Brown–Peterson cohomology
In mathematics, Brown–Peterson cohomology is a generalized cohomology theory introduced by Edgar H. Brown and Franklin P. Peterson (1966), depending on a choice of prime p. It is described in detail by Ravenel (2003, Chapter 4). Its representing spectrum is denoted by BP.
Complex cobordism and Quillen's idempotent
Brown–Peterson cohomology BP is a summand of MU(p), which is complex cobordism MU localized at a prime p. In fact MU(p) is a wedge product of suspensions of BP.
For each prime p, Quillen showed there is a unique idempotent map of ring spectra ε from MUQ(p) to itself, with the property that ε([CPn]) is [CPn] if n+1 is a power of p, and 0 otherwise. The spectrum BP is the image of this idempotent ε.
Structure of BP
The coefficient ring π*(BP) is a polynomial algebra over Z(p) on generators vn of dimension 2(pn − 1) for n ≥ 1.
BP*(BP) is isomorphic to the polynomial ring π*(BP)[t1, t2, ...] over π*(BP) with generators ti in BP2(pi−1)(BP) of degrees 2(pi−1).
The cohomology of the Hopf algebroid (π*(BP), BP*(BP)) is the initial term of the Adams–Novikov spectral sequence for calculating p-local homotopy groups of spheres.
BP is the universal example of a complex oriented cohomology theory whose associated formal group law is p-typical.
See also
References
- Adams, J. Frank (1974), Stable homotopy and generalised homology, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-00524-9
- Brown, Edgar H., Jr.; Peterson, Franklin P. (1966), "A spectrum whose Zp cohomology is the algebra of reduced pth powers", Topology, 5 (2): 149–154, doi:10.1016/0040-9383(66)90015-2, MR 0192494.
- Quillen, Daniel (1969), "On the formal group laws of unoriented and complex cobordism theory" (PDF), Bull. Amer. Math. Soc., 75 (6): 1293–1298, doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1969-12401-8, MR 0253350.
- Ravenel, Douglas C. (2003), Complex cobordism and stable homotopy groups of spheres (2nd ed.), AMS Chelsea, ISBN 0-8218-2967-X
- Wilson, W. Stephen (1982), Brown-Peterson homology: an introduction and sampler, CBMS Regional Conference Series in Mathematics, 48, Washington, D.C.: Conference Board of the Mathematical Sciences, ISBN 978-0-8219-1699-5, MR 655040