1 - An Informal Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 January 2010
Summary
“Sauter à pieds joints sur ces calculs; … telle est, suivant moi, la mission des géometres futurs; …”
E. GaloisIn the chapters that follow, we will consider, in detail, the algebra of spectral sequences and furthermore, how this formalism can be applied to a topological problem. The user, however, needs to get acquainted with the manipulation of these gadgets without the formidable issue of their origins. This chapter is something of a tool kit, filled with computation techniques that may be employed by the user in the application of spectral sequences to algebraic and topological problems. We take a loosely axiomatic stance and argue from definitions, with most spectral sequences in mind. As in the case of long exact sequences or homology theory, this viewpoint still makes for a substantial enterprise. The techniques developed in this chapter, though elementary, will appear again and again in what follows. The user, facing a computation in later chapters, will profit by returning to this collection of tools and tricks.
“There is a spectral sequence …”
Let us begin with a basic goal: We want to compute H* where H* is a graded R-module or a graded κ-vector space or a graded κ-algebra or … This H* may be the homology or cohomology of some space or some other graded algebraic invariant associated to a space or perhaps an invariant of some algebraic object like a group, a ring or a module; in any case, H* is often difficult to obtain. In order to proceed, we introduce some helpful conditions.
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- Information
- A User's Guide to Spectral Sequences , pp. 3 - 27Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000