Is there an abelian variety $A/\mathbb R$ of dimension $n$ such that $End_{\mathbb R}(A)\otimes \mathbb Q$ contains a field $K$ of degree $[K:\mathbb Q]=2n$? ($End_{\mathbb R}(A)$ is the ring of $\mathbb R$-endomorphisms of $A$)
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$\begingroup$ Take $A=E^n$, where $E$ is an elliptic curve with CM defined over $\mathbb{Q}$ — e.g. $\ y^2=x^4-1$. Then $\operatorname{End}(A)\otimes \mathbb{Q}=M_n(L) $, with $L=\operatorname{End}(E)\otimes \mathbb{Q}$. Any extension of $L$ of degree $n$ injects into $M_n(L)$. $\endgroup$– abxCommented Aug 17, 2021 at 15:11
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4$\begingroup$ @abx: Wait, in this case $\mathrm{End}_\mathbb{R}(E)=\mathbb{Z}$, right? To get the full CM for $E$ you need the ground field to contain $i$. $\endgroup$– Laurent Moret-BaillyCommented Aug 17, 2021 at 15:18
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$\begingroup$ @Laurent Moret-Bailly: Oops, you are right of course! I overlooked the "$\mathbb{R}$" in $\operatorname{End}_{\mathbb{R}} $. $\endgroup$– abxCommented Aug 17, 2021 at 16:19
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$\begingroup$ So in fact the answer is negative for $n=1$, since $\operatorname{End}_{\mathbb{R}} (A)\otimes \mathbb{Q}$ must act faithfully on the 1-dimensional $\mathbb{R}$-vector space $H^0(A,\Omega ^1_A)$. $\endgroup$– abxCommented Aug 17, 2021 at 16:20
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$\begingroup$ Nope, K would then preserve Lie(A/\R), but the action of K on Lie(A/\C) is the direct sum of characters in the CM type of A, and now let \chi be one such character and use Minkowski to produce an element x of \o_K with \chi(x) having huge imaginary part and very small other embeddings —- thus if \chi appears then so must its conjugate (otherwise the trace of the action of x on Lie(A/\C) can’t be real), contradiction. $\endgroup$– alpogeCommented Aug 17, 2021 at 17:56
2 Answers
No.
Assume for contradiction that such an $A$ exists. First look at the singular cohomology $H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathbb Q)$, which admits an action of $K$ and so is a $K$-vector space. It has dimension $2n$ over $\mathbb Q$ and so is a 1-dimensional $K$-vector space.
Tensoring with $\mathbb C$, we see that $H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathbb C)$, as a vector space with an action of $K$, is a sum of $2n$ eigenspaces of $K$ associated to the $2n$ different embeddings $K \to \mathbb C$.
Now by Hodge theory, $H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathbb C) = H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathcal O_A) + H^0(A_{\mathbb C}, \Omega^1_A)$ with the two summands complex conjugates of each other. So for each eigenvector appearing associated to an embedding appears in $H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathcal O_A)$, the eigenvector associated to the complex conjugate embedding appears in $H^0(A_{\mathbb C}, \Omega^1_A)$, and thus, because the eigenspace is 1-dimensional so there is only one eigenvector up to scaling, no eigenvector associated to the complex conjugate embedding appears in $H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathcal O_A)$.
So $H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathcal O_A)$ is not isomorphic to its complex conjugate as a complex vector space with an action of $K$.
But $H^1(A_{\mathbb C}, \mathcal O_A) = H^1(A_{\mathbb R}, \mathcal O_A) \otimes_{\mathbb R} \mathbb C$ and thus is isomorphic to its complex conjugate. (Here we use that the endomorphisms in $K$ are defined over $\mathbb R$ and thus act on $ H^1(A_{\mathbb R}, \mathcal O_A) $.)
This is a contradiction, so no such $A$ exists.
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$\begingroup$ Thank you very much, I will read about Hodge theory so I can completely understand your answer. $\endgroup$– SophieCommented Aug 24, 2021 at 3:58
(Essentially the same argument as the one given by Will Sawin, but perhaps a bit simpler. Further clarification included thanks to comment by Wojowu.)
If $A$ is an abelian variety over a field $k\supset\mathbb{Q}$, then the tangent space $T_0(A)$ at identity is a module over $\mathrm{End}_{k}(A)\otimes\mathbb{Q}$.
Now, if the latter contains a field $K$, then $T_0(A)$ has to have dimension at least 1 over $K$. On the other hand $T_0(A)$ has dimension $\dim(A)$ over $k$. Thus $[K:\mathbb{Q}]\leq\dim(A)$.
Added: Alternate explanation of above.
Consider $A(\mathbb{R})$ as a Lie group with connected component $A(\mathbb{R})_0$. The exponential map $T_0(A)\to A(\mathbb{R})_0$ is the universal covering of a compact torus of real dimension $n=\dim(A)$. It is clear that elements of $\mathrm{End}_{\mathbb{R}}(A)$ lift to this cover; Let $K$ be a subfield of $\mathrm{End}_{\mathbb{R}}(A)$. Note that $\mathcal{O}_K$ is a domain and the covering group (which is $\mathbb{Z}^{n}$) is a module over $\mathcal{O}_K$. Thus the rank of $\mathcal{O}_k$ as a $\mathbb{Z}$ module is at most $n$.
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1$\begingroup$ I don't see how this collection of observations addresses the question in any way. $\endgroup$– WojowuCommented Aug 18, 2021 at 9:57
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$\begingroup$ @Wojowu Thanks for the question. I added a clarification. $\endgroup$– KapilCommented Aug 18, 2021 at 17:12
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$\begingroup$ Thanks, this is a very nice argument! $\endgroup$– WojowuCommented Aug 18, 2021 at 20:19
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$\begingroup$ Thank you Kapil for your very nice proof and explanations. $\endgroup$– SophieCommented Aug 24, 2021 at 4:00