Lemma 15.71.6. Let $R$ be a ring. Given complexes $K^\bullet , L^\bullet , M^\bullet $ of $R$-modules there is a canonical morphism
of complexes of $R$-modules functorial in all three complexes.
Lemma 15.71.6. Let $R$ be a ring. Given complexes $K^\bullet , L^\bullet , M^\bullet $ of $R$-modules there is a canonical morphism
of complexes of $R$-modules functorial in all three complexes.
Proof. Via the discussion in Remark 15.71.2 the existence of such a canonical map follows from Categories, Remark 4.43.12. We also give a direct construction.
Consider an element $\beta $ of degree $n$ of the right hand side. Then
Our sign rules tell us that
We can describe the last term as follows
if $f \in \mathop{\mathrm{Hom}}\nolimits ^{-s - 1}(K^\bullet , L^\bullet )$. We conclude that in some unspecified sense $\text{d}(\beta ^{p, s})$ is a sum of three terms with signs as follows
Next, we consider an element $\alpha $ of degree $n$ of the left hand side. We can write it like so
Each $\alpha ^{t, r}$ maps to an element
Our sign rules tell us that
where if we further write $\alpha ^{p, q, r} = \sum g_ i^{p, q} \otimes k_ i^ r$ then we have
We conclude that in some unspecified sense $\text{d}(\alpha ^{p, q, r})$ is a sum of three terms with signs as follows
To define our map we will use the canonical maps
which sends $\varphi \otimes k$ to the map $\psi \mapsto \varphi (\psi (k))$. This is functorial in all three variables. With $s = q + r$ there is an inclusion
coming from the projection $\mathop{\mathrm{Hom}}\nolimits ^{-s}(K^\bullet , L^\bullet ) \to \mathop{\mathrm{Hom}}\nolimits _ R(K^ r, L^{-q})$. Since $\alpha ^{p, q, r}$ is nonzero only for a finite number of $r$ we see that for a given $s$ there is only a finite number of $q, r$ with $q + r = s$. Thus we can send $\alpha $ to the element $\beta $ with
where where the sum uses the inclusions given above and where $\epsilon _{p, q, r} \in \{ \pm 1\} $. Comparing signs in the equations (15.71.6.1) and (15.71.6.2) we see that
$\epsilon _{p, q, r} = \epsilon _{p + 1, q, r}$
$-(-1)^ n\epsilon _{p, q, r} = -(-1)^{p + q}\epsilon _{p, q - 1, r}$ or equivalently $\epsilon _{p, q, r} = (-1)^ r\epsilon _{p, q - 1, r}$
$(-1)^{p + 1}\epsilon _{p, q, r} = (-1)^{p + q}\epsilon _{p, q, r + 1}$ or equivalently $(-1)^{q + 1}\epsilon _{p, q, r} = \epsilon _{p, q, r + 1}$.
A good solution is to take
The choice of this sign is explained in the remark following the proof. $\square$
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