Welcome to destall.com on January 8 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Tor functor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

In higher mathematics, the Tor functors of homological algebra are the derived functors of the tensor product functor. They were first defined in generality to express the Künneth theorem and universal coefficient theorem in algebraic topology.[citation needed]

Specifically, suppose R is a ring, and denote by R-Mod the category of left R-modules and by Mod-R the category of right R-modules (if R is commutative, the two categories coincide). Pick a fixed module B in R-Mod. For A in Mod-R, set T(A) = ARB. Then T is a right exact functor from Mod-R to the category of abelian groups Ab (in case R is commutative, it is a right exact functor from Mod-R to Mod-R) and its left derived functors LnT are defined. We set

\mathrm{Tor}_n^R(A,B)=(L_nT)(A)

i.e., we take a projective resolution

\cdots\rightarrow P_3 \rightarrow P_2 \rightarrow P_1 \rightarrow A\rightarrow 0

then chop off the last term A and tensor it with B to get the complex

\cdots \rightarrow P_3\otimes B \rightarrow P_2\otimes B \rightarrow P_1\otimes B \rightarrow 0

and take the homology of this complex.

[edit] Properties

  • For every n ≥ 1, TornR is an additive functor from Mod-R × R-Mod to Ab. In case R is commutative, we have additive functors from Mod-R × Mod-R to Mod-R.
0\rightarrow K\rightarrow L\rightarrow M\rightarrow 0

induces a long exact sequence of the form

\cdots\rightarrow\mathrm{Tor}_2^R(M,B)\rightarrow\mathrm{Tor}_1^R(K,B)\rightarrow\mathrm{Tor}_1^R(L,B)\rightarrow\mathrm{Tor}_1^R(M,B)\rightarrow K\otimes B\rightarrow L\otimes B\rightarrow M\otimes B\rightarrow 0.
\mathrm{Tor}_1^R(R/(r),B)=\{b\in B:rb=0\},

from which the terminology Tor (that is, Torsion) comes: see torsion subgroup.

  • In the case of abelian groups (i.e. if R is the ring of integers Z), then TornZ(A,B) = 0 for all n ≥ 2. The reason: every abelian group A has a free resolution of length 2, since subgroups of free abelian groups are free abelian. So in this important special case, the higher Tor functors are invisible. In addition, Tor1Z(Zk,A) = Ker(f) where f represents "multiplication by k". By the universal theorem of finitely generated abelian groups, this is sufficient information to calculate Tor of any two finitely generated abelian groups.
\mathrm{Tor}_n^R(\oplus_i A_i, \oplus_j B_j) \simeq \oplus_i \oplus_j \mathrm{Tor}_n^R(A_i,B_j).
  • A module M in Mod-R is flat if and only if Tor1R(M, -) = 0. In this case, we even have TornR(M, -) = 0 for all n. In fact, to compute TornR(A, B), one may use a flat resolution of A or B, instead of a projective resolution (note that a projective resolution is automatically a flat resolution, but the converse isn't true, so allowing flat resolutions is more flexible).

[edit] References

Personal tools
Languages

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs