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K-theory

In mathematics, K-theory is, roughly speaking, the study of a ring generated by vector bundles over a topological space or scheme. In algebraic topology, it is a cohomology theory known as topological K-theory. In algebra and algebraic geometry, it is referred to as algebraic K-theory. It is also a fundamental tool in the field of operator algebras. It can be seen as the study of certain kinds of invariants of large matrices.[1]

K-theory involves the construction of families of K-functors that map from topological spaces or schemes to associated rings; these rings reflect some aspects of the structure of the original spaces or schemes. As with functors to groups in algebraic topology, the reason for this functorial mapping is that it is easier to compute some topological properties from the mapped rings than from the original spaces or schemes. Examples of results gleaned from the K-theory approach include the Grothendieck–Riemann–Roch theorem, Bott periodicity, the Atiyah–Singer index theorem, and the Adams operations.

In high energy physics, K-theory and in particular twisted K-theory have appeared in Type II string theory where it has been conjectured that they classify D-branes, Ramond–Ramond field strengths and also certain spinors on generalized complex manifolds. In condensed matter physics K-theory has been used to classify topological insulators, superconductors and stable Fermi surfaces. For more details, see K-theory (physics).

Grothendieck completion edit

The Grothendieck completion of an abelian monoid into an abelian group is a necessary ingredient for defining K-theory since all definitions start by constructing an abelian monoid from a suitable category and turning it into an abelian group through this universal construction. Given an abelian monoid   let   be the relation on   defined by

 

if there exists a   such that   Then, the set   has the structure of a group   where:

 

Equivalence classes in this group should be thought of as formal differences of elements in the abelian monoid. This group   is also associated with a monoid homomorphism   given by   which has a certain universal property.

To get a better understanding of this group, consider some equivalence classes of the abelian monoid  . Here we will denote the identity element of   by   so that   will be the identity element of   First,   for any   since we can set   and apply the equation from the equivalence relation to get   This implies

 

hence we have an additive inverse for each element in  . This should give us the hint that we should be thinking of the equivalence classes   as formal differences   Another useful observation is the invariance of equivalence classes under scaling:

  for any  

The Grothendieck completion can be viewed as a functor   and it has the property that it is left adjoint to the corresponding forgetful functor   That means that, given a morphism   of an abelian monoid   to the underlying abelian monoid of an abelian group   there exists a unique abelian group morphism  

Example for natural numbers edit

An illustrative example to look at is the Grothendieck completion of  . We can see that   For any pair   we can find a minimal representative   by using the invariance under scaling. For example, we can see from the scaling invariance that

 

In general, if   then

  which is of the form   or  

This shows that we should think of the   as positive integers and the   as negative integers.

Definitions edit

There are a number of basic definitions of K-theory: two coming from topology and two from algebraic geometry.

Grothendieck group for compact Hausdorff spaces edit

Given a compact Hausdorff space   consider the set of isomorphism classes of finite-dimensional vector bundles over  , denoted   and let the isomorphism class of a vector bundle   be denoted  . Since isomorphism classes of vector bundles behave well with respect to direct sums, we can write these operations on isomorphism classes by

 

It should be clear that   is an abelian monoid where the unit is given by the trivial vector bundle  . We can then apply the Grothendieck completion to get an abelian group from this abelian monoid. This is called the K-theory of   and is denoted  .

We can use the Serre–Swan theorem and some algebra to get an alternative description of vector bundles over the ring of continuous complex-valued functions   as projective modules. Then, these can be identified with idempotent matrices in some ring of matrices  . We can define equivalence classes of idempotent matrices and form an abelian monoid  . Its Grothendieck completion is also called  . One of the main techniques for computing the Grothendieck group for topological spaces comes from the Atiyah–Hirzebruch spectral sequence, which makes it very accessible. The only required computations for understanding the spectral sequences are computing the group   for the spheres  .[2]pg 51-110

Grothendieck group of vector bundles in algebraic geometry edit

There is an analogous construction by considering vector bundles in algebraic geometry. For a Noetherian scheme   there is a set   of all isomorphism classes of algebraic vector bundles on  . Then, as before, the direct sum   of isomorphisms classes of vector bundles is well-defined, giving an abelian monoid  . Then, the Grothendieck group   is defined by the application of the Grothendieck construction on this abelian monoid.

