homological theory
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henning Krause

Modern developments in representation theory rely heavily on homological methods. This book for advanced graduate students and researchers introduces these methods from their foundations up and discusses several landmark results that illustrate their power and beauty. Categorical foundations include abelian and derived categories, with an emphasis on localisation, spectra, and purity. The representation theoretic focus is on module categories of Artin algebras, with discussions of the representation theory of finite groups and finite quivers. Also covered are Gorenstein and quasi-hereditary algebras, including Schur algebras, which model polynomial representations of general linear groups, and the Morita theory of derived categories via tilting objects. The final part is devoted to a systematic introduction to the theory of purity for locally finitely presented categories, covering pure-injectives, definable subcategories, and Ziegler spectra. With its clear, detailed exposition of important topics in modern representation theory, many of which were unavailable in one volume until now, it deserves a place in every representation theorist's library.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-33
Author(s):  
Luis Gabriel Rodríguez-Valdés ◽  
Martha Lizbeth Shaid Sandoval-Miranda ◽  
Valente Santiago-Vargas
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Author(s):  
Jiaqun Wei

We show that a differential module is Gorenstein projective (injective, respectively) if and only if its underlying module is Gorenstein projective (injective, respectively). We then relate the Ringel–Zhang theorem on differential modules to the Avramov–Buchweitz–Iyengar notion of projective class of differential modules and prove that for a ring R there is a bijective correspondence between projectively stable objects of split differential modules of projective class not more than 1 and R-modules of projective dimension not more than 1, and this is given by the homology functor H and stable syzygy functor ΩD. The correspondence sends indecomposable objects to indecomposable objects. In particular, we obtain that for a hereditary ring R there is a bijective correspondence between objects of the projectively stable category of Gorenstein projective differential modules and the category of all R-modules given by the homology functor and the stable syzygy functor. This gives an extended version of the Ringel–Zhang theorem.


2013 ◽  
Vol 150 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
You Qi

AbstractWe develop some basic homological theory of hopfological algebra as defined by Khovanov [Hopfological algebra and categorification at a root of unity: the first steps, Preprint (2006), arXiv:math/0509083v2]. Several properties in hopfological algebra analogous to those of usual homological theory of DG algebras are obtained.


Author(s):  
Ofer Gabber ◽  
Lorenzo Ramero
Keyword(s):  

1998 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-145
Author(s):  
L. I. Pugach

The notion of projective Banach module was defined by Helemskii in [1]—the paper which properly founded the homological theory of Banach algebras. The same author introduced the definition of the (relatively) flat Banach module in [2]. Recently M. C. White [3] modified both of those definitions, introducing so called C-projective and C-flat Banach modules.


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