1 Introduction
Let $K$ be a global field, and $X$ a smooth, proper and geometrically connected variety over $K$ . Many classical invariants of $X$ , like the Brauer group or the group of principal homogeneous spaces $H^{1}(K,A)$ of an abelian variety $A$ over $K$ , are large, but the subgroups of those elements which become trivial over every completion $K_{v}$ of $K$ are finite. In case of the Brauer group and $X=\operatorname{Spec}K$ , this is the classical Hasse principle, and in case of $H^{1}(K,A)$ it is the conjectural finiteness of the Tate–Shafarevich group. We propose a generalization of these statements and conjectures in terms of étale motivic cohomology. We consider the groups
where $\mathbb{Z}(n)$ is the motivic complex, and $X_{v}$ is the base extension to the henselization of $K$ at $v$ .
Some of our results are that $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ is a torsion group, that $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(K)$ is finite for all $i$ and $n$ , and that $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,0}(X)$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,1}(X)$ are finite for $i\leqslant 2$ . We show that a conjecture of Lichtenbaum on the structure of motivic cohomology implies the finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ for $i\not =2n+2$ in the function field case, and for $i\leqslant 2n+1$ in the number field case.
The groups $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2n+1,n}(X)$ appear to be the most interesting ones. For example,
so that the vanishing of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(K)$ is equivalent to the Hasse principle for the Brauer group. For a curve $X$ , $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ is isomorphic to the Brauer group $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ of a regular and proper model of $X$ , hence finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ is equivalent to the finiteness of the classical Tate–Shafarevich group $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ and to the Tate conjecture for divisors on ${\mathcal{X}}$ . For $X$ of arbitrary dimension, finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ , and for almost all $l$ , finiteness of the $l$ -primary part of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})\{l\}$ implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)\{l\}$ .
Our work is related to Schneider’s [Reference Schneider27] examination of the kernels of the maps
in the number field case. These kernels are easy to understand if $i\not =1$ , and Schneider conjectured that they are finite and related to the value of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{K}(s)$ at $s=n$ for $i=1$ . This conjecture is still open if $n>1$ . Jannsen [Reference Jannsen15] extended Schneider’s work by considering the groups $H^{i}(K,H_{\text{et}}^{j}(\bar{X},\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(n)))$ . Our expectation is that the kernel of the localization map has better properties if one considers integral coefficients and the abutment instead of the $E_{2}$ -terms in the spectral sequence
Notation: Let $K$ be a global field of characteristic $p\geqslant 0$ , and $C$ the regular proper curve over the prime field with function field $K$ and the ring of integers in the function field and number field case, respectively. For a finite place of $K$ , we let ${\mathcal{O}}_{v}$ be the henselization of $C$ at $v$ with field of quotients $K_{v}$ and residue field $k_{v}$ . For an infinite place we let $K_{v}$ be the completion of $K$ at $v$ . We fix a separable closure $\bar{K}$ of $K$ with Galois group $G_{K}$ . Then, for a finite place, $\bar{K}$ is a separable closure of $K_{v}$ with Galois group $G_{v}\subseteq G_{K}$ the decomposition group of $v$ . We let $X$ be a smooth, proper, and geometrically connected scheme over $K$ , $X_{v}=X\times _{K}K_{v}$ , and $\bar{X}=X\times _{K}\bar{K}$ .
For an abelian group $A$ we denote by $A_{\operatorname{tor}}$ its torsion group, by $A\{l\}$ its subgroup of $l$ -power torsion elements, by $A^{\wedge l}=\operatorname{lim}_{r}A/l^{r}$ its $l$ -adic completion, and by $T_{l}A={\operatorname{lim}_{r}}_{l^{r}}A$ its $l$ -adic Tate-module.
2 Motivic Tate–Shafarevich groups
We denote the étale hypercohomology of Bloch’s cycle complex $\mathbb{Z}(n):V\mapsto z^{n}(V,\ast -2n)$ by $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Z}(n))$ . We frequently use that $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Q}(n))$ is isomorphic to the higher Chow group $CH^{n}(X,2n-i)_{\mathbb{Q}}$ and that this vanishes if $i>2n$ .
Etale motivic cohomology is contravariant for flat maps and covariant for finite maps. Indeed, given a finite map $f:X^{\prime }\rightarrow X$ , covariant functoriality of the cycle complex induces a map $f_{\ast }\mathbb{Z}(n)_{X^{\prime }}\rightarrow \mathbb{Z}(n)_{X}$ . Finiteness of $f$ implies $f_{\ast }\cong Rf_{\ast }$ , hence we obtain the push-forward by applying hypercohomology on $X$ .
In the function field case, we can spread out $X$ to a smooth scheme ${\mathcal{X}}$ over an open set of $C$ and see that $\mathbb{Z}/p^{r}(n)$ is isomorphic to the logarithmic de Rham–Witt sheaf $\unicode[STIX]{x1D708}_{r}^{n}[-n]$ [Reference Geisser and Levine9]. The same holds for $X_{v}$ because it is the limit of étale schemes over $X$ (at this point it is more convenient to work with the henselization instead of the completion). In particular, $\mathbb{Z}/p^{r}(n)=0$ for $n>\dim X+1$ . For $l\not =p$ , $\mathbb{Z}/l^{r}(n)$ is the usual twisted root of unity sheaf $\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{l^{r}}^{\otimes n}$ [Reference Geisser and Levine10]. This suggests our definition $\mathbb{Z}(n)=\operatorname{colim}_{p\not |m}\unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{m}^{\otimes n}[-1]$ for $n<0$ .
