The Tate conjecture for
divisors (algebraic cycles of codimension 1) is a major open problem. For example, let
f :
X →
C be a morphism from a smooth projective surface onto a smooth projective curve over a finite field. Suppose that the generic fiber
F of
f, which is a curve over the
function field k(
C), is smooth over
k(
C). Then the Tate conjecture for divisors on
X is equivalent to the
Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture for the
Jacobian variety of
F. By contrast, the Hodge conjecture for divisors on any smooth complex projective variety is known (the
Lefschetz (1,1)-theorem). Probably the most important known case is that the Tate conjecture is true for divisors on
abelian varieties. This is a theorem of Tate for abelian varieties over finite fields, and of
Faltings for abelian varieties over number fields, part of Faltings' solution of the
Mordell conjecture. Zarhin extended these results to any finitely generated base field. The Tate conjecture for divisors on abelian varieties implies the Tate conjecture for divisors on any product of curves
C1 × ... ×
Cn. The (known) Tate conjecture for divisors on abelian varieties is equivalent to a powerful statement about homomorphisms between abelian varieties. Namely, for any abelian varieties
A and
B over a finitely generated field
k, the natural map : \text{Hom}(A,B)\otimes_{\mathbf{Z}}\mathbf{Q}_{\ell} \to \text{Hom}_G \left (H_1 \left (A_{k_s},\mathbf{Q}_{\ell} \right), H_1 \left (B_{k_s},\mathbf{Q}_{\ell} \right) \right ) is an isomorphism. In particular, an abelian variety
A is determined up to
isogeny by the Galois representation on its
Tate module H1(
Aks,
Zℓ). The Tate conjecture also holds for
K3 surfaces over finitely generated fields of characteristic not 2. (On a surface, the nontrivial part of the conjecture is about divisors.) In characteristic zero, the Tate conjecture for K3 surfaces was proved by André and Tankeev. For K3 surfaces over finite fields of characteristic not 2, the Tate conjecture was proved by Nygaard,
Ogus, Charles, Madapusi Pera, and Maulik. surveys known cases of the Tate conjecture. ==Related conjectures==