Dual universal coefficient theorem: Difference between revisions
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{{quotation|A more detailed page on the same theorem, but from a purely algebraic perspective, is at [[Groupprops:Dual universal coefficient theorem]]}} | {{quotation|A more detailed page on the same theorem, but from a purely algebraic perspective, is at [[Groupprops:Dual universal coefficient theorem for group cohomology]]}} | ||
==Statement== | ==Statement== | ||
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==Related facts== | ==Related facts== | ||
* [[Universal | * [[Universal coefficient theorem for homology]] | ||
* [[Universal | * [[Universal coefficient theorem for cohomology]] | ||
* [[Kunneth formula for homology]] | * [[Kunneth formula for homology]] | ||
* [[Kunneth formula for cohomology]] | * [[Kunneth formula for cohomology]] | ||
Latest revision as of 22:44, 9 May 2015
A more detailed page on the same theorem, but from a purely algebraic perspective, is at Groupprops:Dual universal coefficient theorem for group cohomology
Statement
For coefficients in an abelian group
Suppose is a topological space and is an abelian group. The dual universal coefficients theorem relates the homology groups of with coefficients in and the cohomology groups of with coefficients in as follows:
First, for any , there is a natural short exact sequence of abelian groups:
Second, the sequence splits (not necessarily naturally), and we get:
For coefficients in the integers
This is the special case where . In this case, we case:
Related facts
- Universal coefficient theorem for homology
- Universal coefficient theorem for cohomology
- Kunneth formula for homology
- Kunneth formula for cohomology
Particular cases
Case of free abelian groups
In the case that is a free abelian group, we get:
Further, if is finitely generated, then, under these circumstances, is simply the torsion-free part of .
Note that this always applies to the case , because is a free abelian group of rank equal to the number of connected components. Thus, we get:
In particular, if is finitely generated, then is free abelian and equals the torsion-free part of .
In the case that both and are free abelian groups, and the latter has finite rank, we get: