Graded-commutative ring
In algebra, a graded-commutative ring (also called a skew-commutative ring) is a graded ring that is commutative in the graded sense; that is, homogeneous elements x, y satisfy
:
where |x| and |y| denote the degrees of x and y.
A commutative (non-graded) ring, with trivial grading, is a basic example. For a nontrivial example, an exterior algebra is generally not a commutative ring but is a graded-commutative ring.
A cup product on cohomology satisfies the skew-commutative relation; hence, a cohomology ring is graded-commutative. In fact, many examples of graded-commutative rings come from algebraic topology and homological algebra.
References
- David Eisenbud, Commutative Algebra. With a view toward algebraic geometry, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol 150, Springer-Verlag, New York, 1995. {{ISBN|0-387-94268-8}}
- {{Cite arXiv |last1=Beck |first1=Kristen A. |last2=Sather-Wagstaff |first2=Keri Ann |author2-link=Keri Sather-Wagstaff|date=2013-07-01 |title=A somewhat gentle introduction to differential graded commutative algebra |eprint=1307.0369 |class=math.AC}}
See also
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