In mathematics, more specifically in topology, the Volodin space of a ring R is a subspace of the classifying space given by
where is the subgroup of upper triangular matrices with 1's on the diagonal (i.e., the unipotent radical of the standard Borel) and a permutation matrix thought of as an element in and acting (superscript) by conjugation. The space is acyclic and the fundamental group is the Steinberg group of R. In fact, Suslin (1981) showed that X yields a model for Quillen's plus-construction in algebraic K-theory.
Application
An analogue of Volodin's space where GL(R) is replaced by the Lie algebra was used by Goodwillie (1986) to prove that, after tensoring with Q, relative K-theory K(A, I), for a nilpotent ideal I, is isomorphic to relative cyclic homology HC(A, I). This theorem was a pioneering result in the area of trace methods.
Notes
- Weibel 2013, Ch. IV. Example 1.3.2.
References
- Goodwillie, Thomas G. (1986), "Relative algebraic K-theory and cyclic homology", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 124 (2): 347–402, doi:10.2307/1971283, JSTOR 1971283, MR 0855300
- Weibel, Charles (2013). "The K-book: an introduction to algebraic K-theory".
- Suslin, A. A. (1981), "On the equivalence of K-theories", Comm. Algebra, 9 (15): 1559–66, doi:10.1080/00927878108822666
- Volodin, I. (1971), "Algebraic K-theory as extraordinary homology theory on the category of associative rings with unity", Izv. Akad. Nauk SSSR, 35 (4): 844–873, Bibcode:1971IzMat...5..859V, doi:10.1070/IM1971v005n04ABEH001121, MR 0296140, (Translation: Math. USSR Izvestija Vol. 5 (1971) No. 4, 859–887)
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