Homological stability


In mathematics, homological stability is any of a number of theorems asserting that the group homology of a series of groups is stable, i.e.,
is independent of n when n is large enough. The smallest n such that the maps is an isomorphism is referred to as the stable range.
The concept of homological stability was pioneered by Daniel Quillen whose proof technique has been adapted in various situations.

Examples

Examples of such groups include the following:
groupname
symmetric group
Nakaoka stability
braid group
general linear group for rings R
mapping class group of surfaces Harer stability
automorphism group of free groups,

Applications

In some cases, the homology of the group
can be computed by other means or is related to other data. For example, the Barratt–Priddy theorem relates the homology of the infinite symmetric group agrees with mapping spaces of spheres. This can also be stated as a relation between the plus construction of and the sphere spectrum. In a similar vein, the homology of is related, via the +-construction, to the algebraic K-theory of R.