$\operatorname {Spec}(k)$
is the k-point corresponding to the identity coset
$e \in \mathcal {P}_{s_i}(\mathcal {O}_F)/ \mathcal {I}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
and
$\mathbb {A}^1_{\operatorname {perf}}(k) = \mathcal {I}(\mathcal {O}_F) s_i \mathcal {I}(\mathcal {O}_F)/ \mathcal {I}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
. We always have
$\{e\}$
,
$\{s_i\} \in (D_{\dot {s}_i})^0$
. There are three possibilities, depending on whether
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
fixes, attracts or repels the affine root group corresponding to
$s_i$
, respectively:
-
• We have
$(D_{\dot {s}_i})^0 = D_{\dot {s}_i}$ , or
-
•
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$ attracts
$\mathbb {A}^1_{\operatorname {perf}} - \{s_i\}$ toward
$\{s_i\}$ , or
-
•
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$ repels
$\mathbb {A}^1_{\operatorname {perf}} - \{s_i\}$ toward
$\{e\}$ .
In the last two cases, one attractor is a point, and the other is an
$(\mathbb {A}^1)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-bundle over its fixed point. Since
$R\Gamma _c(\mathbb {A}^1_{\operatorname {perf}}, \mathbb {F}_p) =0$
, this implies that (1) and (2) are satisfied when
$n=1$
. For the inductive step, let
$t= s_1 \cdots s_{n-1}$
and let
$\pi \colon D_{\dot {w}} = D_{\dot {t}} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {I}} D_{\dot {s}_n} \rightarrow D_{\dot {t}}$
be the projection. If
$(D_{\dot {s}_n})^0 = D_{\dot {s}_n}$
, then
$\pi ^{-1}$
induces a bijection between
$\pi _0((D_{\dot {t}})^0)$
and
$\pi _0((D_{\dot {w}})^0)$
. Furthermore, in this case,
$\pi $
identifies fibers of the map
$(D_{\dot {w}})^+ \rightarrow (D_{\dot {w}})^0$
with fibers of the map
$(D_{\dot {t}})^+ \rightarrow (D_{\dot {t}})^0$
. Thus, by induction, we are done in the first case.
In the other two cases, for each connected component
$\widetilde {Y}_i^+ \subset (D_{\dot {t}})^+$
,
$\pi ^{-1}(\widetilde {Y}_i^+)$
is a union of two connected components
$\widetilde {X}_{i1}^+$
,
$\widetilde {X}_{i2}^+$
of
$(D_{\dot {w}})^+$
. The fixed points
$\widetilde {X}_{i1}^0$
and
$\widetilde {X}_{i2}^0$
each map isomorphically under
$\pi $
onto
$\widetilde {Y}_i^0$
. One of the two connected components, say
$\widetilde {X}_{i1}^+$
, maps isomorphically under
$\pi $
onto its image
$\widetilde {Y}_i^+$
in
$(D_{\dot {t}})^+$
. The other connected component
$\widetilde {X}_{i2}^+$
has the structure of an
$(\mathbb {A}^1)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-bundle over
$\widetilde {Y}_i^+$
coming from the non-closed component of
$(D_{\dot {s}_n})^+$
. The unique closed attractor in
$D_{\dot {w}}$
is the connected component
$\widetilde {X}_{i_01}^+$
corresponding to the unique closed attractor
$\widetilde {Y}_{i_0}^+ \subset (D_{\dot {t}})^+$
. All other
$\widetilde {X}_{i1}$
satisfy
$Rq_{i1, !}^+(\mathbb {F}_p) = 0$
by induction. Finally,
$Rq_{i2, !}^+(\mathbb {F}_p) = 0$
for all i because the map
$q_{i2}^+$
factors through an
$(\mathbb {A}^1)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-bundle (by forgetting the last factor
$D_{\dot {s}_n}$
) (cf. the last part of the proof of Lemma 2.13).
Remark 2.18. The induction in the proof of Theorem 2.17 can be used to show that
$D_{\dot {w}}$
has a filtrable decomposition by the connected components of
$D_{\dot {w}}^+$
without appealing to the existence of a
$\mathbb {G}_m$
-equivariant deperfection or [Reference Białynicki-BirulaBB76]. Moreover, the induction also applies in equal characteristic. Thus, in equal characteristic, there are two proofs of Theorem 2.17 (and hence of the main results in this paper): one which appeals to abstract generalities on Białynicki-Birula maps and one which uses the explicit nature of
$D_{\dot {w}}$
as much as possible.
