Splitting lemma

See also splitting lemma in singularity theory.

In mathematics, and more specifically in homological algebra, the splitting lemma states that in any abelian category, the following statements for a short exact sequence are equivalent.

Given a short exact sequence with maps q and r:

0 \rightarrow A \overset{q}{\longrightarrow} B \overset{r}{\longrightarrow} C \rightarrow 0

one writes the additional arrows t and u for maps that may not exist:

0 \rightarrow A {{q \atop \longrightarrow} \atop {\longleftarrow \atop t}} B {{r \atop \longrightarrow} \atop {\longleftarrow \atop u}} C \rightarrow 0.

Then the following statements are equivalent:

1. left split
there exists a map t: BA such that tq is the identity on A,
2. right split
there exists a map u: CB such that ru is the identity on C,
3. direct sum
B is isomorphic to the direct sum of A and C, with q corresponding to the natural injection of A and r corresponding to the natural projection onto C. More precisely, there is an isomorphism of short exact sequences between the given sequence and the sequence with B replaced by the direct sum of A and C, where the maps are the canonical inclusion and projection. Just an isomorphism of B with the direct sum is not sufficient.

The short exact sequence is called split if any of the above statements hold.

(The word "map" refers to morphisms in the abelian category we are working in, not mappings between sets.)

It allows one to refine the first isomorphism theorem:

It is a categorical generalization of the rank–nullity theorem (in the form V \approx \ker T \oplus \operatorname{im}\,T) in linear algebra.

Proof

First, to show that (3) implies both (1) and (2), we assume (3) and take as t the natural projection of the direct sum onto A, and take as u the natural injection of C into the direct sum.

To prove that (1) implies (3), first note that any member of B is in the set (ker t + im q). This follows since for all b in B, b = (b - qt(b)) + qt(b); qt(b) is obviously in im q, and (b - qt(b)) is in ker t, since

t(b - qt(b)) = t(b) - tqt(b) = t(b) - (tq)t(b) = t(b) - t(b) = 0.

Next, the intersection of im q and ker t is 0, since if there exists a in A such that q(a) = b, and t(b) = 0, then 0 = tq(a) = a; and therefore, b = 0.

This proves that B is the direct sum of im q and ker t. So, for all b in B, b can be uniquely identified by some a in A, k in ker t, such that b = q(a) + k.

By exactness ker r = im q. The subsequence BC → 0 implies that r is onto; therefore for any c in C there exists some b = q(a) + k such that c = r(b) = r(q(a) + k) = r(k). Therefore, for any c in C, exists k in ker t such that c = r(k), and r(ker t) = C.

If r(k) = 0, then k is in im q; since the intersection of im q and ker t = 0, then k = 0. Therefore the restriction of the morphism r : ker tC is an isomorphism; and ker t is isomorphic to C.

Finally, im q is isomorphic to A due to the exactness of 0 → AB; so B is isomorphic to the direct sum of A and C, which proves (3).

To show that (2) implies (3), we follow a similar argument. Any member of B is in the set ker r + im u; since for all b in B, b = (b - ur(b)) + ur(b), which is in ker r + im u. The intersection of ker r and im u is 0, since if r(b) = 0 and u(c) = b, then 0 = ru(c) = c.

By exactness, im q = ker r, and since q is an injection, im q is isomorphic to A, so A is isomorphic to ker r. Since ru is a bijection, u is an injection, and thus im u is isomorphic to C. So B is again the direct sum of A and C.

Other proof

http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/748699/abstract-nonsense-proof-of-the-splitting-lemma/753182#753182

Non-abelian groups

In the form stated here, the splitting lemma does not hold in the full category of groups, which is not an abelian category.

Partially true

It is partially true: if a short exact sequence of groups is left split or a direct sum (conditions 1 or 3), then all of the conditions hold. For a direct sum this is clear, as one can inject from or project to the summands. For a left split sequence, the map t \times r\colon B \to A \times C gives an isomorphism, so B is a direct sum (condition 3), and thus inverting the isomorphism and composing with the natural injection C \to A \times C gives an injection C \to B splitting r (condition 2).

However, if a short exact sequence of groups is right split (condition 2), then it need not be left split or a direct sum (neither condition 1 nor 3 follows): the problem is that the image of the right splitting need not be normal. What is true in this case is that B is a semidirect product, though not in general a direct product.

Counterexample

To form a counterexample, take the smallest non-abelian group B\cong S_3, the symmetric group on three letters. Let A denote the alternating subgroup, and let C=B/A\cong\{\pm 1\}. Let q and r denote the inclusion map and the sign map respectively, so that

0 \rightarrow A \stackrel{q}{\longrightarrow} B \stackrel{r}{\longrightarrow} C \rightarrow 0 \,

is a short exact sequence. Condition (3) fails, because S_3 is not abelian. But condition (2) holds: we may define u: CB by mapping the generator to any two-cycle. Note for completeness that condition (1) fails: any map t: BA must map every two-cycle to the identity because the map has to be a group homomorphism, while the order of a two-cycle is 2 which can not be divided by the order of the elements in A other than the identity element, which is 3 as A is the alternating subgroup of S_3, or namely the cyclic group of order 3. But every permutation is a product of two-cycles, so t is the trivial map, whence tq: AA is the trivial map, not the identity.


References


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