Detecting periodic elements in higher topological Hochschild homology (Q680294)

From MaRDI portal
Revision as of 02:30, 20 March 2024 by Openalex240319060354 (talk | contribs) (Set OpenAlex properties.)
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Detecting periodic elements in higher topological Hochschild homology
scientific article

    Statements

    Detecting periodic elements in higher topological Hochschild homology (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    23 January 2018
    0 references
    The topological Hochschild homology spectrum of a commutative ring spectrum \(R\) can be modeled by the tensor \(R \otimes S^1\) of \(R\) with the \(1\)-sphere. The tensor \(\Lambda_X R = R \otimes X\) of \(R\) with a more general space \(X\) is also known as the Loday construction and has been studied by \textit{M.Brun, G. Carlsson} and \textit{B. I. Dundas} [Adv. Math. 225, No. 6, 3166-3213 (2010; Zbl 1208.19003)]. The purpose of the present work is to calculate the homotopy groups \(\Lambda_X R\) when \(R\) is the Eilenberg-Mac Lane spectrum \(H \mathbb F_p\) at a prime \(p \geq 5\), the space \(X\) is either an \(n\)-sphere \(S^n\) or an \(n\)-torus \(T^n\), and \(n\leq p\). The relevance of these calculations comes from the hope that fixed point information of the iterated topological Hochschild homology spectrum \(\Lambda_{T^n}(R)\) should provide an approximation to the iterated algebraic \(K\)-theory \(K^{(n)}(R) = K(K(\dots K(R)))\) of \(R\), just as the topological cyclic homology spectrum built from fixed points of the topological Hochschild homology spectrum \(\Lambda_{S^1}R\) approximates the algebraic \(K\)-theory of \(R\). The chromatic redshift conjecture predicts that under suitable assumptions, algebraic \(K\)-theory should increase chromatic complexity. Thus \(\Lambda_{T^n} H \mathbb F_p\) may be among the most accessible objects that can provide evidence for chromatic redshift in high chromatic levels. In fact, the author shows that in accordance with these expectations, the image of \(v_{n-1}\) under the unit map \(\mathbb F_p[v_{n-1}] \cong \pi_* k(n-1) \to k(n-1)_*( \Lambda_{T^n} H \mathbb F_p)^{h T^n}\) is non-zero. Here \(k(n-1)\) is the connective Morava \(K\)-theory spectrum, \(k(n-1)_*\) denotes \(k(n-1)\)-homology, and \( ( \Lambda_{T^n} H \mathbb F_p)^{h T^n}\) is the \(T^n\)-homotopy fixed point spectrum of \(\Lambda_{T^n} H \mathbb F_p\). To establish these results, the author first determines the homotopy groups of \(\Lambda_{S^n} H \mathbb F_p\). Using this, he sets up a family of bar spectral sequences and exploits a multifold Hopf algebra structure coming from the various circles in \(T^n\) in order to compute the homotopy groups of \(\Lambda_{T^n} H \mathbb F_p\). The result about the image of \(v_{n-1}\) in the \(k(n-1)\)-homology of \((\Lambda_{T^n} H \mathbb F_p)^{h T^n}\) is the consequence of an analysis of the homotopy fixed point spectral sequence.
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    topological Hochschild homology
    0 references
    Morava \(K\)-theory
    0 references
    chromatic redshift
    0 references
    homotopy fixed point spectral sequence
    0 references
    multifold Hopf algebra
    0 references
    0 references