2.3.4 Description of the attractors
Since the partial order on a Coxeter group is directed, we may write
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}} = \operatorname {colim} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w,$
where the colimit is over
$w \in {}_{\mathbf {f}} W ^{\mathbf {f}}$
, and the transition maps are closed immersions. The formation of fixed points and attractors is compatible with filtered colimits of closed immersions [Reference Haines and RicharzHR21, Theorem 2.1]. Thus,
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^0 = \operatorname {colim} (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w)^0$
and
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^+ = \operatorname {colim} (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w)^+.$
Here,
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^0$
is a closed sub-ind-scheme of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
, and
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^+$
is a disjoint union of locally closed sub-ind-schemes. The natural map
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^+ \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^0$
induces a bijection
$\pi _0((\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^+) \cong \pi _0((\mathcal {F}\!\ell _G)^0)$
.
By the definition of
$\mathcal {M}:=\mathcal {G}^0$
, the closed immersion
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
factors through
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
. By the proof of [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Theorem 5.2], the map
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}} \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
identifies
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
with a disjoint union of connected components of
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
(see also [Reference Haines and RicharzHR21, Proposition 4.7, Lemma 4.11]). Furthermore, by [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Theorem 5.2], the connected components of
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
can be described as follows. Let
$W_{M}$
be the Iwahori–Weyl group of M and let
$W_{M, \operatorname {af}}$
be its affine Weyl group. Then the inclusion
$\pi _0(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}) \hookrightarrow \pi _0((\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0)$
identifies with the inclusion
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu29.png?pub-status=live)
For
$c \in W_{M,\operatorname {af}} \backslash W / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, let
$S_c$
be the corresponding connected componentFootnote
6
of
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+$
. This is a locally closed sub-ind-scheme of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
. Then
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu30.png?pub-status=live)
The irreducible components of the
$S_c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
generalizeFootnote
7
the Mirković–Vilonen cycles in [Reference Mirković and VilonenMV07, Theorem 3.2]. The k-points of
$S_c$
can be described as follows. Let
$M_{\operatorname {sc}}$
be the simply connected cover of the derived group of M and let
$P_{\operatorname {sc}} = M_{\operatorname {sc}} \ltimes U$
. The following lemma also appears in the proof of [Reference Anschütz, Gleason, Lourenço and RicharzAGLR22, Theorem 5.2].
Lemma 2.19. For
$c \in W_{M,\operatorname {af}} \backslash W / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, let
$\widetilde {c} \in \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(k)$
be the image of a representative under the embedding
$W / W_{\mathbf {f}} \hookrightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(k)$
. Then
$S_c(k) = P_{\operatorname {sc}}(F) \cdot \widetilde {c}.$
If
$c \in W_{M, \operatorname {af}} \backslash W_M = \pi _1(M)_I$
, let
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
be the corresponding connected component of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
. Let
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu31.png?pub-status=live)
be the resulting map obtained by restriction from the map
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+ \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
.
Lemma 2.20. Let
$m \in \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}(k)$
and let
$\widetilde {m} \in M(F)$
be a representative. If m lies in
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
, then
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu32.png?pub-status=live)
In the above,
$[\widetilde {m} \cdot u]$
is the equivalence class of
$\widetilde {m} \cdot u$
in
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(k)$
for
$u \in U(F)$
, and
$[\widetilde {m} \cdot u_1] = [\widetilde {m} \cdot u_2]$
if and only if
$u_1 \cdot (U(F) \cap K) = u_2 \cdot (U(F) \cap K)$
.
Proof. This is a consequence of (2.12) and Lemma 2.19 (see also [Reference Haines and RicharzHR21, Lemma 4.11]).
2.3.5 Attractors over finite fields
In this subsection, we assume that k is finite, and we fix an element
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
. By (2.3), this gives rise to a perfect Schubert scheme
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}$
defined over k which admits a k-point. Also, fix a connected component
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
which is defined over k and admits a k-point (and is therefore geometrically connected). Such connected components of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
are indexed by
$c \in \pi _1(M)_I^\sigma $
.
