In mathematics, Tate cohomology groups are a slightly modified form of the usual cohomology groups of a finite group that combine homology and cohomology groups into one sequence. They were introduced by, and are used in class field theory.
If G is a finite group and A a G-module, then there is a natural map N from
H0(G,A)
H0(G,A)
\sumg\inga
\hatHn(G,A)
\hatHn(G,A)=Hn(G,A)
n\ge1
\hatH0(G,A)=\operatorname{coker}N=
H0(G,A)
\hatH-1(G,A)=\kerN=
\hatHn(G,A)=H-n(G,A)
n\le-2
0\longrightarrowA\longrightarrowB\longrightarrowC\longrightarrow0
is a short exact sequence of G-modules, then we get the usual long exact sequence of Tate cohomology groups:
… \longrightarrow\hatHn(G,A)\longrightarrow\hatHn(G,B)\longrightarrow\hatHn(G,C)\longrightarrow\hatHn+1(G,A)\longrightarrow\hatHn+1(G,B) …
(Fixed points of G on A)/(Obvious fixed points of G acting on A)where by the "obvious" fixed point we mean those of the form
\sumga
The Tate cohomology groups are characterized by the three properties above.
Tate's theorem gives conditions for multiplication by a cohomology class to be an isomorphism between cohomology groups. There are several slightly different versions of it; a version that is particularly convenient for class field theory is as follows:
Suppose that A is a module over a finite group G and a is an element of
H2(G,A)
H1(E,A)
H2(E,A)
\operatorname{Res}(a)
\hatHn(G,\Z)\longrightarrow\hatHn+2(G,A)
F. Thomas Farrell extended Tate cohomology groups to the case of all groups G of finite virtual cohomological dimension. In Farrell's theory, the groups
\hatHn(G,A)
. Kenneth Brown (mathematician). Cohomology of Groups. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. 87. 1982. Springer-Verlag. New York-Berlin . 0-387-90688-6. 0672956 .