Universal coefficient theorem

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In algebraic topology, universal coefficient theorems establish relationships between homology groups (or cohomology groups) with different coefficients. For instance, for every topological space X, its integral homology groups:

Hi(X,)

completely determine its homology groups with coefficients in A, for any abelian group A:

Hi(X,A)

Here Hi might be the simplicial homology, or more generally the singular homology. The usual proof of this result is a pure piece of homological algebra about chain complexes of free abelian groups. The form of the result is that other coefficients A may be used, at the cost of using a Tor functor.

For example, it is common to take A to be /2, so that coefficients are modulo 2. This becomes straightforward in the absence of 2-torsion in the homology. Quite generally, the result indicates the relationship that holds between the Betti numbers bi of X and the Betti numbers bi,F with coefficients in a field F. These can differ, but only when the characteristic of F is a prime number p for which there is some p-torsion in the homology.

Statement of the homology case

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Consider the tensor product of modules Hi(X,)A. The theorem states there is a short exact sequence involving the Tor functor

0Hi(X,)AμHi(X,A)Tor1(Hi1(X,),A)0.

Furthermore, this sequence splits, though not naturally. Here μ is the map induced by the bilinear map Hi(X,)×AHi(X,A).

If the coefficient ring A is /p, this is a special case of the Bockstein spectral sequence.

Universal coefficient theorem for cohomology

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Let G be a module over a principal ideal domain R (for example , or any field.)

There is a universal coefficient theorem for cohomology involving the Ext functor, which asserts that there is a natural short exact sequence

0ExtR1(Hi1(X;R),G)Hi(X;G)hHomR(Hi(X;R),G)0.

As in the homology case, the sequence splits, though not naturally. In fact, suppose

Hi(X;G)=keriG/imi+1G,

and define

H*(X;G)=ker(Hom(,G))/im(Hom(,G)).

Then h above is the canonical map:

h([f])([x])=f(x).

An alternative point of view can be based on representing cohomology via Eilenberg–MacLane space, where the map h takes a homotopy class of maps XK(G,i) to the corresponding homomorphism induced in homology. Thus, the Eilenberg–MacLane space is a weak right adjoint to the homology functor.[1]

Example: mod 2 cohomology of the real projective space

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Let X=n, the real projective space. We compute the singular cohomology of X with coefficients in G=/2 using integral homology, i.e., R=.

Knowing that the integer homology is given by:

Hi(X;)={i=0 or i=n odd,/20<i<n, i odd,0otherwise.

We have Ext(G,G)=G and Ext(R,G)=0, so that the above exact sequences yield

Hi(X;G)=G

for all i=0,,n. In fact the total cohomology ring structure is

H*(X;G)=G[w]/wn+1.

Corollaries

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A special case of the theorem is computing integral cohomology. For a finite CW complex X, Hi(X,) is finitely generated, and so we have the following decomposition.

Hi(X;)βi(X)Ti,

where βi(X) are the Betti numbers of X and Ti is the torsion part of Hi. One may check that

Hom(Hi(X),)Hom(βi(X),)Hom(Ti,)βi(X),

and

Ext(Hi(X),)Ext(βi(X),)Ext(Ti,)Ti.

This gives the following statement for integral cohomology:

Hi(X;)βi(X)Ti1.

For X an orientable, closed, and connected n-manifold, this corollary coupled with Poincaré duality gives that βi(X)=βni(X).

Universal coefficient spectral sequence

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There is a generalization of the universal coefficient theorem for (co)homology with twisted coefficients.

For cohomology we have

E2p,q=ExtRq(Hp(C*),G)Hp+q(C*;G),

where R is a ring with unit, C* is a chain complex of free modules over R, G is any (R,S)-bimodule for some ring with a unit S, and Ext is the Ext group. The differential dr has degree (1r,r).

Similarly for homology,

Ep,q2=TorqR(Hp(C*),G)H*(C*;G),

for Tor the Tor group and the differential dr having degree (r1,r).

Notes

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References

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  • Allen Hatcher, Algebraic Topology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2002. Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).. A modern, geometrically flavored introduction to algebraic topology. The book is available free in PDF and PostScript formats on the author's homepage.
  • Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  • Jerome Levine. “Knot Modules. I.” Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 229 (1977): 1–50. https://doi.org/10.2307/1998498
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