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I had trouble parsing the statement of this conjecture. The modular curve I can think of is $\mathbb{H}/\text{SL}(2,\mathbb{Z})$ or I think it can also be written: $\text{PSL}(2,\mathbb{R})/\text{PSL}(2,\mathbb{Z})$. These parameterized complex structures on a single elliptic curve. The other modular curves $X_0(N)=\Gamma_0(N)\backslash\mathbb{H}$ could parameterize other objects, I don't know. Isn't the Fermat curve a modular curve?

It doesn't seem to matter either, because CM-points (otherwise known as Heegner points) are basically just the images of algebraic numbers in $\mathbb{H}$ and they have finite orbits under $\text{SL}(2,\mathbb{Z})$. So there are finitely many images on these various modular curves.

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The conjecture seem to say that the Picard group (possibly $\text{SL}(2,\mathbb{Z})$ is mixing) on the images of the algebraic numbers in $\mathbb{H}$ in the limit of large norm.

What is the status of this conjecture? And why they say "packet" of CM points (I gave my best guess)? Is this related to the Quantum Mechanical wave packets?


The paper says more. If $G = PGL_2$ then $Y=G(\mathbb{Q})\backslash G(\mathbb{A})/K$ where $K \subset G(\mathbb{A})$ is compact and open. That having been said there is a working definition of packet.

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I do not know the meaning of "class number 1" description. A "torus" I'm hoping is a collection of diagonal matrices in $G$ or else I am lost. The space $Y$ could be an analogue of the modular curve $\mathbb{H}/\text{SL}(2,\mathbb{Z})$ if I knew which adelic parameters to set.

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    $\begingroup$ The class-number-1 description seems self-describing, right? It says that there is only one $(\mathbf G(\mathbb Q), \mathbf G(\mathbb Q_S)\cdot K^S)$-double coset in $\mathbf G(\mathbb A)$, which means that $\mathbf G(\mathbb A)$ is the set product $\mathbf G(\mathbb Q)\cdot(\mathbf G(\mathbb Q_S)\cdot K^S)$. $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Oct 26, 2017 at 22:11
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    $\begingroup$ The wording regard torus orbits in the current version of the paper is slightly different from what you have written, but I am not sure clearer. An algebraic (maximal) torus in $\mathrm{PGL}_2$ is a conjugate in $\mathrm{PGL}_2(\overline{\mathbb Q})$ of the group of diagonal matrices in $\mathrm{PGL}_2$. For example, $\left\{\begin{pmatrix} a & 0 \\ 0 & d \end{pmatrix}\right\}$ and $\left\{\begin{pmatrix} a & b \\ -b & a \end{pmatrix}\right\}$ are such tori in $\mathrm{PGL}_2$. They are conjugate over $\overline{\mathbb Q}$, in an obvious sense, but not over $\mathbb Q$. $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Oct 26, 2017 at 22:14
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    $\begingroup$ (P.S. I don't know anything about packets of CM points, but, as someone involved with the Langlands correspondence, to me 'packet' means "I wish that I had a bijection but I don't, and I don't like the term 'fibre'" :-). Maybe it is so here, too.) $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Oct 26, 2017 at 22:16
  • $\begingroup$ I thought class number 1 had to do with factorization in number fields. That's not self-explaining at all. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 26, 2017 at 22:43
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    $\begingroup$ @johnmangual, I'm sorry; I meant that the text explains what is meant by class number 1, not that it's obvious what that has to do with number-field class numbers. For $\mathbf G = \mathrm{GL}_1$, the double-coset space is $\mathbb Q^\times\backslash\mathbb A^\times/\mathbb Q_S^\times\mathbb Z^S$. I guess, but don't know for sure, that the size of (the analogue for other number fields of) this is (or at least is related to) the class number. $\endgroup$
    – LSpice
    Commented Oct 27, 2017 at 2:10

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A packet of CM points on $Y=\mathbf{SL}_2(\mathbb{Z}) \backslash \mathbb{H}=\mathbf{SL}_2(\mathbb{Z}) \backslash \mathbf{SL}_2(\mathbb{R}) / \mathbf{SO}_2(\mathbb{R}) $ is a very old notion. To each CM point corresponds a class of fractional ideals in $\operatorname{Pic}(\Lambda)$ where $\Lambda$ is an order in some imaginary quadratic field $E/\mathbb{Q}$. A "packet" of CM points in this special case is the collection of all CM points in $Y$ corresponding to a class of a fixed order $\Lambda \subset E$. Hence each order in an imaginary field defines a unique packet of CM points which carries an obvious action of $\operatorname{Pic}(\Lambda)$.

Notice that a point on $Y$ is nothing more then an orbit of the real compact torus $\mathbf{SO}_2(\mathbb{R})$ on $\widetilde{Y}=\mathbf{SL}_2(\mathbb{Z}) \backslash \mathbf{SL}_2(\mathbb{R})$. There is an analogues notion of packets for orbits of the real split torus $A=\begin{pmatrix} \lambda & 0 \\ 0 & \lambda^{-1}\end{pmatrix}$ on $\widetilde{Y}$. These are exactly the periodic geodesics which are parametrized by Picard groups of orders in real quadratic extensions of $\mathbb{Q}$.

The name "packet" has been introduced by Einsiedler, Lindenstrauss, Michel and Venkatesh https://arxiv.org/abs/0708.1113, https://arxiv.org/abs/math/0607815 . Why give a new name to such a well-known object? This is because it has useful generalizations to quotients of higher rank linear reductive groups $\mathbf{G}$. The cases $\mathbf{SL}_n(\mathbb{Z})\backslash\mathbf{SL}_n(\mathbb{R})$, i.e. $\mathbf{G}=\mathbf{SL}_n$, and $\mathbf{G}=\mathbf{SL}_2\times \mathbf{SL}_2$ have been studied by several people.

The idea of Einsiedler, Lindenstrauss, Michel and Venkatesh is to put under a single framework several different objects which have been studied under several names. What they have noticed that there are many cases when one has a finite collection of arithmetic significance of orbits of a torus $H<\mathbf{G}(\mathbb{R})$ on a quotient $\Gamma \backslash \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{R})$ where $\Gamma$ is a congruence lattice. These come from a single "torus orbit" on an adelic quotient. Specifically, there is a compact-open subgroup $K_f<\mathbf{G}(\mathbb{A}_f)$ and an open embedding $$ \Gamma \backslash \mathbf{G} \hookrightarrow \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{Q}) \backslash \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{A}) / K_f$$ This embedding is a homeomorphism exactly under the "class number 1" assumption which simplifies the notation. Otherwise, the right hand side above is a finite unite of quotients of the form $\Gamma_\delta \backslash \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{R})$ for varying congruence lattices $\Gamma_\delta$. Now if we fix an algebraic torus $\mathbf{T}<\mathbf{G}$ defined and anisotropic over $\mathbb{Q}$ then we can consider the closed set $$\mathcal{H}=[\mathbf{T}(\mathbb{A})g] \subset \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{Q}) \backslash \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{A})$$ where $g\in \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{A})$ is fixed. This is a single orbit of the locally compact abelian group $H_\mathbb{A}=g^{-1} \mathbf{T}(\mathbb{A}) g$ and carries a unique $H_\mathbb{A}$-invariant probability measure (the Haar measure which is finite due to the assumption that $\mathbf{T}$ is anisotropic over $\mathbb{Q}$).

If we project $\mathcal{H}$ to $\mathbf{G}(\mathbb{Q}) \backslash \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{A})/K_f$ (and maybe restrict to the component $\Gamma \backslash \mathbf{G}(\mathbb{R})$) we get a "packet" which is a finite collection of orbits of the real torus $H_\mathbb{R}=g_\infty^{-1} \mathbf{T}(\mathbb{R}) g_\infty$ where $g_\infty\in\mathbf{G}(\mathbb{R})$ is the archimedean part of $g$. The crux is that this finite collection of orbits in the real quotient is actually a single orbit in the larger adelic quotient. The adelic object $[\mathbf{T}(\mathbb{A})g]$ was invariant under a much bigger group $H_\mathbb{A}$. There is a trace of this action in the real setting as well which is a transitive action of a finite abelian group on the set of $H_\mathbb{R}$-orbits in the packet through Hecke correspondences. This generalizes the $\operatorname{Pic}(\Lambda)$ action for CM points.

More important then the packet itself is the $H_\mathbb{R}$-invariant probability measure it supports which is the push-forward of the $H_\mathbb{A}$-invariant measure on $[\mathbf{T}(\mathbb{A})g]$ to the real quotient. In the very special case of the modular curve this can be though of as an average over finitely many delta measures on $Y$ which is an $\mathbf{SO}_2(\mathbb{R})$-invariant measure on $\widetilde{Y}$. In general, this measure is a finite uniform average of the normalized $H_\mathbb{R}$-invariant measures on the periodic orbits in the packet.

Moreover, these collection of torus orbits in the general setting are not divisors in the algebraic sense for several reasons. The first one is that locally symmetric spaces are in general not algebraic varieties.

Lastly, in regard to the status of the mixing conjecture of Michel and Venkatesh, it seems that my paper you have mentioned and the results of Ellenberg, Michel and Venkatesh https://arxiv.org/abs/1001.0897 which apply in a restricted regime are all that we know. I would also like to stress that in the setting of the mixing conjecture there is no real added generality by using the fancy adelic construction then just $\operatorname{Pic}(\Lambda)$ orbits on pairs of CM points (with the diagonal action). The usefulness of the adelic viewpoint is important in the proof as it clarifies the role of the torus action and how to apply measure rigidity tools.

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In this case, it appears that "packets of CM-points" is an informal or colloquial way of saying either "divisor" (a sum in the free group generated by points) or "finite linear combination of automorphic Dirac deltas supported at CM-points".

Also, just to be sure, "CM-point" does not mean "point in the upper half-plane with algebraic coordinates. Rather, it means "point in complex-quadratic field extension of $\mathbb Q$", and possibly subject to further constraints about (Minkowski?) "reduced" points/quadratic forms.

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  • $\begingroup$ By syllogism, a "divisor" could be a collection of Dirac-$\delta$ functions on a variety. I'd definitely agree in calling that a "packet". I really have no idea what packets or divisors are, anyway. $\endgroup$ Commented Oct 26, 2017 at 23:39

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