Grothendieck group of coherent sheaves in algebraic geometry edit

In algebraic geometry, the same construction can be applied to algebraic vector bundles over a smooth scheme. But, there is an alternative construction for any Noetherian scheme  . If we look at the isomorphism classes of coherent sheaves   we can mod out by the relation   if there is a short exact sequence

 

This gives the Grothendieck-group   which is isomorphic to   if   is smooth. The group   is special because there is also a ring structure: we define it as

 

Using the Grothendieck–Riemann–Roch theorem, we have that

 

is an isomorphism of rings. Hence we can use   for intersection theory.[3]

Early history edit

The subject can be said to begin with Alexander Grothendieck (1957), who used it to formulate his Grothendieck–Riemann–Roch theorem. It takes its name from the German Klasse, meaning "class".[4] Grothendieck needed to work with coherent sheaves on an algebraic variety X. Rather than working directly with the sheaves, he defined a group using isomorphism classes of sheaves as generators of the group, subject to a relation that identifies any extension of two sheaves with their sum. The resulting group is called K(X) when only locally free sheaves are used, or G(X) when all are coherent sheaves. Either of these two constructions is referred to as the Grothendieck group; K(X) has cohomological behavior and G(X) has homological behavior.

If X is a smooth variety, the two groups are the same. If it is a smooth affine variety, then all extensions of locally free sheaves split, so the group has an alternative definition.

In topology, by applying the same construction to vector bundles, Michael Atiyah and Friedrich Hirzebruch defined K(X) for a topological space X in 1959, and using the Bott periodicity theorem they made it the basis of an extraordinary cohomology theory. It played a major role in the second proof of the Atiyah–Singer index theorem (circa 1962). Furthermore, this approach led to a noncommutative K-theory for C*-algebras.

Already in 1955, Jean-Pierre Serre had used the analogy of vector bundles with projective modules to formulate Serre's conjecture, which states that every finitely generated projective module over a polynomial ring is free; this assertion is correct, but was not settled until 20 years later. (Swan's theorem is another aspect of this analogy.)

Developments edit

The other historical origin of algebraic K-theory was the work of J. H. C. Whitehead and others on what later became known as Whitehead torsion.

There followed a period in which there were various partial definitions of higher K-theory functors. Finally, two useful and equivalent definitions were given by Daniel Quillen using homotopy theory in 1969 and 1972. A variant was also given by Friedhelm Waldhausen in order to study the algebraic K-theory of spaces, which is related to the study of pseudo-isotopies. Much modern research on higher K-theory is related to algebraic geometry and the study of motivic cohomology.

The corresponding constructions involving an auxiliary quadratic form received the general name L-theory. It is a major tool of surgery theory.

In string theory, the K-theory classification of Ramond–Ramond field strengths and the charges of stable D-branes was first proposed in 1997.[5]

Examples and properties edit

K0 of a field edit

The easiest example of the Grothendieck group is the Grothendieck group of a point   for a field  . Since a vector bundle over this space is just a finite dimensional vector space, which is a free object in the category of coherent sheaves, hence projective, the monoid of isomorphism classes is   corresponding to the dimension of the vector space. It is an easy exercise to show that the Grothendieck group is then  .

K0 of an Artinian algebra over a field edit

One important property of the Grothendieck group of a Noetherian scheme   is that it is invariant under reduction, hence  .[6] Hence the Grothendieck group of any Artinian  -algebra is a direct sum of copies of  , one for each connected component of its spectrum. For example,

 

K0 of projective space edit

One of the most commonly used computations of the Grothendieck group is with the computation of   for projective space over a field. This is because the intersection numbers of a projective   can be computed by embedding   and using the push pull formula  . This makes it possible to do concrete calculations with elements in   without having to explicitly know its structure since[7]

 
One technique for determining the Grothendieck group of   comes from its stratification as
 
since the Grothendieck group of coherent sheaves on affine spaces are isomorphic to  , and the intersection of   is generically
 
for  .

K0 of a projective bundle edit

Another important formula for the Grothendieck group is the projective bundle formula:[8] given a rank r vector bundle   over a Noetherian scheme  , the Grothendieck group of the projective bundle   is a free  -module of rank r with basis  . This formula allows one to compute the Grothendieck group of  . This make it possible to compute the   or Hirzebruch surfaces. In addition, this can be used to compute the Grothendieck group   by observing it is a projective bundle over the field  .

K0 of singular spaces and spaces with isolated quotient singularities edit

One recent technique for computing the Grothendieck group of spaces with minor singularities comes from evaluating the difference between   and  , which comes from the fact every vector bundle can be equivalently described as a coherent sheaf. This is done using the Grothendieck group of the Singularity category  [9][10] from derived noncommutative algebraic geometry. It gives a long exact sequence starting with

 
where the higher terms come from higher K-theory. Note that vector bundles on a singular   are given by vector bundles   on the smooth locus  . This makes it possible to compute the Grothendieck group on weighted projective spaces since they typically have isolated quotient singularities. In particular, if these singularities have isotropy groups   then the map
 
is injective and the cokernel is annihilated by   for  .[10]pg 3

K0 of a smooth projective curve edit

For a smooth projective curve   the Grothendieck group is

 
for Picard group of  . This follows from the Brown-Gersten-Quillen spectral sequence[11]pg 72 of algebraic K-theory. For a regular scheme of finite type over a field, there is a convergent spectral sequence
 
for   the set of codimension   points, meaning the set of subschemes   of codimension  , and   the algebraic function field of the subscheme. This spectral sequence has the property[11]pg 80
 
for the Chow ring of  , essentially giving the computation of  . Note that because   has no codimension   points, the only nontrivial parts of the spectral sequence are  , hence
 
