In mathematics, an
algebra
Algebra () is one of the areas of mathematics, broad areas of mathematics. Roughly speaking, algebra is the study of mathematical symbols and the rules for manipulating these symbols in formulas; it is a unifying thread of almost all of mathem ...
such as
has multiplication
whose
associativity
In mathematics, the associative property is a property of some binary operations, which means that rearranging the parentheses in an expression will not change the result. In propositional logic, associativity is a valid rule of replacement ...
is well-defined on the nose. This means for any real numbers
we have
:
.
But, there are algebras
which are not necessarily associative, meaning if
then
:
in general. There is a notion of algebras, called
-algebras, which still have a property on the multiplication which still acts like the first relation, meaning associativity holds, but only holds up to a
homotopy
In topology, a branch of mathematics, two continuous functions from one topological space to another are called homotopic (from grc, ὁμός "same, similar" and "place") if one can be "continuously deformed" into the other, such a defor ...
, which is a way to say after an operation "compressing" the information in the algebra, the multiplication is associative. This means although we get something which looks like the second equation, the one of
inequality
Inequality may refer to:
Economics
* Attention inequality, unequal distribution of attention across users, groups of people, issues in etc. in attention economy
* Economic inequality, difference in economic well-being between population groups
* ...
, we actually get equality after "compressing" the information in the algebra.
The study of
-algebras is a subset of
homotopical algebra
In mathematics, homotopical algebra is a collection of concepts comprising the ''nonabelian'' aspects of homological algebra as well as possibly the abelian aspects as special cases. The ''homotopical'' nomenclature stems from the fact that a com ...
, where there is a homotopical notion of
associative algebras through a differential graded algebra with a multiplication operation and a series of higher homotopies giving the failure for the multiplication to be associative. Loosely, an
-algebra
is a
-graded vector space over a field
with a series of operations
on the
-th tensor powers of
. The
corresponds to a
chain complex differential,
is the multiplication map, and the higher
are a measure of the failure of associativity of the
. When looking at the underlying cohomology algebra
, the map
should be an associative map. Then, these higher maps
should be interpreted as higher homotopies, where
is the failure of
to be associative,
is the failure for
to be higher associative, and so forth. Their structure was originally discovered by
Jim Stasheff
James Dillon Stasheff (born January 15, 1936, New York City) is an American mathematician, a professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He works in algebraic topology and algebra as well as their appl ...
while studying
A∞-spaces, but this was interpreted as a purely algebraic structure later on. These are spaces equipped with maps that are associative only up to homotopy, and the A∞ structure keeps track of these homotopies, homotopies of homotopies, and so forth.
They are ubiquitous in
homological mirror symmetry
Homological mirror symmetry is a mathematical conjecture made by Maxim Kontsevich. It seeks a systematic mathematical explanation for a phenomenon called mirror symmetry first observed by physicists studying string theory.
History
In an address ...
because of their necessity in defining the structure of the
Fukaya category of
D-brane
In string theory, D-branes, short for ''Dirichlet membrane'', are a class of extended objects upon which open strings can end with Dirichlet boundary conditions, after which they are named. D-branes were discovered by Jin Dai, Leigh, and Polchi ...
s on a
Calabi–Yau manifold
In algebraic geometry, a Calabi–Yau manifold, also known as a Calabi–Yau space, is a particular type of manifold which has properties, such as Ricci flatness, yielding applications in theoretical physics. Particularly in superstring ...
who have only a homotopy associative structure.
Definition
Definition
For a fixed field
an
-algebra
is a
-graded vector space
:
such that for
there exist degree
,
-linear maps
:
which satisfy a coherence condition:
:
,
where
.
Understanding the coherence conditions
The coherence conditions are easy to write down for low degrees
pgs 583–584.
d=1
For
this is the condition that
:
,
since
giving
and
. These two inequalities force
in the coherence condition, hence the only input of it is from
. Therefore
represents a differential.
d=2
Unpacking the coherence condition for
gives the degree
map
. In the sum there are the inequalities
:
of indices giving
equal to
. Unpacking the coherence sum gives the relation
:
,
which when rewritten with
:
and
as the differential and multiplication, it is
:
,
which is the
Leibniz rule Leibniz's rule (named after Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz) may refer to one of the following:
* Product rule in differential calculus
* General Leibniz rule, a generalization of the product rule
* Leibniz integral rule
* The alternating series test, al ...
for differential graded algebras.
