In homological algebra, the hyperhomology or hypercohomology (
H*(-),H*(-)
l{A}
Ch(l{A})
R*\Gamma(-)
Hyperhomology is no longer used much: since about 1970 it has been largely replaced by the roughly equivalent concept of a derived functor between derived categories.
One of the motivations for hypercohomology comes from the fact that there isn't an obvious generalization of cohomological long exact sequences associated to short exact sequences
i.e. there is an associated long exact sequence0\toM'\toM\toM''\to0
It turns out hypercohomology gives techniques for constructing a similar cohomological associated long exact sequence from an arbitrary long exact sequence0\toH0(M')\toH0(M)\toH0(M'')\toH1(M')\to …
since its inputs are given by chain complexes instead of just objects from an abelian category. We can turn this chain complex into a distinguished triangle (using the language of triangulated categories on a derived category)0\toM1\toM2\to … \toMk\to0
which we denote byM1\to[M2\to … \toMk-1]\toMk[-k+3]\xrightarrow{+1}
Then, taking derived global sectionsl{M}'\bullet\tol{M}\bullet\tol{M}''\bullet\xrightarrow{+1}
R*\Gamma(-)
We give the definition for hypercohomology as this is more common. As usual, hypercohomology and hyperhomology are essentially the same: one converts from one to the other by dualizing, i.e. by changing the direction of all arrows, replacing injective objects with projective ones, and so on.
Suppose that A is an abelian category with enough injectives and F a left exact functor to another abelian category B. If C is a complex of objects of A bounded on the left, the hypercohomology
Hi(C)
of C (for an integer i) iscalculated as follows:
The hypercohomology of C is independent of the choice of the quasi-isomorphism, up to unique isomorphisms.
The hypercohomology can also be defined using derived categories: the hypercohomology of C is just the cohomology of RF(C) considered as an element of the derived category of B.
For complexes that vanish for negative indices, the hypercohomology can be defined as the derived functors of H0 = FH0 = H0F.
There are two hypercohomology spectral sequences; one with E2 term
RiF(Hj(C))
and the other with E1 term
RjF(Ci)
and E2 term
Hi(RjF(C))
both converging to the hypercohomology
Hi+j(RF(C))
where RjF is a right derived functor of F.
One application of hypercohomology spectral sequences are in the study of gerbes. Recall that rank n vector bundles on a space
X
1(X,\underline{GL} | |
H | |
n) |
H1(X,bf{R}0F)
F
H1(X,bf{R}1F)