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Orthogonality relations for deep level Deligne–Lusztig schemes of Coxeter type

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2024

Olivier Dudas
Affiliation:
Université de Paris and Sorbonne Université, IMJ-PRG, Paris, F-75006, France; E-mail: olivier.dudas@imj-prg.fr
Alexander B. Ivanov*
Affiliation:
Mathematisches Institut, Universität Bonn, Endenicher Allee 60, Bonn, 53115, Germany;
*
E-mail: ivanov@math.uni-bonn.de (corresponding author)

Abstract

In this paper, we prove some orthogonality relations for representations arising from deep level Deligne–Lusztig schemes of Coxeter type. This generalizes previous results of Lusztig [Lus04], and of Chan and the second author [CI21b]. Applications include the study of smooth representations of p-adic groups in the cohomology of p-adic Deligne–Lusztig spaces and their relation to the local Langlands correspondences. Also, the geometry of deep level Deligne–Lusztig schemes gets accessible, in the spirit of Lusztig’s work [Lus76].

Type
Algebra
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

1 Introduction

In the last fifteen years, various p-adic and deep level analogues of classical Deligne–Lusztig varieties attracted a lot of attention; see, in particular, [Reference LusztigLus04, Reference BoyarchenkoBoy12, Reference Chen and StasinskiCS17, Reference ChanCha20, Reference Chan and IvanovCI23, Reference IvanovIva23]. The interest in them is justified by the fact that they allow application of methods from classical Deligne–Lusztig theory to study representations of p-adic groups. Furthermore, they are very interesting geometric objects in their own right (like the classical Deligne–Lusztig varieties are). In this article, we consider deep level Deligne–Lusztig schemes of Coxeter type and prove orthogonality relations for the corresponding representations, extending a classical result of [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76] to the deep level setup.

Let k be a nonarchimedean local field with uniformizer $\varpi $ and ${\mathcal O}_k$ be its ring of integers. We assume that the residue field ${\mathcal O}_k/\varpi $ is a finite field ${\mathbb F}_q$ with q elements. Let $\breve k$ denote the completion of a maximal unramified extension of k with residue field $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ . Let ${\mathbf G}$ be an unramified connected reductive group over k, ${\mathbf T} \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ a k-rational unramified maximal torus, and ${\mathbf U}$ the unipotent radical of a $\breve k$ -rational Borel subgroup of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ . Let ${\mathcal G} = {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ be a (connected) parahoric ${\mathcal O}_k$ -group scheme with generic fiber ${\mathbf G}$ , whose corresponding facet $\mathbf {x}$ in the Bruhat–Tits building (over $\breve k$ ) of the adjoint group of ${\mathbf G}$ lies in the apartment of ${\mathbf T}$ , and let ${\mathcal T} \subseteq {\mathcal G}$ denote the schematic closure of ${\mathbf T}$ in ${\mathcal G}$ .

Fix an integer $r \geq 1$ . Let $G = {\mathcal G}({\mathcal O}_k/\varpi ^r)$ and $T = {\mathcal T}({\mathcal O}_k/\varpi ^r)$ . In [Reference LusztigLus04, Reference StasinskiSta09, Reference Chan and IvanovCI21b], a certain (perfect) $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -scheme $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} = S_{\mathbf {x},{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U},r}$ equipped with a natural $G\times T$ -action was defined. In a sense, it can be regarded as a deep level analogue of a classical Deligne–Lusztig variety.Footnote 1 As in the classical Deligne–Lusztig theory, the cohomology of $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ attaches to any character $\theta \colon T \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ ( $\ell \neq \mathrm {char}\ {\mathbb F}_q$ ) the G-representation $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta ) = \sum _{i \in {\mathbb Z}} (-1)^i H_c^i(S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}},\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell })_\theta $ . One of the central features within the classical Deligne–Lusztig theory is the Deligne–Lusztig orthogonality relation, which computes (in the classical case, that is, $r=1$ , $\mathbf {x}$ hyperspecial) the inner product of two virtual representations $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ , $R_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}(\theta ')$ [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, Thm. 6.8].

The goal of the present article is to generalize the abovementioned classical orthogonality relations to deep level schemes $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ of Coxeter type. There is a meaningful notion of a Coxeter pair $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ (cf. Section 2.6), which essentially means that $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ is the deep level analogue of a classical Deligne–Lusztig variety of Coxeter type. In that case, the intersection of the apartment of ${\mathbf T}$ with the k-rational Bruhat–Tits building of the adjoint group is just one vertex, $\mathbf {x}_{\mathbf T}$ , and (as we assumed ${\mathbf G}$ to be unramified) this vertex must necessarily be hyperspecial (cf. Section 2.6). The following theorem is our main result.

Theorem 3.2.3. Let $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ be Coxeter pairs with $\mathbf {x} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}'}$ (then, automatically, $\mathbf {x}$ is hyperspecial). Assume that $q> 5$ . Then for all $r \geq 1$ and all $\theta \colon T \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ , $\theta ' \colon T' \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ , we have

$$\begin{align*}\langle R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta), R_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}(\theta') \rangle_G = \# \left\{w \in W({\mathbf T},{\mathbf T}')^F \colon \theta' = {}^w\theta \right\}, \end{align*}$$

where $W({\mathbf T},{\mathbf T}') ={\mathbf T}(\breve k) \backslash \{ g \in {\mathbf G}(\breve k)\colon {}^g{\mathbf T}' = {\mathbf T}\}$ , and F denotes the Frobenius action.

Note that the assumption on q in the theorem and the corollaries below can be strengthened depending on the root system of ${\mathbf G}$ ; see Condition (3). Formerly, Theorem 3.2.3 was known only under the quite restrictive assumptions – namely, that either $r=1$ , or $\theta $ or $\theta '$ is regular (i.e., ‘highly nontrivial’ on $\ker ({\mathcal T}({\mathcal O}_k/\varpi ^r) \rightarrow {\mathcal T}({\mathcal O}_k/\varpi ^{r-1}))$ ) or ${\mathbf G} = \mathbf {GL}_n$ (cf. Remark 3.2.2).

From Theorem 3.2.3 one easily deduces (cf. [Reference LusztigLus04, Cor. 2.4]) that the virtual representations $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ behave in a quite reasonable way:

Corollary 1.0.1. Let $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ be a Coxeter pair, let $\theta \colon T \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ be a character, and assume that $q> 5$ . Then the following hold:

  1. (1) $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ only depends on ${\mathbf T}$ and $\theta $ , but not on ${\mathbf U}$ .

  2. (2) $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ is up to sign an irreducible representation of G if and only if the stabilizer of $\theta $ in $W({\mathbf T})^F$ is trivial.

The most interesting application of our main result arises when it is combined with the recent deep results of Chan–Oi [Reference Chan and OiCO23], who studied the representations $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ in a similar context. The setup of the main result (Theorem B) of loc. cit. is more general than ours in that all pairs $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ with ${\mathbf T}$ an elliptic torus and arbitraty ${\mathbf U}$ were considered, and at the same time, more restrictive in that the character $\theta $ had to be regular (called $0$ -toral resp. extra toral in [Reference Chan and OiCO23]). Now the main result of [Reference Chan and OiCO23] compares $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ for regular $\theta $ ’s with Yu’s construction of supercuspidal representaions [Reference YuYu01]. In fact, the method of Chan–Oi works in a considerably bigger generality than just for regular $\theta $ ’s – namely, for all toral charactersFootnote 2 $\theta $ – provided that additionally the irreducibility of the ${\mathcal G}({\mathcal O}_k)$ -representation $\pm R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ is known; cf. [Reference Chan and OiCO23, Rem. 7.4]. For regular $\theta $ ’s, this ${\mathcal G}({\mathcal O}_k)$ -irreducibility was known due to [Reference LusztigLus04, Reference StasinskiSta09, Reference Chan and IvanovCI21b]. Now, Theorem 3.2.3 grants exactly this irreducibility for arbitrary $\theta $ with trivial stabilizer in $W({\mathbf T})^F$ , at least if one restricts attention to Coxeter pairs. Thus, just as explained in [Reference Chan and OiCO23, Rem. 7.4], our results allows to extend [Reference Chan and OiCO23, Thm. 7.2] from regular $\theta $ ’s to all toral $\theta $ ’s:

Corollary 1.0.2 ([Reference Chan and OiCO23], Theorem 7.2 or Theorem B + Theorem 3.2.3).

Let $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ be a Coxeter pair, assume that $q> 5$ , and let $\theta \colon {\mathbf T}(k) \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ be smooth and toral. Then $\pm R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ is isomorphic to the representation attached to $({\mathbf T},\theta )$ through the theory of Yu’s cuspidal types (cf. [Reference YuYu01] resp. [Reference Chan and OiCO23, §3]). In particular, $\mathrm {cInd}_{{\mathbf T}(k){\mathcal G}({\mathcal O}_k)}^{{\mathbf G}(k)} (\pm R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta ))$ is irreducible supercuspidal and provides a geometric realization of Yu’s construction of supercuspidal ${\mathbf G}(k)$ -representations.

Let us also mention that for $\mathbf {G} = \mathbf {GL}_n$ (or one of its inner forms), the special case of Theorem 3.2.3 was one of the main ingredients in the proof of the main result of [Reference Chan and IvanovCI23], which states that the cohomology of a certain p-adic Deligne–Lusztig space $\dot X_{\dot w}(b)$ , endowed with an action of $\mathbf {GL}_n(k) \times {\mathbf T}(k)$ , realizes the local Langlands and Jacquet–Langlands correspondences for a big portion of representations of $\mathbf {GL}_n(k)$ . In [Reference IvanovIva23], the spaces $\dot X_{\dot w}(b)$ were recently defined for all unramified connected reductive k-groups $\mathbf {G}$ . Correspondingly, our Theorem 3.2.3 is supposed to be the key tool in studying the $\mathbf { G}(k)$ -representations appearing in the cohomology of p-adic Deligne–Lusztig spaces (of Coxeter type) attached to general $\mathbf G$ . Ultimately, this should lead to a purely local realization of a big part of the local Langlands correspondence in the style of Deligne–Lusztig theory.

Another (related) potential application of Theorem 3.2.3 is that it opens the possibility to treat also those ${\mathbf G}(k)$ -representations $R^{\mathbf {G}}_{\mathbf {T}}(\theta )$ for which $\theta $ has non-trivial stabilizer in $W({\mathbf T})^F$ – for example, in a way similar to the classical case studied by Lusztig [Reference LusztigLus76]. For example, the case $\theta = \theta ' = 1$ in Theorem 3.2.3 gives a tool to redefine the cuspidal unipotent representations of the p-adic group ${\mathbf G}(k)$ via $X_w(b)$ .

Our proof of Theorem 3.2.3 follows an idea of Deligne and Lusztig [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76], which consists in extending the $T \times T'$ -action on various subschemes of $\Sigma = G \backslash (S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} \times S_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'})$ to an action of some torus with finitely many fixed points. This considerably simplifies the computation of the Euler characteristic of $\Sigma $ . For ${\mathbf G} = \mathbf {GL}_n$ (and, essentially, for any unramified group of type $A_n$ ), Theorem 3.2.3 was proven in [Reference Chan and IvanovCI23, §4]. However, the general case requires several serious improvements, which are the core of the present work.

2 Setup and preliminaries

2.1 Some notation

Given a group G and $g,x \in G$ , we write ${}^g x = gxg^{-1}$ and $x^g = g^{-1}xg$ . If $\theta $ is an irreducible character of a finite subgroup H of G, then ${}^g\theta $ is the character of $H^g$ given by ${}^g\theta (x) := \theta (g x g^{-1})$ .

Let p be a prime number. Given a ring R of characteristic p, we denote by $\operatorname {\mathrm {Perf}}_R$ the category of perfect R-algebras, and by $W(R)$ the (p-typical) Witt vectors of R.

Let k be a nonarchimedean local field with residue field ${\mathbb F}_q$ , where q is some fixed power of p. The ring of integers of k will be denoted by ${\mathcal O}_k$ . Let $\varpi $ be a uniformizer of k. Given $R \in \operatorname {\mathrm {Perf}}_{{\mathbb F}_q}$ , there is an essentially unique $\varpi $ -adically complete and separated ${\mathcal O}_k$ -algebra ${\mathbb W}(R)$ , in which $\varpi $ is not a zero-divisor and which satisfies ${\mathbb W}(R)/ \varpi {\mathbb W}(R) = R$ . Explicitly, we have

$$\begin{align*}{\mathbb W}(R) = \begin{cases} W(R) \otimes_{W({\mathbb F}_q)} {\mathcal O}_k &\text{if } \mathrm{char}\ k = 0 \\ R[\![\varpi]\!] &\text{if } \mathrm{char}\ k = p\end{cases} \end{align*}$$

(i.e., ${\mathbb W}(R)$ are the ramified Witt vectors, details on which can be found, for example, in [Reference Fargues and FontaineFF18, 1.2]). In particular, ${\mathbb W}({\mathbb F}_q)[1/\varpi ] = k$ . Fix an algebraic closure $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ of ${\mathbb F}_q$ and put ${\mathcal O}_{\breve k} = {\mathbb W}(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)$ and $\breve k = {\mathbb W}(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)[1/\varpi ]$ . The field $\breve k$ is the $\varpi $ -adic completion of a maximal unramified extension of k.

2.2 Loop functors

Let ${\mathcal X}$ be an ${\mathcal O}_{\breve k}$ -scheme. We have the functor of positive loops and its truncations for $r\geq 1$ (also called Greenberg functors, following [Reference GreenbergGre61])

$$ \begin{align*} L^+{\mathcal X} \colon \operatorname{\mathrm{Perf}}_{\overline{{\mathbb F}}_q} &\rightarrow \mathrm{Sets}, \quad (L^+{\mathcal X})(R) = {\mathcal X}({\mathbb W}(R)) \\ L_r^+{\mathcal X} \colon \operatorname{\mathrm{Perf}}_{\overline{{\mathbb F}}_q} &\rightarrow \mathrm{Sets}, \quad (L_r^+{\mathcal X})(R) = {\mathcal X}({\mathbb W}(R)/\varpi^r{\mathbb W}(R)). \end{align*} $$

If ${\mathcal X}$ is affine of finite type over ${\mathcal O}_{\breve k}$ , then $L^+{\mathcal X}$ and $L_r^+{\mathcal X}$ are representable by affine perfect schemes, and the latter is of perfectly finite type over $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ , as follows from [Reference GreenbergGre61].

Moreover, if ${\mathcal X}$ is equipped with an ${\mathcal O}_k$ -rational structure (i.e., ${\mathcal X} = {\mathcal X}_0 \otimes _{{\mathcal O}_k} {\mathcal O}_{\breve k}$ for an ${\mathcal O}_k$ -scheme ${\mathcal X}_0$ ), then $L^+{\mathcal X}$ and $L^+_r{\mathcal X}$ both come equipped with geometric Frobenius automorphisms (over $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ ), which we denote by $F \colon L^+{\mathcal X} \rightarrow L^+{\mathcal X}$ resp. $F \colon L^+_r{\mathcal X} \rightarrow L^+_r{\mathcal X}$ .

2.3 Perfect schemes and $\ell $ -adic cohomology

We fix a prime $\ell \neq p$ and an algebraic closure $\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }$ of ${\mathbb Q}_{\ell }$ . Without further reference, we will make use of the formalism of étale cohomology with compact support, as developed in [Reference DeligneDel77]. If $f \colon X \rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}} \overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ is a (separated) morphism of finite type, then we put $H_c^i(X,\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }) = R^if_!\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }$ , where $\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }$ is the constant local system of rank $1$ on X. Then $H_c^i(X, \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell })$ is a finite dimensional $\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }$ -vector space, which is zero for almost all $i \in {\mathbb Z}$ , and we may form the $\ell $ -adic Euler characteristic $H_c^{\ast }(X) = \sum _{i\in {\mathbb Z}} (-1)^iH_c^i(X,\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell })$ of X, which is an element of the Grothendieck group of finite dimensional $\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }$ -vector spaces.

For an introduction to perfect schemes, we refer to [Reference ZhuZhu17, Appendix A]. If X is a perfect scheme over $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ , such that the structure morphism $f \colon X \rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}} \overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ is (separated and) of perfectly finite type, we may choose any model $f_0 \colon X_0 \rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}} \overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ of finite type over $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ , such that f is the perfection of $f_0$ . Then the étale sites of X and $X_0$ agree, so that $H_c^{\ast }(X) = H_c^{\ast }(X_0)$ . Hence, the above cohomological formalism extends to (separated) perfectly finitely presented perfect schemes over $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ . In particular, $H_c^{\ast }(X)$ makes sense as a virtual (finite) $\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }$ -vector space. If X is acted on by a finite group G, we may similarly consider the G-equivariant Euler characteristic $H_c^*(X)$ , which is an object in the Grothendieck group of $\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }[G]$ -modules.

Below (in Section 7.2), we often encounter the following situation. Let X and G be as in the preceding paragraph. Suppose that X is affine and that there is a torus ${\mathbb T}$ over $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ which acts on X, and that this action commutes with the G-action. Then

(1) $$ \begin{align} H_c^{\ast}(X) = H_c^{\ast}(X^T) \end{align} $$

as $\overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }[G]$ -modules, as follows from [Reference Digne and MichelDM91, 10.15]. This will apply to schemes $\widehat \Sigma _w$ , $\widetilde \Sigma _w$ constructed in Sections 5.1,5.2. We also must apply this to the schemes $Y_{v,w}$ (resp. $Z_{v,w}$ ) constructed in Section 5.3, which are locally closed subschemes of $\widehat \Sigma _{v,w}$ of which we do not know that they are affine. However, the action of the torus ${\mathbb T}$ on $Y_{v,w}$ (resp. $Z_{v,w}$ ) will be the restriction of an action of the same ${\mathbb T}$ on $\widehat \Sigma _w$ (resp. $\widehat \Sigma _v$ ). In this situation, the proof of [Reference Digne and MichelDM91, 10.15] still applies and hence (1) still holds for $Y_{v,w}$ , $Z_{v,w}$ .

