All Study Guides Homological Algebra Unit 9
🧬 Homological Algebra Unit 9 – Cohomology TheoriesCohomology theories are powerful tools in algebraic topology that assign algebraic invariants to topological spaces. They capture global properties by studying cocycles and coboundaries, providing a systematic way to classify spaces up to homotopy equivalence.
These theories have applications beyond topology, including algebraic geometry and physics. Developed in the early 20th century, cohomology generalizes differential forms and de Rham cohomology to arbitrary topological spaces, allowing for computation of obstruction classes and characteristic classes of vector bundles.
Introduction to Cohomology
Cohomology is a powerful tool in algebraic topology that assigns algebraic invariants (abelian groups or rings) to topological spaces
Dual concept to homology, capturing global properties of spaces by studying cocycles and coboundaries
Provides a systematic way to study and classify topological spaces up to homotopy equivalence
Cohomology theories have applications beyond topology, including in algebraic geometry, number theory, and physics
Developed in the early 20th century by mathematicians such as J.W. Alexander, S. Eilenberg, and N. Steenrod
Generalizes the notion of differential forms and de Rham cohomology to arbitrary topological spaces
Allows for the computation of obstruction classes and characteristic classes of vector bundles
Fundamental Concepts and Definitions
Cochain complexes are sequences of abelian groups or modules connected by coboundary maps satisfying d n + 1 ∘ d n = 0 d^{n+1} \circ d^n = 0 d n + 1 ∘ d n = 0
Cochains are dual to chains in homology, assigning algebraic objects to simplices or cells
Coboundary maps raise the degree of cochains and satisfy the coboundary condition
Cocycles are cochains c c c satisfying d ( c ) = 0 d(c) = 0 d ( c ) = 0 , generalizing the notion of closed differential forms
Cocycles represent cohomology classes and capture global properties of the space
Coboundaries are cochains of the form d ( b ) d(b) d ( b ) for some cochain b b b , generalizing exact differential forms
Coboundaries are trivial cocycles and represent the zero cohomology class
Cohomology groups are quotients of the group of cocycles by the group of coboundaries, H n ( X ; G ) = Z n ( X ; G ) / B n ( X ; G ) H^n(X; G) = Z^n(X; G) / B^n(X; G) H n ( X ; G ) = Z n ( X ; G ) / B n ( X ; G )
Measure the failure of the coboundary condition and capture higher-order global information
Cup product is a multiplicative structure on cohomology, turning it into a graded ring
Defined using the Alexander-Whitney map and the tensor product of cochains
Cohomological operations, such as Steenrod squares and power operations, provide additional structure on cohomology
Types of Cohomology Theories
Singular cohomology is defined using singular cochains on a topological space
Dual to singular homology and computable using simplicial approximation
Čech cohomology is defined using open covers and the Čech nerve construction
Computes sheaf cohomology and is related to the Čech-de Rham complex
de Rham cohomology is defined for smooth manifolds using differential forms and the exterior derivative
Isomorphic to singular cohomology via the de Rham theorem
Sheaf cohomology is defined for sheaves on a topological space, capturing local-to-global properties
Generalizes Čech cohomology and is related to the derived functors of the global sections functor
Étale cohomology is defined for schemes in algebraic geometry using étale topology and sheaves
Provides a cohomological approach to studying algebraic varieties and their arithmetic properties
Group cohomology is defined for groups using cochains on the classifying space or the bar resolution
Captures information about group extensions, crossed homomorphisms, and group actions
Galois cohomology is a special case of group cohomology for Galois groups of field extensions
Relates to the Brauer group, the Tate-Shafarevich group, and the Weil conjectures
Cohomology Groups and Their Properties
Cohomology groups are contravariant functors from the category of topological spaces to the category of abelian groups
Induced homomorphisms f ∗ : H n ( Y ; G ) → H n ( X ; G ) f^*: H^n(Y; G) \to H^n(X; G) f ∗ : H n ( Y ; G ) → H n ( X ; G ) for continuous maps f : X → Y f: X \to Y f : X → Y
Contravariance reflects the reversal of direction when pulling back cochains
Long exact sequence of a pair relates the cohomology of a space, a subspace, and the quotient space
Generalizes the Mayer-Vietoris sequence and allows for computations using excision
Künneth formula expresses the cohomology of a product space in terms of the cohomology of its factors and their tensor products
Involves the torsion product and the universal coefficient theorem for cohomology
Poincaré duality relates the cohomology of a compact oriented manifold to its homology in complementary degrees
Realized by the cap product with the fundamental class and the evaluation map
Cohomology with compact supports is a variant that captures the cohomology "at infinity" for non-compact spaces
Satisfies Poincaré duality for non-compact manifolds and is related to Borel-Moore homology
Relative cohomology is defined for pairs of spaces and fits into long exact sequences
Allows for the definition of the connecting homomorphism and the study of relative invariants
Computational Techniques
Mayer-Vietoris sequence is a long exact sequence relating the cohomology of a space to the cohomology of its subspaces