The ind-schemes
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
and
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+$
are defined over k, as are the maps
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}} \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0 \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
. Let
$S_c$
be the geometrically connected component of
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+$
which maps to
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
under the map
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^+ \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0$
.
Lemma 2.21. Let
$c \in \pi _1(M)_I^\sigma $
and
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
. Then
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}$
is geometrically connected.
Proof. Over
$\overline {k}$
, the intersection is a closed union of
$L^+\mathcal {M}_{\mathcal {O}_{\breve {F}}}$
-orbits inside a single connected component
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}, \overline {k}})^c$
of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}, \overline {k}}$
. Every such union is connected because it contains the unique minimal Iwahori-orbit in
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}, \overline {k}})^c$
.
Let
$\pi _{c,w} \colon S_c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w} \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
be the restriction of the map
$\pi _c \colon S_c \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
.
Theorem 2.22. Let
$c \in \pi _1(M)_I^\sigma $
and
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
. Let m be a k-point of
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
and let
$\widetilde m \in M(F)$
be a representative.
(1) At the level of k-points, we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu33.png?pub-status=live)
In the above,
$[\widetilde {m} \cdot u]$
is the equivalence class of
$\widetilde {m} \cdot u$
in
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(k)$
for
$u \in U(F)$
, and
$[\widetilde {m} \cdot u_1] = [\widetilde {m} \cdot u_2]$
if and only if
$u_1 \cdot (U(F) \cap K) = u_2 \cdot (U(F) \cap K)$
.
(2) Furthermore, we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu34.png?pub-status=live)
Proof. Lemma 2.20 is valid if k is finite, so this gives the description of
$\pi _{c,w}^{-1}(m)$
. To check the formula for
$R(\pi _{c,w})_{!}(\mathbb {F}_p)$
, we may base-change to
$\overline {k}$
. By Theorem 2.17, we may then apply the conclusions of Lemma 2.13. It remains to see that
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}, \overline {k}})^c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w, \overline {k}}$
, which is a priori a disjoint union of connected components in
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w, \overline {k}})^0$
, is connected. This follows from Lemma 2.21.
Remark 2.23. If
$\mathbf {f}$
is a special vertex,
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}(k) = (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0(k)$
by the Iwasawa decomposition. If
$\mathbf {f}$
is not very special (i.e, if
$\mathbf {f}$
is not special over
$\breve {F}$
), then
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}(\overline {k}) \subsetneq (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}})^0(\overline {k})$
in general.
3 Applications to mod p Hecke algebras
In Section 3, we assume that
$k = \mathbb {F}_q$
is a finite field of characteristic
$p>0$
.
3.1 Mod p Hecke algebras
3.1.1 The function-sheaf dictionary
In this subsection, we recall the function-sheaf dictionary following [Reference DeligneDel77, Rapport]. Let X be a separated scheme of finite-type over k. Let
$\mathcal {F}$
be a constructible sheaf of
$\mathbb {F}_p$
-vector spaces on X (we will only need the case where
$\mathcal {F}$
is a constant sheaf). For each point
$x \in X(k)$
, the stalk
$\mathcal {F}_x$
is a finite-dimensional representation of
$\operatorname {Gal}(\overline {k}/k)$
. Taking the trace of the action of the geometric Frobenius element
$\gamma \in \operatorname {Gal}(\overline {k}/k)$
gives a value
$\operatorname {Tr}(\gamma , \mathcal {F}_x) \in \mathbb {F}_p$
. In this way, we get a function
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn16.png?pub-status=live)
Moreover, if
$X_{\overline {k}} = X \times \operatorname {Spec}(\overline {k})$
, there is a natural action of
$\operatorname {Gal}(\overline {k}/k)$
on the étale cohomology with compact support
$H_c^i(X_{\overline {k}}, \mathcal {F})$
. The function-sheaf dictionary is the following relationship between these actions.
Lemma 3.1. We have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu35.png?pub-status=live)
In particular, if
$\mathcal {F} = \mathbb {F}_p$
is the constant sheaf,
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu36.png?pub-status=live)
Proof. This follows from [Reference DeligneDel77, Rapport, Theorem 4.1].