In the rest of this article, all schemes over ${\mathbb F}_q$ or $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ will be separated, perfect and of perfectly finite type (unless specified otherwise). Whenever we consider objects over ${\mathbb F}_q$ or $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ , we simply write ‘scheme’ for ‘perfect scheme’.

2.4 Groups, parahoric models and Moy–Prasad quotients

Let ${\mathbf G}$ be a connected reductive group over k which splits over $\breve k$ . For $E \in \{k,\breve k\}$ , let ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G}, E)$ be the Bruhat–Tits building of the adjoint group of ${\mathbf G}$ . The Frobenius of $\breve k/k$ induces automorphisms of ${\mathbf G}(\breve k)$ and ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},\breve k)$ , both denoted by F, and we have ${\mathbf G}(\breve k)^F = {\mathbf G}(k)$ and ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},\breve k)^F = {\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},k)$ .

Let $\mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ be the set of k-rational $\breve k$ -split maximal tori of ${\mathbf G}$ . Given ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ , we denote by $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T})$ (resp. $X_\ast ({\mathbf T})$ ) the group of characters (resp. cocharacters) of ${\mathbf T}$ , and by $\Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G}) \subseteq X^{\ast }({\mathbf T})$ the set of roots of ${\mathbf T}$ in ${\mathbf G}$ . Given $\alpha \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ , ${\mathbf U}_\alpha $ denotes the corresponding root subgroup. Furthermore, we denote by F the automorphism of $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T})$ resp. $X_\ast ({\mathbf T})$ induced by the Frobenius of $\breve k/k$ . Let ${\mathcal A}({\mathbf T}, \breve k)$ denote the apartment of ${\mathbf T}$ in ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},\breve k)$ , and put ${\mathcal A}({\mathbf T},k) = {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T},\breve k)^F$ .

From the theory of Bruhat–Tits, we can attach to any point $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},k)$ a connected parahoric ${\mathcal O}_k$ -model ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ of ${\mathbf G}$ [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT84, §4.6, 5.2.6]. It is smooth affine and has generic fiber ${\mathbf G}$ . The group ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})$ admits a Moy–Prasad filtration by subgroups ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})_r$ for $r \in \widetilde {{\mathbb R}}_{\geq 0} = {\mathbb R}_{\geq 0} \cup \{r+ \colon r \in {\mathbb R}_{\geq 0}\}$ [Reference Moy and PrasadMP94, §2]. By [Reference YuYu15, 8.2 Cor., §9.1], there exists a unique smooth affine ${\mathcal O}_k$ -model ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}^r$ of ${\mathbf G}$ satisfying ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}^r({\mathcal O}_{\breve k}) = {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})_r$ . It is obtained from ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf { x}}$ by a series of dilatations along the unit section.

For the rest of this article, we fix an integer $r \geq 1$ . We consider the fpqc-quotient

(2) $$ \begin{align} {\mathbb G} = {\mathbb G}_r = L^+{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf{x}}/L^+{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf{x}}^{(r-1)+} \end{align} $$

of sheaves on $\operatorname {\mathrm {Perf}}_{{\mathbb F}_q}$ . It is representable by a (perfect) affine ${\mathbb F}_q$ -group scheme, perfectly of finite type over ${\mathbb F}_q$ [Reference Chan and IvanovCI21a, Prop. 4.2(ii)]. We denote this group scheme, as well as its base change to $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ , again by ${\mathbb G}$ . The $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -group ${\mathbb G}$ admits a geometric Frobenius automorphism $F \colon {\mathbb G} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}$ attached to its ${\mathbb F}_q$ -rational structure. We have

$$\begin{align*}{\mathbb G}(\overline{{\mathbb F}}_q) = {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf{x}}({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})/{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf{ x}}({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})_{(r-1)+} \quad \text{ and } \quad {\mathbb G}({\mathbb F}_q) = {\mathbb G}^F = {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf{x}}({\mathcal O}_k)/{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf{x}}^{(r-1)+}({\mathcal O}_k) \end{align*}$$

(by taking Galois cohomology and using that ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}^{r'}$ is pro-unipotent for $r'> 0$ ; see [Reference Moy and PrasadMP94, §2.6]). For more details on this setup and for a more explicit description of ${\mathbb G}$ in terms of root subgroups, we refer to [Reference Chan and IvanovCI21b, §2.4,2.5] (such an explicit description will not be used below).

Remark 2.4.1. Instead of (2), we could work with the seemingly more natural object $L^+_r{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ (r-truncated positive loops of ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ ). However, the advantage of the normalization in (2) is that ${\mathbb G}_1$ is canonically isomorphic to the reductive quotient of the special fiber ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}} \otimes _{{\mathcal O}_k} {\mathbb F}_q$ (cf. [Reference Moy and PrasadMP94, §3.2]), whereas $L^+_1{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ identifies with the special fiber of ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ , which is less useful. On the other side, if $\mathbf {x}$ is hyperspecial (as will be the case in our main result Theorem 3.2.3), then $L^+_r{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}} = {\mathbb G}_r$ .

2.5 Subschemes of ${\mathbb G}$

Let ${\mathbf H} \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a smooth closed $\breve k$ -subgroup. The schematic closure ${\mathcal H} \subseteq {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ of ${\mathbf H}$ is a flat closed ${\mathcal O}_{\breve k}$ -subgroup scheme of ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ by [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT84, 1.2.6,1.2.7]. Applying $L^+_r$ gives a closed immersion $L^+_r{\mathcal H}_{\mathbf {x}} \subseteq L^+_r{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ by [Reference GreenbergGre61, Cor. 2 on p. 639]. We define the closed $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -subgroup ${\mathbb H} \subseteq {\mathbb G}$ as the image of $L^+_r{\mathcal H}$ under $L^+_r{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}} \twoheadrightarrow {\mathbb G}$ . If ${\mathbf H}$ is already defined over k, then ${\mathcal H}$ is defined over ${\mathcal O}_k$ , and hence, ${\mathbb H}$ is defined over ${\mathbb F}_q$ . In this case, we usually will write $H := {\mathbb H}({\mathbb F}_q)$ .

Furthermore, for each $0<r'\leq r$ , we have a natural homomorphism ${\mathbb H} = {\mathbb H}_r \rightarrow {\mathbb H}_{r'}$ , and we denote its kernel by ${\mathbb H}_r^{r'}$ (resp. simply ${\mathbb H}^{r'}$ ).

In particular, this procedure applies to any ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ , any root subgroup ${\mathbf U}_\alpha $ (with $\alpha \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ ) and the unipotent radical ${\mathbf U}$ of any $\breve k$ -rational Borel subgroup containing ${\mathbf T}$ . This gives the subgroups ${\mathbb T},{\mathbb U}_\alpha ,{\mathbb U} \subseteq {\mathbb G}$ , etc., and we will use this notation without further reference.

2.6 Coxeter pairs and Coxeter tori

Suppose that ${\mathbf G}$ is unramified (that is, quasi-split over k and split over $\breve k$ ). Let ${\mathbf T}_0 \subseteq {\mathbf B}_0 \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be a k-rational Borel subgroup and a k-rational maximal torus of ${\mathbf G}$ contained in it. Let $W_0 = N_{{\mathbf G}}({\mathbf T}_0)(\breve k)/{\mathbf T}_0(\breve k)$ be the Weyl group of ${\mathbf T}_0$ . It is a Coxeter group with the set of simple reflections $S_0$ determined by ${\mathbf B}_0$ . The Frobenius of $\breve k/k$ induces an automorphism $\sigma $ of $W_0$ fixing the set of simple reflections. Changing $({\mathbf T}_0,{\mathbf B}_0)$ amounts to replacing $(W_0,S_0,\sigma )$ by a triple canonically isomorphic to it (just as in [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.1]). In particular, whenever we have a vertex $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},k)$ as in Section 2.4, we may assume that $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T}_0,k)$ .

Any pair $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf B})$ with ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ , and ${\mathbf B}$ a $\breve k$ -rational Borel subgroup containing it, determines the triple $(W,S,F)$ , where W is the Weyl group of ${\mathbf T}$ , S the set of simple reflections determined by ${\mathbf B}$ and $F \colon W \rightarrow W$ is induced by the Frobenius. There is a uniquely determined coset $g{\mathbf T}_0(\breve k) \subseteq {\mathbf G}(\breve k)$ with ${}^g({\mathbf T}_0,{\mathbf B}_0) = ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf B})$ , and we have $g^{-1} F(g) \in N_{{\mathbf G}}({\mathbf T}_0)(\breve k)$ mapping to some element $w = w_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf B}}\in W_0$ . In this case, the triples $(W,S,F)$ and $(W_0,S_0,\mathrm { Ad}\, w \circ \sigma )$ are canonically isomorphic, and we may (and will) identify them.

Definition 2.6.1.

  1. (i) Given $w \in W_0$ , we say that $w\sigma $ (or by abuse of language w) is a twisted Coxeter element if a (any) reduced expression of w contains precisely one simple reflection from any $\sigma $ -orbit on $S_0$ . If $W_0$ is irreducible, the order h of $w\sigma $ is called the Coxeter number of $(W_0,\sigma )$ .

  2. (ii) We say that $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf B})$ (resp. $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , where ${\mathbf U}$ is the unipotent radical of ${\mathbf B}$ ) is a Coxeter pair, if $w_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf B}} \sigma $ is a twisted Coxeter element.

  3. (iii) If $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf B})$ is a Coxeter pair, we say that ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm { Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ is a Coxeter torus.

Recall that a torus ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ is called elliptic (or k-minisotropic) if one of the following equivalent conditions holds: (i) $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T})^F = X^{\ast }({\mathbf Z}({\mathbf G})^\circ )^F$ , where ${\mathbf Z}({\mathbf G})^\circ $ is the connected component of the center of ${\mathbf G}$ ; (ii) the group ${\mathbf T}(k)$ has a unique fixed point (necessarily a vertex) $\mathbf {x} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}}$ in ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},k) = {\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},\breve k)^F$ . Any Coxeter torus is elliptic. Note that the property of a torus to be Coxeter (resp. elliptic) is stable under the equivalence relation of stable conjugacy.

Lemma 2.6.2. Suppose ${\mathbf G}$ is unramified.

  1. (i) If ${\mathbf T}$ is a Coxeter torus, then $\mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}}$ is a hyperspecial vertex.

  2. (ii) ${\mathbf T} \mapsto \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}}$ induces a natural bijection between ${\mathbf G}(k)$ -conjugacy classes of Coxeter tori and ${\mathbf G}(k)$ -orbits on the set of hyperspecial points of ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},k)$ .

  3. (iii) If $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ are Coxeter pairs with $\mathbf { x}_{{\mathbf T}} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}'}$ , then there is some $g \in {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})$ with ${}^g({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}) = ({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ .

Proof. For (i), we may pass to the adjoint group of ${\mathbf G}$ . Then ${\mathbf G} \cong \prod _i {\mathbf G}_i$ , with ${\mathbf G}_i$ simple and of adjoint type, and ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},\breve k) \cong \prod _i {\mathcal B}({\mathbf G}_i,\breve k)$ . It thus suffices to prove the result in the case ${\mathbf G}$ is k-simple and of adjoint type. Then ${\mathbf G} = \mathrm {Res}_{k'/k}{\mathbf G}'$ is the restriction of scalars along a finite unramified extension $k'/k$ of an unramified absolutely simple group ${\mathbf G}'$ over $k'$ . Each maximal k-torus of ${\mathbf G}$ is of the form ${\mathbf T} = \mathrm {Res}_{k'/k}{\mathbf T}'$ for a maximal $k'$ -torus ${\mathbf T}' \subseteq {\mathbf G}'$ . We may identify ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},k) = {\mathcal B}({\mathbf G}',k')$ , and under this identification, $\mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}}$ corresponds to $\mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}'}$ . Thus, we are reduced to the case that ${\mathbf G}$ is absolutely simple. In this case, all Coxeter tori are ${\mathbf G}(k)$ -conjugate by [Reference ReederRee08, Prop. 8.1(i)]. Moreover, by [Reference DeBackerDeB06, Thm. 3.4.1], there is at least the ${\mathbf G}(k)$ -conjugacy class of Coxeter tori attached to a (any) hyperspecial vertex $\mathbf {x}$ of ${\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},\breve k)$ and a (any) Coxeter torus in ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}} \otimes _{{\mathcal O}_k} {\mathbb F}_q$ . Now the map in (ii) is well defined by (i) and [Reference KalethaKal19, Lemma 3.4.12(3)]. Its bijectivity and part (iii) follow from now from [Reference DeBackerDeB06, Thm. 3.4.1] and the fact that in a finite Weyl group, all twisted Coxeter elements are conjugate.

If ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ is arbitrary and $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T}, k)$ , then we have the torus ${\mathcal T} \subseteq {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ , and the subgroup ${\mathbb T}_r \subseteq {\mathbb G}_r$ for any $r>0$ (as in Section 2.5). This gives the two Weyl groups

$$\begin{align*}W_{\mathbf{x}}({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G}) := W({\mathbb T}_1,{\mathbb G}_1) \subseteq W({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G}) \end{align*}$$

attached to ${\mathbf T}$ (and $\mathbf {x}$ ). We denote them by $W_{\mathbf {x}}$ and W if ${\mathbf T},{\mathbf G}$ are clear from the context. If $\mathbf {x}$ is a hyperspecial vertex – which is by Lemma 2.6.2 necessarily the case whenever ${\mathbf T}$ is Coxeter – then the situation simplifies to ${\mathbb G}_1 = L_1^+{\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}} = {\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}} \otimes _{{\mathcal O}_k} \overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ and $W_{\mathbf {x}} = W$ .

2.7 A condition on q

Identifying $X_\ast ({\mathbb G}_m)$ with ${\mathbb Z}$ , we have the perfect pairing of ${\mathbb Z}$ -lattices

$$\begin{align*}X^{\ast}({\mathbb T}_1) \times X_\ast({\mathbb T}_1) \rightarrow {\mathbb Z}, \quad (\alpha ,\nu) \mapsto \langle \alpha,\nu \rangle \end{align*}$$

such that $\langle F\alpha , \nu \rangle = \langle \alpha ,F \nu \rangle $ for all $\alpha ,\nu $ . This pairing also induces the analogous pairing for ${\mathbb T}_1^{\mathrm {ad}}$ (where ${\mathbf T}^{\mathrm {ad}}$ is the image of ${\mathbf T}$ in the adjoint quotient of ${\mathbf G}$ ) and for the ${\mathbb Q}$ -vector spaces obtained by extension of scalars.

Recall that the choice of ${\mathbf U}$ is equivalent to the choice of a set of simple roots $\Delta \subseteq \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ , and it endows W with a structure of a Coxeter group. The simple roots $\Delta $ form a basis of $X^{\ast }({\mathbb T}_1^{\mathrm {ad}})_{\mathbb Q}$ . We will denote by $\{\alpha ^{\ast } \colon \alpha \in \Delta \} \subseteq X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1^{\mathrm {ad}})_{\mathbb Q}$ the set of fundamental coweights, defined as the basis of $X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1^{\mathrm {ad}})_{\mathbb Q}$ dual to $\Delta $ . Let $\alpha _0$ denote the highest root. We will prove the orthogonality relations of Coxeter-type Deligne–Lusztig characters under the following restriction on q:

(3) $$ \begin{align} q> M := \max\limits_{\alpha \in \Delta} \, \langle \alpha_0, \alpha^{\ast} \rangle. \end{align} $$

Note that this condition depends only on the group ${\mathbf G}_{\breve k}$ and on no other choice (like that of $\Delta $ ). For the irreducible types, we can explicitly compute the constant M from Condition (3): type $A_n$ : $M = 1$ ; types $B_n,C_n,D_n$ : $M=2$ ; types $G_2,E_6$ : $M = 3$ ; types $F_4, E_7$ : $M = 4$ ; type $E_8$ : $M = 6$ . In general, the constant M for ${\mathbf G}_{\breve k}$ is the maximum of the values of M over all connected components of the Dynkin diagram of ${\mathbf G}_{\breve k}$ . In particular, (3) holds whenever $q> 5$ .

3 Deep level Deligne–Lusztig induction

We work in the setup of Section 2.4. In particular, the connected reductive $\breve k$ -split group ${\mathbf G}/k$ , the point $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal B}({\mathbf G},k)$ , and the integer $r\geq 1$ are fixed. We omit $\mathbf {x}$ and r from notation, and we write ${\mathcal G}$ for the ${\mathcal O}_k$ -group ${\mathcal G}_{\mathbf {x}}$ , and ${\mathbb G}$ , ${\mathbb T}$ , etc. for ${\mathbb G}_r$ , ${\mathbb T}_r$ , etc.

3.1 The schemes $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$

Let ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ , such that $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T}, k)$ . Let ${\mathbf B} = {\mathbf T} {\mathbf U}$ be a Borel subgroup, defined over $\breve k$ , containing ${\mathbf T}$ , and with unipotent radical ${\mathbf U}$ . As in Section 2.5, we have the corresponding closed subgroup ${\mathbb U} \subseteq {\mathbb G}$ , defined over $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ . Following [Reference LusztigLus04, Reference Chan and IvanovCI21b], consider the $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -scheme

where $L_{\mathbb G} \colon {\mathbb G} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}$ , $ g \mapsto g^{-1}F(g)$ is the Lang map. We usually write $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ for $S_{\mathbf {x},{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U},r}$ , as $\mathbf {x}$ , r remain constant throughout the article. The finite group $G \times T = {\mathbb G}({\mathbb F}_q) \times {\mathbb T}({\mathbb F}_q)$ acts on $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ by $(g,t) \colon x \mapsto gxt^{-1}$ . For a character $\theta \colon T \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb {Q}}_{\ell }^\times $ , we obtain the virtual G-representation

$$\begin{align*}R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta) = R_{\mathbf{x},{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U},r}(\theta) := \sum_{i \in {\mathbb Z}} (-1)^i H_c^i(S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell})_\theta, \end{align*}$$

where the subscript $\theta $ indicates that we take the $\theta $ -isotypic component. By inflation, we may regard $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta )$ as a virtual smooth ${\mathcal G}({\mathcal O}_k)$ -representation.

