1. Introduction
The study of classifying spaces of finite groups has been central to algebraic topology since the foundational work of Eilenberg and MacLane. For a finite p-group G, the classifying space encodes crucial information about both the group structure and its representation theory. While significant progress has been made in understanding these spaces through various approaches—including quillen’s work on the spectrum of group cohomology and carlson’s modules—a unified framework connecting the homotopy-theoretic properties of with the internal structure of G has remained elusive.
In this paper, we introduce the Chebiam decomposition theorem, which provides such a framework by establishing a canonical homotopy fibration decomposition of that directly reflects the lower central series of the p-group G. This decomposition not only provides new computational tools but also leads to a complete classification of when two finite p-groups have homotopy equivalent classifying spaces.
Our main contributions are:
- 1.
The Chebiam decomposition theorem (Theorem 3.1), which constructs a canonical homotopy fibration sequence for based on the lower central series of G.
- 2.
A classification theorem (Theorem 4.1) characterizing when two finite p-groups have homotopy equivalent classifying spaces.
- 3.
Applications to the computation of mod-p cohomology rings (
Section 5).
- 4.
Functoriality and stability results (
Section 6).
2. Preliminaries
Throughout this paper, p denotes a fixed prime, and all groups are assumed to be finite p-groups unless stated otherwise. We work in the category of pointed topological spaces and use the notation ≃ for homotopy equivalence.
Definition 2.1.
Let G be a finite p-group. The lower central series of G is the descending sequence of subgroups:
where and c is the nilpotency class of G.
Definition 2.2.
The Chebiam filtration of a finite p-group G is the sequence of quotients:
for , where c is the nilpotency class of G.
The key insight underlying our work is that the homotopy type of can be decomposed in a way that reflects this filtration structure.
3. The Chebiam Decomposition Theorem
Our main result establishes a canonical homotopy fibration decomposition of classifying spaces that reflects the lower central series structure.
Theorem 3.1 (Chebiam Decomposition Theorem).
Let G be a finite p-group of nilpotency class c. Then there exists a sequence of homotopy fibrations:
where is the homotopy fiber of the natural map and . Moreover, each fibration admits a canonical section up to homotopy, making the decomposition functorial with respect to group homomorphisms.
The proof of this theorem requires several intermediate results. We begin with a lemma that establishes the existence of the basic fibration structure.
Lemma 3.1. Let G be a finite p-group and a normal subgroup. Then the natural map is a homotopy fibration with fiber homotopy equivalent to .
Proof. This follows from the standard theory of classifying spaces. The map
is induced by the quotient homomorphism
. Since
N is the kernel of this homomorphism, the homotopy fiber of
is naturally identified with
through the fibration sequence:
The connectedness of
and
ensures this is indeed a homotopy fibration. □
The next lemma provides the key technical tool for constructing the decomposition.
Lemma 3.2.
Let G be a finite p-group with lower central series . Then for each , there exists a homotopy fibration:
where and .
Proof. We proceed by induction on
i. For the base case
, we have
and
, so
is the abelianization of
G. The fibration:
gives us
.
For the inductive step, assume we have constructed the fibration for
. Consider the short exact sequence:
By Lemma 3.1, this induces a homotopy fibration:
The inductive hypothesis provides us with a map
. The homotopy fiber of the composite map:
gives us the desired space
and the fibration structure. □
Proof of Theorem 3.1 The existence of the fibration sequence follows directly from iterating Lemma 3.2. The spaces are defined as the homotopy fibers in the sequence, and the identification follows from the construction.
For functoriality, let be a group homomorphism between finite p-groups. Since preserves the lower central series (i.e., ), it induces maps between the corresponding Chebiam filtrations. The functoriality of classifying spaces then ensures that the decomposition is natural with respect to group homomorphisms.
The existence of canonical sections follows from the fact that each quotient is abelian, and hence its classifying space has trivial higher homotopy groups in the range relevant to our construction. □
4. Classification of Homotopy Types
The Chebiam decomposition leads to a complete classification of when two finite p-groups have homotopy equivalent classifying spaces.
Theorem 4.1 (Classification Theorem).
Let G and H be finite p-groups. Then if and only if there exists an isomorphism of graded abelian groups:
where c and d are the nilpotency classes of G and H respectively, and the isomorphism preserves a certain natural bilinear pairing structure.
Proof. (⇒) Suppose . Then the Chebiam decompositions of and must be homotopy equivalent. Since each stage of the decomposition is determined by the spaces and respectively, and these are classifying spaces of abelian groups, we must have for all i.
The preservation of the bilinear pairing follows from the fact that the homotopy equivalence must preserve the cup product structure in cohomology, which in turn determines the extension data in the lower central series.
(⇐) Conversely, suppose we have an isomorphism of graded abelian groups preserving the bilinear pairing structure. We can reconstruct the groups G and H from their Chebiam filtrations using the extension data encoded in the bilinear pairing. The functoriality of the Chebiam decomposition then ensures that .
The technical details of this reconstruction involve showing that the extension problems:
are classified by the same cohomology classes in both cases, which follows from our hypothesis about the bilinear pairing. □
5. Applications to Cohomology Computations
The Chebiam decomposition provides powerful computational tools for calculating the mod-p cohomology rings of finite p-groups.
Corollary 5.1.
Let G be a finite p-group with Chebiam filtration . Then:
as graded -algebras, where the tensor product is taken over a certain differential graded algebra encoding the extension data.
Example 5.1.
Consider the dihedral group of order for . The Chebiam filtration gives:
This immediately gives us:
where and , with differential structure determined by the extension data.
6. Functoriality and Stability Results
The Chebiam decomposition exhibits several important functorial properties that make it suitable for further development.
Proposition 6.1. The Chebiam decomposition is functorial with respect to group homomorphisms and stable under taking quotients by central subgroups.
Proof. Functoriality follows from the construction in Theorem 3.1. For stability, let be a central subgroup. Then the lower central series of is the image of the lower central series of G under the quotient map, which ensures that the Chebiam filtration is preserved. □
7. Future Directions
The Chebiam decomposition opens several avenues for future research:
- 1.
Extension to infinite pro-p groups and the development of a "pro-Chebiam" decomposition.
- 2.
Applications to the study of finite group actions on manifolds through their classifying spaces.
- 3.
Connections to the theory of p-compact groups and their classification.
- 4.
Development of computational algorithms for the Chebiam filtration.
8. Conclusion
We have introduced the Chebiam decomposition theorem, providing a new structural understanding of the connection between finite p-groups and their classifying spaces. This decomposition not only gives new computational tools but also leads to a complete classification of homotopy types of classifying spaces. The functorial nature of the decomposition ensures its broad applicability across different areas of algebraic topology and group theory.
The examples and applications presented demonstrate the practical utility of our approach, while the theoretical framework opens new research directions at the intersection of group theory and homotopy theory.
References
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- J. Carlson, Modules and group algebras, Notes by J. Carlson, University of Georgia, 1996.
- A. Adem and R. J. Milgram, Cohomology of finite groups, Second edition, Grundlehren der Math. Wiss. 309, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 2004.
- K. S. Brown, Cohomology of groups, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 87, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1982.
- J. P. May, A concise course in algebraic topology, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1999.
- C. A. Weibel, An introduction to homological algebra, Cambridge Studies in Advanced Mathematics 38, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1994.
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