d=3
In this degree the associativity structure comes to light. Note if
then there is a differential graded algebra structure, which becomes transparent after expanding out the coherence condition and multiplying by an appropriate factor of
, the coherence condition reads something like
:
Notice that the left hand side of the equation is the failure for
to be an associative algebra on the nose. One of the inputs for the first three
maps are coboundaries since
is the differential, so on the cohomology algebra
these elements would all vanish since
. This includes the final term
since it is also a coboundary, giving a zero element in the cohomology algebra. From these relations we can interpret the
map as a failure for the associativity of
, meaning it is associative only up to homotopy.
d=4 and higher order terms
Moreover, the higher order terms, for
, the coherent conditions give many different terms combining a string of consecutive
into some
and inserting that term into an
along with the rest of the
's in the elements
. When combining the
terms, there is a part of the coherence condition which reads similarly to the right hand side of
, namely, there are terms
:
In degree
the other terms can be written out as
:
showing how elements in the image of
and
interact. This means the homotopy of elements, including one that's in the image of
minus the multiplication of elements where one is a homotopy input, differ by a boundary. For higher order
, these middle terms can be seen how the middle maps
behave with respect to terms coming from the image of another higher homotopy map.
Diagrammatic interpretation of axioms
There is a nice diagrammatic formalism of algebras which is described in
Algebra+Homotopy=Operad explaining how to visually think about this higher homotopies. This intuition is encapsulated with the discussion above algebraically, but it is useful to visualize it as well.
Examples
Associative algebras
Every associative algebra
has an
-infinity structure by defining
and
for
. Hence
-algebras generalize associative algebras.
Differential graded algebras
Every differential graded algebra
has a canonical structure as an
-algebra
where
and
is the multiplication map. All other higher maps
are equal to
. Using the structure theorem for minimal models, there is a canonical
-structure on the graded cohomology algebra
which preserves the quasi-isomorphism structure of the original differential graded algebra. One common example of such dga's comes from the
Koszul algebra
In abstract algebra, a Koszul algebra R is a graded k-algebra over which the ground field k has a linear minimal graded free resolution, ''i.e.'', there exists an exact sequence:
:\cdots \rightarrow R(-i)^ \rightarrow \cdots \rightarrow R(-2)^ ...
arising from a
regular sequence
In commutative algebra, a regular sequence is a sequence of elements of a commutative ring which are as independent as possible, in a precise sense. This is the algebraic analogue of the geometric notion of a complete intersection.
Definitions
F ...
. This is an important result because it helps pave the way for the equivalence of homotopy categories
of differential graded algebras and
-algebras.
Cochain algebras of H-spaces
One of the motivating examples of
-algebras comes from the study of
H-space In mathematics, an H-space is a homotopy-theoretic version of a generalization of the notion of topological group, in which the axioms on associativity and inverses are removed.
Definition
An H-space consists of a topological space , together wi ...
s. Whenever a topological space
is an H-space, its associated
singular chain complex
In algebraic topology, singular homology refers to the study of a certain set of algebraic invariants of a topological space ''X'', the so-called homology groups H_n(X). Intuitively, singular homology counts, for each dimension ''n'', the ''n''- ...
has a canonical
-algebra structure from its structure as an H-space.
Example with infinitely many non-trivial mi
Consider the graded algebra
over a field
of characteristic
where
is spanned by the degree
vectors
and
is spanned by the degree
vector
. Even in this simple example there is a non-trivial
-structure which gives differentials in all possible degrees. This is partially due to the fact there is a degree
vector, giving a degree
vector space of rank
in
. Define the differential
by
:
and for
:
where
on any map not listed above and
. In degree
, so for the multiplication map, we have
And in
the above relations give
:
When relating these equations to the failure for associativity, there exist non-zero terms. For example, the coherence conditions for
will give a non-trivial example where associativity doesn't hold on the nose. Note that in the cohomology algebra
we have only the degree
terms
since
is killed by the differential
.
Properties
Transfer of A∞ structure
One of the key properties of
-algebras is their structure can be transferred to other algebraic objects given the correct hypotheses. An early rendition of this property was the following: Given an
-algebra
and a homotopy equivalence of complexes
:
,
then there is an
-algebra structure on
inherited from
and
can be extended to a morphism of
-algebras. There are multiple theorems of this flavor with different hypotheses on
and
, some of which have stronger results, such as uniqueness up to homotopy for the structure on
and strictness on the map
.
Structure
Minimal models and Kadeishvili's theorem
One of the important structure theorems for
-algebras is the existence and uniqueness of minimal models – which are defined as
-algebras where the differential map
is zero. Taking the cohomology algebra
of an
-algebra
from the differential
, so as a graded algebra,
:
,
with multiplication map