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Volodin space

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In mathematics, more specifically in topology, the Volodin space X {\displaystyle X} of a ring R is a subspace of the classifying space B G L ( R ) {\displaystyle BGL(R)} given by

X = n , σ B ( U n ( R ) σ ) {\displaystyle X=\bigcup _{n,\sigma }B(U_{n}(R)^{\sigma })}

where U n ( R ) G L n ( R ) {\displaystyle U_{n}(R)\subset GL_{n}(R)} is the subgroup of upper triangular matrices with 1's on the diagonal (i.e., the unipotent radical of the standard Borel) and σ {\displaystyle \sigma } a permutation matrix thought of as an element in G L n ( R ) {\displaystyle GL_{n}(R)} and acting (superscript) by conjugation. The space is acyclic and the fundamental group π 1 X {\displaystyle \pi _{1}X} is the Steinberg group St ( R ) {\displaystyle \operatorname {St} (R)} of R. In fact, Suslin (1981) showed that X yields a model for Quillen's plus-construction B G L ( R ) / X B G L + ( R ) {\displaystyle BGL(R)/X\simeq BGL^{+}(R)} in algebraic K-theory.

Application

An analogue of Volodin's space where GL(R) is replaced by the Lie algebra g l ( R ) {\displaystyle {\mathfrak {gl}}(R)} 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

  1. Weibel 2013, Ch. IV. Example 1.3.2.

References


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