The coniveau filtration can then be used to determine   as the desired explicit direct sum since it gives an exact sequence
 
where the left hand term is isomorphic to   and the right hand term is isomorphic to  . Since  , we have the sequence of abelian groups above splits, giving the isomorphism. Note that if   is a smooth projective curve of genus   over  , then
 
Moreover, the techniques above using the derived category of singularities for isolated singularities can be extended to isolated Cohen-Macaulay singularities, giving techniques for computing the Grothendieck group of any singular algebraic curve. This is because reduction gives a generically smooth curve, and all singularities are Cohen-Macaulay.

Applications edit

Virtual bundles edit

One useful application of the Grothendieck-group is to define virtual vector bundles. For example, if we have an embedding of smooth spaces   then there is a short exact sequence

 

where   is the conormal bundle of   in  . If we have a singular space   embedded into a smooth space   we define the virtual conormal bundle as

 

Another useful application of virtual bundles is with the definition of a virtual tangent bundle of an intersection of spaces: Let   be projective subvarieties of a smooth projective variety. Then, we can define the virtual tangent bundle of their intersection   as

 

Kontsevich uses this construction in one of his papers.[12]

Chern characters edit

Chern classes can be used to construct a homomorphism of rings from the topological K-theory of a space to (the completion of) its rational cohomology. For a line bundle L, the Chern character ch is defined by

 

More generally, if   is a direct sum of line bundles, with first Chern classes   the Chern character is defined additively

 

The Chern character is useful in part because it facilitates the computation of the Chern class of a tensor product. The Chern character is used in the Hirzebruch–Riemann–Roch theorem.

Equivariant K-theory edit

The equivariant algebraic K-theory is an algebraic K-theory associated to the category   of equivariant coherent sheaves on an algebraic scheme   with action of a linear algebraic group  , via Quillen's Q-construction; thus, by definition,

 

In particular,   is the Grothendieck group of  . The theory was developed by R. W. Thomason in 1980s.[13] Specifically, he proved equivariant analogs of fundamental theorems such as the localization theorem.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Atiyah, Michael (2000). "K-Theory Past and Present". arXiv:math/0012213.
  2. ^ Park, Efton. (2008). Complex topological K-theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-511-38869-9. OCLC 227161674.
  3. ^ Grothendieck. "SGA 6 - Formalisme des intersections sur les schema algebriques propres".
  4. ^ Karoubi, 2006
  5. ^ by Ruben Minasian (http://string.lpthe.jussieu.fr/members.pl?key=7), and Gregory Moore in K-theory and Ramond–Ramond Charge.
  6. ^ "Grothendieck group for projective space over the dual numbers". mathoverflow.net. Retrieved 2017-04-16.
  7. ^ "kt.k theory and homology - Grothendieck group for projective space over the dual numbers". MathOverflow. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  8. ^ Manin, Yuri I (1969-01-01). "Lectures on the K-functor in algebraic geometry". Russian Mathematical Surveys. 24 (5): 1–89. Bibcode:1969RuMaS..24....1M. doi:10.1070/rm1969v024n05abeh001357. ISSN 0036-0279.
  9. ^ "ag.algebraic geometry - Is the algebraic Grothendieck group of a weighted projective space finitely generated ?". MathOverflow. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  10. ^ a b Pavic, Nebojsa; Shinder, Evgeny (2021). "K-theory and the singularity category of quotient singularities". Annals of K-Theory. 6 (3): 381–424. arXiv:1809.10919. doi:10.2140/akt.2021.6.381. S2CID 85502709.
  11. ^ a b Srinivas, V. (1991). Algebraic K-theory. Boston: Birkhäuser. ISBN 978-1-4899-6735-0. OCLC 624583210.
  12. ^ Kontsevich, Maxim (1995), "Enumeration of rational curves via torus actions", The moduli space of curves (Texel Island, 1994), Progress in Mathematics, vol. 129, Boston, MA: Birkhäuser Boston, pp. 335–368, arXiv:hep-th/9405035, MR 1363062
  13. ^ Charles A. Weibel, Robert W. Thomason (1952–1995).

