Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 14, 2026

Simplicial group

In mathematics, more precisely, in the theory of simplicial sets, a simplicial group is a simplicial object in the category of groups. Similarly, a simplicial abelian group is a simplicial object in the category of abelian groups. A simplicial group is a Kan complex. The Dold–Kan correspondence says that a simplicial abelian group may be identified with a chain complex. In fact it can be shown that any simplicial abelian group is non-canonically homotopy equivalent to a product of Eilenberg–MacLane spaces,

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In mathematics, more precisely, in the theory of simplicial sets, a simplicial group is a simplicial object in the category of groups. Similarly, a simplicial abelian group is a simplicial object in the category of abelian groups. A simplicial group is a Kan complex (in particular, its homotopy groups make sense). The Dold–Kan correspondence says that a simplicial abelian group may be identified with a chain complex. In fact it can be shown that any simplicial abelian group A {\displaystyle A} is non-canonically homotopy equivalent to a product of Eilenberg–MacLane spaces, i 0 K ( π i A , i ) . {\displaystyle \prod _{i\geq 0}K(\pi _{i}A,i).} 1

A commutative monoid in the category of simplicial abelian groups is a simplicial commutative ring.

Eckmann (1945) discusses a simplicial analogue of the fact that a cohomology class on a Kähler manifold has a unique harmonic representative and deduces Kirchhoff's circuit laws from these observations.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Paul Goerss and Rick Jardine (1999, Ch 3. Proposition 2.20)
Further reading

Further reading