Splitting lemma
In mathematics, and more specifically in homological algebra, the splitting lemma states that in any abelian category, the following statements are equivalent for a short exact sequence
- {\displaystyle 0\longrightarrow A\mathrel {\overset {q}{\longrightarrow }} B\mathrel {\overset {r}{\longrightarrow }} C\longrightarrow 0.}
-
- Right split
- There exists a morphism u: C → B such that ru is the identity idC on C,
-
- Direct sum
- There is an isomorphism h from B to the direct sum of A and C, such that hq is the natural injection of A into the direct sum, and {\displaystyle rh^{-1}} is the natural projection of the direct sum onto C.
If any of these statements holds, the sequence is called a split exact sequence , and the sequence is said to split.
In the above short exact sequence, where the sequence splits, it allows one to refine the first isomorphism theorem, which states that:
to:
- B = q(A) ⊕ u(C) ≅ A ⊕ C
where the first isomorphism theorem is then just the projection onto C.
It is a categorical generalization of the rank–nullity theorem (in the form V ≅ ker T ⊕ im T) in linear algebra.
Proof for the category of abelian groups
[edit ]3. ⇒ 1. and 3. ⇒ 2.
[edit ]First, to show that 3. implies both 1. and 2., we assume 3. and take as t the natural projection of the direct sum onto A, and take as u the natural injection of C into the direct sum.
1. ⇒ 3.
[edit ]To prove that 1. implies 3., first note that any member of B is in the set (ker t + im q). This follows since for all b in B, b = (b − qt(b)) + qt(b); qt(b) is in im q, and b − qt(b) is in ker t, since
- t(b − qt(b)) = t(b) − tqt(b) = t(b) − (tq)t(b) = t(b) − t(b) = 0.
Next, the intersection of im q and ker t is 0, since if there exists a in A such that q(a) = b, and t(b) = 0, then 0 = tq(a) = a; and therefore, b = 0.
This proves that B is the direct sum of im q and ker t. So, for all b in B, b can be uniquely identified by some a in A, k in ker t, such that b = q(a) + k.
By exactness ker r = im q. The subsequence B ⟶ C ⟶ 0 implies that r is onto; therefore for any c in C there exists some b = q(a) + k such that c = r(b) = r(q(a) + k) = r(k). Therefore, for any c in C, exists k in ker t such that c = r(k), and r(ker t) = C.
If r(k) = 0, then k is in im q; since the intersection of im q and ker t = 0, then k = 0. Therefore, the restriction r: ker t → C is an isomorphism; and ker t is isomorphic to C.
Finally, im q is isomorphic to A due to the exactness of 0 ⟶ A ⟶ B; so B is isomorphic to the direct sum of A and C, which proves (3).
2. ⇒ 3.
[edit ]To show that 2. implies 3., we follow a similar argument. Any member of B is in the set ker r + im u; since for all b in B, b = (b − ur(b)) + ur(b), which is in ker r + im u. The intersection of ker r and im u is 0, since if r(b) = 0 and u(c) = b, then 0 = ru(c) = c.
By exactness, im q = ker r, and since q is an injection, im q is isomorphic to A, so A is isomorphic to ker r. Since ru is a bijection, u is an injection, and thus im u is isomorphic to C. So B is again the direct sum of A and C.
An alternative "abstract nonsense" proof of the splitting lemma may be formulated entirely in category theoretic terms.
Non-abelian groups
[edit ]In the form stated here, the splitting lemma does not hold in the full category of groups, which is not an abelian category.
Partially true
[edit ]It is partially true: if a short exact sequence of groups is left split or a direct sum (1. or 3.), then all of the conditions hold. For a direct sum this is clear, as one can inject from or project to the summands. For a left split sequence, the map t ×ばつ r: B → A ×ばつ C gives an isomorphism, so B is a direct sum (3.), and thus inverting the isomorphism and composing with the natural injection C → A ×ばつ C gives an injection C → B splitting r (2.).
However, if a short exact sequence of groups is right split (2.), then it need not be left split or a direct sum (neither 1. nor 3. follows): the problem is that the image of the right splitting need not be normal. What is true in this case is that B is a semidirect product, though not in general a direct product.
Counterexample
[edit ]To form a counterexample, take the smallest non-abelian group B ≅ S3, the symmetric group on three letters. Let A denote the alternating subgroup, and let C = B/A ≅ {±1}. Let q and r denote the inclusion map and the sign map respectively, so that
- {\displaystyle 0\longrightarrow A\mathrel {\stackrel {q}{\longrightarrow }} B\mathrel {\stackrel {r}{\longrightarrow }} C\longrightarrow 0}
is a short exact sequence. 3. fails, because S3 is not abelian, but 2. holds: we may define u: C → B by mapping the generator to any two-cycle. Note for completeness that 1. fails: any map t: B → A must map every two-cycle to the identity because the map has to be a group homomorphism, while the order of a two-cycle is 2 which can not be divided by the order of the elements in A other than the identity element, which is 3 as A is the alternating subgroup of S3, or namely the cyclic group of order 3. But every permutation is a product of two-cycles, so t is the trivial map, whence tq: A → A is the trivial map, not the identity.
References
[edit ]- Saunders Mac Lane: Homology. Reprint of the 1975 edition, Springer Classics in Mathematics, ISBN 3-540-58662-8, p. 16
- Allen Hatcher: Algebraic Topology. 2002, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-79540-0, p. 147