C.: I.M. HOMOLOGY

Couverture
Springer Science & Business Media, 15 févr. 1995 - 422 pages
In presenting this treatment of homological algebra, it is a pleasure to acknowledge the help and encouragement which I have had from all sides. Homological algebra arose from many sources in algebra and topology. Decisive examples came from the study of group extensions and their factor sets, a subject I learned in joint work with OTTO SCHIL LING. A further development of homological ideas, with a view to their topological applications, came in my long collaboration with SAMUEL ElLENBERG; to both collaborators, especial thanks. For many years the Air Force Office of Scientific Research supported my research projects on various subjects now summarized here; it is a pleasure to acknowledge their lively understanding of basic science. Both REINHOLD BAER and JOSEF SCHMID read and commented on my entire manuscript; their advice has led to many improvements. ANDERS KOCK and JACQUES RIGUET have read the entire galley proof and caught many slips and obscurities. Among the others whose sug gestions have served me well, I note FRANK ADAMS, LOUIS AUSLANDER, WILFRED COCKCROFT, ALBRECHT DOLD, GEOFFREY HORROCKS, FRIED RICH KASCH, JOHANN LEICHT, ARUNAS LIULEVICIUS, JOHN MOORE, DIE TER PUPPE, JOSEPH YAO, and a number of my current students at the University of Chicago - not to m~ntion the auditors of my lectures at Chicago, Heidelberg, Bonn, Frankfurt, and Aarhus. My wife, DOROTHY, has cheerfully typed more versions of more chapters than she would like to count. Messrs.
 

Table des matières

II
8
III
9
IV
13
V
15
VI
19
VII
21
VIII
25
IX
28
LXVII
206
LXVIII
210
LXIX
211
LXX
215
LXXI
218
LXXII
220
LXXIII
224
LXXIV
227

X
34
XI
35
XII
39
XIII
42
XIV
44
XV
49
XVI
51
XVII
54
XVIII
57
XIX
61
XX
63
XXII
67
XXIII
72
XXIV
76
XXV
82
XXVI
87
XXVII
92
XXVIII
95
XXIX
96
XXX
99
XXXI
102
XXXII
103
XXXIII
104
XXXIV
105
XXXV
108
XXXVI
111
XXXVII
114
XXXVIII
120
XXXIX
121
XL
124
XLI
129
XLII
131
XLIII
134
XLIV
138
XLV
141
XLVI
142
XLVII
146
XLVIII
148
XLIX
150
L
154
LI
159
LII
163
LIII
166
LIV
170
LV
173
LVI
175
LVII
177
LVIII
181
LIX
184
LX
187
LXI
189
LXII
193
LXIII
197
LXIV
200
LXVI
204
LXXV
228
LXXVI
233
LXXVII
236
LXXVIII
238
LXXIX
244
LXXX
248
LXXXI
249
LXXXII
254
LXXXIII
257
LXXXIV
260
LXXXV
262
LXXXVI
265
LXXXVII
270
LXXXVIII
273
LXXXIX
278
XC
280
XCI
283
XCII
288
XCIII
290
XCIV
293
XCV
295
XCVI
298
XCVII
301
XCVIII
303
XCIX
308
C
311
CI
315
CII
318
CIV
322
CV
326
CVI
332
CVII
336
CVIII
340
CIX
342
CX
345
CXI
347
CXII
351
CXIII
355
CXIV
358
CXV
359
CXVI
361
CXVII
364
CXVIII
367
CXIX
371
CXX
375
CXXI
379
CXXII
386
CXXIII
389
CXXIV
394
CXXV
397
CXXVI
400
CXXVII
404
CXXVIII
413
CXXIX
415
Droits d'auteur

Autres éditions - Tout afficher

Expressions et termes fréquents

Fréquemment cités

Page 2 - jj which is exact in the sense that the kernel of each homomorphism is exactly the image of the preceding. Let E...
Page 408 - Relations between the fundamental group and the second Betti group. Lectures in Topology. Ann Arbor, pp.
Page 408 - Infinite abelian groups and homological methods', Ann. of Math. 69 (1959), 366-391.

À propos de l'auteur (1995)

Biography of Saunders Mac Lane Saunders Mac Lane was born on August 4, 1909 in Connecticut. He studied at Yale University and then at the University of Chicago and at Göttingen, where he received the D.Phil. in 1934. He has tought at Harvard, Cornell and the University of Chicago. Mac Lane's initial research was in logic and in algebraic number theory (valuation theory). With Samuel Eilenberg he published fifteen papers on algebraic topology. A number of them involved the initial steps in the cohomology of groups and in other aspects of homological algebra - as well as the discovery of category theory. His famous and undergraduate textbook Survey of modern algebra, written jointly with G. Birkhoff, has remained in print for over 50 years. Mac Lane is also the author of several other highly successful books.

Informations bibliographiques