This definition, as given in the introduction, is natural in classical terms, and is due to
Helmut Hasse and
Ernst Witt (1936). It provides a solution to the question of the
p-rank of the
Jacobian variety J of
C; the
p-rank is bounded by the
rank of
H, specifically it is the rank of the Frobenius mapping composed with itself
g times. It is also a definition that is in principle algorithmic. There has been substantial recent interest in this as of practical application to
cryptography, in the case of
C a
hyperelliptic curve. The curve
C is
superspecial if
H = 0. That definition needs a couple of caveats, at least. Firstly, there is a convention about Frobenius mappings, and under the modern understanding what is required for
H is the
transpose of Frobenius (see
arithmetic and geometric Frobenius for more discussion). Secondly, the Frobenius mapping is not
F-linear; it is linear over the
prime field Z/
pZ in
F. Therefore the matrix can be written down but does not represent a linear mapping in the straightforward sense. ==Cohomology==