Definition 2.1. We define
and
where $v$ runs through all places of $K$ .
By our convention, $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)=S^{i-1,n}(X)$ for $n<0$ and for $i>2n+1$ . We do not discuss the motivic cohomology version, that is, the kernel of
because the étale version has more interesting arithmetic properties and is more accessible to calculations due to the finite coefficient calculations in [Reference Saito25] and [Reference Geisser and Schmidt11].
Conjecture 2.2. The groups $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ are finite for all $i$ and $n$ .
We expect a “Weil-etale” version of motivic cohomology, and hence of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ , with better properties for $i>2n+1$ , and finiteness might only hold for the Weil-etale version. The groups $S^{i,n}(X)$ are not finite as the following example shows.
Example 2.3. Let $E$ be an elliptic curve over $\mathbb{Q}$ , and consider the commutative diagram
The kernel of the left vertical map injects into the kernel of the right vertical map. The group $\operatorname{Pic}^{0}(E_{v})\otimes \mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}$ is isomorphic to $\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}$ for $v$ the $l$ -adic place and vanishes otherwise, so that the kernel of the left hand map contains a copy of $\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}$ if $E$ has rank larger than one. Hence $S^{2,1}(E)$ is not finite in general.
Remark 2.4. (Completion versus henselization)
Let $\widehat{K}_{v}$ be the completion of $K_{v}$ . We expect that the canonical map $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X_{v},\mathbb{Z}(n))\rightarrow H^{i}(X_{\widehat{K}_{v}},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ is injective with a $\mathbb{Z}_{(p)}$ -module as cokernel. In particular, the injection $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)\rightarrow \ker \big(H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Z}(n))\rightarrow \prod _{v}H^{i}(X_{\widehat{K}_{v}},\mathbb{Z}(n))\big)$ would be an isomorphism.
We next show that $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ is a torsion group.
Lemma 2.5. Let ${\mathcal{F}}$ be a covariant functor from the category of extension fields of a fixed field $k$ to the category of $\mathbb{Q}$ -vector spaces. Assume that ${\mathcal{F}}$ commutes with filtered colimits, that ${\mathcal{F}}$ has trace maps ${\mathcal{F}}(L^{\prime })\rightarrow {\mathcal{F}}(L)$ for finite field extensions $L^{\prime }/L$ such that the composition ${\mathcal{F}}(L)\rightarrow {\mathcal{F}}(L^{\prime })\rightarrow {\mathcal{F}}(L)$ is multiplication by the degree $[L^{\prime }:L]$ , and that ${\mathcal{F}}(L)\rightarrow {\mathcal{F}}(L(t))$ is injective for any extension $L$ of $k$ . Then ${\mathcal{F}}(L)\rightarrow {\mathcal{F}}(L^{\prime })$ is injective for any field extension $k\subseteq L\subseteq L^{\prime }$ .
Proof. Since ${\mathcal{F}}$ commutes with filtered colimits, we can assume that either $L^{\prime }/L$ is finite or purely transcendental of transcendence degree $1$ . In the first case, the map ${\mathcal{F}}(L)\rightarrow {\mathcal{F}}(L^{\prime })$ is injective because its kernel is torsion, and in the second case by hypothesis.◻
Proposition 2.6. Let $X$ be separated and of finite type over $K$ . Then $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X\times _{K}L,\mathbb{Q}(n))\rightarrow H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X\times _{K}L^{\prime },\mathbb{Q}(n))$ is injective for any field extension $K\subseteq L\subseteq L^{\prime }$ .
Proof. We show that the assignment $L\mapsto H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X\times _{K}L,\mathbb{Q}(n))\cong CH^{n}(X\times _{K}L,2n-i)_{\mathbb{Q}}$ satisfies the hypothesis of the lemma. Functoriality is due to contravariance of higher Chow groups for flat maps, and the existence of the trace map follows from covariant functoriality for proper maps. Injectivity for transcendental extensions $L(t)/L$ follows by writing $L(t)$ as the filtered colimit of finitely generated localizations $R$ of $L[t]$ . Such an $R$ admits a map to a finite extension $L^{\prime }$ of $L$ , so that the composition, hence first map, in
is injective. Here the second map is given by contravariant functoriality for maps between smooth schemes over $L$ .◻
Corollary 2.7. The groups $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ agree with
In particular, they are torsion groups.
Proof. By the Proposition, $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Q}(n))\rightarrow H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X_{v},\mathbb{Q}(n))$ is injective for every $v$ , and the Corollary follows by considering the diagram
◻
3 Some Examples
The case $X=\operatorname{Spec}K$
Let $X=\operatorname{Spec}K$ . Then the maps $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}_{0}^{1}$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}_{1}^{2}$ are maps between zero groups, and
are injective. For $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}_{0}^{2}$ this follows from Chebotarev’s density theorem, and for $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}_{1}^{3}$ it is the Hasse principle for Brauer groups. More generally, we have
Proposition 3.1. The groups $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(K)$ are finite. They vanish for $i\not =2$ or $n=1$ , and in the function field case $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2,n}(K)\cong H_{\text{et}}^{2}(C,\mathbb{Z}(n))$ for $n\not =1$ .