Example 3.2. If
$X = \mathbb {P}^1$
and
$\mathcal {F} = \mathbb {F}_p$
, the left side of Lemma 3.1 is
$|\mathbb {P}^1(\mathbb {F}_q)| = q+1$
. Likewise,
$R\Gamma (\mathbb {P}^1_{\overline {k}}, \mathbb {F}_p) = \mathbb {F}_p[0]$
so the right side of Lemma 3.1 is
$\operatorname {Tr}(\gamma , H^0(\mathbb {P}^1_{\overline {k}}, \mathbb {F}_p)) = 1 \equiv q+1 \ \pmod {p}$
since
$\operatorname {Gal}(\overline {k}/ k)$
acts trivially on
$H^0(\mathbb {P}^1_{\overline {k}}, \mathbb {F}_p)$
. If
$X= \mathbb {A}^1$
, then
$R\Gamma _c(\mathbb {A}^1_{\overline {k}}, \mathbb {F}_p) = 0$
, which agrees with the fact that
$|\mathbb {A}^1(\mathbb {F}_q)| = q \equiv 0 \ \pmod {p}$
.
3.1.2 Definitions and bases
The mod p Hecke algebra associated to K is the algebra
$\mathcal {H}_{K}$
of compactly supported functions
$K \backslash G(F) / K \rightarrow \mathbb {F}_p$
. The multiplication is convolution:
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn17.png?pub-status=live)
The algebra
$\mathcal {H}_{K}$
has a basis consisting of the characteristic functions of the double cosets
$K \backslash G(F) / K$
. By (2.3), these double cosets are indexed by
$ w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
. Let
be the characteristic function of the corresponding double coset.
There is another basis of
$\mathcal {H}_K$
more suitable for geometric arguments. For
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, let
, where the sum runs over those
$v \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
such that
$_{\mathbf {f}} v ^{\mathbf {f}} \leq {}_{\mathbf {f}} w ^{\mathbf {f}}$
. The basis
$\phi _{w}$
arises from the function-sheaf dictionary as follows. Let
$(\underline {\mathbb {F}}_p)_w$
be the constant étale sheaf supported on
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
. Then by the closure relations in Lemma 2.2, we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn18.png?pub-status=live)
Remark 3.3. In the case of split groups in equal characteristic,
$(\underline {\mathbb {F}}_p)_w$
is a shift of the mod p intersection cohomology sheaf of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
(by the perfected version of [Reference CassCas22, Theorem 1.5]). By [Reference CassCas22, Theorem 1.7], the same is true in mixed characteristic if
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
has a deperfection by a scheme with F-rational singularities. It is an interesting question whether such a deperfection exists for all w (for example, one could ask whether or not
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w}^{\operatorname {dep}}$
is F-rational).
3.1.3 The Satake transform
Recall the Levi decomposition
$P = MU$
arising from the cocharacter
$\lambda $
. The Satake transform with respect to P is the following map.
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqn19.png?pub-status=live)
3.2 Explicit formulas
Let
$w_1, w_2 \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
. The image of the convolution map
$m \colon \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_1} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {I}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_2} \rightarrow \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
is geometrically irreducible, closed,
$L^+\mathcal {G}$
-stable, and it is defined over k. Thus, it is of the form
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
for some
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
. Moreover, by Theorem 2.10,
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w, \overline {k}}$
is the image of a certain Demazure map, and w may be computed explicitly by tracing through the steps in the proof of Lemma 2.8.
Theorem 3.4. Let
$w_1, w_2 \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^\sigma / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
, and let
$w \in W_{\mathbf {f}} \backslash W^{\sigma } / W_{\mathbf {f}}$
be the element such that
$m(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_1} \times ^{L^+\mathcal {G}} \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{w_2}) = \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w$
. Then
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu37.png?pub-status=live)
Proof. By Lemma 2.9, for each
$x \in \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}(k)$
, we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu38.png?pub-status=live)
Recall that
$((\underline {\mathbb {F}}_p)_{w_i})^{\operatorname {Tr}} = \phi _{w_i}$
by (3.3). Thus, for any
$\widetilde {x} \in G(F)$
a lift of x,
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu39.png?pub-status=live)
Additionally,
$Rm_!(\mathbb {F}_p) \cong (\underline {\mathbb {F}}_p)_w$
by Theorem 2.10. Note that
$m^{-1}(x)$
is nonempty if and only if
$x \in \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w(k)$
, in which case it follows that
$R\Gamma _c(m^{-1}(x), \mathbb {F}_p) = \mathbb {F}_p[0]$
, where we view
$m^{-1}(x)$
as a k-scheme. Now we conclude by applying the function-sheaf dictionary, using that
$\sum _i (-1)^i \operatorname {Tr}(\gamma , H_c^i(m^{-1}(x)_{\overline {k}}, \mathbb {F}_p)) = \operatorname {Tr}(\gamma , H_c^0(m^{-1}(x)_{\overline {k}}, \mathbb {F}_p)) = 1$
. Here, we use the topological invariance of the étale site [Sta24, Tag 04DY] to conclude that Lemma 3.1 is also valid for the perfection of a finite-type k-scheme.
