I have to make a talk about spectral sequences, so I'd like to present some concrete examples of computation, after the general definition. I'd like to present three examples of spectral sequences: Cech-De Rham s.s. in order to compute the cohomology groups of complex projective space $\mathbb{C}P^n$, Serre s.s. and the third I'd like to find a s.s. related to homological algebra or algebraic geometry, for example regarding Koszul complex. Can you give me any idea to make some concrete examples of Serre s.s. and Koszul s.s.? (and some bibliography...) Thank you!
2026-03-25 16:20:46.1774455646
Examples spectral sequence
279 Views Asked by Bumbble Comm https://math.techqa.club/user/bumbble-comm/detail At
1
There are 1 best solutions below
Related Questions in EXAMPLES-COUNTEREXAMPLES
- A congruence with the Euler's totient function and sum of divisors function
- Seeking an example of Schwartz function $f$ such that $ \int_{\bf R}\left|\frac{f(x-y)}{y}\right|\ dy=\infty$
- Inner Product Uniqueness
- Metric on a linear space is induced by norm if and only if the metric is homogeneous and translation invariant
- Why do I need boundedness for a a closed subset of $\mathbb{R}$ to have a maximum?
- A congruence with the Euler's totient function and number of divisors function
- Analysis Counterexamples
- A congruence involving Mersenne numbers
- If $\|\ f \|\ = \max_{|x|=1} |f(x)|$ then is $\|\ f \|\ \|\ f^{-1}\|\ = 1$ for all $f\in \mathcal{L}(\mathbb{R}^m,\mathbb{R}^n)$?
- Unbounded Feasible Region
Related Questions in HOMOLOGICAL-ALGEBRA
- How does $\operatorname{Ind}^G_H$ behave with respect to $\bigoplus$?
- Describe explicitly a minimal free resolution
- $A$ - dga over field, then $H^i(A) = 0, i > 1$ implies $HH_i(A) = 0, i < -1$
- Tensor product $M\otimes_B Hom_B(M,B)$ equals $End_B(M)$, $M$ finitely generated over $B$ and projective
- Group cohomology of $\mathrm{GL}(V)$
- two maps are not homotopic equivalent
- Existence of adjugant with making given natural transformation be the counit
- Noetherian property is redundant?
- What is the monomorphism that forms the homology group?
- Rational points on conics over fields of dimension 1
Related Questions in HOMOLOGY-COHOMOLOGY
- Are these cycles boundaries?
- Cohomology groups of a torus minus a finite number of disjoint open disks
- $f$ - odd implies $d(f)$ - odd, question to the proof
- Poincarè duals in complex projective space and homotopy
- understanding proof of excision theorem
- proof of excision theorem: commutativity of a diagram
- exact sequence of reduced homology groups
- Doubts about computation of the homology of $\Bbb RP^2$ in Vick's *Homology Theory*
- the quotien space of $ S^1\times S^1$
- Rational points on conics over fields of dimension 1
Related Questions in SPECTRAL-SEQUENCES
- Hochschild-Serre spectral sequence
- Example of a nongraded chain complex
- Showing induced action of G by conjugation on Hochschild-Serre $H_i(G/N, H_j(N,M))$ is trivial
- Homology with coefficients from homology.
- Adams operations and an artificial grading on K-theory
- Spectral sequence associated to the stupid filtration
- Leray spectral sequence
- First page of a spectral sequence
- Cohomolgoy of $S^1$-bundle over genus $g$ surface
- Homology of a trivial fibre bundle via a spectral sequence
Trending Questions
- Induction on the number of equations
- How to convince a math teacher of this simple and obvious fact?
- Find $E[XY|Y+Z=1 ]$
- Refuting the Anti-Cantor Cranks
- What are imaginary numbers?
- Determine the adjoint of $\tilde Q(x)$ for $\tilde Q(x)u:=(Qu)(x)$ where $Q:U→L^2(Ω,ℝ^d$ is a Hilbert-Schmidt operator and $U$ is a Hilbert space
- Why does this innovative method of subtraction from a third grader always work?
- How do we know that the number $1$ is not equal to the number $-1$?
- What are the Implications of having VΩ as a model for a theory?
- Defining a Galois Field based on primitive element versus polynomial?
- Can't find the relationship between two columns of numbers. Please Help
- Is computer science a branch of mathematics?
- Is there a bijection of $\mathbb{R}^n$ with itself such that the forward map is connected but the inverse is not?
- Identification of a quadrilateral as a trapezoid, rectangle, or square
- Generator of inertia group in function field extension
Popular # Hahtags
second-order-logic
numerical-methods
puzzle
logic
probability
number-theory
winding-number
real-analysis
integration
calculus
complex-analysis
sequences-and-series
proof-writing
set-theory
functions
homotopy-theory
elementary-number-theory
ordinary-differential-equations
circles
derivatives
game-theory
definite-integrals
elementary-set-theory
limits
multivariable-calculus
geometry
algebraic-number-theory
proof-verification
partial-derivative
algebra-precalculus
Popular Questions
- What is the integral of 1/x?
- How many squares actually ARE in this picture? Is this a trick question with no right answer?
- Is a matrix multiplied with its transpose something special?
- What is the difference between independent and mutually exclusive events?
- Visually stunning math concepts which are easy to explain
- taylor series of $\ln(1+x)$?
- How to tell if a set of vectors spans a space?
- Calculus question taking derivative to find horizontal tangent line
- How to determine if a function is one-to-one?
- Determine if vectors are linearly independent
- What does it mean to have a determinant equal to zero?
- Is this Batman equation for real?
- How to find perpendicular vector to another vector?
- How to find mean and median from histogram
- How many sides does a circle have?
Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology by Bott and Tu has many examples that you could present if you want. A User's Guide to Spectral Sequences by McCleary has also tons and tons of examples.
Here are some examples off the top of my head:
The Serre SS for computing the homology of $\Omega S^n$ ("easy"), of $BU_n$ and $U_n$ ("hard").
In homological algebra, the Künneth SS or the universal coefficient SS can probably give examples of computations.
In algebraic geometry, there's the Leray SS, depending on your familiarity with the concepts involved.