Allows for computations by decomposing a space into simpler pieces (open sets or CW complexes)
Spectral sequences are algebraic tools for computing cohomology groups by successive approximations
Examples include the Leray spectral sequence, the Serre spectral sequence, and the Atiyah-Hirzebruch spectral sequence
Cohomological spectral sequences often arise from filtrations or double complexes
Convergence properties depend on the structure of the spectral sequence (first or second quadrant, bounded or unbounded)
Comparison theorems relate different cohomology theories under suitable hypotheses
Examples include the de Rham theorem, the Čech-de Rham isomorphism, and the comparison between étale and singular cohomology
Characteristic classes, such as Chern classes, Stiefel-Whitney classes, and Pontryagin classes, are computable invariants of vector bundles
Computed using the Chern-Weil theory, the splitting principle, or the Leray-Hirsch theorem
Cohomology operations, such as Steenrod squares and Massey products, provide additional computational tools
Used to detect non-trivial cohomology classes and to study the structure of the cohomology ring
Applications in Mathematics
Algebraic topology: Cohomology is a fundamental tool for classifying topological spaces and studying their invariants
Used to define and compute characteristic classes, obstruction classes, and homotopy groups
Algebraic geometry: Cohomology theories, such as sheaf cohomology and étale cohomology, are essential in the study of algebraic varieties
Used to prove the Weil conjectures, study the geometry of moduli spaces, and classify vector bundles
Number theory: Cohomological methods, such as Galois cohomology and étale cohomology, have applications in arithmetic geometry
Used to study the Brauer group, the Tate-Shafarevich group, and the arithmetic of elliptic curves
Mathematical physics: Cohomology appears in various contexts, such as gauge theory, string theory, and quantum field theory
Used to describe the topology of configuration spaces, classify instantons, and study anomalies
Differential geometry: de Rham cohomology and Dolbeault cohomology are important tools in the study of smooth manifolds and complex manifolds
Used to study the geometry of vector bundles, characteristic classes, and the Atiyah-Singer index theorem
Representation theory: Group cohomology and Lie algebra cohomology have applications in the study of representations
Used to classify group extensions, describe the structure of Lie algebras, and study the cohomology of homogeneous spaces
Connections to Other Algebraic Structures
Cohomology theories often have a ring structure given by the cup product, turning them into graded commutative algebras
The cohomology ring encodes multiplicative information and is related to the Yoneda product in derived categories
Massey products provide a higher-order generalization of the cup product, capturing additional multiplicative structure
Defined using cochains and the coboundary operator, and related to the Toda bracket in homotopy theory
Cohomology operations, such as Steenrod squares and power operations, are cohomology classes in the cohomology of the Eilenberg-MacLane spaces
Give rise to additional algebraic structures, such as Steenrod algebras and unstable algebras over them
Cohomology theories can be generalized to extraordinary cohomology theories, such as K-theory and cobordism theory
These theories have a more intricate structure, including products, operations, and Adams spectral sequences
Sheaf cohomology is related to the derived functors of the global sections functor and fits into the framework of homological algebra
Connects cohomology to the theory of derived categories, derived functors, and spectral sequences
Hochschild cohomology and cyclic cohomology are cohomology theories for algebras and provide invariants in noncommutative geometry
Related to the deformation theory of algebras and the study of algebraic K-theory
Advanced Topics and Current Research
Motivic cohomology is a cohomology theory for algebraic varieties that combines algebraic and topological information
Defined using algebraic cycles and related to the study of special values of L-functions and the Beilinson conjectures
Equivariant cohomology is a cohomology theory for spaces with group actions, taking into account the symmetries of the space
Defined using equivariant sheaves or the Borel construction, and related to the study of group actions and quotient spaces
Quantum cohomology is a deformation of the ordinary cohomology ring of a symplectic manifold, incorporating information from pseudoholomorphic curves
Plays a central role in mirror symmetry and the study of Gromov-Witten invariants
Nonabelian cohomology is a generalization of cohomology that allows for coefficients in nonabelian groups or groupoids
Arises in the study of gerbes, principal bundles, and higher gauge theory
Homotopy coherent cohomology theories are a framework for studying cohomology theories that are compatible with homotopy theory
Defined using ∞ \infty ∞ -categories and related to the study of spectra and stable homotopy theory
Persistent cohomology is a tool from applied algebraic topology that studies the evolution of cohomology classes across a filtration
Used in topological data analysis to study the shape and structure of data sets
Categorification of cohomology theories aims to lift cohomology groups to higher categorical structures, such as chain complexes or spectra
Provides a deeper understanding of the structure of cohomology and its relationship to other invariants