Berkeley Lectures on p-adic Geometry presents an important
breakthrough in arithmetic geometry. In 2014, leading mathematician
Peter Scholze delivered a series of lectures at the University of
California, Berkeley, on new ideas in the theory of p-adic geometry.
Building on his discovery of perfectoid spaces, Scholze introduced the
concept of "diamonds," which are to perfectoid spaces what algebraic
spaces are to schemes. The introduction of diamonds, along with the
development of a mixed-characteristic shtuka, set the stage for a
critical advance in the discipline. In this book, Peter Scholze and
Jared Weinstein show that the moduli space of mixed-characteristic
shtukas is a diamond, raising the possibility of using the cohomology of
such spaces to attack the Langlands conjectures for a reductive group
over a p-adic field.
This book follows the informal style of the original Berkeley lectures,
with one chapter per lecture. It explores *p-*adic and perfectoid spaces
before laying out the newer theory of shtukas and their moduli spaces.
Points of contact with other threads of the subject, including
p-divisible groups, p-adic Hodge theory, and Rapoport-Zink spaces,
are thoroughly explained. Berkeley Lectures on p-adic Geometry will be
a useful resource for students and scholars working in arithmetic
geometry and number theory.