For
$c \in \pi _1(M)_I^\sigma $
, let
$\phi _{c,w} \in \mathcal {H}_{M(F) \cap K}$
be the characteristic function of the intersection
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c(\mathbb {F}_q) \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _w(\mathbb {F}_q)$
. Recall that
$M(F) \cap K = \mathcal {M}(\mathcal {O}_F)$
by Lemma 2.14.
Theorem 3.5. The Satake transform
$\mathcal {S} \colon \mathcal {H}_{\mathcal {G}} \rightarrow \mathcal {H}_{M(F) \cap K}$
satisfies
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu40.png?pub-status=live)
3.3 The case of a special parahoric
Throughout this section, we assume that M is a minimal Levi subgroup and that
$\mathbf {f}$
is a special vertex. Since we assumed that M is semi-standard, this implies that
$M = C_G(A)$
. By [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15, §6], the group
$\Lambda := M(F)/(M(F) \cap K)$
is a finitely generated abelian group. The Hecke algebra
$\mathcal {H}_{M(F) \cap K}$
is naturally identified with the group algebra
$\mathbb {F}_p[\Lambda ]$
. We denote the canonical basis elements by
$e^{z}$
for
$z \in \Lambda $
.
The relative Weyl group
$W(G,A)$
acts on
$\Lambda $
. Furthermore, the map
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu41.png?pub-status=live)
induces a bijection between
$W(G,A)$
-orbits in
$\Lambda $
and the double cosets
$K \backslash G(F) / K$
. To describe these orbits, we note that there is a natural homomorphism of groups
$\nu _M \colon M(F) \rightarrow \operatorname {Hom}(X^*(M)^{\operatorname {Gal}(\overline {F}/F)}, \mathbb {Z})$
characterized by the requirement
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu42.png?pub-status=live)
Here,
$\text {val}_F$
is the normalized valuation on F. The restriction map
$X^*(M)^{\operatorname {Gal}(\overline {F}/F)} \rightarrow X^*(A)$
induces an isomorphism
$X_*(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q} \cong \operatorname {Hom}(X^*(M)^{\operatorname {Gal}(\overline {F}/F)}, \mathbb {Z}) \otimes \mathbb {Q}$
, and hence, we may view
$\nu _{\mathcal {M}}$
as a homomorphism
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu43.png?pub-status=live)
The map
$\nu _{M}$
is
$W(G,A)$
-equivariant and identifies
$\Lambda /\Lambda _{\text {tor}}$
with a lattice in
$X_*(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q}$
.
The minimal parabolic P containing M corresponds to a choice of positive roots
$\Phi ^+$
for G in
$X^*(A)$
. This determines an anti-dominant Weyl chamber
$\mathcal {C} \subset X_*(A) \otimes \mathbb {Q}$
, defined by the requirement that
$\langle \alpha , \nu \rangle \leq 0$
for all
$\alpha \in \Phi ^+$
and
$\nu \in \mathcal {C}$
. Let
$\Lambda _-$
be the preimage of
$\mathcal {C}$
in
$\Lambda $
. We call the elements of
$\Lambda _-$
anti-dominant. Each
$W(G,A)$
-orbit in
$\Lambda $
contains a unique anti-dominant element, so we get bijections
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu44.png?pub-status=live)
For
$z \in \Lambda _-$
, let
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _z \subset \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
be the corresponding perfect Schubert scheme, and let
$\phi _z = ((\underline {\mathbb {F}}_p)_z)^{\operatorname {Tr}}$
be corresponding basis element of
$H_K$
.