Remark 3.1.1. The varieties $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ are closely related to classical Deligne–Lusztig varieties. Indeed, the group ${\mathbb U} \cap F{\mathbb U}$ acts by right multiplication on $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ , and we may form the quotient $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} = S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}/{\mathbb U} \cap F{\mathbb U}$ . If $r = 1$ , then $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ is equal to the classical Deligne–Lusztig variety $\widetilde X_{{\mathbb T}_1 \subseteq {\mathbb B}_1}$ attached to the reductive ${\mathbb F}_q$ -group ${\mathbb G}_1$ ; cf. [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.17(ii), 1.19] and Remark 2.4.1.

Remark 3.1.2. In the light of Remark 3.1.1, $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ are deep level analogs of classical Deligne–Lusztig varieties. Moreover, the fibers of the morphism $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} \rightarrow X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ are isomorphic to the perfection of a fixed finite-dimensional affine space over ${\mathbb F}_q$ . It follows that $H_c^{\ast }(S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}) = H_c^{\ast }(X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}})$ . In turn, $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ is the r-truncated integral version of the p-adic Deligne–Lusztig spaces $X_w(b)$ (or rather their coverings $\dot X_{\dot w}(b)$ ) defined in [Reference IvanovIva23]. Cf. Section 4.1 below.

3.2 Main result

Let $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ be two pairs where ${\mathbf T},{\mathbf T}' \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ satisfy $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T},k) \cap {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T}',k)$ , and ${\mathbf U}$ (resp. ${\mathbf U}'$ ) is the unipotent radical of a $\breve k$ -rational Borel subgroup of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ (resp. ${\mathbf T}'$ ). We have the groups ${\mathcal T},{\mathbb T},T,{\mathcal U},{\mathbb U}$ attached to ${\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}$ by Section 2.5, and similarly for ${\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'$ .

Using Remark 3.1.1, the classical orthogonality relations for Deligne–Lusztig characters [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, Thm. 6.8] can be expressed as follows: for $r=1$ and any characters $\theta \colon T \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ , $\theta ' \colon T' \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ , we have

(4) $$ \begin{align} \langle R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta), R_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}(\theta') \rangle_G = \# \left\{w \in W({\mathbb T}_1,{\mathbb T}_1^{\prime})^F \colon \theta' = {}^w\theta \right\}, \end{align} $$

where

(5) $$ \begin{align} W_{\mathbf{x}}({\mathbf T},{\mathbf T}') = W({\mathbb T}_1, {\mathbb T}^{\prime}_1) = {\mathbb T}_1 \backslash \{g \in {\mathbb G}_1 \colon {}^g {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} = {\mathbb T}_1 \} \end{align} $$

is the transporter principal homogeneous space under $W_{\mathbf {x}}({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ . We may ask for a generalization of this to deeper levels.

It is natural to ask whether (4) holds in general – that is, for arbitrary ${\mathbf G}$ , $\mathbf {x}$ , r, ${\mathbf T}$ , ${\mathbf T}'$ , ${\mathbf U}$ , ${\mathbf U}'$ , $\theta $ , $\theta '$ . In this generality, the answer is no, as the following example shows.

Example 3.2.1 (This example was explained to us by an anonymous referee).

Let ${\mathbf G} = \mathbf {GL}_2$ , ${\mathbf T} = {\mathbf T}'$ a split torus, $\mathbf {x}$ a hyperspecial point in the apartment of ${\mathbf T}$ , $r=2$ , $\theta = \theta ' = 1$ . Let ${\mathbf U}$ be the unipotent radical of any Borel ${\mathbf B}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ . Then $R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(1) \cong \mathrm {Ind}_B^G 1$ has three irreducible components: the trivial and the Steinberg representations (both inflated from level $r=1$ ) and a further irreducible representation of dimension $q^2 - 1$ . Thus, $\langle R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(1), R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(1) \rangle _G = 3 \neq 2 = \#W({\mathbf T})^F$ .

However, the generalization of (4) is known in many cases, summarized in the following remark.

Remark 3.2.2. The generalization of the formula (4) holds in the following cases:

  1. (i) If $r=1$ by [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, Thm. 6.8].

  2. (ii) If $r \geq 2$ , and $\theta $ or $\theta '$ is regular in the sense of [Reference LusztigLus04] (roughly, ‘regular’ = ‘highly nontrivial on $\ker (T_r \rightarrow T_{r-1})$ ’) by [Reference LusztigLus04] if ${\mathcal G}$ reductive and $\mathrm {char}\ k> 0$ , resp. [Reference StasinskiSta09] if ${\mathcal G}$ reductive and $\mathrm {char}\ k = 0$ , resp. [Reference Chan and IvanovCI21b] in general.

  3. (iii) If ${\mathbf G} =$ inner form of $\mathbf {GL}_n$ , and $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ are Coxeter pairs, by [Reference Chan and IvanovCI23, Thm. 4.1].

In this article, we concentrate on the Coxeter case and prove the following generalization of Remark 3.2.2(iii).

Theorem 3.2.3. Suppose ${\mathbf G}$ is unramified, and $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ are Coxeter pairs with $\mathbf {x} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}'}$ . Suppose that Condition (3) holds for q and the root system of ${\mathbf G}$ . Then for all $r \geq 1$ and all $\theta \colon T \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ , $\theta ' \colon T' \rightarrow \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell }^\times $ , we have

(6) $$ \begin{align} \langle R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta), R_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}(\theta') \rangle_G = \# \left\{w \in W_{\mathbf{x}}({\mathbf T},{\mathbf T}')^F \colon \theta' = {}^w\theta \right\}, \end{align} $$

where $W_{\mathbf {x}}({\mathbf T},{\mathbf T}')$ is as in (5).

We will show Theorem 3.2.3 when $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}) =({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ is a given Coxeter pair and W is irreducible. The various reductions needed to deduce the theorem from this particular case are studied in the next section.

4 Reductions

The purpose of this section is to show that it is enough to prove Theorem 3.2.3 when $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}) =({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ is a given Coxeter pair and W is irreducible. There is a small price to pay, and one will actually need to show a stronger statement – namely, Theorem 4.2.1 – which behaves well with respect to our reductions.

4.1 Changing Coxeter pairs

Suppose ${\mathbf G}$ is unramified and $\mathbf {x}$ is hyperspecial. Then ${\mathcal G}$ is a reductive group over ${\mathcal O}_k$ , and we have ${\mathbb G} = L^+_r{\mathcal G}$ (cf. Remark 2.4.1). Let ${\mathbf T}_0 \subseteq {\mathbf B}_0 \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ be as in Section 2.6, such that $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T}_0,k)$ and $W_0 = N_{{\mathbf G}}({\mathbf T}_0)(\breve k)/{\mathbf T}_0(\breve k)$ . Then ${\mathcal T}_0 \subseteq {\mathcal B}_0 \subseteq {\mathcal G}$ are a maximal torus and a Borel subgroup containing it and defined over ${\mathcal O}_k$ . Let ${\mathbf U}_0$ (resp. ${\mathcal U}_0$ ) be the unipotent radical of ${\mathbf B}$ (resp. ${\mathcal B}_0$ ).

The ${\mathcal O}_k$ -group ${\mathcal G}$ is quasi-split, ${\mathcal B}_0 \subseteq {\mathcal G}$ is a rational Borel subgroup, and the quotient ${\mathcal G}/{\mathcal B}_0$ is projective over ${\mathcal O}_k$ ; cf. [Reference ConradCon14, Thm. 2.3.6]. Then ${\mathcal G}$ admits a Bruhat decomposition in the following sense: letting ${\mathcal G}$ act diagonally on $({\mathcal G}/{\mathcal B}_0)^2$ , there are ${\mathcal G}$ -stable reduced subschemes ${\mathcal O}(w) \subseteq ({\mathcal G}/{\mathcal B}_0)^2$ for each $w\in W_0$ , flat over ${\mathcal O}_k$ , such that for any geometric point $x \in \operatorname {\mathrm {Spec}} {\mathcal O}_k$ , the fiber ${\mathcal O}(w)_x$ is the ${\mathcal G}_x$ -orbit of $(1\cdot {\mathcal B}_{0,x},\dot w \cdot {\mathcal B}_{0,x})$ in $({\mathcal G}/{\mathcal B}_0)^2_x$ like in the usual Bruhat decomposition, where $\dot w\in N_{{\mathcal G}}({\mathcal T}_0)({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})$ is any lift of w. Analogously, for any $w \in W_0$ , we have a reduced subscheme $\dot {\mathcal O}(\dot w) \subseteq ({\mathcal G}/{\mathcal U}_0)^2$ , flat over ${\mathcal O}_k$ , such that for each x as above, $\dot {\mathcal O}(\dot w)_x$ is the ${\mathcal G}_x$ -orbit of $(1\cdot {\mathcal U}_{0,x},\dot w \cdot {\mathcal U}_{0,x})$ in $({\mathcal G}/{\mathcal U}_0)_x$ .

We have the following integral analogue of [Reference IvanovIva23, Def. 7.3].

Definition 4.1.1. Let $w \in W_0$ and $\dot w\in N_{{\mathcal G}}({\mathcal T}_0)({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})$ . Define the integral p-adic Deligne–Lusztig spaces $X_w^{{\mathcal G}}(1)$ , and $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G}}(1)$ by Cartesian diagrams of functors on $\operatorname {\mathrm {Perf}}_{\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q}$

Similarly, replacing $L^+$ by $L^+_r$ everywhere, define their r-truncations $X_w^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ , $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ .

The functors $X_w^{{\mathcal G}}(1)$ , $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ are representable by (perfect) $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -schemes; the latter are of perfectly finite presentation. If $\dot w$ maps to w, then there is a natural map $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1) \rightarrow X_w^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ . Let ${\mathcal T}_{0,w}$ denote the torus over ${\mathcal O}_k$ , which is obtained from ${\mathcal T}_0$ by twisting the Frobenius action by $\mathrm {Ad}(w)$ ; then $G \times {\mathcal T}_{0,w}({\mathcal O}_k/\varpi ^r)$ acts on $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ , G acts on $X_w^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ , and the above map is G-equivariant finite étale ${\mathcal T}_{0,w}({\mathcal O}_k/\varpi ^r)$ -torsor. Recall the definition of the space $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ from Remark 3.1.1.

Lemma 4.1.2. Suppose ${\mathbf T} \in \mathrm {Tori}_{\breve k/k}({\mathbf G})$ such that $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T},k)$ . Identify $W({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ with $W_0$ , and let $w \in W_0$ be the element satisfying $F{\mathbf U} = {}^w{\mathbf U}$ . Then we may identify T with ${\mathcal T}_{0,w}({\mathcal O}_k/\varpi ^r)$ . Let $\dot w \in N_{{\mathcal G}}({\mathcal T}_0)({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})$ be an arbitrary lift of w. Then $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} \cong \dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ , equivariant for the $G \times T$ -actions.

Proof. This has the same proof as [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.19]. There are no subtleties due to the loop functor cf. the similar results of [Reference IvanovIva23, Prop. 11.1 and Lem. 11.3].

To $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ we may apply the technique of Frobenius-cyclic shift. Let $\ell $ denote the length function on the Coxeter group $(W_0,S_0)$ .

Lemma 4.1.3. Suppose $w = w_1w_2$ , $w' = w_2F(w_1) \in W_0$ , such that $\ell (w) = \ell (w_1) + \ell (w_2) = \ell (w')$ . Then there is a G-equivariant isomorphism $X_w^{{\mathcal G},r}(1) \cong X_{w'}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ . If $\dot w$ , $\dot w'$ , $\dot w_1$ , $\dot w_2 \in {\mathcal G}({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})$ are lifts of $w,w',w_1,w_2$ , satisfying $\dot w = \dot w_1 \dot w_2$ , $\dot w' = \dot w_2 F(\dot w_1)$ , then there is a $G \times T$ -equivariant isomorphism $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1) \cong \dot X_{\dot w'}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ .

Proof. The same proof as in [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.6] applies. Again, the use of the (positive, truncated) loop functor causes no problems; cf. [Reference IvanovIva23, Lem. 7.23].

As a corollary we deduce the following:

Corollary 4.1.4. Suppose ${\mathbf G}$ is unramified, and $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ are Coxeter pairs with $\mathbf {x} = \mathbf {x}_{\mathbf T} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}'}$ (in particular, $\mathbf { x}$ hyperspecial). Then $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} \cong X_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}$ ( $G\times T \cong G \times T'$ -equivariantly). In particular, $H^{\ast }_c(S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}) \cong H^{\ast }_c(S_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'})$ . To show Theorem 3.2.3, it suffices to do so under the additional assumption $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}') = ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ is a fixed Coxeter pair.

Proof. We prove the first statement. By Lemma 4.1.2, it suffices to show that whenever $w,w'\in W_0$ are two twisted Coxeter elements, $\dot X_{\dot w}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1) \cong \dot X_{\dot w'}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ . First, when $\dot w_1,\dot w_2 \in N_{{\mathcal G}}({\mathcal T}_0)({\mathcal O}_{\breve k})$ are two lifts of w, then $\dot X_{\dot w_1}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1) \cong \dot X_{\dot w_2}^{{\mathcal G},r}(1)$ equivariantly (same argument as on [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, p. 111], along with an application of Lang’s theorem to the connected $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -group $L^+_r{\mathcal T}_0$ with Frobenius $\mathrm {Ad}(w) \circ F$ ). Using this, the first statement of the corollary follows from Lemma 4.1.3 along with the fact that all twisted Coxeter elements are conjugate by a sequence of cyclic shifts in $W_0$ (cf. the corresponding discussion in [Reference IvanovIva23, §7.5]).

The second claim follows from the first and Remark 3.1.2, and the third claim follows from the second.

4.2 First step toward the proof of Theorem 3.2.3

In the proof of Theorem 3.2.3, we follow the general strategy of [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, §6] and [Reference LusztigLus04]. Let the setup be as in the beginning of Section 3.2. Attached to $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ we may consider the $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -scheme

(7) $$ \begin{align} \Sigma := {}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma &:= G \backslash (S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} \times S_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}) \\ \nonumber &\mbox{}\,\,\cong \{(x,x',y) \in F{\mathbb U} \times F{\mathbb U}' \times {\mathbb G} \colon xF(y) = yx' \}. \end{align} $$

We will write ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma $ , whenever the choice of ${\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'$ is relevant, and simply $\Sigma $ whenever it is clear from context. In (7), the group G acts diagonally on $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} \times S_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}$ , and the second isomorphism is given by $(g,g') \mapsto (x,x',y)$ with $x = g^{-1}F(g)$ , $x' = g^{\prime -1}F(g')$ , $y = g^{-1}g'$ , just as in [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 6.6]. Now $T\times T'$ acts on $\Sigma $ by $(t,t') \colon (x,x',y) \mapsto (txt^{-1},t'x't^{\prime -1}, tyt^{\prime -1})$ , and an application of the Künneth formula shows that

$$\begin{align*}\left\langle R_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}(\theta), R_{{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}'}(\theta')\right\rangle_G = \dim_{\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}} H_c^{\ast}(\Sigma,\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell})_{\theta \otimes \theta'}. \end{align*}$$

Let $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}} \colon {\mathbb G} = {\mathbb G}_r \rightarrow {\mathbb G}_1$ denote the natural projection. We have the locally-closed decomposition ${\mathbb G}_1 = \coprod _{v \in W({\mathbb T}_1,{\mathbb T}^{\prime }_1)} {\mathbb U}_1 \dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime } {\mathbb U}_1^{\prime }$ . This induces a $T\times T'$ -stable locally closed decomposition $\Sigma = \coprod _{v \in W({\mathbb T}_1,{\mathbb T}^{\prime }_1)} \Sigma _v$ , with

(8) $$ \begin{align} \Sigma_v = \{(x,x',y) \in \Sigma \colon y \in \operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} {\mathbb U}_1^{\prime}) \}, \end{align} $$

where $\dot v$ is an arbitrary lift of v to ${\mathbb G}(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)$ fixed once and for all. To prove formula (6) for the given ${\mathbf T},{\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U},{\mathbf U}',\theta ,\theta '$ , it suffices to show

(9) $$ \begin{align} \dim_{\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}} H_c^{\ast}(\Sigma_v,\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell})_{\theta\otimes\theta'} = \begin{cases} 1 & \text{if } F(v) = v \text{ and } \theta' = {}^v\theta. \\ 0 & \text{otherwise.} \end{cases} \end{align} $$

We shall show that a stronger statement holds for a specific choice of a Coxeter pair. Let ${\mathbb Z} = Z({\mathbb G})$ be the center of ${\mathbb G}$ and $Z := {\mathbb Z}^F$ be its rational points. The group Z embeds diagonally in $T \times T'$ , and its action on $\Sigma $ (hence on its cohomology) is trivial. The action of $T \times ^Z T'$ on $\Sigma $ extends to an action of $({\mathbb T} \times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T}')^F$ , and the cohomology of the cell $\Sigma _v$ for that action is given by the following theorem.

Theorem 4.2.1. Suppose ${\mathbf G}$ that is unramified and that condition (3) holds for q and the root system of ${\mathbf G}$ . Then there exists a Coxeter pair $({\mathbb T},{\mathbb U})$ such that for all $v \in W$ ,

(10) $$ \begin{align} H_c^{\ast}({}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}}\Sigma_v) = \begin{cases} H_c^0((\dot v {\mathbb T})^F, \overline {\mathbb Q}_{\ell}) & \text{if } v \in W^F, \\ 0 &\text{otherwise,} \end{cases} \end{align} $$

as virtual $({\mathbb T} \times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T}')^F$ -modules.