Proof. Recall that from the calculation of higher $K$ -theory of global fields due to Borel, Harder and Soulé we know that $H^{i}(K,\mathbb{Q}(n))$ vanishes unless $(i,n)=(0,0),(1,1)$ , or $K$ is a number field and $i=1$ . With $p$ -coefficients we have $\mathbb{Z}/p^{r}(n)=0$ hence $H^{i}(K,\mathbb{Q}_{p}/\mathbb{Z}_{p}(n))=0$ for $n\geqslant 2$ . If $i\geqslant 4$ , then
by Tate–Poitou (the $p$ -part in characteristic $p$ for $n\leqslant 1$ follows because the cohomological $p$ -dimension of $K$ is one). If $i=3$ and $n\not =1$ , then $H^{i}(K,\mathbb{Z}(n))\cong H^{i-1}(K,\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(n))=0$ by the argument of [Reference Schneider27, Section 4 Satz 1]. The cases $i\leqslant 2$ and $n=0,1$ are covered in the example above, and it remains to consider the cases $i\leqslant 2$ and $n\geqslant 2$ . If $i\leqslant 1$ , we obtain the result from the injectivity of
for any $v$ not dividing $l$ (both sides are zero if $l=p=\operatorname{char}K$ ).
Using the Rost–Voevodsky theorem [Reference Voevodsky28] and the localization sequence for higher Chow groups [Reference Bloch1] we obtain a sequence
Comparing to the local situation we see that
The groups $H_{\text{et}}^{2}(C,\mathbb{Z}(n))$ are finite, which shows the remaining statements in view of the following lemma.◻
Lemma 3.2. If ${\mathcal{O}}_{v}$ has positive characteristic $p$ , then $H_{\text{et}}^{2}({\mathcal{O}}_{v},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ is uniquely divisible for $n\geqslant 2$ .
Proof. Itsufficestoshowthat $H_{\text{et}}^{1}({\mathcal{O}}_{v},\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}(n))\,=\,H_{\text{et}}^{2}({\mathcal{O}}_{v},\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}(n))\,=\,0$ for all $l$ . If $l\not =p$ , then $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{O}}_{v},\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}(n))\cong H_{\text{et}}^{i}(k_{v},\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}(n))$ by the proper base-change theorem, and this vanishes for $i>0$ . On the other hand $\mathbb{Z}/p(n)=0$ on ${\mathcal{O}}_{v}$ for $n>1$ implies that $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{O}}_{v},\mathbb{Q}_{p}/\mathbb{Z}_{p}(n))=0$ for all $i$ .◻
In contrast, if ${\mathcal{O}}_{v}$ has mixed characteristic $(0,p)$ , then
because $H^{i}(k_{v},\mathbb{Q}_{p}/\mathbb{Z}_{p}(n))=0$ for all $i$ . But $H^{1}(K_{v},\mathbb{Q}_{p}/\mathbb{Z}_{p}(n))$ is the sum of the dual of $\mathbb{Q}_{p}/\mathbb{Z}_{p}(1-n)^{G_{v}}$ and of $(\mathbb{Q}_{p}/\mathbb{Z}_{p})^{[K_{v}:\mathbb{Q}_{p}]}$ by [Reference Schneider27, Section 3 Satz 4].
The groups $S^{i,n}(K)$ have been studied by Schneider [Reference Schneider27] in the number field case. They vanish for $i\not =1$ ; this is clear for $i=0$ and $i>2$ , and follows from [Reference Schneider27, Satz 2] for $i=2$ . We also have $S^{1,0}(K)=0$ by the Chebotarev density theorem. Schneider conjectures that the groups $S^{1,n}(K)$ are finite and that their order is related to the value of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{K}(s)$ at $s=n$ . For example, finiteness of $S^{1,1}(K)$ is equivalent to Leopoldt’s conjecture for $K$ [Reference Schneider27, Section 5 Lemma 3, Section 7 Lemma 1]. Considering the coefficient sequence
we see that in addition to $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2,n}(K)$ the group $S^{1,n}(K)$ involves the term $H^{1}(K,\mathbb{Z}(n))\otimes \mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}$ .
The same argument shows that in the function field case $S^{i,n}(K)$ vanishes for $i\not =1$ and for $(i,n)=(1,0)$ . The coefficient sequence shows that $H^{1}(K,\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(n))\cong H^{2}(K,\mathbb{Z}(n))$ , hence $S^{1,n}(K)\cong H_{\text{et}}^{2}(C,\mathbb{Z}(n))$ which is related to the value of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D701}_{K}(s)$ at $s=n$ , see [Reference Geisser5].
Other examples
Proposition 3.3. For $i\leqslant 2$ the groups $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,0}(X)$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,1}(X)$ are finite.
Proof. We have $H_{\text{et}}^{0}(X,\mathbb{Z})\cong \mathbb{Z}$ and $H_{\text{et}}^{1}(X,\mathbb{Z})=0$ , so that $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{0,0}(X)=\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{1,0}(X)=0$ . By [Reference Katz and Lang16, Theorem 1] the pull back along the structure map
has finite cokernel, hence $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2,0}(X)$ is finite by Chebotarev’s density theorem.
