Simple examples are the following: • Let
L be a finite extension of
k of degree
s. Then \operatorname{Res}_{L/k}(\operatorname{Spec} (L)) = \operatorname{Spec}(k) and \operatorname{Res}_{L/k}\mathbb{A}^1 is an
s-dimensional affine space \mathbb{A}^s over Spec
k. • If
X is an affine
L-variety, defined by X = \operatorname{Spec} L[x_1, \dots, x_n]/(f_1,\dotsc,f_m); we can write \operatorname{Res}_{L/k}X as Spec k[y_{i,j}]/(g_{l,r}), where y_{i,j} (1 \leq i \leq n, 1 \leq j \leq s) are new variables, and g_{l,r} (1 \leq l \leq m, 1 \leq r \leq s) are polynomials in y_{i,j} given by taking a
k-basis e_1, \dotsc, e_s of
L and setting x_i = y_{i,1}e_1 + \dotsb + y_{i,s}e_s and f_t = g_{t,1}e_1 + \dotsb + g_{t,s}e_s. If a scheme is a
group scheme then any Weil restriction of it will be as well. This is frequently used in
number theory, for instance: • The torus \mathbb{S} := \operatorname{Res}_{\Complex/\R} \mathbb{G}_m where \mathbb{G}_m denotes the multiplicative group, plays a significant role in
Hodge theory, since the
Tannakian category of real
Hodge structures is equivalent to the
category of representations of \mathbb{S}. The real points have a
Lie group structure isomorphic to \Complex^\times. See
Mumford–Tate group. • The Weil restriction \operatorname{Res}_{L/k} \mathbb{G} of a (commutative) group variety \mathbb{G} is again a (commutative) group variety of dimension [L:k]\dim \mathbb{G}, if
L is separable over
k. • Restriction of scalars on
abelian varieties (e.g.
elliptic curves) yields abelian varieties, if
L is separable over
k. James Milne used this to reduce the
Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture for abelian varieties over all
number fields to the same conjecture over the rationals. • In
elliptic curve cryptography, the
Weil descent attack uses the Weil restriction to transform a
discrete logarithm problem on an
elliptic curve over a finite extension field L/K, into a discrete log problem on the
Jacobian variety of a
hyperelliptic curve over the base field K, that is potentially easier to solve because of K's smaller size. == Weil restrictions vs. Greenberg transforms ==