An important example, the idele groupI, is the case of. Here the set of ideles consists of the invertible adeles; but the topology on the idele group is not their topology as a subset of the adeles. Instead, considering that lies in two-dimensional affine space as the 'hyperbola' defined parametrically by the topology correctly assigned to the idele group is that induced by inclusion in A2; composing with a projection, it follows that the ideles carry a finer topology than the subspace topology from A. Inside AN, the product KN lies as a discrete subgroup. This means that G is a discrete subgroup of G, also. In the case of the idele group, the quotient group is the idele class group. It is closely related to the ideal class group. The idele class group is not itself compact; the ideles must first be replaced by the ideles of norm 1, and then the image of those in the idele class group is a compact group; the proof of this is essentially equivalent to the finiteness of the class number. The study of the Galois cohomology of idele class groups is a central matter in class field theory. Characters of the idele class group, now usually called Hecke characters, give rise to the most basic class of L-functions.
Tamagawa numbers
For more general G, the Tamagawa number is defined as the measure of Tsuneo Tamagawa's observation was that, starting from an invariant differential form ω on G, defined over K, the measure involved was well-defined: while ω could be replaced by cω with c a non-zero element ofK, the product formula for valuations in K is reflected by the independence from c of the measure of the quotient, for the product measure constructed from ω on each effective factor. The computation of Tamagawa numbers for semisimple groups contains important parts of classicalquadratic form theory.
History of the terminology
Historically the idèles were introduced by under the name "élément idéal", which is "ideal element" in French, which then abbreviated to "idèle" following a suggestion of Hasse. This was to formulate class field theory for infinite extensions in terms of topological groups. defined the ring of adeles in the function field case and pointed out that Chevalley's group of Idealelemente was the group of invertible elements of this ring. defined the ring of adeles as a restricted direct product, though he called its elements "valuation vectors" rather than adeles. defined the ring of adeles in the function field case, under the name "repartitions". The term adèle was in use shortly afterwards and may have been introduced by André Weil. The general construction of adelic algebraic groups by followed the algebraic group theory founded by Armand Borel and Harish-Chandra.