The decomposition of the space L2 (G(Q)G(A)), where G is a reductive group defined over Q and A is the ring of adeles of Q, is a deep problem at the intersection of number and group theory. Langlands reduced this decomposition to that of the (smaller) spaces of cuspidal automorphic forms for certain subgroups of G. This book describes this proof in detail. The starting point is the theory of automorphic forms, which can also serve as a first step toward understanding the Arthur-Selberg trace formula. To make the book reasonably self-contained, the authors also provide essential background in...
The decomposition of the space L2 (G(Q)G(A)), where G is a reductive group defined over Q and A is the ring of adeles of Q, is a deep problem at the i...
The decomposition of the space L2 (G(Q)G(A)), where G is a reductive group defined over Q and A is the ring of adeles of Q, is a deep problem at the intersection of number and group theory. Langlands reduced this decomposition to that of the (smaller) spaces of cuspidal automorphic forms for certain subgroups of G. This book describes this proof in detail. The starting point is the theory of automorphic forms, which can also serve as a first step toward understanding the Arthur-Selberg trace formula. To make the book reasonably self-contained, the authors also provide essential background in...
The decomposition of the space L2 (G(Q)G(A)), where G is a reductive group defined over Q and A is the ring of adeles of Q, is a deep problem at the i...