Standard complex
In mathematics, the standard complex, also called standard resolution, bar resolution, bar complex, bar construction, is a way of constructing resolutions in homological algebra. It was first introduced for the special case of algebras over a commutative ring by Eilenberg & Mac Lane (1953) and Cartan & Eilenberg (1956, IX.6) and has since been generalized in many ways.
The name "bar complex" comes from the fact that Eilenberg & Mac Lane (1953) used a vertical bar | as a shortened form of the tensor product ⊗ in their notation for the complex.
Definition
If A is an associative algebra over a field K, the standard complex is
with the differential given by
If A is a unital K-algebra, the standard complex is exact. is a free A-bimodule resolution of the A-bimodule A.
Normalized standard complex
The normalized (or reduced) standard complex replaces A⊗A⊗...⊗A⊗A with A⊗(A/K)⊗...⊗(A/K)⊗A.
See also
References
- Cartan, Henri; Eilenberg, Samuel (1956), Homological algebra, Princeton Mathematical Series, 19, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-04991-5, MR 0077480
- Eilenberg, Samuel; Mac Lane, Saunders (1953), "On the groups of H(Π,n). I", Annals of Mathematics. Second Series, 58: 55–106, ISSN 0003-486X, JSTOR 1969820, MR 0056295
- Ginzburg, Victor (2005). "Lectures on Noncommutative Geometry". arXiv:math.AG/0506603.