Questions tagged [group-cohomology]

In mathematics, group cohomology is a set of mathematical tools used to study groups using cohomology theory, a technique from algebraic topology. Analogous to group representations, group cohomology looks at the group actions of a group G in an associated G-module M to elucidate the properties of the group.

In mathematics, group cohomology is a set of mathematical tools used to study groups using cohomology theory, a technique from algebraic topology. Analogous to group representations, group cohomology looks at the group actions of a group G in an associated G-module M to elucidate the properties of the group. By treating the G-module as a kind of topological space with elements of $G^{n}$ representing n-simplices, topological properties of the space may be computed, such as the set of cohomology groups $H^{n}(G,M)$. The cohomology groups in turn provide insight into the structure of the group G and G-module M themselves. Group cohomology plays a role in the investigation of fixed points of a group action in a module or space and the quotient module or space with respect to a group action. Group cohomology is used in the fields of abstract algebra, homological algebra, algebraic topology and algebraic number theory, as well as in applications to group theory proper. As in algebraic topology, there is a dual theory called group homology. The techniques of group cohomology can also be extended to the case that instead of a G-module, G acts on a nonabelian G-group; in effect, a generalization of a module to non-Abelian coefficients.

871 questions
15
votes
1 answer

Shapiro's lemma in the language of group extensions

I am trying to understand Shapiro's lemma for $H^2$ in the concrete language of extensions of finite groups. Let $H$ be a subgroup of a finite group $G$, and let $A$ be an $H$-module. Let ${\rm Ind}_G^H(A)$ be the induced module (see Serre, Galois…
user05811
  • 749
  • 4
  • 12
15
votes
2 answers

Universal coefficient theorem for group homology and cohomology

I've been looking for any kind of universal coefficient theorem for group homology and cohomology, including dual universal coefficient theorems. However, the only things I can find are ones where the group action on the coefficients is trivial. As…
user44191
  • 4,961
12
votes
1 answer

Example of group cohomology not annihilated by exponent of $G$?

Is there an example of a finite group $G$ and an action on $M=\mathbb{Z}^n$ such that $H^2(G,M)$ has exponent greater than the exponent of $G$? (Especially, can we have $G=\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}\oplus\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$ and some free…
user39380
11
votes
4 answers

Examples of Tate cohomology rings

If $G$ is a finite group with periodic cohomology then the Tate cohomology ring can be easily computed to be the localization $\hat{H}^\ast(G,\mathbb{Z}) = H^\ast(G,\mathbb{Z})_{(z)}$ where $z$ is a unit of minimal positive degree. Examples are…
tj_
  • 2,170
10
votes
1 answer

Second cohomology of group of $S_n$

Hello, Let $k$ be a field of characteristic different from $2$. Let $n\geq 1$ be an integer, and let $T$ be the maximal torus of the $k$-algebraic group $PGL_n$, namely the quotient of diagonal matrices by the diagonal action of…
GreginGre
  • 101
9
votes
2 answers

Coboundary Representations for Trivial Cup Products

Suppose $G$ is a pro-$p$-group, $p$ odd, and $\mathbb{F}_p$ is given the trivial $G$-action. By skew-symmetry of the cup-product in degree 1, given $\chi\in H^1(G,\mathbb{F}_p)$, we have $\chi\cup\chi=0\in H^2(G,\mathbb{F}_p)$. In fact, in this…
Cam McLeman
  • 8,417
7
votes
1 answer

Exponent of the cohomology of a product of groups

Suppose $G$, $H$ are finite groups and $M$ is a module over $G\times H$. Question: Is the exponent of $H^i(G\times H,M)$ a divisor of $lcm(|G|,|H|)$ for $i> 0$ ? The Künneth formula answers the question affirmatively if $M$ is trivial or, more…
Demin Hu
  • 569
6
votes
1 answer

Cohomology $H^*(G,K)$ of wreath products

Let $G = Sym(a) \wr Sym(b)$ be a wreath product of symmetric groups - I'm particularly interested in the Weyl group of type $B$, $Sym(2) \wr Sym(n)$. Let $k$ be a field of characteristic $p$. What is $H^*(G,k)$? If $i \leq p-3$ and we're in the…
Chris Bowman
  • 1,191
6
votes
2 answers

Question about computing group cohomology using cochains

In Milne's notes on Class Field Theory (http://www.jmilne.org/math/CourseNotes/CFT.pdf), he initially defines group cohomology in terms of injective resolutions, then he talks about computing cohomology using cochains. I don't see him mention…
David Corwin
  • 15,078
6
votes
1 answer

Mod-p cohomology of $GL(n,p^d)$

In the classic paper On the Cohomology and K-Theory of the General Linear Groups Over a Finite Field, Quillen proved (Theorem 6): $H^i(GL(n,p^d),\mathbb{F}_p)=0$ for $0 < i < d(p-1)$ and all $n$. On the other hand, the cohomology of a finite…
Demin Hu
  • 569
5
votes
1 answer

Annulators for minimal primes in group cohomology

Let $G$ be a finite group and $p$ be an odd prime. It's known by work of Quillen that the minimal primes of $H^{2\ast}(G;\mathbb{F}_p)$ are in one-to-one correspondence with the maximal elementary abelian p-subgroups of $G$. Explicitely, if $E \le…
Ralph
  • 16,114
5
votes
2 answers

Group cohomology of Q/Z

What is the group cohomology $H^{d}(\mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z}, \mathbb{Z})$ with trivial action? Can it be computed succinctly using the short exact sequence $0 \to \mathbb{Z} \to \mathbb{Q} \to \mathbb{Q}/\mathbb{Z} \to 0$?
qspt
  • 61
  • 4
5
votes
1 answer

Explicit formula for Bockstein hom in group cohomology of elementary abelian p-groups

Suppose $G$ is an elementary abelian $p$-group of rank n (for simplicity we can assume n=1). Denote by $\beta$ the well-known Bockstein boundary map from $H^1(G,\mathbb F_p)$ to $H^2(G,\mathbb F_p)$. I am looking for an explicit formula for…
4
votes
0 answers

Second cohomology group

Dear Forum, Let A be an associative division algebra (i.e. a skew field), G a subgroup of the multiplicative group of A and E an extension of the additive group A+ of A by G such that G acts on A+ by multiplication in A. Is it true that E always…
4
votes
0 answers

On restriction to centralizers of all elements in group cohomology

If $G$ is a finite group, what do we know of the natural «restriction» map $$H^\bullet(G,\mathbb Z)\to\left(\bigoplus_{g\in G}H^\bullet(Z(g),\mathbb Z)\right)^G,$$ with $Z(g) $ the centralizer of $g $. In particular, can we describe the kernel and…
1
2 3