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KR-theory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics, KR-theory is a variant of topological K-theory defined for spaces with an involution. It was introduced by Atiyah (1966), motivated by applications to the Atiyah–Singer index theorem for real elliptic operators.

Definition

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A real space is a defined to be a topological space with an involution. A real vector bundle over a real space X is defined to be a complex vector bundle E over X that is also a real space, such that the natural maps from E to X and from ×E to E commute with the involution, where the involution acts as complex conjugation on . (This differs from the notion of a complex vector bundle in the category of Z/2Z spaces, where the involution acts trivially on .)

The group KR(X) is the Grothendieck group of finite-dimensional real vector bundles over the real space X.

Periodicity

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Similarly to Bott periodicity, the periodicity theorem for KR states that KRp,q = KRp+1,q+1, where KRp,q is suspension with respect to Rp,q = Rq + iRp (with a switch in the order of p and q), given by

and Bp,q, Sp,q are the unit ball and sphere in Rp,q.

References

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  • Atiyah, Michael Francis (1966), "K-theory and reality", The Quarterly Journal of Mathematics, Second Series, 17 (1): 367–386, doi:10.1093/qmath/17.1.367, ISSN 0033-5606, MR 0206940, archived from the original on 2013-04-15