Clearly $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,1}(X)=0$ for $i\leqslant 0$ , and $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{1,1}(X)=\ker \big(K^{\times }\rightarrow \prod _{v}K_{v}^{\times }\big)$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2,1}(X)=\ker \big(\!\operatorname{Pic}(X)\rightarrow \prod _{v}\operatorname{Pic}(X_{v})\big)$ vanish as well.◻
The case $n=d$ has been considered in [Reference Geisser8], where it is shown that in the function field case $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2d+2,d}(X)$ is a $p$ -group, and $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2d+1,d}(X)$ is related to the Tate–Shafarevich group $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Alb}_{X})$ of the Albanese variety of $X$ and other invariants which are expected to be finite.
Proposition 3.4. Up to $p$ -groups we have
and $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Z}(d+1))=H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X_{v},\mathbb{Z}(d+1))=0$ for $i>2d+3$ . In particular, $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,d+1}(X)$ is a $p$ -group for $i\geqslant 2(d+1)+1$ .
Proof. From the coefficient sequence and $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Q}(d+1))=0$ for $i\geqslant 2d+2$ we obtain $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Z}(d+1))\cong H_{\text{et}}^{i-1}(X,\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(d+1))$ for $i\geqslant 2d+3$ . By [Reference Milne22, VI Theorem 11.1] we have $H_{\text{et}}^{2d}(\bar{X},\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(d+1))\cong \mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(1)$ up to $p$ -groups. The Hochschild–Serre spectral sequence now shows that
The final vanishing follows because $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(\bar{X},\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(d+1))=0$ for $i>2d$ .◻
4 Connections to motivic cohomology of a model
Let ${\mathcal{X}}\rightarrow C$ be a flat and proper map, with regular, connected ${\mathcal{X}}$ of dimension $d+1$ such that $X$ is the generic fiber. If we disregard the $p$ -torsion in characteristic $p$ , we can assume that such a model exists in order to prove finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ . Indeed, by de Jong’s theorem there is a finite extension $K^{\prime }$ of $K$ of some degree $e$ and a regular model of $X^{\prime }=X\times _{K}K^{\prime }$ which is projective and flat over the normalization $C^{\prime }$ of $C$ in $K^{\prime }$ . It is easy to check that the composition $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Z}(n))\rightarrow H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X^{\prime },\mathbb{Z}(n))\rightarrow H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Z}(n))$ is multiplication by $e$ , hence $\ker \unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X^{\prime })$ is killed by $e$ . Now applying Gabber’s refinement of de Jong’s theorem, we can find for every prime $l\not =p$ dividing $e$ another $X^{\prime }$ such that $\ker \unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X^{\prime })$ is injective on $l$ -torsion.
For finite places $v$ of $C$ , we let ${\mathcal{X}}_{v}={\mathcal{X}}\times _{C}{\mathcal{O}}_{v}$ be the base change to the henselization ${\mathcal{O}}_{v}$ of $C$ at $v$ , with generic fiber $X_{v}$ and closed fiber $Y_{v}$ . For infinite places $v$ we set ${\mathcal{X}}_{v}=X_{v}=X\times _{K}K_{v}$ . Then for any open subset $U\subseteq C$ and set $I$ of infinite places we have a map of long exact sequences
and similarly with finite coefficients.
Proposition 4.1. The groups $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)\{l\}$ are of cofinite type if $i>2n$ and $l\not =p$ . In particular, $_{m}\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ is finite for any integer $m$ not divisible by $p$ and $i>2n$ .
Proof. It follows from diagram (2) that for any $U$ and $I$ , the image of $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}}_{U},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ in $H_{\text{et}}^{i}(X,\mathbb{Z}(n))$ contains $\ker \unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}_{n}^{i}(U,I)$ , which contains $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ . But $H_{\text{et}}^{i-1}({\mathcal{X}}_{U},\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(n))$ surjects onto $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}}_{U},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ , because $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}}_{U},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ is torsion for $i>2n$ . Hence it suffices to show that the groups $H_{\text{et}}^{i-1}({\mathcal{X}}_{U},\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}(n))$ are of cofinite type, which is implied by the finiteness of $H_{\text{et}}^{i-1}({\mathcal{X}}_{U},\mathbb{Z}/l(n))$ . For a fixed $l$ choose $U$ to be $C$ without the places above $l$ and the places where ${\mathcal{X}}$ has bad reduction. Then $\mathbb{Z}/l(n)\cong \unicode[STIX]{x1D707}_{l}^{\otimes n}$ is locally constant [Reference Geisser4], hence its cohomology groups are finite by [Reference Milne21, II Proposition 7.1].◻
Lemma 4.2. The map $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}_{n}^{i}$ has image in the restricted direct product with respect to the subgroups $\operatorname{im}(H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}}_{v},\mathbb{Z}(n)))$ .
Proof. If we set $U=C$ in (2), we see that the image of any element under $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}_{n}^{i}$ is contained in the direct sum on the lower right because $\unicode[STIX]{x2202}$ has image in the direct sum.◻
Conjecture 4.3. (Lichtenbaum [Reference Lichtenbaum18])
Let ${\mathcal{X}}$ be regular, and proper over $\mathbb{Z}$ . Then the groups $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ are finitely generated for $i\leqslant 2n$ , finite for $i=2n+1$ , and of cofinite type for $i\geqslant 2n+2$ . If ${\mathcal{X}}$ is regular and proper over a finite field, they are finite for $i\not =2n,2n+2$ , finitely generated for $i=2n$ , and of cofinite type for $i=2n+2$ .
