Stable module category

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In mathematics, especially representation theory, the stable module category is a category in which projectives are "factored out."

Definition

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Let R be a ring. For two modules M and N over R, define Hom_(M,N) to be the set of R-linear maps from M to N modulo the relation that f ~ g if f − g factors through a projective module. The stable module category is defined by setting the objects to be the R-modules, and the morphisms are the equivalence classes Hom_(M,N).

Given a module M, let P be a projective module with a surjection p:PM. Then set Ω(M) to be the kernel of p. Suppose we are given a morphism f:MN and a surjection q:QN where Q is projective. Then one can lift f to a map PQ which maps Ω(M) into Ω(N). This gives a well-defined functor Ω from the stable module category to itself.

For certain rings, such as Frobenius algebras, Ω is an equivalence of categories. In this case, the inverse Ω1 can be defined as follows. Given M, find an injective module I with an inclusion i:MI. Then Ω1(M) is defined to be the cokernel of i. A case of particular interest is when the ring R is a group algebra.

The functor Ω−1 can even be defined on the module category of a general ring (without factoring out projectives), as the cokernel of the injective envelope. It need not be true in this case that the functor Ω−1 is actually an inverse to Ω. One important property of the stable module category is it allows defining the Ω functor for general rings. When R is perfect (or M is finitely generated and R is semiperfect), then Ω(M) can be defined as the kernel of the projective cover, giving a functor on the module category. However, in general projective covers need not exist, and so passing to the stable module category is necessary.

Connections with cohomology

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Now we suppose that R = kG is a group algebra for some field k and some group G. One can show that there exist isomorphisms

Hom_(Ωn(M),N)ExtkGn(M,N)Hom_(M,Ωn(N))

for every positive integer n. The group cohomology of a representation M is given by Hn(G;M)=ExtkGn(k,M) where k has a trivial G-action, so in this way the stable module category gives a natural setting in which group cohomology lives.

Furthermore, the above isomorphism suggests defining cohomology groups for negative values of n, and in this way one recovers Tate cohomology.

Triangulated structure

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An exact sequence

0XEY0

in the usual module category defines an element of ExtkG1(Y,X), and hence an element of Hom_(Y,Ω1(X)), so that we get a sequence

XEYΩ1(X).

Taking Ω1 to be the translation functor and such sequences as above to be exact triangles, the stable module category becomes a triangulated category.

See also

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References

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  • J. F. Carlson, Lisa Townsley, Luis Valero-Elizondo, Mucheng Zhang, Cohomology Rings of Finite Groups, Springer-Verlag, 2003.