1967
DOI: 10.1515/9781400877751
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Homology of Cell Complexes

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Cited by 63 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…To (1). Let x"* (0) be an arbitrary element of niE[S(i)' Since S(i) is additively closed, Therefore, one only need to show that there is a bound for the ith components of elements of G \ Si' For this purpose, choose an element z E S \ S(i)' Let H denote the additive group generated by S(i) and z in zn.…”
Section: Proof Note That Ho(dj = K[si] and Hp(djmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To (1). Let x"* (0) be an arbitrary element of niE[S(i)' Since S(i) is additively closed, Therefore, one only need to show that there is a bound for the ith components of elements of G \ Si' For this purpose, choose an element z E S \ S(i)' Let H denote the additive group generated by S(i) and z in zn.…”
Section: Proof Note That Ho(dj = K[si] and Hp(djmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The problem is that even though the individual pieces are homeomorphic to balls and are glued together nicely, the boundaries of the closures of the pieces are not homeomorphic to spheres in general. (If they were, then the Voronoǐ decomposition would give rise to a regular cell complex [CF67], which can be used as a substitute for a simplicial or CW complex in homology computations.) Nevertheless, there is a way to remedy this.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This generalizes readily to permutation representations. The notation for joins used here will be that of Cooke and Finney [4]. Specifically, Cooke and Finney define a raised chain complex of a cell complex E to be the chain complex sC, where sC'(E) = Cq_x(E), if q > 0, and sC0(E) = ZvE, where vE is a void cell of dimension -1 added to E. The differentials are given by d'q = dq_x if a > 0, and 90 = e, the augmentation of C. They then show that the chain complex of the join E * E' of two cell complexes £ and £' is given by: sC*(E * £') = sC+(E) ® ¿C*(£').…”
Section: He\e a Point Of E) = [He\e A Cell Of E)mentioning
confidence: 99%