Tate cohomology group


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.

Definition

If G is a finite group and A a G-module, then there is a natural map N from to
taking a representative a to . The Tate cohomology groups are defined by
If
is a short exact sequence of G-modules, then we get the usual long exact sequence of Tate cohomology groups:
If A is an induced G module then all Tate cohomology groups of A vanish.
The zeroth Tate cohomology group of A is
where by the "obvious" fixed point we mean those of the form. In other words, the zeroth cohomology group in some sense describes the non-obvious fixed points of G acting on A.
The Tate cohomology groups are characterized by the three properties above.

Tate's theorem

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, such that for every subgroup E of G
for all n; in other words the graded Tate cohomology of A is isomorphic to
the Tate cohomology with integral coefficients, with the degree shifted by 2.

Tate-Farrell cohomology

extended Tate cohomology groups to the case of all groups G of finite virtual cohomological dimension. In Farrell's theory, the groups
are isomorphic to the usual cohomology groups whenever n is greater than the virtual cohomological dimension of the group G. Finite groups have virtual cohomological dimension 0, and in this case Farrell's cohomology groups are the same as those of Tate.