group cohomology, nonabelian group cohomology, Lie group cohomology
cohomology with constant coefficients / with a local system of coefficients
differential cohomology
In algebraic topology, what are called the Steenrod squares is the system of cohomology operations on ordinary cohomology with coefficients in (the cyclic group of order 2) which is compatible with suspension (the “stable cohomology operations”). They are special examples of power operations.
The collection of Steenrod squares for all degrees forms the Steenrod algebra, see there for more.
We discuss the explicit construction of the Steenrod-operations in terms of chain maps of chain complexes of -vector spaces equipped with a suitable product. We follow (Lurie 07, lecture 2).
Write for the field with two elements.
For an -module, hence an -vector space, and for , write
for the homotopy quotient of the -fold tensor product of with itself by the action of the symmetric group. Explicitly this is presented, up to quasi-isomorphism by the ordinary coinvariants of the tensor product of with a free resolution of :
This is called the th extended power of .
For instance
where on the right we have the, say, singular cohomology cochain complex of the homotopy quotient , which is the homotopy type of the classifying space for .
is called a symmetric multiplication on (a shadow of an E-infinity algebra structure). The archetypical class of examples of these are given by the singular cohomology of any topological space , for instance of .
Therefore there is a canonical isomorphism
of the cochain cohomology of the extended square of the chain compplex concentrated on in degree with the singular homology of this classifying space shifted by .
Using this one gets for general and for each a map that sends an element in the th cochain cohomology
represented by a morphism of chain complexes
to the element
represented by the chain map
If moreover is equipped with a symmetric product as above, then one can further compose and form the element
represented by the chain map
This linear map
is called the th Steenrod operation or the th Steenrod square on . By default this is understood for the -singular cochain complex of some topological space , as in the above examples, in which case it has the form
For write for the classifying space of ordinary cohomology in degree with coefficients in the group of order 2 (the Eilenberg-MacLane space ), regarded as an object in the homotopy category of topological spaces).
Notice that for any topological space (CW-complex),
is the ordinary cohomology of in degree with coefficients in . Therefore, by the Yoneda lemma, natural transformations
correspond bijectively to morphisms .
The following characterization is due to (SteenrodEpstein).
The Steenrod squares are a collection of cohomology operations
hence of morphisms in the homotopy category
for all satisfying the following conditions:
for it is the identity;
if then ;
for the morphism is the cup product ;
;
An analogous definition works for coefficients in for any prime number . The corresponding operations are then usually denoted
Under composition, the Steenrod squares form an associative algebra over , called the Steenrod algebra. See there for more.
is the Bockstein homomorphism of the short exact sequence .
The Steenrod squares are compatible with the suspension isomorphism.
Therefore the Steenrod squares are often also referred to as the stable cohomology operations
See at Massey product, Relation to Steenrod squares
The composition of Steenrod square operations satisfies the following relations
for all .
Here if .
(Adem relation for postcomposition with the Bockstein homomorphism )
For and , the Adem relations (prop. ) say that:
This gives rise to:
For odd defines the integral Steenrod squares to be
By example and by this example these indeed are lifts of the odd Steenrod squares:
in that we have
For , a map of spheres, the Steenrod square
(on the homotopy cofiber )
is non-vanishing exactly for .
See at Hopf invariant one theorem.
The operations were first defined in
The axiomatic definition appears in
Lecture notes on Steenrod squares and the Steenrod algebra include
Jacob Lurie, 18.917 Topics in Algebraic Topology: The Sullivan Conjecture, Fall 2007. (MIT OpenCourseWare: Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Lecture notes
Lecture 2 Steenrod operations (pdf)
Lecture 3 Basic properties of Steenrod operations (pdf)
Lecture 4 The Adem relations (pdf)
Lecture 5 The Adem relations (cont.) (pdf)
See also
Wen-Tsun Wu, Sur les puissances de Steenrod, Colloque de Topologie de Strasbourg, IX, La Bibliothèque Nationale et Universitaire de Strasbourg, (1952)
Rocio Gonzalez-Diaz, Pedro Real, A Combinatorial Method for Computing Steenrod Squares, Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra 139 (1999) 89-108 (arXiv:math/0110308)
Discussion in homotopy type theory:
Last revised on January 17, 2023 at 05:54:31. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.