References edit

External links edit

  • Grothendieck-Riemann-Roch
  • Max Karoubi's Page
  • K-theory preprint archive

theory, group, theory, mathematics, roughly, speaking, study, ring, generated, vector, bundles, over, topological, space, scheme, algebraic, topology, cohomology, theory, known, topological, algebra, algebraic, geometry, referred, algebraic, also, fundamental,. For the hip hop group see K Theory In mathematics K theory is roughly speaking the study of a ring generated by vector bundles over a topological space or scheme In algebraic topology it is a cohomology theory known as topological K theory In algebra and algebraic geometry it is referred to as algebraic K theory It is also a fundamental tool in the field of operator algebras It can be seen as the study of certain kinds of invariants of large matrices 1 K theory involves the construction of families of K functors that map from topological spaces or schemes to associated rings these rings reflect some aspects of the structure of the original spaces or schemes As with functors to groups in algebraic topology the reason for this functorial mapping is that it is easier to compute some topological properties from the mapped rings than from the original spaces or schemes Examples of results gleaned from the K theory approach include the Grothendieck Riemann Roch theorem Bott periodicity the Atiyah Singer index theorem and the Adams operations In high energy physics K theory and in particular twisted K theory have appeared in Type II string theory where it has been conjectured that they classify D branes Ramond Ramond field strengths and also certain spinors on generalized complex manifolds In condensed matter physics K theory has been used to classify topological insulators superconductors and stable Fermi surfaces For more details see K theory physics Contents 1 Grothendieck completion 1 1 Example for natural numbers 2 Definitions 2 1 Grothendieck group for compact Hausdorff spaces 2 2 Grothendieck group of vector bundles in algebraic geometry 2 3 Grothendieck group of coherent sheaves in algebraic geometry 3 Early history 4 Developments 5 Examples and properties 5 1 K0 of a field 5 2 K0 of an Artinian algebra over a field 5 3 K0 of projective space 5 4 K0 of a projective bundle 5 5 K0 of singular spaces and spaces with isolated quotient singularities 5 6 K0 of a smooth projective curve 6 Applications 6 1 Virtual bundles 6 2 Chern characters 7 Equivariant K theory 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksGrothendieck completion editMain article Grothendieck group The Grothendieck completion of an abelian monoid into an abelian group is a necessary ingredient for defining K theory since all definitions start by constructing an abelian monoid from a suitable category and turning it into an abelian group through this universal construction Given an abelian monoid A displaystyle A nbsp let displaystyle sim nbsp be the relation on A 2 A A displaystyle A 2 A times A nbsp defined by a 1 a 2 b 1 b 2 displaystyle a 1 a 2 sim b 1 b 2 nbsp if there exists a c A displaystyle c in A nbsp such that a 1 b 2 c a 2 b 1 c displaystyle a 1 b 2 c a 2 b 1 c nbsp Then the set G A A 2 displaystyle G A A 2 sim nbsp has the structure of a group G A displaystyle G A nbsp where a 1 a 2 b 1 b 2 a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 displaystyle a 1 a 2 b 1 b 2 a 1 b 1 a 2 b 2 nbsp Equivalence classes in this group should be thought of as formal differences of elements in the abelian monoid This group G A displaystyle G A nbsp is also associated with a monoid homomorphism i A G A displaystyle i A to G A nbsp given by a a 0 displaystyle a mapsto a 0 nbsp which has a certain universal property To get a better understanding of this group consider some equivalence classes of the abelian monoid A displaystyle A nbsp Here we will denote the identity element of A displaystyle A nbsp by 0 displaystyle 0 nbsp so that 0 0 displaystyle 0 0 nbsp will be the identity element of G A displaystyle G A nbsp First 0 0 n n displaystyle 0 0 sim n n nbsp for any n A displaystyle n in A nbsp since we can set c 0 displaystyle c 0 nbsp and apply the equation from the equivalence relation to get n n displaystyle n n nbsp This implies a b b a a b a b 0 0 displaystyle a b b a a b a b 0 0 nbsp hence we have an additive inverse for each element in G A displaystyle G A nbsp This should give us the hint that we should be thinking of the equivalence classes a b displaystyle a b nbsp as formal differences a b displaystyle a b nbsp Another useful observation is the invariance of equivalence classes under scaling a b a k b k displaystyle a b sim a k b k nbsp for any k A displaystyle k in A nbsp The Grothendieck completion can be viewed as a functor G A b M o n A b G r p displaystyle G mathbf AbMon to mathbf AbGrp nbsp and it has the property that it is left adjoint to the corresponding forgetful functor U A b G r p A b M o n displaystyle U mathbf AbGrp to mathbf AbMon nbsp That means that given a morphism ϕ A U B displaystyle phi A to U B nbsp of an abelian monoid A displaystyle A nbsp to the underlying abelian monoid of an abelian