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59.5 Feats of the étale topology

For a natural number $n \in \mathbf{N} = \{ 1, 2, 3, 4, \ldots \} $ it is true that

\[ H_{\acute{e}tale}^2 (\mathbf{P}^1_\mathbf {C}, \mathbf{Z}/n\mathbf{Z}) = \mathbf{Z}/n\mathbf{Z}. \]

More generally, if $X$ is a complex variety, then its étale Betti numbers with coefficients in a finite field agree with the usual Betti numbers of $X(\mathbf{C})$, i.e.,

\[ \dim _{\mathbf{F}_ q} H_{\acute{e}tale}^{2i} (X, \mathbf{F}_ q) = \dim _{\mathbf{F}_ q} H_{Betti}^{2i} (X(\mathbf{C}), \mathbf{F}_ q). \]

This is extremely satisfactory. However, these equalities only hold for torsion coefficients, not in general. For integer coefficients, one has

\[ H_{\acute{e}tale}^2 (\mathbf{P}^1_\mathbf {C}, \mathbf{Z}) = 0. \]

By contrast $H_{Betti}^2(\mathbf{P}^1(\mathbf{C}), \mathbf{Z}) = \mathbf{Z}$ as the topological space $\mathbf{P}^1(\mathbf{C})$ is homeomorphic to a $2$-sphere. There are ways to get back to nontorsion coefficients from torsion ones by a limit procedure which we will come to shortly.


Comments (2)

Comment #1700 by Yogesh More on

Very minor remark: I think it would be helpful to add, after the sentence "For integer coefficients, one has ", the following:

By contrast since is topologically equivalent to .


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