Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- An army of cohomology against residual finiteness
- On some questions concerning subnormally monomial groups
- A conjecture concerning the evaluation of products of class-sums of the symmetric group
- Automorphisms of Burnside rings
- On finite generation of unit groups for group rings
- Counting finite index subgroups
- The quantum double of a finite group and its role in conformal field theory
- Closure properties of supersoluble Fitting classes
- Groups acting on locally finite graphs - a survey of the infinitely ended case
- An invitation to computational group theory
- On subgroups, transversals and commutators
- Intervals in subgroup lattices of finite groups
- Amalgams of minimal local subgroups and sporadic simple groups
- Vanishing orbit sums in group algebras of p-groups
- From stable equivalences to Rickard equivalences for blocks with cyclic defect
- Factorizations in which the factors have relatively prime orders
- Some problems and results in the theory of pro-p groups
- On equations in finite groups and invariants of subgroups
- Group presentations where the relators are proper powers
- A condensing theorem
- Lie methods in group theory
- Some new results on arithmetical problems in the theory of finite groups
- Groups that admit partial power automorphisms
- Problems
From stable equivalences to Rickard equivalences for blocks with cyclic defect
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- An army of cohomology against residual finiteness
- On some questions concerning subnormally monomial groups
- A conjecture concerning the evaluation of products of class-sums of the symmetric group
- Automorphisms of Burnside rings
- On finite generation of unit groups for group rings
- Counting finite index subgroups
- The quantum double of a finite group and its role in conformal field theory
- Closure properties of supersoluble Fitting classes
- Groups acting on locally finite graphs - a survey of the infinitely ended case
- An invitation to computational group theory
- On subgroups, transversals and commutators
- Intervals in subgroup lattices of finite groups
- Amalgams of minimal local subgroups and sporadic simple groups
- Vanishing orbit sums in group algebras of p-groups
- From stable equivalences to Rickard equivalences for blocks with cyclic defect
- Factorizations in which the factors have relatively prime orders
- Some problems and results in the theory of pro-p groups
- On equations in finite groups and invariants of subgroups
- Group presentations where the relators are proper powers
- A condensing theorem
- Lie methods in group theory
- Some new results on arithmetical problems in the theory of finite groups
- Groups that admit partial power automorphisms
- Problems
Summary
Introduction
Let G and H be two finite groups, p a prime number. Let (O) be a complete discrete valuation ring with residue field k of characteristic p and with field of fractions K of characteristic 0, “big enough” for G and H. Let A and B be two blocks of G and H over O.
Let M be a (A ⊗ B°)-module, projective as A-module and as B-module, where B° denotes the opposite algebra of B. We denote by M* the (B ⊗ A°)- module Homo(M, O).
We say that M induces a stable equivalence between A and B if
M ⊗BM* ≅ A ⊗ projectives as (A ⊗ A°) – modules and
M* ⊗AM ≅ B ⊗ projectives as (B ⊗ B°) – modules.
Let C be a complex of (A ⊗ B°)-modules, all of which are projective as A-modules and as B°-modules.
Denoting by C* the O-dual of C, we say that C induces a Rickard equivalence between A and B if C ⊗BC* is homotopy equivalent to A as complexes of (A ⊗ A°)-modules and C* ⊗AC is homotopy equivalent to B as complexes of (B ⊗ B°)-modules.
By [Ri4, 5.5] j from a complex C inducing a Rickard equivalence between A and B, one can construct a module M inducing a stable equivalence between A and B as follows : In the derived bounded category of A ⊗ B°, the complex C is isomorphic to a complex with only one term which is not projective as (A ⊗ B°)-module, V in degree –n and then the n-th Heller translate (syzygy) M = Ωn(V) induces a stable equivalence between A and B.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Groups '93 Galway/St Andrews , pp. 512 - 523Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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