Products in algebraic topology
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In algebraic topology, several types of products are defined on homological and cohomological theories.
The cross product
[math]\displaystyle{ H_p(X) \otimes H_q(Y) \to H_{p+q}(X\times Y) }[/math]
The cap product
- [math]\displaystyle{ \frown\ : H_p(X;R)\times H^q(X;R) \rightarrow H_{p-q}(X;R) }[/math]
The slant product
- [math]\displaystyle{ \backslash\ : H_p(X;R)\times H^q(X\times Y;R) \rightarrow H^{q-p}(Y;R) }[/math]
The cup product
- [math]\displaystyle{ H^p(X) \otimes H^q(X) \to H^{p+q}(X) }[/math]
This product can be understood as induced by the exterior product of differential forms in de Rham cohomology. It makes the singular cohomology of a connected manifold into a unitary supercommutative ring.
See also
- Singular homology
- Differential graded algebra: the algebraic structure arising on the cochain level for the cup product
- Poincaré duality: swaps some of these
- Intersection theory: for a similar theory in algebraic geometry
References
- Hatcher, A., Algebraic Topology, Cambridge University Press (2002) ISBN:0-521-79540-0, especially chapter 3.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Products in algebraic topology.
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