2016
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.1610.05381
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Fully Hodge-Newton decomposable Shimura varieties

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Cited by 16 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Recall that (cf. [17] Definition 2.1 and [3] 4.3) we have the notion of fully Hodge-Newton decomposability for the Kottwitz set B(G, µ) (or the pair (G, {µ})). This notion can be generalized to the sets B(G, 0, ν b µ −1 ) and B(J b , 0, ν b −1 µ).…”
Section: Fully Hodge-newton Decomposable Casementioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Recall that (cf. [17] Definition 2.1 and [3] 4.3) we have the notion of fully Hodge-Newton decomposability for the Kottwitz set B(G, µ) (or the pair (G, {µ})). This notion can be generalized to the sets B(G, 0, ν b µ −1 ) and B(J b , 0, ν b −1 µ).…”
Section: Fully Hodge-newton Decomposable Casementioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are some further (conjectural) equivalences for the fully Hodge-Newton decomposable condition (1). For example, we refer the reader to (1) [3] Conjecture 7.2 (in terms of fundamental domains of p-adic period domains and local Shimura varieties), (2) [17] Theorem 2.3 (in terms of the geometry of affine Deligne-Lusztig varieties).…”
Section: Fully Hodge-newton Decomposable Casementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Here the fully Hodge-Newton-decomposability condition is purely group theoretic. Görtz, He and Nie classified all the fully Hodge-Newton decomposable pairs and give more equivalent conditions of fully Hodge-Newton decomposability in their article [18]. When G is a general linear group, the triple (G, µ, b) is Hodge-Newton-indecomposable if all the breakpoints of the Newton polygon defined by b do not touch the Hodge polygon defined by µ.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[36], [37]), and for the case where (G, µ) is fully Hodge-Newton decomposable (cf. [8]), see [18], [20], [41], [34], [39], [32], [12], [13], [6], [24], [25], [33] and so on for the precise descriptions and their applications in arithmetic geometry.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%