Taft Hopf algebra

In algebra, a Taft Hopf algebra is a Hopf algebra introduced by Earl Taft (1971) that is neither commutative nor cocommutative and has an antipode of large even order.

Construction

Suppose that k is a field with a primitive n'th root of unity ζ for some positive integer n. The Taft algebra is the n2-dimensional associative algebra generated over k by c and x with the relations cn=1, xn=0, xccx. The coproduct takes c to cc and x to cx + x1. The counit takes c to 1 and x to 0. The antipode takes c to c−1 and x to –c−1x: the order of the antipode is 2n (if n > 1).

gollark: And the UK. What joy.
gollark: I fear that having official classes on it would end up dragging all the horrible school baggage along, like having *exams* on it, and going for stuff which is easy to test over good, and such.
gollark: There's nothing stopping people in schools from debating things amongst each other.
gollark: If only they had more text on them, you could do many funlolz.
gollark: Really? Interesting.

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, doi:10.1090/surv/168, ISBN 978-0-8218-5262-0, MR 2724822, Zbl 1211.16023
  • Taft, Earl J. (1971), "The order of the antipode of finite-dimensional Hopf algebra", Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 68: 2631–2633, doi:10.1073/pnas.68.11.2631, MR 0286868, PMC 389488, PMID 16591950, Zbl 0222.16012
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.