Equation (9) follows easily from this theorem. Indeed, if $\theta _{|Z} \neq \theta _{|Z}^{\prime }$ , then $H_c^{\ast }(\Sigma _v)_{\theta \otimes \theta '} = 0$ since Z acts trivially on $\Sigma _v$ . However, since $ T \times ^Z T' \subset ({\mathbb T} \times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T}')^F$ , Theorem 4.2.1 implies that the cohomology of $\Sigma _v$ as a virtual $T\times ^Z T$ -module is the same as the cohomology of $(\dot v {\mathbb T})^F$ for which the analogue of (9) clearly holds.

The proof of Theorem 4.2.1 in the case where W is irreducible will be given in Section 7. The reduction to that case is the purpose of the remainder of this section.

4.3 Reduction to the almost simple case

Let ${\mathbf G}$ be an arbitrary unramified connected reductive group over k. Let $\pi \colon \widetilde {\mathbf G} \rightarrow {\mathbf G}$ be the simply connected covering of the derived group of ${\mathbf G}$ . Let ${\mathbf Z}$ denote the center of ${\mathbf G}$ . Adjoint buildings of ${\mathbf G}$ and $\widetilde {\mathbf G}$ agree, and we have the parahoric ${\mathcal O}_k$ -model $\widetilde {\mathcal G}$ of $\widetilde {\mathbf G}$ , corresponding to the same point as ${\mathcal G}$ . Moreover, $\pi $ extends uniquely to a map $\pi \colon \widetilde {\mathcal G} \rightarrow {\mathcal G}$ [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT84, 1.7.6], which, in turn, induces the map $\pi \colon \widetilde {\mathbb G} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}$ . Put $\widetilde {\mathbf T} = \pi ^{-1}({\mathbf T})$ , $\widetilde {\mathcal T} = \pi ^{-1}({\mathcal T})$ , $\widetilde {\mathbb T} = \pi ^{-1}({\mathbb T})$ , and similarly for ${\mathbf U}$ , ${\mathbf Z}$ , etc.

Remark 4.3.1. If $r=1$ , then $\widetilde {\mathbb G} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}$ is the simply connected covering of the derived group of ${\mathbb G}$ , and the situation is precisely as in [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.21-1.27]).

The map $\pi $ induces maps on rational points $\widetilde G = \widetilde {\mathbb G}({\mathbb F}_q) \rightarrow {\mathbb G}({\mathbb F}_q) = G$ , and similarly, $\widetilde T \rightarrow T$ . In particular, any character $\chi $ of T pulls back to a character $\widetilde \chi $ of $\widetilde T$ . Now the general case of Theorem 3.2.3 follows from the next proposition.

Proposition 4.3.2. If Theorem 4.2.1 holds for $\widetilde {\mathbf G}$ , $\widetilde {\mathbf T}$ , then it holds for ${\mathbf G}$ , ${\mathbf T}$ .

Proof. Let ${\mathbb S} = {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}$ and $S = T \times T$ (resp. $\widetilde {\mathbb S} = \pi ^{-1}({\mathbb S})$ and $\widetilde S = \widetilde {\mathbb S}({\mathbb F}_q)$ ). We have the spaces $X = S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ and $\widetilde X = S_{\widetilde {\mathbf T},\widetilde {\mathbf U}}$ carrying actions of $G \times T$ and $\widetilde G \times \widetilde T$ , respectively. Moreover, we also have the quotients $\Sigma = (X\times X)/G$ and $\widetilde \Sigma = (\widetilde X \times \widetilde X)/\widetilde G$ acted on by S and $\widetilde S$ , respectively. The $G\times T$ -action on X factors through the action of the quotient $G \times ^Z T = G\times T/\{(z,z^{-1}) \colon z \in Z\}$ , which, in turn, extends to an action of the bigger group $({\mathbb G} \times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ given by the same formula. Similarly, the S-action on $\Sigma $ factors through an action of $S/Z$ (Z embedded diagonally), which extends to an action of $({\mathbb S}/{\mathbb Z})^F$ given by same formula. These two extensions of actions also hold when we put a $\widetilde {(\cdot )}$ over each of the objects.

Recall the notion of the induced space from [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.24]: if $\alpha \colon A \rightarrow B$ is a homomorphism of finite groups, and Y a space on which A acts, then the induced space $\mathrm {Ind}_A^B Y = \mathrm {Ind}_\alpha Y$ is the (unique up to unique isomorphism) B-space I, provided with an A-equivariant map $Y \rightarrow I$ , which satisfies $\operatorname {\mathrm {Hom}}_B(I,V) = \operatorname {\mathrm {Hom}}_A(Y,V)$ for any B-space V.

Lemma 4.3.3. Let $\gamma \colon (\widetilde {\mathbb S} /\widetilde {\mathbb Z})^F \rightarrow ({\mathbb S} /{\mathbb Z})^F$ be the natural map induced by $\pi $ . Then $\Sigma = \mathrm {Ind}_\gamma \widetilde \Sigma $ . Moreover, for $v \in W$ , we have $\Sigma _v = \mathrm {Ind}_\gamma \widetilde \Sigma _v$ .

Proof. We have the natural map $\alpha \colon (\widetilde {\mathbb S} \times ^{\widetilde {\mathbb Z}} \widetilde {\mathbb G})^F \rightarrow ({\mathbb S} \times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb G})^F$ . Kernel and cokernel of $\alpha $ are canonically isomorphic to the kernel and cokernel of $\beta \colon \widetilde {\mathbb S}^F \rightarrow {\mathbb S}^F$ (same argument as [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.26] with ${\mathbb S}$ instead of ${\mathbb T}$ ). One checks that $X = \mathrm {Ind}_{\widetilde {\mathbb T}^F}^{{\mathbb T}^F} \widetilde X$ . Thus, similar as in [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, 1.25],

(11) $$ \begin{align} X \times X = \mathrm{Ind}_\beta \widetilde X \times \widetilde X = \mathrm{Ind}_\alpha \widetilde X \times \widetilde X. \end{align} $$

Now, we have the commutative diagram with exact rows:

(12)

which is obtained from the same diagram for the algebraic groups (with all F’s removed) by taking Galois cohomology and using Lang’s theorem and connectedness of ${\mathbb G}$ , $\widetilde {\mathbb G}$ . Now the first claim of the lemma formally follows from (12) and (11), using that $\Sigma = (X\times X)/{\mathbb G}^F$ and $\widetilde \Sigma =( \widetilde X \times \widetilde X) / \widetilde {\mathbb G}^F$ . Let $(X \times X)_v \subseteq X \times X$ be the preimage of $\Sigma _v$ under $X \times X \twoheadrightarrow \Sigma _v$ , and similarly for $(\widetilde X \times \widetilde X)_v$ . The same argument as above shows that to prove the second claim of the lemma it suffices to show that $(X \times X)_v = \mathrm {Ind} _\beta (\widetilde X \times \widetilde X)_v$ . Both are locally closed subvarieties of $X \times X = \mathrm {Ind} _\beta (\widetilde X \times \widetilde X)$ (the latter by functoriality of $\mathrm {Ind}$ ). Let now $(g,g') \in X \times X$ , and let $(\tau ,\tau ') \in {\mathbb S}$ , $(\widetilde g,\widetilde g') \in \widetilde X \times \widetilde X$ be such that $(g,g') = (\pi (\widetilde g)\tau ,\pi (\widetilde g')\tau ')$ . Writing ${\mathbb G}_v := \operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot v {\mathbb T}_1 {\mathbb U}_1^{\prime }) \subseteq {\mathbb G}$ and similarly for $\widetilde {\mathbb G}_v \subseteq \widetilde {\mathbb G}$ , and recalling (7) and (8), we have

$$ \begin{align*} (g,g') \in (X\times X)_v &\iff g^{-1}g' \in {\mathbb G}_v \\& \iff \tau^{-1}\pi(\widetilde g)^{-1}\pi(\widetilde g') \tau' \in {\mathbb G}_v \\ & \iff \tau^{-1} \pi(\widetilde g^{-1}\widetilde g')\tau' \in {\mathbb G}_v \\ &\iff \widetilde x^{-1} \widetilde x' \in \widetilde {\mathbb G}_v \\ &\iff (\widetilde g,\widetilde g') \in (\widetilde X \times \widetilde X)_v, \end{align*} $$

where in the fourth step we used that ${\mathbb T} {\mathbb G}_v{\mathbb T} = {\mathbb G}_v$ and that $\pi ^{-1}({\mathbb G}_v) = \widetilde {\mathbb G}_v$ . Thus, $\mathrm {Ind}_\beta (\widetilde X\times \widetilde X)_v$ and $(X\times X)_v$ agree on geometric points, and as both are locally closed perfect subschemes of $X\times X$ , they must be equal.

However, if $v \in W$ , then we also have $(\dot v {\mathbb T})^F = \mathrm {Ind}_\gamma (\dot v \widetilde {\mathbb T})^F$ as $({\mathbb S}/{\mathbb Z})^F$ -varieties. Therefore, Proposition 4.3.2 follows from Lemma 4.3.3.

Assume now that ${\mathbf G}$ is semisimple and simply connected. In this case, there is some $s\geq 1$ such that ${\mathbf G} \cong \prod _{i=1}^s {\mathbf G}_i$ , where each ${\mathbf G}_i$ is an almost simple and simply connected unramified reductive k-group. We have then similar product decompositions for the Bruhat–Tits buildings, the parahoric models ${\mathcal G} \cong \prod _i {\mathcal G}_i$ , their Moy–Prasad filtrations, the maximal tori, their Weyl groups, the unipotent radicals of the Borels, etc. Upon applying the functor ${\mathcal G} \mapsto L^+{\mathcal G}/L^+{\mathcal G}^{(r-1)+}$ , this induces an isomorphism $X_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}} \cong \prod _i X_{{\mathbf T}_i,{\mathbf U}_i}$ , and finally an isomorphism $\Sigma \cong \prod _i \Sigma _i$ (with obvious notation), equivariant for the action of $T \times T = \prod _i (T_i \times T_i)$ . Applying the Künneth formula shows that Theorem 4.2.1 holds for ${\mathbf G},{\mathbf T}$ whenever it holds for all ${\mathbf G}_i$ , ${\mathbf T}_i$ .

Finally, if ${\mathbf G}$ is almost simple and simply connected, then there is some $m \geq 1$ , and an absolutely almost simple group $\widehat {\mathbf G}$ over $k_m$ , the degree m subextension of $\breve k/k$ , such that ${\mathbf G} \cong \mathrm {Res}_{k_m/k} \widehat {\mathbf G}$ is the restriction of scalars of $\widehat {\mathbf G}$ . We thus may assume that ${\mathbf G} = \mathrm {Res}_{k_m/k} \widehat {\mathbf G}$ . The Bruhat–Tits buildings ${\mathscr {B}}({\mathbf G},k)$ and ${\mathscr {B}}(\widehat {\mathbf G},k_m)$ are canonically isomorphic. Let $\mathbf {x}$ be a vertex of ${\mathscr {B}}({\mathbf G},k)$ with attached parahoric ${\mathcal O}_k$ -model ${\mathcal G}$ of ${\mathbf G}$ , and let $\mathbf {x}$ also denote the corresponding vertex of ${\mathscr {B}}(\widehat {\mathbf G},k_m)$ , with attached parahoric ${\mathcal O}_{k_m}$ -model $\widehat {\mathcal G}$ of $\widehat {\mathbf G}$ . Then there is a canonical isomorphism ${\mathcal G} = \mathrm {Res}_{{\mathcal O}_{k_m}/{\mathcal O}_k} \widehat {\mathcal G}$ inducing the identity on generic fibers [Reference Haines and RicharzHR20, Prop. 4.7]. Reducing modulo $\varpi ^r$ and applying [Reference Bertapelle and Gonzàles-AvilésBGA18, Thm. 10.2] (with $e=1$ ), we deduce a canonical identification ${\mathbb G} = \mathrm {Res}_{{\mathbb F}_{q^m}/{\mathbb F}_q} \widehat {\mathbb G}$ , where ${\mathbb G},\widehat {\mathbb G}$ are attached to ${\mathcal G},\widehat {\mathcal G}$ as in Section 2.5.

We have ${\mathbf T} = \mathrm {Res}_{k_m/k} \widehat {\mathbf T}$ for a Coxeter torus of $\widehat {\mathbf G} / k_m$ , and we may identify $W = \prod _{i=1}^m \widehat W$ , where $\widehat W$ is the Weyl group of $\widehat {\mathbf T}$ . Furthermore, under this identification, one can assume that F acts by $F((w_i)_{i=1}^m) = (\widehat F(w_m),w_1, \dots ,w_{m-1})$ , where $\widehat F$ is the Frobenius of $\widehat W$ . In particular, $W^F = \{(w_1,\dots ,w_1) \colon \widehat F(w_1) = w_1\} \simeq (\widehat W)^{\widehat F}$ . Choose ${\mathbf U}$ such that $F({\mathbf U}) = {}^c{\mathbf U}$ , where $c = (\widehat c,1,\dots ,1) \in W$ and $\widehat c \in \widehat W$ is the twisted Coxeter element of $\widehat W$ satisfying $\widehat F(\widehat {\mathbf U}) = {}^{\widehat c} \widehat {\mathbf U}$ . Then $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ is a Coxeter pair. Now, if we consider the decomposition ${\mathbb G}_{\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q} \cong \prod _{i=1}^m \widehat {\mathbb G}_{\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q}$ , the equation $ xF(y) = yx' $ for $(x, x',y) \in {\mathbb U} \times {\mathbb U} \times {\mathbb G}$ can be written

$$ \begin{align*} (x_1,\dots,x_m)(\widehat F(y_m),y_1,\dots, y_{m-1}) = (y_1,\dots,y_m)(x_1^{\prime},\dots, x_m^{\prime}), \end{align*} $$

which, in turn, is equivalent to

$$ \begin{align*}\widehat x \widehat F(y_1) = y_1\widehat x' \quad \text{and} \quad \forall i \in \{2,\ldots,m\} \ y_i = x_i y_{i-1} (x_i^{\prime})^{-1},\end{align*} $$

where $\widehat x := x_1 \widehat F(x_m x_{m-1} \dots x_2)$ and $\widehat x' := x_1^{\prime } \widehat F(x_m^{\prime }x_{m-1}^{\prime }\dots x_2^{\prime })$ . Therefore, we can remove all the $y_i$ ’s for $i \geq 2$ to show that

$$ \begin{align*} \Sigma = \{((x_i),(x^{\prime}_i),y_1) \in {\mathbb U} \times {\mathbb U} \times \widehat{\mathbb G} \colon \widehat x \widehat F(y_1) = y_1\widehat x' \}. \end{align*} $$

This scheme lies over the scheme $\widehat \Sigma = \{(\widehat x,\widehat x',y_1) \in \widehat {\mathbb U} \times \widehat {\mathbb U} \times \widehat {\mathbb G} \colon \widehat x \widehat F(y_1) = y_1 \widehat x'\}$ attached to $\widehat {\mathbb G}$ , via the natural map $(x_i),(x_i^{\prime }),y_1 \mapsto (\widehat x, \widehat x',y_1)$ . All fibers of this map are isomorphic to the perfection of a fixed affine space of some dimension, so that $H_c^{\ast }(\Sigma ) = H_c^{\ast }(\widehat {\Sigma })$ . This shows that Theorem 4.2.1 holds for ${\mathbf G}$ whenever it holds for $\widehat {\mathbf G}$ .

Summarizing the results obtained in this section, we have that Theorem 4.2.1 holds whenever it holds for any absolutely almost simple group. In particular, we shall, and we will, only consider the case where W is irreducible in Sections 6 and 7.

5 Extensions of action

Throughout this section, we work in the general setup of Section 2.4. We fix two arbitrary pairs $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ with $\mathbf {x} \in {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T},k) \cap {\mathcal A}({\mathbf T}',k)$ . Then we have the corresponding subgroups ${\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}' \subseteq {\mathbb G}$ and for $v \in W({\mathbb T}_1,{\mathbb T}_1^{\prime })$ , the scheme $\Sigma _v = {}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma _v$ as in (8). Pushing further the ideas from [Reference Deligne and LusztigDL76, (6.6.2)] and [Reference Chan and IvanovCI23, §4.3 and §4.4], we will extend the action of the finite group $T \times T'$ on $\Sigma _v$ to the actions of various bigger groups.

5.1 Lusztig’s extension

First, we have the extension of action due to Lusztig (and a minimal variation of it). The geometric points ${\mathbb G}^1(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)$ of the group ${\mathbb G}^1 = \ker ({\mathbb G} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}_1)$ can be written as a product of all ‘root subgroups’ ${\mathbb U}_{\alpha }(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)$ , $\alpha \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ contained in it, and these can be taken in any order [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT72, (6.4.48)], so we have

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} {\mathbb U}_1^{\prime}) &= {\mathbb U}\dot v {\mathbb G}^1 {\mathbb T}' {\mathbb U}' \\ &= {\mathbb U} \dot v \left[ ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U})^1 ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime -})^1 {\mathbb U}^{\prime 1} {\mathbb T}^{\prime 1}\right]{\mathbb T}' {\mathbb U}' \\ &= {\mathbb U}\dot v {\mathbb T}^{\prime}{\mathbb K}^1 {\mathbb U}', \end{align*} $$

where we put

$$\begin{align*}{\mathbb K} := {\mathbb K}_{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}',v} := {}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime -}. \end{align*}$$

Then $\Sigma _v$ can be rewritten as

$$\begin{align*}\Sigma_v = \{(x,x',y) \in \Sigma \colon y \in {\mathbb U}\dot v {\mathbb T}^{\prime}{\mathbb K}^1 {\mathbb U}'\}. \end{align*}$$

Consider

(13) $$ \begin{align} \widehat\Sigma_v = \{(x,x',y',\tau,z,y") \in F{\mathbb U} \times F{\mathbb U}' \times {\mathbb U} \times {\mathbb T}' \times {\mathbb K}^1 \times {\mathbb U}' \colon xF(y'\dot v\tau z y") = y'\dot v\tau z y"x' \}, \end{align} $$

with an action of $T\times T'$ given by

$$\begin{align*}(t,t') \colon (x,x',y',\tau,z,y") \mapsto (txt^{-1},t'x't^{\prime -1},ty't^{-1},\dot v^{-1}t\dot v\tau t',t'zt^{\prime -1},t'y"t^{\prime -1}). \end{align*}$$

Then we have an obvious $T\times T'$ -equivariant map $\widehat \Sigma _v \rightarrow \Sigma _v$ , $(x,x',y',\tau ,z,y") \mapsto (x,x',y'\dot v \tau z y")$ , which is a Zariski-locally trivial fibration with fibers isomorphic to the perfection of a fixed affine space. Then the $\ell $ -adic Euler characteristic does not change, so that we have an equality of virtual $T \times T'$ -modules

(14) $$ \begin{align} H_c^{\ast}(\Sigma_v) = H_c^{\ast}(\widehat\Sigma_v). \end{align} $$

Now make the change of variables $xF(y') \mapsto x$ , $x'F(y")^{-1} \mapsto x'$ , so that

(15) $$ \begin{align} \widehat\Sigma_v \cong \{(x,x',y',\tau,z,y") \in F{\mathbb U} \times F{\mathbb U}' \times {\mathbb U} \times {\mathbb T}' \times {\mathbb K}^1 \times {\mathbb U}' \colon xF(\dot v \tau z) = y'\dot v \tau z y" x'\}. \end{align} $$

Lemma 5.1.1 ([Reference LusztigLus04], 1.9).

