Gorenstein homological dimensions for triangulated categories
From MaRDI portal
Publication:403113
DOI10.1016/j.jalgebra.2014.03.037zbMath1305.18052OpenAlexW2021435810MaRDI QIDQ403113
Publication date: 29 August 2014
Published in: Journal of Algebra (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jalgebra.2014.03.037
Generalized (extraordinary) homology and cohomology theories in algebraic topology (55N20) Relative homological algebra, projective classes (category-theoretic aspects) (18G25)
Related Items
Resolving subcategories of triangulated categories and relative homological dimension ⋮ Balance of Tate cohomology in triangulated categories ⋮ Relative homological dimensions in recollements of triangulated categories ⋮ 𝒲(ξ)-Gorenstein objects in extriangulated categories ⋮ Unnamed Item ⋮ $W$-Gorenstein objects in triangulated categories ⋮ Cohomology theories in triangulated categories ⋮ Proper resolutions and Gorensteinness in extriangulated categories ⋮ Gorenstein homological dimensions for extriangulated categories ⋮ Tilting objects in triangulated categories ⋮ Resolving resolution dimensions in triangulated categories
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Gorenstein objects in triangulated categories
- Strongly Gorenstein projective, injective, and flat modules
- Gorenstein derived categories
- Complete cohomological functors on groups
- Gorenstein homological dimensions.
- Gorenstein dimensions
- Gorenstein injective and projective modules
- Relative homological algebra
- Relative homological algebra and purity in triangulated categories
- Tate cohomology and Gorensteinness for triangulated categories
- Triangulated Categories
- ABSOLUTE, RELATIVE, AND TATE COHOMOLOGY OF MODULES OF FINITE GORENSTEIN DIMENSION
- Gorenstein derived functors
- The homological theory of contravariantly finite subcategories:auslander-buchweitz contexts, gorenstein categories and (co-)stabilization
- The Grothendieck duality theorem via Bousfield’s techniques and Brown representability
- Global Gorenstein dimensions
- Stable module theory