The conjecture includes the finiteness of the Brauer group of ${\mathcal{X}}$ conjectured by Artin. If $\operatorname{char}K=p$ , finiteness of $H_{\text{et}}^{2n+1}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ implies Tate’s conjecture for ${\mathcal{X}}$ in weight $n$ [Reference Geisser6, Proposition 4.4].
The sequence (2) for $U=C$ together with Corollary 2.7 imply:
Proposition 4.4. Under Lichtenbaum’s conjecture, $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ is finite for $i\leqslant 2n+1$ and for $i\not =2n+2$ in the number field and function field case, respectively.
Our next goal is to prove an unconditional result:
Proposition 4.5. Assume $K$ is a function field. If $n\not \in [0,d+1]$ or if $i\not =2n,2n+1,2n+2$ , then $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ is an extension of a uniquely divisible group by a finite group, and if $i>2n+2$ it is a finite group.
Proof. By a weight argument and Gabber’s theorem [Reference Gabber3], we know that $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}(n))$ is finite if $n\not \in [0,d+1]$ or $i\not =2n,2n+1$ . Hence $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Z}(n))\otimes \mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}=0$ for $n\not \in [0,d+1]$ or $i\not =2n,2n+1$ , and $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Z}(n))_{\operatorname{tor}}$ is finite for $n\not \in [0,d+1]$ or $i\not =2n+1,2n+2$ . Now the first statement follows from the sequence
and the second statement follows because $H_{\text{et}}^{i}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Q}(n))=0$ for $i>2n$ .◻
Applying this to the diagram (2) for $U=C$ and using the argument in the beginning of the section we obtain:
Corollary 4.6. Let $K$ be a function field and $i>2n+2$ . Then $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{i,n}(X)$ is finite if $X$ has a regular proper model over $C$ , and it is the sum of a finite group and a $p$ -group in general.
There should be a Weil-etale version of motivic cohomology such that all groups $H_{W}^{i}({\mathcal{X}},\mathbb{Z}(n))$ are finitely generated, and the above argument would imply that the Weil-etale version $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}_{W}^{i,n}(X)$ is finite.
5 The Brauer group
In this section we consider the group
If $X$ has a regular proper model ${\mathcal{X}}$ , the localization sequence (2) gives a diagram
and we obtain a short exact sequence
In particular, finiteness of $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ . We now consider the case that $X$ is a curve.
Proposition 5.1. Let $X$ be a curve with regular proper model ${\mathcal{X}}$ . Then $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)\rightarrow \operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ is an isomorphism if $K$ has no real places, and an injection with cokernel a finite $2$ -group in general.
Proof. This follows from the vanishing of the groups $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}}_{v})$ for finite or complex places. Indeed, by Artin’s theorem [Reference Grothendieck13, Theorem 3.1], the Brauer group of a regular relative curve, proper and flat over a henselian discrete valuation ring agrees with the Brauer group of the special fiber, and the Brauer group of the special fiber vanishes by [Reference Grothendieck13, Remark 2.5(b)]. If $v$ is complex, then ${\mathcal{X}}_{v}$ is a curve over an algebraically closed field, hence its Brauer group vanishes by loc.cit. Corollary 1.2. If $v$ is real, then $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}}_{v})$ is a finite $2$ -group by the Hochschild–Serre spectral sequence.◻
Artin and Grothendieck showed in [Reference Grothendieck13, Section 4] that $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ is finite if and only if the Tate–Shafarevich group of the Albanese $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Alb}_{X})$ is finite. We proved in [Reference Geisser7] that if $K$ has not real embeddings then (assuming finiteness of the groups) the orders are related by
where $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}_{v}$ are the indices of $X$ and $X_{v}$ , and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}_{v}$ are the orders of the cokernel of the inclusions $\operatorname{Pic}^{0}(X_{K})\rightarrow H^{0}(K,\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ and $\operatorname{Pic}^{0}(X_{v})\rightarrow H^{0}(K_{v},\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ , respectively. The argument of [Reference Liu, Lorenzini and Raynaud19] then implies that the order of $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ , hence of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ is a square if it is finite.
Returning to $X$ of arbitrary dimension, we relate $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ to the Tate–Shafarevich group $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ of the Picard variety of $X$ by comparing both terms to
and using the Hochschild–Serre spectral sequence (1) for $\mathbb{Z}(1)\cong \mathbb{G}_{m}[-1]$ . The following Proposition was explained to us by Colliot-Thélène:
Proposition 5.2. There exists an integer $N$ such that the cokernel of $\operatorname{NS}(X_{v})\rightarrow \operatorname{NS}(\bar{X})^{G_{v}}$ is killed by $N$ for all $v$ .
Proof. For any field $K$ we have the following diagram
where the lower row is the long exact sequence for Galois cohomology of group schemes.Thisgives anexact sequence $\operatorname{coker}u\rightarrow \operatorname{coker}s\rightarrow \operatorname{coker}v\rightarrow 0$ and it suffices to bound the outer terms. Let $M$ be a finite Galois extension of $K$ such that $X$ has an $M$ -rational point. Then the map of exact sequences
coming from (1) shows that the cokernel of $u$ injects into the kernel of $\operatorname{Br}(K)\rightarrow \operatorname{Br}(M)$ and hence is $[M:K]$ -torsion by a trace argument.
We can write $\operatorname{NS}(\bar{X})\cong R\oplus T$ , with $T$ a torsion group of some exponent $t$ , and $R$ free. Since $\operatorname{Pic}(\bar{X})=\operatorname{colim}_{F/K\text{finite, separable}}\operatorname{Pic}(X_{F})$ , we can find a finite Galois extension $L/K$ such that $R$ lifts to $\operatorname{Pic}(X_{L})$ . After increasing $L$ we can assume that $G_{L}$ acts trivially on $R$ . Then $\operatorname{coker}\operatorname{Pic}(\bar{X})^{G_{L}}\rightarrow \operatorname{NS}(\bar{X})^{G_{L}}$ is $t$ -torsion and hence the cokernel of $v$ is $t[L:K]$ -torsion.
If $K$ is a global field, then the above discussion applies to all $K_{v}$ , hence the cokernel of $\operatorname{NS}(X_{v})\rightarrow \operatorname{NS}(\bar{X})^{G_{v}}$ is $N$ torsion for $N=t[L:K][M:K]$ .◻
Lemma 5.3. Consider the following commutative diagram of abelian groups with exact rows:
If $\operatorname{coker}s$ is zero, finite, or of exponent $n$ , then so is the cohomology of $\ker c\rightarrow \ker d\rightarrow \ker e$ .
Proof. A diagram chase shows that the cohomology of $\ker c\rightarrow \ker d\rightarrow \ker e$ is isomorphic to the cohomology of $\operatorname{coker}a\rightarrow \operatorname{coker}b\rightarrow \operatorname{coker}c$ , which is a subgroup of $\operatorname{coker}b/\operatorname{im}\operatorname{coker}a=B^{\prime }/\operatorname{im}b+\operatorname{im}s$ . But $\operatorname{coker}s=B^{\prime }/\operatorname{im}s$ surjects onto the latter group.◻
Proposition 5.4. The canonical map $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X})$ has finite kernel, and its cokernel is of finite exponent.
Proof. Consider the commutative diagram with exact rows
The kernel of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X})$ is contained in the image of $\unicode[STIX]{x2202}$ , which is the finite cokernel of $\operatorname{NS}(X)\rightarrow \operatorname{NS}(\bar{X})^{G_{K}}$ . On the other hand, by Lemma 5.3, the cohomology of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}^{0})\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic})\rightarrow \ker \unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}$ is killed by $N$ of Proposition 5.2, and $\ker \unicode[STIX]{x1D70C}$ is finite because $\operatorname{NS}_{X}$ is a finitely generated Galois module [Reference Milne21, Theorem I 4.20].◻
Lemma 5.5. For almost all $v$ , $\operatorname{Br}(K_{v})\rightarrow \operatorname{Br}(X_{v})$ has a section and $\operatorname{Pic}X_{v}\rightarrow \operatorname{Pic}_{X}(\bar{K})^{G_{v}}$ is an isomorphism.
Proof. This follows because for any geometrically integral $K$ -variety, $X_{v}$ has a $K_{v}$ -rational point for all almost all places $v$ [Reference Poonen23, Theorem 7.7.2]. For the statement on $\operatorname{Pic}$ we use the low terms of (1)
Proposition 5.6. There is a canonical map $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X})$ with finite kernel, and cyclic cokernel of order dividing the index of $X$ . If $X$ has a rational point, then the map is an isomorphism.
Proof. Let $f:{\mathcal{X}}\rightarrow C$ be a normal, flat and proper model. By our hypothesis on $X$ we have $f_{\ast }\mathbb{G}_{m}\cong \mathbb{G}_{m}$ . Compare the spectral sequence (1) with its local analogue:
Here $\operatorname{Br}^{0}(X)$ and $\operatorname{Br}^{0}(X_{v})$ are the cokernels of $f^{\ast }$ and $f_{v}^{\ast }$ , respectively. By Lemma 4.2, the image of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$ lies in the restricted direct product with respect to the subgroups $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}}_{v})$ and the lower row is exact because $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{O}}_{v})=0$ , and $d_{2}^{v}$ is zero for almost all $v$ by Lemma 5.5.
Since $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ is injective, Lemma 5.3 implies that the kernel of $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F6}:\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)\rightarrow \ker \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FE}$ is finite because $\operatorname{coker}\prod _{v}\operatorname{Pic}(X_{v})\rightarrow \prod _{v}\operatorname{Pic}(\bar{X})^{G_{v}}$ is. On the other hand, the kernel of $u:\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}\cong \operatorname{coker}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}\rightarrow \operatorname{coker}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}$ surjects onto $\operatorname{coker}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F6}$ . But a zero-cycle of degree $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}$ on $X$ induces a compatible quasisplitting of (3), hence a map $v:\operatorname{coker}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FD}\rightarrow \operatorname{coker}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FC}$ such that $vu$ is multiplication by $\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}$ . Hence $\ker u\subseteq \mathbb{Z}/\unicode[STIX]{x1D6FF}$ surjects onto $\operatorname{coker}\unicode[STIX]{x1D6F6}$ . Finally the diagram
coming from (1) shows that $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X})\cong \ker \unicode[STIX]{x1D6FE}$ .