(i) This $T \times T'$ -action on $\widehat \Sigma _v$ extends to an action of the closed subgroup

$$\begin{align*}H_v = \{(t,t') \in {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}' \colon \dot v^{-1} t^{-1}F(t)\dot v = t^{\prime -1}F(t') \text{ centralizes } {\mathbb K} = ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U} \cap {\mathbb U}')^- \} \end{align*}$$

of ${\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}'$ , given by

$$ \begin{align*} (x,x',y',\tau,z,y") \mapsto (F(t)xF(t)^{-1}, &F(t')x'F(t')^{-1}, F(t)y'F(t)^{-1}, \dots\\ &\dots \dot v^{-1}t\dot v\tau t^{\prime -1},t'zt^{\prime -1},F(t')y"F(t')^{-1}) \end{align*} $$

for $(t,t') \in {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}'$ .

(ii) Similarly, the $T\times T'$ -action on $\widehat \Sigma _v$ extends to an action of the closed subgroup

$$\begin{align*}H_v^{\prime} = \{(t,t') \in {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}' \colon F(\dot v)^{-1} tF(t)^{-1}F(\dot v) = t'F(t')^{-1} \text{ centralizes } F({\mathbb K}) = F({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U} \cap {\mathbb U}')^- \} \end{align*}$$

of ${\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}'$ , given by

$$\begin{align*}(t,t') \colon (x,x',y',\tau,z,y") \mapsto (txt^{-1}, t'x't^{\prime -1}, ty't^{-1},\dot v^{-1}t\dot v\tau t^{\prime -1},t'zt^{\prime -1},t'y"t^{\prime -1}). \end{align*}$$

Proof. (ii) is proven in [Reference LusztigLus04, 1.9]. The proof of part (i) is completely analogous.

5.2 Another extension of action

To extend the action differently, we replace the resolution $\widehat \Sigma _v \rightarrow \Sigma _v$ by a different one. For that purpose, note that the ( $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -points of the) closed subgroup

(16) $$ \begin{align} ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime -})^1 \cdot ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}') \end{align} $$

of ${}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^-$ can be described as being cut out by a certain concave function on $\Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ . More precisely, it is equal to the quotient of $U_f$ (in the sense of Bruhat–Tits [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT72, §6.2]) with $f \colon \Phi \cup \{0\} \rightarrow \widetilde {\mathbb R}$ being the function

$$\begin{align*}f(\alpha) = \begin{cases} \infty & \text{if } \alpha = 0 \text{ or } \alpha \in \Phi({\mathbf T}, {}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbf U}) \\ 0 & \text{if } \alpha \in \Phi({\mathbf T},{}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbf U} \cap {\mathbf U}')\\ 1 & \text{if } \alpha \in \Phi({\mathbf T}, {}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbf U} \cap {\mathbf U}^{\prime -})\\ \end{cases} \end{align*}$$

by the normal subgroup $\ker (L^+{\mathcal G} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}_r)(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q) \cap U_f$ (which is itself of the form $U_{f'}$ for a further concave function $f'$ ). By [Reference Bruhat and TitsBT72, 6.4.48], the order of the roots in the product expression appearing in (16) can be chosen arbitrary; thus, the group (16) is also equal to

(17) $$ \begin{align} &({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime -} \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -})^1 \cdot ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime} \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -}) \cdot ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime -} \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime})^1 \cdot ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime} \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime}) \\ \nonumber&= ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -})' \cdot ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime})', \end{align} $$

where $({}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -})'$ denotes the closed subgroup of ${}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -}$ determined by the appropriate concave function on roots (and similarly for $({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime })'$ ). Then on $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -points, we have

$$ \begin{align*} \operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1\dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} {\mathbb U}^{\prime}_1) &= \operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1\dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}_1^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime}_1)) \\ &= {\mathbb U}\dot v {\mathbb T}' {\mathbb G}^1 ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}') \\ &= {\mathbb U}\dot v{\mathbb T}'({}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime -})^1 ({}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime}), \end{align*} $$

using that ${\mathbb G}^1(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)$ decomposes into the product of ‘root subgroups’ ${\mathbb U}_\alpha (\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)$ contained in it, taken in any order. Using this and the expression (17) of the group (16), we can rewrite

$$\begin{align*}\Sigma_v = \{(x,x',y) \in F{\mathbb U} \times F{\mathbb U}' \times {\mathbb U}\dot v {\mathbb T}' ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -})' ({}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime})' \colon xF(y) = yx' \}. \end{align*}$$

Now consider

$$\begin{align*}\begin{aligned} \widetilde\Sigma_v := \{(x,x',y',\tau,z_1,y_1^{\prime\prime}) \in F{\mathbb U} \times F{\mathbb U}' \times {\mathbb U} \times {\mathbb T}' \times ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -})' \times ({}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime})' \colon \\ xF(y'\dot v \tau z_1y_1^{\prime\prime}) = y'\dot v \tau z_1y_1^{\prime\prime}x' \}, \end{aligned} \end{align*}$$

with $T\times T'$ -action given by

$$\begin{align*}(t,t') \colon (x,x',y',\tau,z_1,y_1^{\prime\prime}) \mapsto (txt^{-1},t'x't^{\prime -1}, ty't^{-1},\dot v^{-1}t\dot v \tau t', t'z_1t^{\prime -1}, t'y_1^{\prime\prime}t^{\prime -1}).\end{align*}$$

Then the map $\widetilde \Sigma _v \rightarrow \Sigma _v$ , $(x,x',y',\tau ,z_1,y_1^{\prime \prime }) \mapsto (x,x',y'\dot v \tau z_1 y_1^{\prime \prime })$ is a $T\times T'$ -equivariant Zariski-locally trivial fibration, with fibers isomorphic to the perfection of some fixed affine space. In particular, we again have an equality of virtual $T \times T'$ -modules

(18) $$ \begin{align} H_c^{\ast}(\Sigma_v) = H_c^{\ast}(\widetilde\Sigma_v). \end{align} $$

Now we make the change of variables $xF(y') \mapsto x$ , $y_1^{\prime \prime } x' \mapsto x'$ , so that

$$\begin{align*}\begin{aligned} \widetilde\Sigma_v := \{(x,x',y',\tau,z_1,y_1^{\prime\prime}) \in F{\mathbb U} \times F{\mathbb U}' \times {\mathbb U} \times {\mathbb T}' \times ({}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -})' \times ({}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime})' \colon \\ xF(\dot v \tau z_1y_1^{\prime\prime}) = y'\dot v \tau z_1 x' \}, \end{aligned} \end{align*}$$

with the action of $T\times T'$ given by the same formula as before.

Lemma 5.2.1.

  1. (i) The action of $T\times T'$ on $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ extends to an action of the closed subgroup

    $$\begin{align*}H_v^{\prime\prime} = \{(t,t') \in {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}' \colon \dot v^{-1}F^{-1}(t)^{-1}t\dot v = t^{\prime -1}F^{-1}(t') \text{ centralizes } {}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap F{\mathbb U}^{\prime -}\}, \end{align*}$$
    of ${\mathbb T}\times {\mathbb T}'$ given by
    $$\begin{align*}(t,t') \colon (x,x',y',\tau,z_1,y_1^{\prime\prime}) \mapsto (txt^{-1},t'x't^{\prime -1}, ty't^{-1},\dot v^{-1}t\dot v \tau t^{\prime -1}, t'z_1t^{\prime -1}, F(t')y_1^{\prime\prime}F(t^{\prime})^{-1}).\end{align*}$$
  2. (ii) The action of $T\times T'$ on $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ extends to an action of the closed subgroup

    $$\begin{align*}H_v^{\prime\prime\prime} = \{(t,t') \in {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}' \colon \dot v^{-1}F^{-1}(t)^{-1}t\dot v = t^{\prime -1}F^{-1}(t') \text{ centralizes } {}^{v^{-1}}F{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^{\prime -}\}, \end{align*}$$
    of ${\mathbb T}\times {\mathbb T}'$ given by
    $$\begin{align*}(t,t') \colon (x,x',y',\tau,z_1,y_1^{\prime\prime}) \mapsto (txt^{-1},t'x't^{\prime -1}, ty't^{-1},\dot v^{-1}t\dot v \tau t^{\prime -1}, t'z_1t^{\prime -1}, F^{-1}(t')y_1^{\prime\prime}F^{-1}(t^{\prime})^{-1}). \end{align*}$$

Proof. The proof is a computation similar to Lemma 5.1.1.

5.3 An isomorphism

The extensions of actions from Sections 5.1 and 5.2 suffice to prove Theorem 3.2.3 in type $A_n$ , as was done in [Reference Chan and IvanovCI23, Thm. 4.1]. The proof was, however, based on a particular combinatorial property of this type. For the general case, we need the following new idea. One immediately checks that

$$ \begin{align*} \alpha = {}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\alpha \colon {}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma &\rightarrow {}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma \\ (x,x',y) &\mapsto (x,F(x'),yx') \end{align*} $$

is an $T \times T'$ -equivariant isomorphism. In general, it does not preserve the locally closed pieces $\Sigma _v$ . However, we have the following lemma.

Lemma 5.3.1. For $v,w \in W({\mathbb T}_1,{\mathbb T}_1^{\prime })$ , let $Y_{v,w}\subseteq {}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _w$ be defined by the Cartesian diagram

where the left lower entry is the scheme-theoretic intersection inside ${}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma _w$ . Then $Y_{v,w}$ is stable under the action of $H_w$ on ${}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _w$ defined in Lemma 5.1.1(i).

Proof. In terms of the presentation (13) of ${}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _w$ where we denote the coordinates by $x_1,x_1^{\prime },y_1^{\prime },\tau _1,z_1,y_1^{\prime \prime }$ , consider the morphism

$$\begin{align*}y_1^{\prime}\dot w \tau_1 z_1 y_1^{\prime\prime} F^{-1}(x_1^{\prime})^{-1} \colon \widehat\Sigma_w \rightarrow {\mathbb G}. \end{align*}$$

The subscheme $Y_{v,w}$ is the preimage under this morphism of $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime }{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime })$ . Now we apply the change of coordinates ( $x_1F(y_1) \mapsto x_1$ , $x_1^{\prime }F(y_1^{\prime \prime })^{-1} \mapsto x_1^{\prime }$ ) from (13) to (15). Then the expression $F^{-1}(x_1^{\prime })^{-1}$ in the old coordinates gets $y_1^{\prime \prime -1}F^{-1}(x_1^{\prime })^{-1}$ in the new coordinates. Thus, in the new coordinates, $Y_{v,w} \subseteq {}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _w$ is the preimage under

$$\begin{align*}y := y_1^{\prime}\dot w \tau_1 z_1 F^{-1}(x_1^{\prime})^{-1} \colon \widehat\Sigma_w \rightarrow {\mathbb G} \end{align*}$$

of $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime }{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime }) \subseteq {\mathbb G}$ . We have to show that for any $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -algebra R and any $(t,t') \in H_w(R)$ , the map $(t,t') \colon Y_{v,w,R} \rightarrow {}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _{w,R}$ factors through $Y_{v,w,R} \subseteq {}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _{w,R}$ – that is, $y \circ (t,t') \colon Y_{v,w,R} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}_R$ factors through the locally closed subset $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime }{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime })_R \subseteq {\mathbb G}_R$ . It suffices to do so on points. Let $(X_1,X_1^{\prime },Y_1^{\prime },T_1,Z_1,Y_1^{\prime \prime }) \in Y_{v,w}(R')$ for some R-algebra $R'$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*} y\circ(t,t')(X_1,X_1^{\prime},Y_1^{\prime},T_1,Z_1,Y_1^{\prime\prime}) &= y(F(t)X_1F(t)^{-1}, F(t')X_1^{\prime}F(t')^{-1}, F(t)Y_1^{\prime}F(t)^{-1}, \\ & \hspace{1cm} \dot w^{-1}t\dot w T_1 t^{\prime -1}, t'Z_1t^{\prime -1},F(t')Y_1^{\prime\prime}F(t')^{-1}) \\ &= F(t)Y_1^{\prime}F(t)^{-1} t\dot wT_1 Z_1 F^{-1}(X_1^{\prime})^{-1} t^{\prime -1} \\ &= \underbrace{F(t)Y_1^{\prime}F(t)^{-1}}_{\in {\mathbb U}(R')} \cdot \underbrace{t}_{\in {\mathbb T}(R')} \cdot \underbrace{Y_1^{\prime -1}}_{\in {\mathbb U}(R')} \cdot \underbrace{Y_1^{\prime} \dot w T_1 Z_1 F^{-1}(X_1^{\prime})^{-1}}_{\substack{\in \operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1\dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} {\mathbb U}_1^{\prime})(R') \\ \text{by assumption}}} \cdot \underbrace{t^{\prime -1}}_{\in {\mathbb T}'(R')}. \end{align*} $$

The last expression clearly lies in $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1\dot v {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime } {\mathbb U}_1^{\prime })(R')$ , and we are done.

Let us also look at the converse situation. The inverse of $\alpha $ is given by $(x_1,x_1^{\prime },y_1) \mapsto (x_1, F^{-1}(x_1^{\prime }),y_1F^{-1}(x_1^{\prime })^{-1})$ .

Lemma 5.3.2. For $v,w\in W({\mathbb T}_1,{\mathbb T}_1^{\prime })$ let $Z_{v,w} \subseteq {}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _v$ be defined by the Cartesian diagram

where the left lower entry is the scheme-theoretic intersection inside ${}^{{\mathbb U},F{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma _w$ . Then $Z_{v,w}$ is stable under the action of $H_v^{\prime }$ on ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _v$ defined in Lemma 5.1.1(ii).

Proof. In terms of the presentation (13) of ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\widehat \Sigma _v$ where we denote the coordinates by $x,x',y',\tau ,z,y"$ , consider the morphism

$$\begin{align*}y'\dot v \tau z y" x' \colon \widehat\Sigma_v \rightarrow {\mathbb G}. \end{align*}$$

Then $Z_{v,w}$ is the preimage under this morphism of $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot w {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime } F{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime })$ . Now we make the change of coordinates ( $xF(y) \mapsto x$ , $x'F(y")^{-1} \mapsto x'$ ) from (13) to (15). Then the expression $x'$ in the old coordinates becomes $x'F(y")$ in the new coordinates. Hence, in the new coordinates, $Z_{v,w}$ is the preimage of $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot w {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime } F{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime })$ under

$$\begin{align*}y_1 := y' \dot v \tau z y" x'F(y") \colon \widehat\Sigma_v \rightarrow {\mathbb G}. \end{align*}$$

Let R be an $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -algebra and $(t,t') \in H_v^{\prime }(R)$ . As in the proof of Lemma 5.3.1, we have to show that $y_1 \circ (t,t') \colon Z_{v,w,R} \rightarrow {\mathbb G}_R$ factors through $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot w {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime } F{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime })_R \subseteq {\mathbb G}_R$ . Let $(X,X',Y',T,Z,Y") \in Z_{v,w}(R')$ for some R-algebra $R'$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*} y_1 \circ (t,t')(X,X',Y',T,Z,Y") &= y_1(tXt^{-1}, t'X't^{\prime -1}, tY't^{-1}, \dot v^{-1}t\dot v T t^{\prime -1}, t^{\prime} Z t^{\prime -1}, t' Y" t^{\prime -1}) \\ &= t Y' \dot v T Z Y" X' t^{\prime -1}F(t') F(Y") F(t')^{-1} \\ &= \underbrace{t}_{\in {\mathbb T}(R')} \cdot \underbrace{Y' \dot v T Z Y" X' F(Y")}_{\substack{\in \operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot w {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} F{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime})(R') \\ \text{by assumption}}} \cdot \underbrace{F(Y")^{-1}}_{\in F{\mathbb U}'(R')} \cdot \underbrace{t^{\prime -1}}_{\in {\mathbb T}'(R')} \cdot \underbrace{F(t') F(Y") F(t')^{-1}}_{\in F{\mathbb U}'(R')}. \end{align*} $$

The last expression lies in $\operatorname {\mathrm {pr}}^{-1}({\mathbb U}_1 \dot w {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime } F{\mathbb U}_1^{\prime })(R')$ , and we are done.

Remark 5.3.3. There seem to be no analogues of these lemmas for $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ (from Section 5.2) instead of $\widehat \Sigma _v$ .

6 Regularity of certain subgroups

The purpose of this section is to show that the groups $H_v,H_v^{\prime }, \dots $ produced in Section 5 contain connected $\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q$ -reductive subgroups under which the varieties $\widehat \Sigma _v$ and $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ have finitely many fixed points. This will be the key for computing their cohomology, as given in Theorem 4.2.1. Note that this strategy was already used in [Reference LusztigLus04, 1.9(e)], but with much bigger versions of $H_v$ .