The following theorem recovers [Reference HerzigHer11b, Theorem 1.2] (where K is hyperspecial), and [Reference Henniart and VignérasHV15, §1.5] (where K is special). Moreover, we recover the explicit formulas in [Reference HerzigHer11a, Proposition 5.1] and [Reference OllivierOll15, Theorem 5.5] (where G is split and K is hyperspecial), and in [Reference Abe, Herzig and VignérasAHV22, Theorem 1.1] (where G is arbitrary and K is special).
Theorem 3.6.
(1) If K is special, for
$z_1, z_2 \in \Lambda _-$
, we have
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu45.png?pub-status=live)
In particular,
$\mathcal {H}_{K}$
is commutative.
(2) Moreover, the Satake transform
$\mathcal {S} \colon \mathcal {H}_{K} \rightarrow \mathcal {H}_{M(F) \cap K}$
is injective, identifies
$\mathcal {H}_{K}$
with
$\mathbb {F}_p[\Lambda _-]$
, and satisfies
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250204172258540-0628:S2050509424001300:S2050509424001300_eqnu46.png?pub-status=live)
Proof. By Theorem 3.4 and the fact that
$\mathcal {S}$
is an algebra homomorphism, all of the statements follow from the formula
$\mathcal {S}(\phi _z) = e^{z}$
. To prove the formula, let
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
be the unique connected component
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}}$
which contains the k-point
$z \in \Lambda _-$
, and let
$S_c \subset \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
be the corresponding attractor. Then we have the map
$\pi _{c,z} \colon S_c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{z} \rightarrow (\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _z$
. Since affine Schubert schemes are
$(\mathbb {G}_m)_{\operatorname {perf}}$
-stable, the closure relations (Lemma 2.2) imply that
$\pi _{c,z}^{-1}((\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _z^\circ ) \subset \mathcal {F}\!\ell _z^\circ $
. By (1.1) and Theorem 2.22, at the level of k-points,
$\pi _{c,z}^{-1}(\{z\}) = \{z\}.$
Then by the function-sheaf dictionary,
$R(\pi _{c,z})_! (\mathbb {F}_p) \neq 0$
. Thus,
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}, \overline {k}})^c \cap \mathcal {F}\!\ell _{z, \overline {k}}$
is the unique closed attractor in
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{z, \overline {k}})^+$
. Note that
$\Lambda $
is naturally identified with the
$\sigma $
-stable connected components of
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M},\overline {k}}$
by [Reference Haines and RostamiHR10, Proposition 1.0.2]. Thus, z is the only k-point of
$(\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {M}})^c$
, so the formula follows from Theorem 3.5.
Remark 3.7. A special vertex
$\mathbf {f}$
is called very special if it remains special in
$\mathscr {B}(G,\breve {F})$
. If
$\mathbf {f}$
is very special, Theorem 3.6 takes the following simpler form. First, by [Reference ZhuZhu15, Lemma 6.1], a special vertex exists if and only if G is quasi-split over F. In this case,
$M=T$
is a maximal torus and
$P = B$
is an F-rational Borel. Furthermore,
$\Lambda = X_*(T)_I^\sigma $
by [Reference Haines and RostamiHR10, Corollary 11.1.2]. Over
$\breve {F}$
, we have a splitting
$W = X_*(T)_I \rtimes W_0$
, where
$W_0 = N_G(S)(\breve {F})/T(\breve {F})$
. Then
${W}_{\breve {\mathbf {f}}} = W_0$
and
${W}_{\breve {\mathbf {f}}} \backslash W / W_{\breve {\mathbf {f}}}$
and consists of the image of the anti-dominant elements
$X_*(T)_-$
, defined with respect to B, under the surjection
$X_*(T) \rightarrow X_*(T)_I$
[Reference RicharzRic13, Corollary 1.8]. Furthermore, the length
$\ell $
is additive on these anti-dominant elements, so all convolution maps for
$\mathcal {F}\!\ell _{\mathcal {G}}$
are birational.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank João Lourenço for comments on an earlier version of this paper and for helpful discussions on deperfections of perfect Schubert schemes. The authors would also like to thank Tom Haines, Claudius Heyer, Thibaud van den Hove, Timo Richarz and anonymous referees for helpful comments. The authors would like to thank the University of Michigan, MIT and Harvard for providing wonderful working environments.
Competing interest
The authors have no competing interest to declare.
Funding statement
R.C. was supported by NSF grant DMS 2103200. Y.X. was supported by NSF grant DMS 2202677.