If $X$ has a rational point, then the sequences in (3) are compatibly split short exact.◻
Corollary 5.7. Finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ . Conversely, for almost all $l$ , finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})\{l\}$ implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)\{l\}$ .
Remark 5.8. We expect the existence of perfect pairings (for $n+u=d+1$ )
compatible with the finite coefficient versions arising from the Tate–Poitou sequences in [Reference Saito25] and [Reference Geisser and Schmidt11]:
If $X$ is a curve with model ${\mathcal{X}}$ , then under the identification $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})\cong \unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ the pairing should agree with the Artin–Tate pairing (which is alternating [Reference Feng2])
It is an interesting question if the order of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2n+1,n}(X)$ is always a square for $2n=d+1$ .
If $X$ has a rational point, and $n=1,u=d$ , the pairing should be compatible with the classical pairing
where the map $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{2d+1,d}(X)\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Alb}_{X})$ is induced by the map
arising from the Hochschild–Serre sequence and the albanese map.
If $X$ is an abelian variety with principal polarization, the classical Cassels–Tate pairing is not alternating [Reference Poonen and Stoll24]. However, the proof of Proposition 5.4 shows that this obstruction is contained in the kernel of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})\rightarrow \unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ .
6 Equivalence of conjectures
In this section, $K$ is a function field and ${\mathcal{X}}\rightarrow C$ a flat and regular model. In [Reference Geisser8] we proved the following theorem:
Theorem 6.1. Tate’s conjecture for divisors on ${\mathcal{X}}$ is equivalent to Tate’s conjecture for divisors on $X$ and the finiteness of the Tate–Shafarevich group $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Alb}_{X})$ .
This was proven by considering weight $d$ motivic cohomology. We give a shorter proof of a weaker result using weight $1$ motivic cohomology. We have already seen that finiteness of $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}^{3,1}(X)$ which implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ .
Theorem 6.2. Finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})$ and Tate’s conjecture for divisors on $X$ imply the finiteness of $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ .
Proof. Fix $l\not =p$ . Since the groups are finitely generated, completing the short exact sequence $0\rightarrow \operatorname{Pic}^{0}(X)\rightarrow \operatorname{Pic}(X)\rightarrow \operatorname{NS}(X)\rightarrow 0$ at $l$ gives the exact upper row in the following commutative diagram:
The lower row comes from the Hochschild–Serre spectral sequence for continuous $l$ -adic cohomology [Reference Jannsen14, Remark 3.5 b].
where we set $H_{\text{et}}^{2}(X,\mathbb{Z}_{l}(1))^{0}=\operatorname{coker}H^{2}(K,\mathbb{Z}_{l}(1))\rightarrow H_{\text{et}}^{2}(X,\mathbb{Z}_{l}(1))$ . For the left term we use that the injection
induces isomorphisms $H^{i}(K,T_{l}\operatorname{Pic}^{0})\cong H^{i}(K,H^{1}(\bar{X},\mathbb{Z}_{l}(1)))$ in the limit as $\operatorname{lim}_{r}H^{i}(K,_{l^{r}}\operatorname{NS}_{X})=0$ for all $i$ .
The map $a$ is the composition of the inclusion $\operatorname{Pic}^{0}(X)^{\wedge l}\rightarrow H^{0}(K,\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})^{\wedge l}$ with finite cokernel with the left map in the short exact coefficient sequence
The map $b$ is the canonical map in the coefficient sequence with cokernel $T_{l}\operatorname{Br}^{0}(X)$ . Finally, $c$ is the cycle map, whose cokernel is finite if and only if Tate’s conjecture for divisors holds on $X$ . It is easy to see that the diagram commutes. Combining this with the following Proposition, we obtain that Tate’s conjecture for divisors on $X$ together with finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(\operatorname{Pic}_{X}^{0})\{l\}$ implies that $T_{l}\operatorname{Br}^{0}(X)$ vanishes. But the inclusion $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})\rightarrow \operatorname{Br}^{0}(X)$ induces an inclusion $T_{l}\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})\rightarrow T_{l}\operatorname{Br}^{0}(X)$ , hence $T_{l}\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ vanishes as well. Since $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})\{l\}$ is of cofinite type, we conclude that $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})\{l\}$ is finite, which in turn implies that $\operatorname{Br}({\mathcal{X}})$ is finite [Reference Milne20].◻
Proposition 6.3. Let $A$ be an abelian variety over a global function field $K$ . Then $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)$ is finite if and only if $T_{l}H^{1}(K,A)$ vanishes for some (all) $l\not =p$ .