group B displaystyle B nbsp there exists a unique abelian group morphism G A B displaystyle G A to B nbsp Example for natural numbers edit An illustrative example to look at is the Grothendieck completion of N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp We can see that G N Z displaystyle G mathbb N mathbb Z nbsp For any pair a b displaystyle a b nbsp we can find a minimal representative a b displaystyle a b nbsp by using the invariance under scaling For example we can see from the scaling invariance that 4 6 3 5 2 4 1 3 0 2 displaystyle 4 6 sim 3 5 sim 2 4 sim 1 3 sim 0 2 nbsp In general if k min a b displaystyle k min a b nbsp then a b a k b k displaystyle a b sim a k b k nbsp which is of the form c 0 displaystyle c 0 nbsp or 0 d displaystyle 0 d nbsp This shows that we should think of the a 0 displaystyle a 0 nbsp as positive integers and the 0 b displaystyle 0 b nbsp as negative integers Definitions editThis section is about K0 the most basic K theory group see also Grothendieck group For definitions of higher K groups Ki see Algebraic K theory and Topological K theory There are a number of basic definitions of K theory two coming from topology and two from algebraic geometry Grothendieck group for compact Hausdorff spaces edit Given a compact Hausdorff space X displaystyle X nbsp consider the set of isomorphism classes of finite dimensional vector bundles over X displaystyle X nbsp denoted Vect X displaystyle text Vect X nbsp and let the isomorphism class of a vector bundle p E X displaystyle pi E to X nbsp be denoted E displaystyle E nbsp Since isomorphism classes of vector bundles behave well with respect to direct sums we can write these operations on isomorphism classes by E E E E displaystyle E oplus E E oplus E nbsp It should be clear that Vect X displaystyle text Vect X oplus nbsp is an abelian monoid where the unit is given by the trivial vector bundle R 0 X X displaystyle mathbb R 0 times X to X nbsp We can then apply the Grothendieck completion to get an abelian group from this abelian monoid This is called the K theory of X displaystyle X nbsp and is denoted K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp We can use the Serre Swan theorem and some algebra to get an alternative description of vector bundles over the ring of continuous complex valued functions C 0 X C displaystyle C 0 X mathbb C nbsp as projective modules Then these can be identified with idempotent matrices in some ring of matrices M n n C 0 X C displaystyle M n times n C 0 X mathbb C nbsp We can define equivalence classes of idempotent matrices and form an abelian monoid Idem X displaystyle textbf Idem X nbsp Its Grothendieck completion is also called K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp One of the main techniques for computing the Grothendieck group for topological spaces comes from the Atiyah Hirzebruch spectral sequence which makes it very accessible The only required computations for understanding the spectral sequences are computing the group K 0 displaystyle K 0 nbsp for the spheres S n displaystyle S n nbsp 2 pg 51 110 Grothendieck group of vector bundles in algebraic geometry edit There is an analogous construction by considering vector bundles in algebraic geometry For a Noetherian scheme X displaystyle X nbsp there is a set Vect X displaystyle text Vect X nbsp of all isomorphism classes of algebraic vector bundles on X displaystyle X nbsp Then as before the direct sum displaystyle oplus nbsp of isomorphisms classes of vector bundles is well defined giving an abelian monoid Vect X displaystyle text Vect X oplus nbsp Then the Grothendieck group K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp is defined by the application of the Grothendieck construction on this abelian monoid Grothendieck group of coherent sheaves in algebraic geometry edit In algebraic geometry the same construction can be applied to algebraic vector bundles over a smooth scheme But there is an alternative construction for any Noetherian scheme X displaystyle X nbsp If we look at the isomorphism classes of coherent sheaves Coh X displaystyle operatorname Coh X nbsp we can mod out by the relation E E E displaystyle mathcal E mathcal E mathcal E nbsp if there is a short exact sequence 0 E E E 0 displaystyle 0 to mathcal E to mathcal E to mathcal E to 0 nbsp This gives the Grothendieck group K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp which is isomorphic to K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp if X displaystyle X nbsp is smooth The group K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp is special because there is also a ring structure we define it as E E 1 k Tor k O X E E displaystyle mathcal E cdot mathcal E sum 1 k left operatorname Tor k mathcal O X mathcal E mathcal E right nbsp Using the Grothendieck Riemann Roch theorem we have that ch K 0 X Q A X Q displaystyle operatorname ch K 0 X otimes mathbb Q to A X otimes mathbb Q nbsp is an isomorphism of rings Hence we can use K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp for intersection theory 3 Early history editThe subject can be said to begin with Alexander Grothendieck 