group cohomology, nonabelian group cohomology, Lie group cohomology
cohomology with constant coefficients / with a local system of coefficients
differential cohomology
(2,1)-quasitopos?
structures in a cohesive (∞,1)-topos
Recall from the discussion at cohomology that every notion of cohomology (e.g. group cohomology, abelian sheaf cohomology, etc) is given by Hom-spaces in an (∞,1)-topos . Cohomology on an object with coefficients in an object is
The cup product is an operation on cocycles with coefficients and that is induced from a pairing of coefficients given by some morphism
in . In applications this is often a pairing operation with , i.e. , and typically it is the product morphism for a ring object structure on the coefficients . (See at multiplicative cohomology theory).
If and are two cocycles in and , respectively, then their cup product with respect to this pairing is the cocycle
in obtained by combining the pairing with precomposition by the diagonal map .
When the coefficient object ∞Grpd is “sufficiently abelian” in that under the Dold-Kan correspondence it is represented by a chain complex then using the lax monoidalness of the Dold-Kan correspondence (see at monoidal Dold-Kan correspondence) one obtains a chain complex model for the cup product which makes the origin of the typical grading shift manifest.
Write
for the category of chain complexes of abelian groups, in non-negative degrees;, regarded as a symmetric monoidal category with the standard tensor product of chain complexes ;
for the category of simplicial abelian groups, regarded as a symmetric monoidal category with the degreewise tensor product of abelian groups;
for the forgetful functor to the underlying simplicial sets (which happens to land in Kan complexes);
for the equivalence of categories given by the Dold-Kan correspondence;
for the composite.
Now:
is a lax monoidal functor, the lax monoidal structure being induced dually by the Alexander-Whitney map;
is a strong monoidal functor;
for the tensor product of abelian groups there are canonical natural bilinear maps of underlying sets
Using all this, then for
a given chain map, this induces a map of the corresponding Kan complexes
as the following composite
With this in hand then for any homotopy type, the cup product on its cohomology with coefficients in and is induced by just homming into this morphism:
For example if
is the chain complex concentrated in degree and , respectively, on the group of integers, then
is the corresponding Eilenberg-MacLane space which classifies ordinary cohomology (singular cohomology) with integral coefficients in the given degree. By the nature of the tensor product of chain complexes one has
Hence we may take and and we get a cup product
For any cosimplicial algebra, its dual Moore cochain complex naturally inherits the structure of a dg-algebra under the cup product.
The general formula is literally the same as that for the case where is functions on the singular complex of a space, which is discussed below. For the moment, see below.
This cup product operation on is not in general commutative. However, it is a standard fact that it becomes commutative after passing to cochain cohomology.
This suggests that the cup product should be, while not commutative, homotopy commutative in that it makes a homotopy commutative monoid object.
This in turn should mean that is an algebra over an operad for the E-∞ operad.
That this is indeed the case is the main statement in (Berger-Fresse 01)
A special case of the cup product on Moore complexes is the complex of singular cohomology, which is the Moore complex of the cosimplicial algebra of functions on the singular simplicial set of a topological space.
Often in the literature by cup product is meant specifically the realization of the cup product on singular cohomology.
For a topological space, let be the simplicial set of -simplices in – the fundamental ∞-groupoid of .
For some ring, let be the cosimplicial ring of -valued functions on the spaces of -simplices. The corresponding Moore cochain complex is the cochain complex whose cochain cohomology is the singular cohomology of the space : a homogeneous element is a function on -simplices in .
Write, as usual, for , for the totally ordered set with elements. For an injective order preserving map and some cosimplicial object, write for the image of this map under .
Specifically, for let be the map that sends to and let be the map that sends to .
Then the cup product
is the cochain map that on homogeneous elements is defined by the formula
There is some glue missing here to connect this back to the above general definition, something involving the Eilenberg-Zilber map.
This means that .
This cup product enjoys the following properties:
it is indeed a cochain complex morphism as claimed, in that it respects the differential: for any homogeneous as above we have
the image of the cup product on cochain cohomology
is associative and distributes over the addition in .
Accordingly, the cup product makes into a ring: the cohomology ring on the ordinary cohomology of .
See for instance section 3.2 of
For the cup product in multiplicative Whitehead-generalized cohomology theories is defined by the same recipe of “cocycles pre-composed by diagonal and post-composed by product operation”, one just has to observe that symmetric smash-?monoidal diagonals on suspension spectra
do exists. This is discussed at suspension spectrum – Smash-monoidal diagonalspectrum#SmashMonoidalDiagonals).
With this, given a Whitehead-generalized cohomology theory represented by a ring spectrum
the smash-monoidal diagonal structure (1) on suspension spectra serves to define the cup product in the corresponding multiplicative cohomology theory structure by:
Traditionally the cup product is considered for abelian cohomology, such as generalized (Eilenberg-Steenrod) cohomology and more generally abelian sheaf cohomology.
In that case all coefficient objects are complexes of sheaves and the pairing that one usually considers is the tensor product of chain complexes
where
with differential
The cup product has a simple expression in abelian ?ech cohomology.
For and two chain complexes (of sheaves of abelian groups) construct a morphism of Čech complexes
by sending and to
For instance (Brylinski, section (1.3)) spring
For the case that of Čech hypercohomology with coefficients in Deligne complexes the above yields the Beilinson-Deligne cup-product for ordinary differential cohomology.
Euler class takes Whitney sum to cup product, see this Prop.
Frank Adams, part III, sections 2 and 3 of Stable homotopy and generalised homology, 1974
Peter May, 18.3 and 22.3 of A concise course in algebraic topology (pdf)
The cup product in Čech cohomology is discussed for instance in section 1.3 of
Recall from the discussion at models for ∞-stack (∞,1)-toposes that all hypercomplete ∞-stack (∞,1)-toposes are modeled by the model structure on simplicial presheaves. Accordingly understanding the cup product on simplicial presheaves goes a long way towards the most general description. For a bit of discussion of this see around page 19 of
An early treatment of cup product can be found in this classic
See also
Last revised on November 24, 2024 at 06:00:02. See the history of this page for a list of all contributions to it.