lecture 2
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Author: Dr. Jan A. Sanders, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Central extensions
A module
is projective if for every surjective morphism of modules
and every morphism
,
there exists a morphism
such that
.
In particular, if
is projective and
surjective, there exists a
such that
,
that is,
is a section of
.
Consider the exact sequence of Leibniz algebras with Leibniz algebra morphisms
- (1)
.
question
If
is projective as an
-module, is there a section of
which is also a Leibniz algebra morphism, that is, is it also projective as a Leibniz algebra?
To answer this question, first assume
to be abelian, that is,
for all
.
Let
be a section, but not necessarily a Leibniz algebra morphism (Exists, since
is projective). Define
by
- (2)
One has
- (3)
Since
, one can define
(or
in the Lie algebra case, where we denote by
the antisymmetric forms in
) by
- (4)
Now define
by
This is well-defined since, for instance,
.
Observe that
.
Moreover,
is a representation, since
or
,
and (the following checks can be skipped in the Lie algebra case)
,
or
.
Suppose now there exists a
such that
is a Leibniz algebra homomorphism and a section of
.
Then
implying that
.
Define
by
.
Then (by assumption!)
This implies that the existence of such a
is equivalent to
.
On the other hand, if it would turn out that
, this would be a definite obstruction of the existence of such a
.
We can, however, rule out the last possibility.
It follows that
.
| Invited by: | Dr. Eugene M. Izhikevich, Editor-in-Chief of Scholarpedia, the peer-reviewed open-access encyclopedia |