1957 who used it to formulate his Grothendieck Riemann Roch theorem It takes its name from the German Klasse meaning class 4 Grothendieck needed to work with coherent sheaves on an algebraic variety X Rather than working directly with the sheaves he defined a group using isomorphism classes of sheaves as generators of the group subject to a relation that identifies any extension of two sheaves with their sum The resulting group is called K X when only locally free sheaves are used or G X when all are coherent sheaves Either of these two constructions is referred to as the Grothendieck group K X has cohomological behavior and G X has homological behavior If X is a smooth variety the two groups are the same If it is a smooth affine variety then all extensions of locally free sheaves split so the group has an alternative definition In topology by applying the same construction to vector bundles Michael Atiyah and Friedrich Hirzebruch defined K X for a topological space X in 1959 and using the Bott periodicity theorem they made it the basis of an extraordinary cohomology theory It played a major role in the second proof of the Atiyah Singer index theorem circa 1962 Furthermore this approach led to a noncommutative K theory for C algebras Already in 1955 Jean Pierre Serre had used the analogy of vector bundles with projective modules to formulate Serre s conjecture which states that every finitely generated projective module over a polynomial ring is free this assertion is correct but was not settled until 20 years later Swan s theorem is another aspect of this analogy Developments editThe other historical origin of algebraic K theory was the work of J H C Whitehead and others on what later became known as Whitehead torsion There followed a period in which there were various partial definitions of higher K theory functors Finally two useful and equivalent definitions were given by Daniel Quillen using homotopy theory in 1969 and 1972 A variant was also given by Friedhelm Waldhausen in order to study the algebraic K theory of spaces which is related to the study of pseudo isotopies Much modern research on higher K theory is related to algebraic geometry and the study of motivic cohomology The corresponding constructions involving an auxiliary quadratic form received the general name L theory It is a major tool of surgery theory In string theory the K theory classification of Ramond Ramond field strengths and the charges of stable D branes was first proposed in 1997 5 Examples and properties editK0 of a field edit The easiest example of the Grothendieck group is the Grothendieck group of a point Spec F displaystyle text Spec mathbb F nbsp for a field F displaystyle mathbb F nbsp Since a vector bundle over this space is just a finite dimensional vector space which is a free object in the category of coherent sheaves hence projective the monoid of isomorphism classes is N displaystyle mathbb N nbsp corresponding to the dimension of the vector space It is an easy exercise to show that the Grothendieck group is then Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp K0 of an Artinian algebra over a field edit One important property of the Grothendieck group of a Noetherian scheme X displaystyle X nbsp is that it is invariant under reduction hence K X K X red displaystyle K X K X text red nbsp 6 Hence the Grothendieck group of any Artinian F displaystyle mathbb F nbsp algebra is a direct sum of copies of Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp one for each connected component of its spectrum For example K 0 Spec F x x 9 F Z Z displaystyle K 0 left text Spec left frac mathbb F x x 9 times mathbb F right right mathbb Z oplus mathbb Z nbsp K0 of projective space edit One of the most commonly used computations of the Grothendieck group is with the computation of K P n displaystyle K mathbb P n nbsp for projective space over a field This is because the intersection numbers of a projective X displaystyle X nbsp can be computed by embedding i X P n displaystyle i X hookrightarrow mathbb P n nbsp and using the push pull formula i i E i F displaystyle i i mathcal E cdot i mathcal F nbsp This makes it possible to do concrete calculations with elements in K X displaystyle K X nbsp without having to explicitly know its structure since 7 K P n Z T T n 1 displaystyle K mathbb P n frac mathbb Z T T n 1 nbsp One technique for determining the Grothendieck group of P n displaystyle mathbb P n nbsp comes from its stratification as P n A n A n 1 A 0 displaystyle mathbb P n mathbb A n coprod mathbb A n 1 coprod cdots coprod mathbb A 0 nbsp since the Grothendieck group of coherent sheaves on affine spaces are isomorphic to Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp and the intersection of A n k 1 A n k 2 displaystyle mathbb A n k 1 mathbb A n k 2 nbsp is generically A n k 1 A n k 2 A n k 1 k 2 displaystyle mathbb A n k 1 cap mathbb A n k 2 mathbb A n k 1 k 2 nbsp for k 1 k 2 n displaystyle k 1 k 2 leq n nbsp K0 of a projective bundle edit Another important formula for the Grothendieck group is the projective bundle formula 8 given a rank r vector bundle E displaystyle