Throughout this section, we work in the setup of Theorem 3.2.3. In particular, ${\mathbf G}$ is unramified, $\mathbf {x}$ is hyperspecial, and $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ are Coxeter pairs with $\mathbf {x} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}} = \mathbf {x}_{{\mathbf T}'}$ . Thanks to the reduction results in Section 4.3 we will assume in addition that ${\mathbf G}$ is absolutely almost simple over k (i.e., that the Dynkin diagram of the split group ${\mathbf G}_{\breve k}$ is connected).

6.1 Pull-back of a cocharacter under the Lang map

We may identify the groups of cocharacters $X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)$ , $X_{\ast }({\mathbf T})$ , and similarly for characters. The Frobenius F acts on $X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)$ , $X^{\ast }({\mathbb T}_1)$ , and these actions induce ${\mathbb Q}$ -linear automorphisms of the ${\mathbb Q}$ -vector spaces $X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)_{\mathbb Q}$ , $X^{\ast }({\mathbb T}_1)_{\mathbb Q}$ . Let ${\mathbf G}^{\mathrm {ad}}$ be the adjoint quotient of ${\mathbf G}$ and ${\mathbf T}^{\mathrm {ad}}$ the image of ${\mathbf T}$ in ${\mathbf G}^{\mathrm {ad}}$ , such that $X_{\ast }({\mathbf T}^{\mathrm {ad}})$ is a quotient of $X_{\ast }({\mathbf T})$ , and $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T}^{\mathrm {ad}}) \subseteq X^{\ast }({\mathbf T})$ .

For $\chi \in X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)$ , we are interested in (the connected component of the) subgroup

(19) $$ \begin{align} H_\chi = \{ t \in {\mathbb T}_1 \colon t^{-1}F(t) \in \operatorname{\mathrm{im}}(\chi \colon {\mathbb G}_m \rightarrow {\mathbb T}_1) \} \subseteq {\mathbb T}_1. \end{align} $$

Lemma 6.1.1. Let $\chi \in X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)$ . There exists $0 \neq \mu \in X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)$ such that $F\mu - \mu \in {\mathbb Q}\cdot \chi $ . Such $\mu $ is unique up to a scalar and we have $H_\chi ^\circ = \operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\mu )$ .

Proof. By [Reference Digne and MichelDM91, Prop. 13.7], the map $F-1\colon X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1) \rightarrow X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)$ is injective and has finite cokernel. Therefore, there exists $0 \neq \mu \in X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1)$ , unique up to a scalar, such that $F\mu - \mu \in {\mathbb Q}\cdot \chi $ . This implies that $\operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\mu )$ is a one-dimensional subtorus of ${\mathbb T}_1$ contained in $H_\chi $ . Since $H_\chi $ is one-dimensional, this forces $\operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\mu ) =H_\chi ^\circ $ .

Recall from §2.7 that $\{\alpha ^{\ast } \colon \alpha \in \Delta \} \subseteq X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1^{\mathrm {ad}})_{\mathbb Q}$ is the set of fundamental coweights, defined as the basis of $X_\ast ({\mathbb T}_1^{\mathrm {ad}})_{\mathbb Q}$ dual to $\Delta $ .

Proposition 6.1.2. Assume Condition (3) holds for q and ${\mathbf G}$ . Then there exists a set of simple roots $\Delta \subset \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ such that

  1. (i) F acts on $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T})$ as $qc\sigma $ where $\sigma $ satisfies $\sigma (\Delta ) = \Delta $ , $c \in W$ and $c\sigma $ is a twisted Coxeter element of $(W,\sigma )$ such that

    $$ \begin{align*} \ell(c\sigma(c)\cdots \sigma^{i-1}(c))= i\ell(c) \end{align*} $$
    for all $0 \leq i \leq h/2$ , where h is the Coxeter number of $(W,\sigma )$ .
  2. (ii) For all $\alpha \in \Delta $ , and all $\gamma \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ , we have $H_{\alpha ^*}^\circ \not \subseteq \ker (\gamma )$ .

Proof. Let $\tau = q^{-1}F$ . Then the order of $\tau $ is h. Let $g \in {\mathbf G}$ be such that ${\mathbf T}_0 = {}^g {\mathbf T}$ . By assumption on ${\mathbf T}$ , the endomorphism ${}^g \tau $ of $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T}_0)$ lies in the $W_0$ -conjugacy class of twisted Coxeter elements (this class is unique by [Reference SpringerSpr74, Thm. 7.6]). Therefore, the same holds for $\tau $ in W. Let $\zeta =\mathrm {exp}(2\pi \mathrm {i}/h)$ . By [Reference SpringerSpr74, Thm. 7.6], the $\zeta $ -eigenspace of $\tau $ on $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T}^{\mathrm {ad}})_{{\mathbb C}}$ is one-dimensional and is not contained in any reflection hyperplane. Let $0 \neq v \in X^{\ast }({\mathbf T}^{\mathrm { ad}})_{\mathbb C}$ be an eigenvector of $\tau $ for the eigenvalue $\zeta $ such that $\mathrm {Re}(\langle v,\alpha ^\vee \rangle ) \neq 0$ for all $\alpha \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ . Then as shown in the proof [Reference SpringerSpr74, Prop. 4.10], the condition $\mathrm {Re}(\langle v,\alpha ^\vee \rangle )> 0$ defines a set of positive roots $ \Phi ^+ \subset \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ – hence, a basis $\Delta $ . Let $c \in W$ be the unique element in W such that $c(\Delta ) = \tau (\Delta )$ and $\sigma = c^{-1} \tau $ . Then $\sigma (\Delta ) = \Delta $ and (i) follows from [Reference Broué and MichelBM97, Prop. 6.5].

Let $\alpha \in \Delta $ be a simple root and $\gamma \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ be any root. The orbit of $\gamma $ under $\tau = q^{-1} F = c\sigma $ has exactly h elements; see [Reference SpringerSpr74, Thm. 7.6]. If $V = \langle \tau ^i(\gamma ) \colon i =0,\ldots ,h-1\rangle $ is the ${\mathbb C}$ -vector subspace of $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T}^{\mathrm { ad}})_{\mathbb C}$ spanned by the orbit, then $\tau $ restricts to an automorphism of V of order h. In particular, it must contain the eigenvector v defined above. Since $\alpha ^*$ is a non-negative combination of simple coroots, we deduce that $\mathrm {Re}(\langle v,\alpha ^*\rangle )> 0$ , which forces $\langle \tau ^i(\gamma ),\alpha ^*\rangle \neq 0$ for some i. Let $i_0 \in \{0,\ldots ,h-1\}$ be maximal such that $\langle \tau ^i(\gamma ),\alpha ^*\rangle \neq 0$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*}\begin{aligned} \sum_{i =0}^{h-1} \langle F^i(\gamma),\alpha^* \rangle & \, = \sum_{i =0}^{h-1} q^i \langle \tau^i(\gamma),\alpha^* \rangle \\ & \, = q^{i_0} \langle \tau^{i_0}(\gamma),\alpha^* \rangle + \sum_{i =0}^{i_0-1} q^i \langle \tau^i(\gamma),\alpha^* \rangle \end{aligned}\end{align*} $$

so that

$$ \begin{align*}\begin{aligned} \left|\sum_{i =0}^{h-1} \langle F^i(\gamma),\alpha^* \rangle \right|& \, \geq q^{i_0} | \langle \tau^{i_0}(\gamma),\alpha^* \rangle| - \sum_{i =0}^{i_0-1} q^i |\langle \tau^i(\gamma),\alpha^* \rangle|\\ & \, \geq q^{i_0} - \sum_{i =0}^{i_0-1} q^iM = q^{i_0} - M \frac{q^{i_0}-1}{q-1}\\ & \, \geq q^{i_0}- (q-1) \frac{q^{i_0}-1}{q-1} = 1 \end{aligned}\end{align*} $$

since by Condition (3), we have $q-1 \geq M$ . This proves that $\sum _{i =0}^{h-1} \langle F^i(\gamma ),\alpha ^* \rangle \neq 0$ . Now recall that $F^h = q^h$ on $X^*({\mathbf T})$ . We have $(F-1)\sum _{i =0}^{h-1} F^i = F^h-1 = q^h-1$ ; therefore, $(F-1)$ is invertible on $X^*({\mathbf T})_{{\mathbb Q}}$ and $(F-1)^{-1} = (q^h-1)^{-1} \sum _{i =0}^{h-1} F^i$ . We deduce that

$$ \begin{align*} \langle (F-1)^{-1}\gamma, \alpha^*\rangle = \langle \gamma, (F-1)^{-1}\alpha^*\rangle \neq 0. \end{align*} $$

Consequently, for any $0 \neq \mu \in (F-1)^{-1} {\mathbb Q} \cdot \alpha ^* \cap X_\ast ({\mathbf T})$ , we have $\langle \gamma ,\mu \rangle \neq 0$ . Using Lemma 6.1.1 we get $H_{\alpha ^*}^\circ = \operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\mu )$ , and we deduce that $H_{\alpha ^*}^\circ \not \subseteq \ker (\gamma )$ .

6.2 A consequence

We have the short exact sequence of ${\mathbb F}_q$ -groups

$$\begin{align*}0 \rightarrow {\mathbb T}^1 \rightarrow {\mathbb T} \rightarrow {\mathbb T}_1 \rightarrow 0, \end{align*}$$

which is (canonically) split by the Teichmüller lift. Moreover, we have an isomorphism ${\mathbb T} \cong {\mathbb T}^1 \times {\mathbb T}_1$ which sends the unipotent part ${\mathbb T}_{\mathrm {unip}}$ to ${\mathbb T}^1$ and the reductive part ${\mathbb T}_{\mathrm {red}}$ to ${\mathbb T}_1$ . This also applies to ${\mathbb T}'$ instead of ${\mathbb T}$ .

Let now ${\mathbf L}$ be a proper Levi subgroup of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ , and let $v \in W({\mathbb T}_1, {\mathbb T}^{\prime }_1)$ . We will be interested in the closed subgroup

(20) $$ \begin{align} H_{{\mathbf L},v,r} = \{(t,t') \in {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}' \colon t^{-1}F(t) = \dot v t^{\prime -1}F(t') \dot v^{-1} \text{ centralizes } {\mathbb L} \} \subseteq {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}'. \end{align} $$

Being affine and commutative, $H_{{\mathbf L}, v, r}$ decomposes into the product of its unipotent and reductive parts, $H_{{\mathbf L}, v, r} \cong H_{{\mathbf L}, v, r,\mathrm {unip}} \times H_{{\mathbf L}, v, r,\mathrm {red}}$ , and we have $H_{{\mathbf L}, v, r,\mathrm {red}} \subseteq {\mathbb T}_{\mathrm {red}} \times {\mathbb T}^{\prime }_{\mathrm {red}} \cong {\mathbb T}_1 \times {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime }$ .

Proposition 6.2.1. Assume Condition (3) holds for q and ${\mathbf G}$ . Suppose that $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ , $({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf U}')$ are such that the corresponding sets of simple roots satisfy the conclusion of Proposition 6.1.2. Let ${\mathbf L}$ , v be as above. Consider the connected component $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r, \mathrm {red}}^\circ $ of the reductive part of $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r}$ . Let H (resp. $H'$ ) denote the image of $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r, \mathrm {red}}^\circ $ under

$$\begin{align*}H_{{\mathbf L},v,r, \mathrm{red}}^\circ \hookrightarrow H_{{\mathbf L},v,r} \rightarrow {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}' \twoheadrightarrow {\mathbb T}_1 \times {\mathbb T}_1^{\prime} \stackrel{\operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}}{ \twoheadrightarrow } {\mathbb T}_1, \end{align*}$$

(resp. the image of the same map with ${\mathbb T}_1$ on the right replaced by ${\mathbb T}_1^{\prime }$ ). Then for all $\gamma \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ , H is not contained in the subtorus $\ker (\gamma ) \subseteq {\mathbb T}_1$ , and similarly for $H'$ and all $\gamma ' \in \Phi ({\mathbf T}',{\mathbf G})$ .

Proof. Enlarging ${\mathbf L}$ makes its centralizer smaller; hence, we may assume that ${\mathbf L}$ is a maximal proper Levi subgroup containing ${\mathbf T}$ . We show only the claim for H; the one for $H'$ has a similar proof. Let

$$\begin{align*}H_{{\mathbf L},r} = \{t \in {\mathbb T} \colon t^{-1}F(t) \text{ centralizes } {\mathbb L} \} \subseteq {\mathbb T}. \end{align*}$$

The projection to the first factor $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r} \rightarrow H_{{\mathbf L},r}$ , $(t,t') \mapsto t$ is surjective (by Lang’s theorem for the connected group ${\mathbb T}'$ ), and hence induces also a surjection on the reductive parts and hence also on their connected components, so it suffices to show that the connected component of

$$\begin{align*}H_1^{\prime} := \operatorname{\mathrm{im}}\left( H_{{\mathbf L},r,\mathrm{red}}^\circ \hookrightarrow H_{{\mathbf L},r} \rightarrow {\mathbb T} \twoheadrightarrow {\mathbb T}_1 \right) \end{align*}$$

is not contained in $\ker (\gamma )$ for any $\gamma \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ .

By maximality of ${\mathbf L}$ , there exists a system of simple positive roots $\Delta _1 \subseteq \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ and some $\alpha \in \Delta _1$ such that ${\mathbf L}$ is generated by ${\mathbf T}$ and all ${\mathbf U}_{\beta }$ , ${\mathbf U}_{-\beta }$ with $\beta \in \Delta _1 \smallsetminus \{\alpha \}$ . Alternatively, we can characterize ${\mathbf L}$ as follows: $\Delta _1$ forms a basis of $X^{\ast }({\mathbf T}^{\mathrm {ad}})_{\mathbb Q}$ , and we have the fundamental coweights $\{\beta ^{\ast }\}_{\beta \in \Delta _1}$ which form the dual basis of $X_\ast ({\mathbf T}^{\mathrm {ad}})_{\mathbb Q}$ . Then ${\mathbf L}$ is equal to the centralizer in ${\mathbf G}$ of a (any) lift of $\alpha ^{\ast }$ to $X_\ast ({\mathbf T})_{\mathbb Q}$ (again denoted $\alpha ^{\ast }$ ). By Proposition 6.1.2, the subgroup $H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ $ of ${\mathbb T}_1$ studied in Section 6.1 is not contained in $\ker (\gamma )$ for any $\gamma \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ . Thus, it suffices to show that $H_1^{\prime } \supseteq H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ $ .

We have the Teichmüller lift $\mathrm {TM} \colon {\mathbb T}_1 \rightarrow {\mathbb T}$ , inducing an isomorphism ${\mathbb T}_1 \stackrel {\sim }{\rightarrow } {\mathbb T}_{\mathrm {red}}$ onto the reductive part of ${\mathbb T}$ . Restricted to $H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ $ , $\mathrm {TM}$ induces an isomorphism $\mathrm {TM} \colon H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ \stackrel {\sim }{\rightarrow } \mathrm {TM}(H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ )$ onto a subgroup of ${\mathbb T}_{\mathrm {red}}$ .

Lemma 6.2.2. For any $\tilde {t} \in \mathrm {TM}(H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ )$ , $\tilde {t}^{-1} F(\tilde {t})$ centralizes ${\mathbb U}_{\beta ,r}$ for all $\beta \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf L})$ , and consequently, it centralizes ${\mathbb L}_r$ . In particular, we have $\mathrm {TM}(H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ ) \subseteq H_{{\mathbf L},r}$ .

Proof of Lemma 6.2.2.

Teichmüller lift commutes with Frobenius F; hence, the map $t \mapsto t^{-1}F(t) \colon H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ \rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\alpha ^{\ast })$ induces a map $\tilde t \mapsto \tilde t^{-1} F(\tilde t) \colon \mathrm {TM}(H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ ) \rightarrow \mathrm { TM}(\operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\alpha ^{\ast }))$ . Thus, we have to show that $\mathrm {TM}(\operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\alpha ^{\ast })) \subseteq {\mathbb T}$ centralizes ${\mathbb U}_{\beta ,r}$ .

We have the homomorphism ${\mathbb T} \rightarrow \operatorname {\mathrm {Aut}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta })$ given by the action of ${\mathbb T}$ on ${\mathbb U}_{\beta }$ . The group ${\mathbb U}_{\beta } = {\mathbb U}_{\beta ,r}$ comes with a filtration by closed subgroups ${\mathbb U}_{\beta }^i = \ker ({\mathbb U}_{\beta ,r} \rightarrow {\mathbb U}_{\beta ,i})$ ( $0\leq i\leq r$ ), and the action of ${\mathbb T}_r$ preserves this filtration (i.e., the above homomorphism factors through a homomorphism

$$\begin{align*}{\mathbb T} \rightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Aut}}_{\mathrm{fil}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta}), \end{align*}$$

where $\operatorname {\mathrm {Aut}}_{\mathrm {fil}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta }) \subseteq \operatorname {\mathrm {Aut}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta })$ is the subgroup of automorphisms preserving the filtration). This subgroup fits into an exact sequence

$$\begin{align*}1 \rightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Aut}}_{\mathrm{fil, 0}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta}) \rightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Aut}}_{\mathrm{fil}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta}) \rightarrow Q \rightarrow 1, \end{align*}$$

where $\operatorname {\mathrm {Aut}}_{\mathrm {fil, 0}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta })$ is the subgroup of automorphisms inducing the identity on the graded object $\mathrm {gr}^\bullet {\mathbb U}_\beta = \bigoplus _{i=0}^{r-1} {\mathbb U}_{\beta ,i+1}^i$ , and Q is defined by exactness of the above sequence. The composition

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{TM}(\operatorname{\mathrm{im}}(\alpha^{\ast})) \subseteq {\mathbb T}_r \rightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Aut}}_{\mathrm{fil}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta}) \end{align*}$$

factors through $\operatorname {\mathrm {Aut}}_{\mathrm {fil, 0}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta })$ . Indeed, the image of $\mathrm { TM}(\operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\alpha ^{\ast }))$ in ${\mathbb T}_1$ lies in $\operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\alpha ^{\ast }) \subseteq \ker (\beta )$ (the latter inclusion holds as $\langle \beta , \alpha ^{\ast } \rangle = 0$ ); hence, it acts trivially on ${\mathbb U}_{\beta ,i+1}^i$ for each $0 \leq i \leq r-1$ . But $\operatorname {\mathrm {Aut}}_{\mathrm {fil, 0}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta })$ is unipotent, whereas $TM(\operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\alpha ^{\ast })) \cong \operatorname {\mathrm {im}}(\alpha ^{\ast })$ is a torus. Hence, the resulting morphism

$$\begin{align*}\mathrm{TM}(\operatorname{\mathrm{im}}(\alpha^{\ast})) \rightarrow \operatorname{\mathrm{Aut}}_{\mathrm{fil,0}}({\mathbb U}_{\beta}) \end{align*}$$

is trivial. This proves the lemma.

