64 The Trace Formula
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Section 64.1: Introduction
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Section 64.2: The trace formula
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Section 64.3: Frobenii
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Section 64.4: Traces
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Section 64.5: Why derived categories?
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Section 64.6: Derived categories
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Section 64.7: Filtered derived category
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Section 64.8: Filtered derived functors
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Section 64.9: Application of filtered complexes
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Section 64.10: Perfectness
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Section 64.11: Filtrations and perfect complexes
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Section 64.12: Characterizing perfect objects
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Section 64.13: Cohomology of nice complexes
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Section 64.14: Lefschetz numbers
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Section 64.15: Preliminaries and sorites
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Section 64.16: Proof of the trace formula
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Section 64.17: Applications
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Section 64.18: On l-adic sheaves
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Section 64.19: L-functions
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Section 64.20: Cohomological interpretation
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Section 64.21: List of things which we should add above
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Section 64.22: Examples of L-functions
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Section 64.23: Constant sheaves
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Section 64.24: The Legendre family
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Section 64.25: Exponential sums
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Section 64.26: Trace formula in terms of fundamental groups
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Section 64.27: Fundamental groups
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Section 64.28: Profinite groups, cohomology and homology
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Section 64.29: Cohomology of curves, revisited
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Section 64.30: Abstract trace formula
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Section 64.31: Automorphic forms and sheaves
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Section 64.32: Counting points
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Section 64.33: Precise form of Chebotarev
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Section 64.34: How many primes decompose completely?
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Section 64.35: How many points are there really?