mathcal E nbsp over a Noetherian scheme X displaystyle X nbsp the Grothendieck group of the projective bundle P E Proj Sym E displaystyle mathbb P mathcal E operatorname Proj operatorname Sym bullet mathcal E vee nbsp is a free K X displaystyle K X nbsp module of rank r with basis 1 3 3 n 1 displaystyle 1 xi dots xi n 1 nbsp This formula allows one to compute the Grothendieck group of P F n displaystyle mathbb P mathbb F n nbsp This make it possible to compute the K 0 displaystyle K 0 nbsp or Hirzebruch surfaces In addition this can be used to compute the Grothendieck group K P n displaystyle K mathbb P n nbsp by observing it is a projective bundle over the field F displaystyle mathbb F nbsp K0 of singular spaces and spaces with isolated quotient singularities edit One recent technique for computing the Grothendieck group of spaces with minor singularities comes from evaluating the difference between K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp and K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X nbsp which comes from the fact every vector bundle can be equivalently described as a coherent sheaf This is done using the Grothendieck group of the Singularity category D s g X displaystyle D sg X nbsp 9 10 from derived noncommutative algebraic geometry It gives a long exact sequence starting with K 0 X K 0 X K s g X 0 displaystyle cdots to K 0 X to K 0 X to K sg X to 0 nbsp where the higher terms come from higher K theory Note that vector bundles on a singular X displaystyle X nbsp are given by vector bundles E X s m displaystyle E to X sm nbsp on the smooth locus X s m X displaystyle X sm hookrightarrow X nbsp This makes it possible to compute the Grothendieck group on weighted projective spaces since they typically have isolated quotient singularities In particular if these singularities have isotropy groups G i displaystyle G i nbsp then the map K 0 X K 0 X displaystyle K 0 X to K 0 X nbsp is injective and the cokernel is annihilated by lcm G 1 G k n 1 displaystyle text lcm G 1 ldots G k n 1 nbsp for n dim X displaystyle n dim X nbsp 10 pg 3 K0 of a smooth projective curve edit For a smooth projective curve C displaystyle C nbsp the Grothendieck group isK 0 C Z Pic C displaystyle K 0 C mathbb Z oplus text Pic C nbsp for Picard group of C displaystyle C nbsp This follows from the Brown Gersten Quillen spectral sequence 11 pg 72 of algebraic K theory For a regular scheme of finite type over a field there is a convergent spectral sequence E 1 p q x X p K p q k x K p q X displaystyle E 1 p q coprod x in X p K p q k x Rightarrow K p q X nbsp for X p displaystyle X p nbsp the set of codimension p displaystyle p nbsp points meaning the set of subschemes x Y X displaystyle x Y to X nbsp of codimension p displaystyle p nbsp and k x displaystyle k x nbsp the algebraic function field of the subscheme This spectral sequence has the property 11 pg 80 E 2 p p CH p X displaystyle E 2 p p cong text CH p X nbsp for the Chow ring of X displaystyle X nbsp essentially giving the computation of K 0 C displaystyle K 0 C nbsp Note that because C displaystyle C nbsp has no codimension 2 displaystyle 2 nbsp points the only nontrivial parts of the spectral sequence are E 1 0 q E 1 1 q displaystyle E 1 0 q E 1 1 q nbsp hence E 1 1 E 2 1 1 CH 1 C E 0 0 E 2 0 0 CH 0 C displaystyle begin aligned E infty 1 1 cong E 2 1 1 amp cong text CH 1 C E infty 0 0 cong E 2 0 0 amp cong text CH 0 C end aligned nbsp The coniveau filtration can then be used to determine K 0 C displaystyle K 0 C nbsp as the desired explicit direct sum since it gives an exact sequence 0 F 1 K 0 X K 0 X K 0 X F 1 K 0 X 0 displaystyle 0 to F 1 K 0 X to K 0 X to K 0 X F 1 K 0 X to 0 nbsp where the left hand term is isomorphic to CH 1 C Pic C displaystyle text CH 1 C cong text Pic C nbsp and the right hand term is isomorphic to C H 0 C Z displaystyle CH 0 C cong mathbb Z nbsp Since Ext Ab 1 Z G 0 displaystyle text Ext text Ab 1 mathbb Z G 0 nbsp we have the sequence of abelian groups above splits giving the isomorphism Note that if C displaystyle C nbsp is a smooth projective curve of genus g displaystyle g nbsp over C displaystyle mathbb C nbsp then K 0 C Z C g Z 2 g displaystyle K 0 C cong mathbb Z oplus mathbb C g mathbb Z 2g nbsp Moreover the techniques above using the derived category of singularities for isolated singularities can be extended to isolated Cohen Macaulay singularities giving techniques for computing the Grothendieck group of any singular algebraic curve This is because reduction gives a generically smooth curve and all singularities are Cohen Macaulay Applications editVirtual bundles edit One useful application of the Grothendieck group is to define virtual vector bundles For example if we have an embedding of smooth spaces Y X displaystyle Y hookrightarrow X nbsp then there is a short exact sequence 0 W Y W X Y C Y X 0 displaystyle 0 to Omega Y to Omega X Y to C Y X to 0 nbsp where C Y X displaystyle C Y X nbsp is the conormal bundle of Y displaystyle Y nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp If we have a singular space Y displaystyle Y nbsp embedded into a smooth space X displaystyle