Descent in Buildings begins with the resolution of a major open
question about the local structure of Bruhat-Tits buildings. The authors
then put their algebraic solution into a geometric context by developing
a general fixed point theory for groups acting on buildings of arbitrary
type, giving necessary and sufficient conditions for the residues fixed
by a group to form a kind of subbuilding or "form" of the original
building. At the center of this theory is the notion of a Tits index, a
combinatorial version of the notion of an index in the relative theory
of algebraic groups. These results are combined at the end to show that
every exceptional Bruhat-Tits building arises as a form of a "residually
pseudo-split" Bruhat-Tits building. The book concludes with a display of
the Tits indices associated with each of these exceptional forms.
This is the third and final volume of a trilogy that began with Richard
Weiss' The Structure of Spherical Buildings and The Structure of
Affine Buildings.