Proof. Since $A(K_{v})$ has a subgroup of finite index which is uniquely divisible by all integers prime to $p$ , duality of $H^{1}(K_{v},A)$ and $A(K_{v})$ [Reference Saito26, Theorem 9.3] shows that $H^{1}(K_{v},A)[1/p]$ is finite for all $v$ . Hence taking Tate-modules in the short exact sequence
shows that $T_{l}\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)\cong T_{l}H^{1}(K,A)$ . Finally, $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)$ is finite if and only if $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)\{l\}$ is finite for some $l$ , or equivalently if $T_{l}\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)$ vanishes [Reference Milne21, I Remark 6.7].◻
More generally, let $A$ be an abelian variety over any global field, and consider the exact sequence dual to the main theorem of [Reference González-Avilés and Tan12]
Let $l$ be different from the characteristic of $K$ and $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}$ be the corank of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)\{l\}$ . Then $\operatorname{Sel}(A)\{l\}$ is of cofinite type of corank $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}+\operatorname{rank}A(K)$ , hence $T_{l}(\operatorname{Sel}(A))\cong \mathbb{Z}_{l}^{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}+\operatorname{rank}A(K)}$ and $T_{l}(\operatorname{Sel}(A))^{\ast }\cong (\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l})^{\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}+\operatorname{rank}A(K)}$ . Moreover, $T_{l}H^{1}(K_{v},A)\cong \mathbb{Z}_{l}^{[K_{v}:\mathbb{Q}_{l}]\dim A}$ if $\operatorname{char}K_{v}=0$ and $v|l$ , and zero otherwise. Since $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)^{\wedge l}$ is finite, we obtain up to finite groups an exact sequence of Tate-modules
where we set $[K:\mathbb{Q}]=0$ if $K$ is a function field.
Proposition 6.4. The vanishing of $T_{l}H^{1}(K,A)$ implies that $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)\{l\}$ is finite and $\operatorname{rank}A(K)\geqslant [K:\mathbb{Q}]\dim A$ . The converse holds if $K=\mathbb{Q}$ and $A$ is an elliptic curve.
Proof. From the sequence (4) we see that the vanishing of $T_{l}H^{1}(K,A)$ implies finiteness of $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)\{l\}$ , hence $\unicode[STIX]{x1D70F}=0$ and $A(K)$ has rank at least $[K:\mathbb{Q}]\dim A$ . Conversely, if $\unicode[STIX]{x0428}(A)\{l\}$ is finite, then the first terms of (4) become
The last map is the map on Tate-modules induced by
and if $\dim A=[K:\mathbb{Q}]=1$ , then this is a nontrivial map from a $\mathbb{Z}_{l}$ -module of rank one, hence injective.◻
The Proposition generalizes a result of Kriz [Reference Kriz17], who considers the question when $T_{l}\operatorname{Br}^{0}(E)=\operatorname{coker}T_{l}\operatorname{Br}(K)\rightarrow T_{l}\operatorname{Br}(E)$ vanishes for elliptic curves over $\mathbb{Q}$ . Since $E$ has a rational point and $\operatorname{Br}(\bar{E})=0$ , the Hochschild–Serre spectral sequence (1) gives a split short exact sequence
hence this is equivalent to the vanishing of $T_{l}H^{1}(\mathbb{Q},E)$ .
7 Connections to Galois cohomology
We relate the work of Jannsen [Reference Jannsen15] to the groups $S^{i,n}(X)$ . Let $m$ be prime to the characteristic of $K$ .
Proposition 7.1. There is a map of spectral sequences
where $\prod _{v}^{\prime }$ on the left denotes the product, restricted product with respect to unramified cohomology, and sum for $s=0,1,2$ , respectively, and on the right the restricted product with respect to the cohomology $H_{\text{et}}^{s+t}({\mathcal{X}}_{v},\mathbb{Z}/m(n))$ of a model (which are subgroups for almost all $v$ ). The same statement holds with $\mathbb{Q}_{l}/\mathbb{Z}_{l}(n)$ -coefficients.
Note that the right vertical map is defined by the argument of Lemma 4.2.
Proof. Assume that $v$ does not divide $m$ and that $X$ has good reduction at $v$ , that is, there is a smooth ${\mathcal{X}}_{v}$ over ${\mathcal{O}}_{v}$ with generic fiber $X_{v}$ and closed fiber $Y_{v}$ . If $\mathfrak{g}$ is the Galois group of the reside field, then we have short exact sequences
By the smooth and proper base-change theorem,
for all $t$ , hence using the proper base-change theorem in the middle, we can identify this with the short exact sequence in the upper row of the diagram
The outer groups are unramified cohomology groups of $K_{v}$ by definition. The diagram implies that the lower (edge) map is surjective, hence the differential
vanishes for all $v$ as above. It follows that the differential $(d_{2}^{v})$ maps the product to the sum.
Finally, the upper row in the diagram (6) shows the spectral sequence converges to the abutment.◻
Jannsen [Reference Jannsen15, Theorem 3(c,d)] shows that if $i\not =2n-2$ and $K$ is a number field, then
has finite kernel and cokernel.
Proposition 7.2. If $i\not =2n$ , then there is a homomorphism from $S^{i,n}(X)\{l\}$ to
with finite kernel and cokernel.
Proof. Since the map
is injective for any $v\not |l$ , $S^{i,n}(X)\{l\}$ agrees with the kernel of
with respect to the filtration induced by the spectral sequence (5). Now the diagram with exact sequences
shows that the kernels of the two right vertical map differ by a finite group in view of Jannsen result. ◻
The kernel of the map
was examined in [Reference Saito25] and [Reference Geisser and Schmidt11], but it is not clear what happens in the colimit. We hope that the groups with integral coefficients are better behaved.