Hopf algebra
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In mathematics, a Hopf algebra, named after Heinz Hopf, is a structure that is simultaneously a (unital associative) algebra, a coalgebra, and has an antiautomorphism, with these structures compatible. Hopf algebras occur naturally in algebraic topology, where they originated and are related to the H-space concept, in group scheme theory, in group theory (via the concept of a group ring), and in numerous other places, making them probably the most familiar type of bialgebra. Hopf algebras are also studied in their own right, with much work on specific classes of examples on the one hand and classification problems on the other.
Formal definitionFormally, a Hopf algebra is a bialgebra H over a field K together with a K-linear map Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): S\colon H\to H (called the antipode) such that the following diagram commutes: Here Δ is the comultiplication of the bialgebra, ∇ its multiplication, η its unit and ε its counit. In the sumless Sweedler notation, this property can also be expressed as
The definition of Hopf algebra is self-dual (as reflected in the symmetry of the above diagram), so if one can define a dual of H (which is always possible if H is finite-dimensional), then it is automatically a Hopf algebra. Properties of the antipodeS is sometimes required to have a K-linear inverse, which is automatic in the finite-dimensional case, or if H is commutative or cocommutative (or more generally quasitriangular). In general, S is an antihomomorphism, so Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): S^2 is a homomorphism, which is therefore an automorphism if S was invertible (as may be required). If Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): S^2 = Id , then the Hopf algebra is said to be involutive (and the underlying algebra with involution is a *-algebra). If H is finite-dimensional, commutative, or cocommutative, then it is involutive. If a bialgebra B admits an antipode S, then S is unique ("a bialgebra admits at most 1 Hopf algebra structure"). The antipode is an analog[1] to the inversion map on a group that sends Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): g
to Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): g^{-1}
. ExamplesGroup algebra. Suppose G is a group. The group algebra KG is a unital associative algebra over K. It turns into a Hopf algebra if we define
Functions on a finite group. Suppose now that G is a finite group. Then the set KG of all functions from G to K with pointwise addition and multiplication is a unital associative algebra over K, and KG ⊗ KG is naturally isomorphic to KGxG (for G infinite, KG ⊗ KG is a proper subset of KGxG). The set KG becomes a Hopf algebra if we define
Regular functions on an algebraic group. Generalizing the previous example, we can use the same formulas to show that for a given algebraic group G over K, the set of all regular functions on G forms a Hopf algebra. Universal enveloping algebra. Suppose g is a Lie algebra over the field K and U is its universal enveloping algebra. U becomes a Hopf algebra if we define
Cohomology of Lie groupsThe cohomology algebra of a Lie group is a Hopf algebra: the multiplication is provided by the cup-product, and the comultiplication
by the group multiplication Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): G\times G\rightarrow G . This observation was actually a source of the notion of Hopf algebra. Using this structure, Hopf proved a structure theorem for the cohomology algebra of Lie groups. Theorem (Hopf) [2] Let A be a finite-dimensional, graded commutative, graded cocommutative Hopf algebra over a field of characteristic 0. Then A (as an algebra) is a free exterior algebra with generators of odd degree. Quantum groups and non-commutative geometryAll examples above are either commutative (i.e. the multiplication is commutative) or co-commutative (i.e. Δ = T Failed to parse (Missing texvc executable; please see math/README to configure.): \circ Δ where T: H ⊗ H → H ⊗ H is defined by T(x ⊗ y) = y ⊗ x). Other interesting Hopf algebras are certain "deformations" or "quantizations" of those from example 3 which are neither commutative nor co-commutative. These Hopf algebras are often called quantum groups, a term that is so far only loosely defined. They are important in noncommutative geometry, the idea being the following: a standard algebraic group is well described by its standard Hopf algebra of regular functions; we can then think of the deformed version of this Hopf algebra as describing a certain "non-standard" or "quantized" algebraic group (which is not an algebraic group at all). While there does not seem to be a direct way to define or manipulate these non-standard objects, one can still work with their Hopf algebras, and indeed one identifies them with their Hopf algebras. Hence the name "quantum group". Related conceptsGraded Hopf algebras are often used in algebraic topology: they are the natural algebraic structure on the direct sum of all homology or cohomology groups of an H-space. Locally compact quantum groups generalize Hopf algebras and carry a topology. The algebra of all continuous functions on a Lie group is a locally compact quantum group. Quasi-Hopf algebras are also generalizations of Hopf algebras, where coassociativity only holds up to a twist. Analogy with groupsGroups can be axiomatized by the same diagrams (equivalently, operations) as a Hopf algebra, where G is taken to be a set instead of a module. In this case:
In this philosophy, a group can be thought of[3] as a Hopf algebra over the "field with one element". See also
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