By Lemma 6.2.2, $\mathrm {TM}(H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ ) \subseteq H_{{\mathbf L},r}$ . Being reductive and connected, $\mathrm {TM}(H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ )$ is thus contained in $H_{{\mathbf L},r,\mathrm {red}}^\circ $ . This shows that the image of $H_{{\mathbf L},r,\mathrm {red}}^\circ $ in ${\mathbb T}_1$ contains the image of $\mathrm {TM}(H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ )$ , which is just $H_{\alpha ^{\ast }}^\circ $ .

Corollary 6.2.3. Under the assumptions of Proposition 6.2.1, let $\widetilde H$ (resp. $\widetilde H'$ ) denote the image of the map

$$\begin{align*}H_{{\mathbf L},v,r, \mathrm{red}}^\circ \hookrightarrow H_{{\mathbf L},v,r} \rightarrow {\mathbb T} \times {\mathbb T}' \stackrel{\operatorname{\mathrm{pr}}}{ \twoheadrightarrow } {\mathbb T} \end{align*}$$

(resp. the image of the same map with ${\mathbb T}$ on the right replaced by ${\mathbb T}'$ ). Let ${\mathbb V}$ be the subgroup of ${\mathbb G}$ corresponding to the unipotent radical ${\mathbf V}$ of an arbitrary Borel subgroup of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ . Then ${\mathbb V}^{\widetilde H} = \{1\}$ (i.e., the only element of ${\mathbb V}$ fixed by the adjoint action of $\widetilde H$ is $1$ ). The analogous statement holds for ${\mathbb T}',{\mathbb V}',\widetilde H'$ .

Proof. We prove only the first claim. The proof of the second is similar. Any element of ${\mathbb V}(\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q)$ has a unique presentation as a product of elements in the subgroups ${\mathbb U}_\gamma $ corresponding to root subgroups ${\mathbf U}_{\gamma } \subseteq {\mathbf G}$ for $\gamma \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf V})$ , and this product decomposition is compatible with the adjoint action of ${\mathbb T}$ . This reduces the corollary to the claim that ${\mathbb U}_\gamma ^{\widetilde H} = \{1\}$ for all $\gamma \in \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf V})$ . For the latter, we can use induction on $1\leq r'\leq r$ : it suffices to show that if $x \in {\mathbb U}_{\gamma ,r}^{\widetilde H_i}$ and x projects to $1$ under ${\mathbb U}_{\gamma ,r} \rightarrow {\mathbb U}_{\gamma ,r' - 1}$ , then it projects to $1$ under ${\mathbb U}_{\gamma ,r} \rightarrow {\mathbb U}_{\gamma ,r'}$ . The adjoint action of ${\mathbb T}_1$ on ${\mathbb U}_{\gamma ,r'}^{r'-1}$ can be described as follows: fix an isomorphism ${\mathbf G}_{a,\breve k} \stackrel {\sim }{\rightarrow } {\mathbf U}_{\gamma }$ , which is part of an épinglage for ${\mathbf G}$ . It induces an isomorphism $u_{\gamma ,r'}^{r-1} \colon {\mathbb G}_{a,\overline {{\mathbb F}}_q} \stackrel {\sim }{\rightarrow } {\mathbb U}_{\gamma ,r'}^{r'-1}$ , and the adjoint action is given by $\mathrm { Ad}(t)(u_{\gamma ,r'}^{r'-1}(x)) = u_{\gamma ,r'}^{r'-1}(\gamma (t)x)$ . Now the result follows, as the image of $\widetilde H$ in ${\mathbb T}_1$ is not contained in $\ker (\gamma )$ by Proposition 6.2.1.

7 Cohomology of $\Sigma $

As in Section 6, we assume that ${\mathbf G}$ is an unramified absolutely almost simple group. Moreover, we will assume that Condition (3) holds for ${\mathbf G}$ and q. We fix a Coxeter pair $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ as in Proposition 6.1.2. In particular, the action of F on W is given by $F(w) = c\cdot \sigma (w)\cdot c^{-1}$ , where $\sigma $ is an automorphism of W permuting the simple reflections and $c\sigma $ is a twisted Coxeter element of $(W,\sigma )$ . The purpose of this section is to show that (10) holds for such a Coxeter pair. This will imply Theorem 3.2.3 for general unramified groups.

7.1 Nonemptyness of cells

We give here conditions for a cell ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'}\Sigma _v$ to be empty (see (8) for the definition of the cell). Unlike Theorem 4.2.1, which is stated in the case where ${\mathbb U} = {\mathbb U}'$ , we will work here with more general Coxeter pairs.

Proposition 7.1.1. Let $a \in \mathbb {Z}$ and set ${\mathbf U}' :=F^a({\mathbf U})$ . If $v \in W$ is such that ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'} \Sigma _v \neq \varnothing $ , then at least one of the following holds:

  1. (i) $v \in W^F$ ;

  2. (ii) ${}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbf U} \cap {\mathbf U}'$ is contained in a proper Levi subgroup of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ .

Proof. Recall from Proposition 6.1.2 that $F = qc\sigma $ with $c\sigma $ a twisted Coxeter element. Given $v \in W$ , let us consider the condition

(21) $$ \begin{align} v^{-1} {\mathbb B}_1 F({\mathbb B}_1 v) \cap {\mathbb B}^{\prime}_1 F({\mathbb B}^{\prime}_1) \neq \varnothing. \end{align} $$

From the definition of ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'} \Sigma _v$ , we see that if ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}'} \Sigma _v$ is nonempty, then there exist $x \in F({\mathbb B}_1)$ , $x' \in F({\mathbb B}_1^{\prime })$ and $y \in {\mathbb B}_1 v {\mathbb B}_1^{\prime }$ such that $xF(y) = yx'$ . Writing $y = b v b'$ with $b \in {\mathbb B}_1$ and $b' \in {\mathbb B}_1^{\prime }$ , we deduce that $v^{-1} b^{-1} x F(bv) = b'x'F(b')^{-1}$ so that (21) holds. Therefore, it is enough to show that if (21) holds for v, then (i) or (ii) hold as well.

Since $F({\mathbb B}) = {}^c {\mathbb B}$ , we have ${\mathbb B}^{\prime }_1 = F^a({\mathbb B}_1) = {}^{d} {\mathbb B}_1$ with $d = c\sigma (c) \cdots \sigma ^{a-1}(c) = (c\sigma )^a \sigma ^{-a}$ . Using the fact that $d^{-1} F(d) = \sigma ^a(c) c^{-1}$ , we get

$$ \begin{align*} \begin{aligned} v^{-1} {\mathbb B}_1 F({\mathbb B}_1 v) \cap {\mathbb B}^{\prime}_1 F({\mathbb B}^{\prime}_1) & \, = \big(v^{-1} {\mathbb B}_1 {}^c{\mathbb B}_1 F(v) \big)\cap \big(d {\mathbb B}_1 d^{-1} F(d) {}^c{\mathbb B}_1 F(d^{-1})\big) \\ & \, = \big(v^{-1} {\mathbb B}_1 c{\mathbb B}_1\sigma(v) c^{-1} \big)\cap \big(d {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^a(c) {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma(d^{-1}) c^{-1}\big)\\ & \, = v^{-1} \Big(\big({\mathbb B}_1 c {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma(vd) \big) \cap \big(vd {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^a(c) {\mathbb B}_1\big)\Big) \sigma(d^{-1}) c^{-1}.\end{aligned} \end{align*} $$

Therefore, (21) is equivalent to

$$ \begin{align*} \big({\mathbb B}_1 c {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma(vd) \big) \cap \big(vd {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^a(c) {\mathbb B}_1\big) \neq \varnothing, \end{align*} $$

which, in turn, is equivalent to

(22) $$ \begin{align} ({\mathbb B}_1 c {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma(vd) {\mathbb B}_1) \cap ({\mathbb B}_1 vd {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^a(c) {\mathbb B}_1) \neq \varnothing. \end{align} $$

Let $\Delta \subseteq \Phi ({\mathbf T},{\mathbf G})$ be the set of simple roots corresponding to ${\mathbf U}$ . Since $c\sigma $ is a twisted Coxeter element, there exists a set of representatives of $\sigma $ -orbits of simple reflections $s_1,\ldots ,s_r$ with $r = |\Delta /\sigma |$ such that $c =s_1 s_2 \cdots s_r$ . Given $I \subset \{1,\ldots ,r\}$ , we will denote by $W_I$ the smallest $\sigma $ -stable parabolic subgroup of W containing $s_i$ for all $i\in I$ and by $c_I = \prod _{i \in I} s_i$ the element of $W_I$ obtained from c by keeping the simple reflections labelled by I. Note that $c_I \sigma $ is a twisted Coxeter element of $(W_I,\sigma )$ .

Assume that (22) holds. Since c contains each simple reflection at most once, the Bruhat cells ${\mathbb B}_1 u {\mathbb B}_1$ contained in ${\mathbb B}_1 c {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma (vd) {\mathbb B}_1$ (resp. in ${\mathbb B}_1 vd {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma ^a(c) {\mathbb B}_1$ ) are attached to elements $u \in W$ of the form $u = c_I \sigma (vd)$ for some $I \subset \{1,\ldots ,r\}$ (resp. $u = vd\sigma ^a(c_J) $ for some $J \subset \{1,\ldots ,r\}$ ). Consequently, if (22) holds, then there exists $I,J \subset \{1,\ldots ,r\}$ such that $c_I \sigma (vd) = vd\sigma ^a(c_J)$ . Set $w := w_0 vd$ where $w_0$ is the longest element of W. Since $\sigma (w_0) = w_0$ , we have $({}^{w_0} c_I) \sigma (w) = w \sigma ^a(c_J)$ . Let $K \subset \{1,\ldots ,r\}$ be such that $W_K := {}^{w_0} W_I$ . Then ${}^{w_0} c_I \sigma $ is a twisted Coxeter element of $W_K$ (but not necessarily equal to $c_K \sigma $ ). By [Reference Geck and PfeifferGP00, Prop. 2.1.7], one can write $w = w_1 x w_2$ where $x \in W$ is K-reduced-J (i.e., of minimal length in $W_K x W_J$ ) and $(w_1,w_2) \in W_K\times W_J$ . Since x is K-reduced-J, we claim that

$$ \begin{align*} W_{J} \cap x^{-1} W_K \sigma(x) = \left\{\begin{array}{ll} W_{J \cap K^x} & \text{if } \sigma(x) = x \\ \varnothing & \text{otherwise}. \end{array} \right. \end{align*} $$

The proof of this claim follows, for example, from the proof of [Reference Geck and PfeifferGP00, Thm. 2.1.12]. Indeed, if $W_{J} \cap x^{-1} W_K \sigma (x)$ is nonempty, then there exists $y \in W_J$ and $z \in W_K$ such that $xy = z\sigma (x)$ . Since x is reduced-J and $\sigma (x)$ is K-reduced, we have necessarily $\ell (y) = \ell (z)$ . Let $y = y_1 \cdots y_m$ be a reduced expression of y. We define inductively $z_i \in W_K$ and $x_i$ a K-reduced element by the conditions $x_0 = x$ and $x_{i-1} y_i = z_i x_i$ for all $i = 1,\ldots ,m$ . In particular, $z = z_1 \cdots z_m$ and $x_m = \sigma (x)$ . By Deodhar’s Lemma [Reference Geck and PfeifferGP00, Lem. 2.1.2], we have $\ell (z_i) = 1$ and $x_i = x_{i-1}$ for all i (the case $z_i = 1$ does not happen since $\ell (z)=\ell (y) = m$ ). In particular, $\sigma (x) = x$ and the result of [Reference Geck and PfeifferGP00, Thm. 2.1.12] applies.

Recall that $\sigma (W_I) = W_I$ and $\sigma (W_J) = W_J$ . The equality $({}^{w_0} c_I) \sigma (w) = w \sigma ^a(c_J)$ forces $W_{J} \cap x^{-1} W_K \sigma (x)$ to be nonempty; therefore, $\sigma (x) = x$ . Now the element

$$ \begin{align*} w_2 \sigma^a(c_J) \sigma(w_2)^{-1} = x^{-1} w_1^{-1} ({}^{w_0} c_I) \sigma(w_1 x) = x^{-1} (w_1^{-1} w_0 c_I w_0^{-1} \sigma(w_1)) x \end{align*} $$

lies in $W_{J} \cap x^{-1}(W_K)x$ and is $\sigma $ -conjugate to a twisted Coxeter element of $W_J$ . Since Coxeter elements are elliptic, this forces $W_{J \cap K^x} = W_J$ ; hence, $J \subset K^x $ . Similarly, we find $K \subset {}^xJ$ ; hence, ${}^x J = K$ . In particular, one can write $w = w' x$ with $w' \in W_K$ .

Let us now look more precisely at what elements $u \in W$ can appear. If ${\mathbb B}_1 v d \sigma ^a(c_J) {\mathbb B}_1 \subset {\mathbb B}_1 vd {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma ^a(c) {\mathbb B}_1$ with $J = \{ j_1 < j_2 < \cdots < j_m\}$ , then for all $i =0, \ldots ,m$ and all $j_i < l < j_{i+1}$ , we must have $v d \sigma ^a(s_{j_1} \cdots s_{j_i} s_l) < v d \sigma ^a(s_{j_1} \cdots s_{j_i})$ , with the convention that $j_0 = 0$ , $j_{m+1} = r+1$ and $s_{j_0}=1$ . However, $w = w' x$ with $w' \in W_K$ and x is K-reduced. Since ${}^x J= K$ , we can write $K = \{k_1,\ldots ,k_m\}$ with $x s_{j_i}x^{-1} = s_{k_i}$ . Then the condition

$$ \begin{align*} w \sigma^a(s_{j_1} \cdots s_{j_i} s_l)> w \sigma^a(s_{j_1} \cdots s_{j_i}) \end{align*} $$

can be written

$$ \begin{align*} w' \sigma^a(s_{k_1} \cdots s_{k_i} x s_l)> w' \sigma^a(s_{k_1} \cdots s_{k_i} x). \end{align*} $$

Now, since $w' \sigma ^a(s_{k_1} \cdots s_{k_i}) \in W_K$ and ${}^x s_l \notin W_K$ , this forces $x \sigma ^a(s_l)> x$ ; hence, $x s_l> x$ (recall that $\sigma (x) =x$ ). Indeed, if $\alpha _l$ denotes the simple root associated to $s_l$ , then $w' \sigma ^a(s_{k_1} \cdots s_{k_i}x) (\alpha _l)> 0$ by assumption. Since $x(\alpha _l)$ is not in $\Phi _K$ , the root subsystem associated to $W_K$ , the element $w' \sigma ^a(s_{k_1} \cdots s_{k_i}) \in W_K$ cannot change the sign of $x(\alpha _l)$ ; therefore, $x(\alpha _l)>0$ . Since l runs over all the elements in $\{1,\ldots ,r\}\smallsetminus J$ and x is reduced-J, this proves that $x s> x$ for all simple reflections s in I, and therefore, $x =1$ since x is $\sigma $ -stable. Consequently, $v d = w_0 w = w_0 w' \in w_0 W_K = W_J w_0$ . If $J \neq \{1,\ldots ,r\}$ , then ${}^{d^{-1}v^{-1}}{\mathbf U} \cap {\mathbf U} = {}^{d^{-1}}({}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbf U} \cap {\mathbf U}')$ is contained in the Levi subgroup of ${\mathbf G}$ corresponding to $W_J$ ; hence, (ii) holds. Otherwise, $I = J = K = \{1,\ldots ,r\}$ , and the relation $c_I \sigma (vd) = vd\sigma ^a(c_J)$ is just $c\sigma (vd)=vd \sigma ^a(c)$ , which with $d = (c\sigma )^a \sigma ^{-a}$ gives $v \in W^{c\sigma } = W^F$ ; hence, (i) holds.

7.2 Comparison of various cells

In this section, we prove that (10) holds for the Coxeter pair $({\mathbf T},{\mathbf U})$ . Note that the Coxeter number h (the order of $c\sigma $ ) is even unless W is of type $A_n$ with n even and $\sigma $ trivial. In particular, if h is odd, then $\sigma $ acts trivially on W. Proposition 6.1.2 implies that when h is even, we have $c \sigma (c) \cdots \sigma ^{h/2-1}(c) = w_0$ , the longest element in W.

Lemma 7.2.1. Assume that $v \in W \smallsetminus W^F$ . Then

$$ \begin{align*} H_c^{\ast}({}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}}\Sigma_v) = 0 \end{align*} $$

as a virtual $({\mathbb T}\times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ -module.

