In mathematics, the universal coefficient theorem in algebraic topology establishes the relationship in homology theory between the integral homology of a topological space X, and its homology with coefficients in any abelian group A. It states that the integral homology groups
completely determine the groups
Here might be the simplicial homology or more general singular homology theory: the result itself is a pure piece of homological algebra about chain complexes of free abelian groups. The form of the result is that other coefficients A may be used, at the cost of using a Tor functor.
For example it is common to take A to be , so that coefficients are modulo 2. This becomes straightforward in the absence of 2-torsion in the homology. Quite generally, the result indicates the relationship that holds between the Betti numbers bi of X and the Betti numbers bi,F with coefficients in a field F. These can differ, but only when the characteristic of F is a prime number p for which there is some p-torsion in the homology.
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Consider the tensor product . The theorem states that there is an injective group homomorphism ι from this group to , which has cokernel .
In other words, there is a natural short exact sequence
Furthermore, this is a split sequence (but the splitting is not natural).
The Tor group on the right can be thought of as the obstruction to ι being an isomorphism.
There is also a universal coefficient theorem for cohomology involving the Ext functor, stating that there is a natural short exact sequence
As in the homological case, the sequence splits, though not naturally.
Let , the real projective space. We compute the singular cohomology of X with coefficients in
knowing that the integer homology is given by:
We have , so that the above exact sequences yield
In fact the total cohomology ring structure is