X nbsp we define the virtual conormal bundle as W X Y W Y displaystyle Omega X Y Omega Y nbsp Another useful application of virtual bundles is with the definition of a virtual tangent bundle of an intersection of spaces Let Y 1 Y 2 X displaystyle Y 1 Y 2 subset X nbsp be projective subvarieties of a smooth projective variety Then we can define the virtual tangent bundle of their intersection Z Y 1 Y 2 displaystyle Z Y 1 cap Y 2 nbsp as T Z v i r T Y 1 Z T Y 2 Z T X Z displaystyle T Z vir T Y 1 Z T Y 2 Z T X Z nbsp Kontsevich uses this construction in one of his papers 12 Chern characters edit Main article Chern character Chern classes can be used to construct a homomorphism of rings from the topological K theory of a space to the completion of its rational cohomology For a line bundle L the Chern character ch is defined by ch L exp c 1 L m 0 c 1 L m m displaystyle operatorname ch L exp c 1 L sum m 0 infty frac c 1 L m m nbsp More generally if V L 1 L n displaystyle V L 1 oplus dots oplus L n nbsp is a direct sum of line bundles with first Chern classes x i c 1 L i displaystyle x i c 1 L i nbsp the Chern character is defined additively ch V e x 1 e x n m 0 1 m x 1 m x n m displaystyle operatorname ch V e x 1 dots e x n sum m 0 infty frac 1 m x 1 m dots x n m nbsp The Chern character is useful in part because it facilitates the computation of the Chern class of a tensor product The Chern character is used in the Hirzebruch Riemann Roch theorem Equivariant K theory editThe equivariant algebraic K theory is an algebraic K theory associated to the category Coh G X displaystyle operatorname Coh G X nbsp of equivariant coherent sheaves on an algebraic scheme X displaystyle X nbsp with action of a linear algebraic group G displaystyle G nbsp via Quillen s Q construction thus by definition K i G X p i B Coh G X displaystyle K i G X pi i B operatorname Coh G X nbsp In particular K 0 G C displaystyle K 0 G C nbsp is the Grothendieck group of Coh G X displaystyle operatorname Coh G X nbsp The theory was developed by R W Thomason in 1980s 13 Specifically he proved equivariant analogs of fundamental theorems such as the localization theorem See also editBott periodicity KK theory KR theory List of cohomology theories Algebraic K theory Topological K theory Operator K theory Grothendieck Riemann Roch theoremNotes edit Atiyah Michael 2000 K Theory Past and Present arXiv math 0012213 Park Efton 2008 Complex topological K theory Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 511 38869 9 OCLC 227161674 Grothendieck SGA 6 Formalisme des intersections sur les schema algebriques propres Karoubi 2006 by Ruben Minasian http string lpthe jussieu fr members pl key 7 and Gregory Moore in K theory and Ramond Ramond Charge Grothendieck group for projective space over the dual numbers mathoverflow net Retrieved 2017 04 16 kt k theory and homology Grothendieck group for projective space over the dual numbers MathOverflow Retrieved 2020 10 20 Manin Yuri I 1969 01 01 Lectures on the K functor in algebraic geometry Russian Mathematical Surveys 24 5 1 89 Bibcode 1969RuMaS 24 1M doi 10 1070 rm1969v024n05abeh001357 ISSN 0036 0279 ag algebraic geometry Is the algebraic Grothendieck group of a weighted projective space finitely generated MathOverflow Retrieved 2020 10 20 a b Pavic Nebojsa Shinder Evgeny 2021 K theory and the singularity category of quotient singularities Annals of K Theory 6 3 381 424 arXiv 1809 10919 doi 10 2140 akt 2021 6 381 S2CID 85502709 a b Srinivas V 1991 Algebraic K theory Boston Birkhauser ISBN 978 1 4899 6735 0 OCLC 624583210 Kontsevich Maxim 1995 Enumeration of rational curves via torus actions The moduli space of curves Texel Island 1994 Progress in Mathematics vol 129 Boston MA Birkhauser Boston pp 335 368 arXiv hep th 9405035 MR 1363062 Charles A Weibel Robert W Thomason 1952 1995 References editAtiyah Michael Francis 1989 K theory Advanced Book Classics 2nd ed Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 09394 0 MR 1043170 Friedlander Eric Grayson Daniel eds 2005 Handbook of K Theory Berlin New York Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 540 27855 9 ISBN 978 3 540 30436 4 MR 2182598 Park Efton 2008 Complex Topological K Theory Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics Vol 111 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85634 8 Swan R G 1968 Algebraic K Theory Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 76 Springer ISBN 3 540 04245 8 Karoubi Max 1978 K theory an introduction Classics in Mathematics Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 540 79890 3 ISBN 0 387 08090 2 Karoubi Max 2006 K theory An elementary introduction arXiv math 0602082 Hatcher Allen 2003 Vector Bundles amp K Theory Weibel Charles 2013 The K book an introduction to algebraic K theory Grad Studies in Math Vol 145 American Math Society ISBN 978 0 8218 9132 2 External links editGrothendieck Riemann Roch Max Karoubi s Page K theory preprint archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title K theory amp oldid 1226336953, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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