Proof. If ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}}\Sigma _v$ is empty, then the statement is trivial. Otherwise, Proposition 7.1.1 ensures that ${}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbf U} \cap {\mathbf U}$ is contained in a proper Levi subgroup ${\mathbf L}$ of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ . In particular, the torus ${\mathbb H} := H_{{\mathbf L},v,r, \mathrm {red}}^\circ $ defined in §6.2 is contained in $H_v$ , which by Lemma 5.1.1 acts on $\widehat \Sigma _v$ . Using Corollary 6.2.3, we see that $({}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}}\widehat \Sigma _v)^{{\mathbb H}} $ is empty since $F(v) \neq v$ . By (1), this shows that $H_c^{\ast }({}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}}\widehat \Sigma _v) = 0$ . The same holds for ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}}\Sigma _v$ since it is related to ${}^{{\mathbb U},{\mathbb U}}\widehat \Sigma _v$ by a $({\mathbb T}\times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ -equivariant map $\widehat \Sigma _v \rightarrow \Sigma _v$ which is a Zariski-locally trivial fibration with fibers isomorphic to the perfection of a fixed affine space.

Given $a \in \mathbb {Z}$ and $v \in W^F$ , we define the virtual $({\mathbb T}\times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ -modules

$$ \begin{align*} h_{a,v} &:= H_c^{\ast}({}^{{\mathbb U},F^a({\mathbb U})}\Sigma_{v},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}) = H_c^{\ast}({}^{{\mathbb U},F^a({\mathbb U})}\widehat\Sigma_{v},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}) = H_c^{\ast}({}^{{\mathbb U},F^a({\mathbb U})}\widetilde\Sigma_{v},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}), \\ \widetilde h_v &:= H_c^0((\dot v{\mathbb T})^F,\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}) = \overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}(\dot v{\mathbb T})^F. \end{align*} $$

Note that $h_{a,v}$ depends only on the class of a modulo h, the Coxeter number.

Lemma 7.2.2. Let $c_a = (c\sigma )^a\sigma ^{-a}$ . Assume that either

  • h is even and $vc_a \in \{w_0,cw_0,w_0 \sigma ^a(c^{-1})\}$ ; or

  • h is odd and $vc_a = c_{\lfloor h/2 \rfloor \pm 1}$ .

Then $h_{a,v} = \widetilde h_v$ .

Proof. Assume first that h is even. If $vc_a=w_0$ , then ${}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U} \cap F^a({\mathbb U}) = {}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U} \cap {}^{c_a}{\mathbb U} = {}^{c_a}({}^{(vc_a)^{-1}}{\mathbb U} \cap {\mathbb U}) = {}^{c_a}({\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}) = 1$ . Hence, the group $H_v \subseteq {\mathbb T}\times {\mathbb T}'$ , which acts on $\widehat \Sigma _v$ by Lemma 5.1.1, is equal to the group $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r}$ from (20) attached to the Levi subgroup ${\mathbf L} = {\mathbf T}$ . By Corollary 6.2.3 applied to ${\mathbf L} = {\mathbf T}$ , the map

$$ \begin{align*} \dot v \tau \in (\dot v {\mathbb T})^F \longmapsto (1,1,1,\tau,1,1) \in \widehat \Sigma_v \end{align*} $$

induces a $({\mathbb T}\times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ -equivariant isomorphism

$$ \begin{align*}(\dot v {\mathbb T})^F \simeq (\widehat \Sigma_v)^{(H_v)_{\mathrm{red}}^\circ},\end{align*} $$

and the result follows. If $vc_a = w_0\sigma ^a(c^{-1})$ , then we have $vc_{a+1} = vc_a \sigma ^a(c) = w_0$ , so that ${}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U}^- \cap F(F^a({\mathbb U}^-)) = {}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {}^{c_{a+1}}{\mathbb U}^- = {}^{c_{a+1}}({}^{(vc_{a+1})^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^-) = {}^{c_{a+1}}({}^{w_0}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^-) = 1$ . Hence, the group $H_v^{\prime \prime }$ which acts on $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ by Lemma 5.2.1(i) is equal to $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r}$ from (20) for ${\mathbf L} = {\mathbf T}$ , and we can conclude as in the case $vc_a=w_0$ above (using $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ instead of $\widehat \Sigma _v$ ). Finally, if $vc_a = cw_0$ , then we have $c_a w_0 = v^{-1}c$ , so that ${}^{v^{-1}} (F({\mathbb U}^-)) \cap F^a({\mathbb U}^-) = {}^{v^{-1}c}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {}^{c_a}{\mathbb U}^- = {}^{c_a w_0}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {}^{c_a}{\mathbb U}^- = {}^{c_a}({}^{w_0}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U}^-) = 1$ . Hence, the group $H_{v}^{\prime \prime \prime }$ which acts on $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ by Lemma 5.2.1(ii) is equal to $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r}$ from (20) for ${\mathbf L} = {\mathbf T}$ , and we again can conclude as in the case $vc_a=w_0$ (using $\widetilde \Sigma _v$ instead of $\widehat \Sigma _v$ ).

When h is odd, then W is of type $A_n$ with n even and $\sigma = 1$ . In that case, $h = n+1$ and $\ell (c) = n$ . By Proposition 6.1.2, we have $\ell (c^{n/2}) = n^2/2$ and $\ell (c^{n/2+1}) = \ell (c^{-n/2}) = n^2/2$ . Therefore, if $k = \lfloor h/2 \rfloor \pm 1$ , we have $\ell (w_0 c_k) = n(n+1)/2-n^2/2 = n/2 < n$ , which forces $w_0 c_k$ to lie in a proper parabolic subgroup of W. Consequently, ${}^{v^{-1}} {\mathbb U} \cap F^a({\mathbb U}) = {}^{v^{-1}}{\mathbb U} \cap {}^{c_a}{\mathbb U} = {}^{c_a}({}^{(vc_a)^{-1}}{\mathbb U} \cap {\mathbb U}) = {}^{c_a}({}^{(w_0c_k)^{-1}}{\mathbb U}^- \cap {\mathbb U})$ lies in a proper Levi subgroup ${\mathbf L}$ of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ . By Lemma 5.1.1, the group $H_{{\mathbf L},v,r}$ from (20) acts on $\widehat \Sigma _v$ , and we once more conclude as in the case when h is even and $vc_a=w_0$ .

The key observation is the following proposition.

Proposition 7.2.3. Let $a \in {\mathbb Z}/h{\mathbb Z}$ and $v \in W^F$ . We have $h_{a,v} = h_{a+1,v}$ , unless $\sigma $ is trivial and $v = w_0 c^{-a}$ or $v= w_0 c^{-a-1}$ .

Proof. As in Section 5.3, we have the isomorphism $\alpha \colon {}^{{\mathbb U},F^a({\mathbb U})}\Sigma \rightarrow {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})} \Sigma $ , and the cell ${}^{{\mathbb U},F^a({\mathbb U})}\Sigma _{v}$ decomposes into finitely many locally closed $({\mathbb T}\times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ -stable pieces:

(23) $$ \begin{align} {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a}({\mathbb U})}\Sigma_{v} = \bigcup_{w \in W} \alpha^{-1}\left(\alpha \left({}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a}({\mathbb U})}\Sigma_{v}\right) \cap {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})} \Sigma_w\right). \end{align} $$

As in Lemma 5.3.1, we have the $({\mathbb T}\times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ -stable piece ${}^a Y_{v,w} := Y_{v,w} \subseteq {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})}\widehat \Sigma _{v}$ , and it satisfies

$$\begin{align*}H_c^{\ast}({}^a Y_{v,w}) = H_c^{\ast} \left(\alpha\left({}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a}({\mathbb U})}\Sigma_{v}\right) \cap {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})} \Sigma_w \right). \end{align*}$$

This and (23) give

(24) $$ \begin{align} h_{a,v} = \sum_{w\in W}H_c^{\ast}({}^aY_{v,w},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}). \end{align} $$

By Lemma 5.3.1, ${}^aY_{v,w} \subseteq {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})}\widehat \Sigma _w$ is stable under the $H_w$ -action on ${}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})}\widehat \Sigma _w$ as in Lemma 5.1.1(i). If ${}^{w^{-1}} {\mathbf U} \cap F^{a+1}({\mathbf U})$ is contained in a proper Levi subgroup of ${\mathbf G}$ containing ${\mathbf T}$ , then using again the argument as in the proof of Lemma 7.2.1, we have $H_c^{\ast }({}^aY_{v,w},\overline {\mathbb {Q}}_{\ell }) = 0$ (cf. Section 2.3). Consequently, by Proposition 7.1.1 applied to ${\mathbb U}' = F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})$ , we only need to consider the case where $w \in W^F$ , so that

(25) $$ \begin{align} h_{a,v} = \sum_{w \in W^F} H_c^{\ast}({}^aY_{v,w},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}). \end{align} $$

Analogously, one can decompose the cell ${}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})}\Sigma _{v}$ into finitely many locally closed $({\mathbb T}\times ^{\mathbb Z} {\mathbb T})^F$ -stable pieces as follows:

$$ \begin{align*} {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})}\Sigma_{v} = \bigcup_{w \in W} \alpha \left({}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a}({\mathbb U})}\Sigma_{w}\right) \cap {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})} \Sigma_v, \end{align*} $$

and using Lemmas 5.3.2 and 5.1.1(ii) instead of Lemmas 5.3.1 and 5.1.1(i), we show

(26) $$ \begin{align} h_{a+1,v} = \sum_{w \in W^F} H_c^{\ast}({}^aY_{w,v},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}). \end{align} $$

Lemma 7.2.4. Let $v,w \in W^F$ . Assume that ${}^aY_{v,w} \neq \varnothing $ and $v\neq w$ . Then $\sigma $ is trivial, $v = w_0c^{-a}$ and $v=wc$ .

Proof. The scheme ${}^aY_{v,w}$ can only be nonempty if $\alpha \left ({}^{{\mathbb U},F^a({\mathbb U})}\Sigma _{v}\right ) \cap {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})} \Sigma _{w} \neq \varnothing $ . If this is the case, there must exist a point $(x,x',y) \in {}^{{\mathbb U},F^a({\mathbb U})}\Sigma _{v}$ , such that $\alpha (x,x',y) = (x,F(x'),yx') \in {}^{{\mathbb U},F^{a+1}({\mathbb U})} \Sigma _{w}$ . Let $y_1 = yx'$ , and let $\bar {x}',\bar {y},\bar {y}_1$ denote the images of $x',y, y_1$ in ${\mathbb G}_1$ . Write ${\mathbb B}_1 = {\mathbb T}_1{\mathbb U}_1$ . Given $k \in \mathbb {Z}$ , we write $c_k = (c\sigma )^k \sigma ^{-k}$ so that $F^k({\mathbb B}) = {}^{c_k} {\mathbb B}$ . We then have

(27) $$ \begin{align} \nonumber \bar y &\in {\mathbb B}_1 v F^a({\mathbb B}_1) = {\mathbb B}_1 v c_a {\mathbb B}_1 c_a^{-1}, \quad \bar{x}' \in F^{a+1}({\mathbb U}_1) = {}^{c_{a+1}}{\mathbb U}_1, \quad \text{and} \\ \bar{y}_1 &\in {\mathbb B}_1w F^{a+1}({\mathbb B}_1) = {\mathbb B}_1 wc_{a+1}{\mathbb B}_1 c_{a+1}^{-1}. \end{align} $$

From the latter two of these three conditions, it follows that $\bar {y} = \bar {y}_1\bar {x}^{\prime -1} \in {\mathbb B}_1 wc_{a+1} {\mathbb B}_1 c_{a+1}^{-1}$ , and we deduce from the first condition in (27) that $ {\mathbb B}_1 wc_{a+1} {\mathbb B}_1 c_{a+1}^{-1} \cap {\mathbb B}_1 v c_a {\mathbb B}_1 c_a^{-1}$ contains $\bar {y}$ , and hence is nonempty. Multiplying by $c^a$ from the right and using that $c_{a+1} = c_a \sigma ^a(c)$ , we get

(28) $$ \begin{align} \big({\mathbb B}_1 wc_{a+1} {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^{a}(c^{-1}) \big) \cap \big( {\mathbb B}_1 v c_a {\mathbb B}_1\big) \neq \varnothing. \end{align} $$

By [Reference SpringerSpr74, Thm. 7.6(v)], there exists $k,l \in \{0,1,\ldots ,h-1\}$ such that $\sigma ^k = \sigma ^l = 1$ and $v = c_k$ , $w = c_l$ . Therefore, the previous equation can be written

$$ \begin{align*}\big({\mathbb B}_1 c_{l+a+1} {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^{a}(c^{-1}) \big) \cap \big( {\mathbb B}_1 c_{k+a} {\mathbb B}_1\big) \neq \varnothing.\end{align*} $$

This implies that

(29) $$ \begin{align} \begin{aligned} \big({\mathbb B}_1 c_{l+a+1} {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^{a}(c^{-1}){\mathbb B}_1\big) \cap \big({\mathbb B}_1 c_{k+a} {\mathbb B}_1\big) \neq \varnothing \\ \big({\mathbb B}_1 c_{l+a+1} {\mathbb B}_1\big) \cap ({\mathbb B}_1 c_{k+a} {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma^{a}(c) {\mathbb B}_1\big) \neq \varnothing. \end{aligned} \end{align} $$

As in the proof of Proposition 7.1.1, recall that the elements $u \in W$ such that ${\mathbb B}_1 u {\mathbb B}_1 \subset {\mathbb B}_1 c_{k+a} {\mathbb B}_1 \sigma ^{a}(c) {\mathbb B}_1$ are of the form $c_{k+a} \sigma ^{a}(c_I)$ , where $c_I$ is obtained by removing some simple reflections in c. Therefore, by (29), we have $c_{k+a} \sigma ^{a}(c_I) = c_{l+a+1}$ for some $c_I \leq c$ , yielding $k \in \{l,l+1\}$ . In addition, when $\ell (c_{k+a+1}) = \ell (c) + \ell (c_{k+a})$ (or when $\ell (c_{l+a}) = \ell (c^{-1}) + \ell (c_{l+a+1})$ ), only $c_I= c$ can appear, in which case, $k =l$ , and hence, $v=w$ , which contradicts the assumptions of the Lemma. Therefore, we have $k = l+1$ , $\ell (c_{k+a+1}) \neq \ell (c) + \ell (c_{k+a})$ and $\ell (c_{k+a-1}) \neq \ell (c^{-1}) + \ell (c_{k+a})$ . Consequently, $\ell (c_{k+a})> \ell (c_{k+a\pm 1})$ ; therefore, $c_{k+a} = w_0$ . Note that we also have $\sigma = \sigma ^{k} \sigma ^{-l} = 1$ , and the lemma follows.

Now we finish the proof of Proposition 7.2.3. Applying Lemma 7.2.4, we deduce from equation (25) that $h_{a,v} = H_c^{\ast }({}^aY_{v,v},\overline {\mathbb {Q}}_{\ell }) $ unless $\sigma = 1$ and $v=w_0 c^{-a}$ . Similarly, equation (26) yields $h_{a+1,v} = H_c^{\ast }({}^aY_{v,v},\overline {\mathbb {Q}}_{\ell }) $ unless $\sigma = 1$ and $vc=w_0 c^{-a}$ . Therefore, if $\sigma \neq 1$ or if $v \notin \{w_0 c^{-a}, w_0 c^{-a-1}\}$ , we have

(30) $$ \begin{align} h_{a,v} = H_c^{\ast}({}^aY_{v,v},\overline{\mathbb{Q}}_{\ell}) = h_{a+1,v}, \end{align} $$

which finishes the proof.

Proof of Theorem 4.2.1.

By Lemma 7.2.1, it suffices to show that $h_{0,v} = \widetilde h_v$ for all $v \in W^F$ . Recall that by [Reference SpringerSpr74, Thm. 7.6(v)] the elements in $W^F$ are of the form $c_k = (c\sigma )^k \sigma ^{-k}$ for some $k \in {\mathbb Z}$ with $\sigma ^k =1$ .

If $\sigma $ is nontrivial, then there exists $a \in {\mathbb Z}$ such that $vc_a = w_0$ (for example, $a = h/2 - k$ ). By Lemma 7.2.2, we have $h_{a,v} = \widetilde h_v$ , and from Proposition 7.2.3, we deduce that $h_{0,v} = h_{a,v} = \widetilde h_v$ .

If $\sigma = 1$ , then $v = c^k$ . Without loss of generality, we can assume that $v \neq w_0$ (equivalently, $k \neq h/2$ ) since in that case, Lemma 7.2.2 applies. Assume first that $0 \leq k < h/2$ . Then $vc^a = c^{k+a} \neq w_0$ for all $0 \leq a < h/2-k$ . Therefore. by Proposition 7.2.3, we have $h_{0,v} = h_{a,v}$ in that case. If h is even, then $vc^{h/2-k-1} = w_0 c^{-1}$ , in which case, $h_{h/2-k-1,v}$ equals $\widetilde h_v$ by Lemma 7.2.2. If h is odd, then $h_{\lfloor h/2\rfloor -k,v}$ equals $\widetilde h_v$ by Lemma 7.2.2 again. When $h/2 < k< h$ , we have $h_{0,v} = h_{-a,v}$ for all $0 \leq a < h/2+k$ , and a similar argument applies.

Acknowledgements

We thank an anonymous referee for pointing out Example 3.2.1 to us. We thank another anonymous referee for the very careful reading of the manuscript and for pointing out various mistakes and helpful improvements to us.

Competing interest

The authors have no competing interest to declare.

Financial support

The first author gratefully acknowledges financial support by the grant ANR-16-CE40-0010-01. The second author gratefully acknowledges support by the DFG through the Leibniz Prize of Peter Scholze.

Footnotes

1 For example, if $r=1$ and $\mathbf {x}$ hyperspecial, then there is a natural map from $S_{{\mathbf T},{\mathbf U}}$ into some classical Deligne–Lusztig variety attached to the special fibers of ${\mathcal G},{\mathcal T},{\mathcal U}$ ; this map induces an isomorphism of $\ell $ -adic cohomology groups, up to a degree shift.

2 The class of toral characters is much bigger than the class of the regular ones, and in a sense ‘as close as possible’ to the class of all $\theta $ ’s with trivial Weyl-stabilizer. For the precise definition and discussion of torality, we refer to [Reference Chan and OiCO23, §3.3].

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