Exp algebra

From HandWiki

In mathematics, an exp algebra is a Hopf algebra Exp(G) constructed from an abelian group G, and is the universal ring R such that there is an exponential map from G to the group of the power series in R[[t]] with constant term 1. In other words the functor Exp from abelian groups to commutative rings is adjoint to the functor from commutative rings to abelian groups taking a ring to the group of formal power series with constant term 1. The definition of the exp ring of G is similar to that of the group ring Z[G] of G, which is the universal ring such that there is an exponential homomorphism from the group to its units. In particular there is a natural homomorphism from the group ring to a completion of the exp ring. However in general the Exp ring can be much larger than the group ring: for example, the group ring of the integers is the ring of Laurent polynomials in 1 variable, while the exp ring is a polynomial ring in countably many generators.

Construction

For each element g of G introduce a countable set of variables gi for i>0. Define exp(gt) to be the formal power series in t

[math]\displaystyle{ \exp(gt) = 1+g_1t+g_2t^2+g_3t^3+\cdots. }[/math]

The exp ring of G is the commutative ring generated by all the elements gi with the relations

[math]\displaystyle{ \exp((g+h)t) = \exp(gt)\exp(ht) }[/math]

for all g, h in G; in other words the coefficients of any power of t on both sides are identified.

The ring Exp(G) can be made into a commutative and cocommutative Hopf algebra as follows. The coproduct of Exp(G) is defined so that all the elements exp(gt) are group-like. The antipode is defined by making exp(–gt) the antipode of exp(gt). The counit takes all the generators gi to 0.

(Hoffman 1983) showed that Exp(G) has the structure of a λ-ring.

Examples

  • The exp ring of an infinite cyclic group such as the integers is a polynomial ring in a countable number of generators gi where g is a generator of the cyclic group. This ring (or Hopf algebra) is naturally isomorphic to the ring of symmetric functions (or the Hopf algebra of symmetric functions).
  • Michiel Hazewinkel, Nadiya Gubareni, and V. V. Kirichenko (2010) suggest that it might be interesting to extend the theory to non-commutative groups G.

References

  • Hazewinkel, Michiel; Gubareni, Nadiya; Kirichenko, V. V. (2010), Algebras, rings and modules. Lie algebras and Hopf algebras, Mathematical Surveys and Monographs, 168, Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-5262-0 
  • Hoffman, P. (1983), "Exponential maps and λ-rings", J. Pure Appl. Algebra 27 (2): 131–162, doi:10.1016/0022-4049(83)90011-7