Split exact sequence

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In mathematics, a split exact sequence is a short exact sequence in which the middle term is built out of the two outer terms in the simplest possible way.

Equivalent characterizations

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A short exact sequence of abelian groups or of modules over a fixed ring, or more generally of objects in an abelian category

0AaBbC0

is called split exact if it is isomorphic to the exact sequence where the middle term is the direct sum of the outer ones:

0AiACpC0

with i:AAC being the natural inclusion of A into the direct sum, and p:ACC denoting the natural projection of the direct sum onto the second summand. The requirement that the sequence is isomorphic means that there is an isomorphism f:BAC such that the composite fa is the natural inclusion i:AAC and such that the composite pf equals b. This can be summarized by a commutative diagram as:

The splitting lemma provides further equivalent characterizations of split exact sequences. The sequence

0AaBbC0

is split exact if and only if there exists r:CB such that br=1C, which is the case if and only if there exists s:BA such that sa=1A.

Examples

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A trivial example of a split short exact sequence is

0M1qM1M2pM20

where M1,M2 are R-modules, q is the canonical injection and p is the canonical projection.

Any short exact sequence of vector spaces is split exact. This is a rephrasing of the fact that any set of linearly independent vectors in a vector space can be extended to a basis.

The exact sequence 0𝐙2𝐙𝐙/2𝐙0 (where the first map is multiplication by 2) is not split exact.

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Pure exact sequences can be characterized as the filtered colimits of split exact sequences.[1]

Terminology in more general contexts

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In the context of short exact sequences of (not necessarily abelian) groups or in other settings, the term split exact sequence is used in two different ways by different people. Some people mean a short exact sequence that right-splits (thus corresponding to a semidirect product) and some people mean a short exact sequence that left-splits (which implies it right-splits, and corresponds to a direct product). When reading a book or paper, it is important to note precisely which of the two meanings is in use.

References

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  1. ^ Fuchs (2015, Ch. 5, Thm. 3.4)

Sources

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