The Stacks project

12.18 Double complexes and associated total complexes

We discuss double complexes and associated total complexes.

Definition 12.18.1. Let $\mathcal{A}$ be an additive category. A double complex in $\mathcal{A}$ is given by a system $(\{ A^{p, q}, d_1^{p, q}, d_2^{p, q}\} _{p, q\in \mathbf{Z}})$, where each $A^{p, q}$ is an object of $\mathcal{A}$ and $d_1^{p, q} : A^{p, q} \to A^{p + 1, q}$ and $d_2^{p, q} : A^{p, q} \to A^{p, q + 1}$ are morphisms of $\mathcal{A}$ such that the following rules hold:

  1. $d_1^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} = 0$

  2. $d_2^{p, q + 1} \circ d_2^{p, q} = 0$

  3. $d_1^{p, q + 1} \circ d_2^{p, q} = d_2^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q}$

for all $p, q \in \mathbf{Z}$.

This is just the cochain version of the definition. It says that each $A^{p, \bullet }$ is a cochain complex and that each $d_1^{p, \bullet }$ is a morphism of complexes $A^{p, \bullet } \to A^{p + 1, \bullet }$ such that $d_1^{p + 1, \bullet } \circ d_1^{p, \bullet } = 0$ as morphisms of complexes. In other words a double complex can be seen as a complex of complexes. So in the diagram

\[ \xymatrix{ \ldots & \ldots & \ldots & \ldots \\ \ldots \ar[r] & A^{p, q + 1} \ar[r]^{d_1^{p, q + 1}} \ar[u] & A^{p + 1, q + 1} \ar[r] \ar[u] & \ldots \\ \ldots \ar[r] & A^{p, q} \ar[r]^{d_1^{p, q}} \ar[u]^{d_2^{p, q}} & A^{p + 1, q} \ar[r] \ar[u]_{d_2^{p + 1, q}} & \ldots \\ \ldots & \ldots \ar[u] & \ldots \ar[u] & \ldots } \]

any square commutes. Warning: In the literature one encounters a different definition where a “bicomplex” or a “double complex” has the property that the squares in the diagram anti-commute.

Example 12.18.2. Let $\mathcal{A}$, $\mathcal{B}$, $\mathcal{C}$ be additive categories. Suppose that

\[ \otimes : \mathcal{A} \times \mathcal{B} \longrightarrow \mathcal{C}, \quad (X, Y) \longmapsto X \otimes Y \]

is a functor which is bilinear on morphisms, see Categories, Definition 4.2.20 for the definition of $\mathcal{A} \times \mathcal{B}$. Given complexes $X^\bullet $ of $\mathcal{A}$ and $Y^\bullet $ of $\mathcal{B}$ we obtain a double complex

\[ K^{\bullet , \bullet } = X^\bullet \otimes Y^\bullet \]

in $\mathcal{C}$. Here the first differential $K^{p, q} \to K^{p + 1, q}$ is the morphism $X^ p \otimes Y^ q \to X^{p + 1} \otimes Y^ q$ induced by the morphism $X^ p \to X^{p + 1}$ and the identity on $Y^ q$. Similarly for the second differential.

Definition 12.18.3. Let $\mathcal{A}$ be an additive category. Let $A^{\bullet , \bullet }$ be a double complex. The associated simple complex, denoted $sA^\bullet $, also often called the associated total complex, denoted $\text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })$, is given by

\[ sA^ n = \text{Tot}^ n(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) = \bigoplus \nolimits _{n = p + q} A^{p, q} \]

(if it exists) with differential

\[ d_{sA^\bullet }^ n = d_{\text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })}^ n = \sum \nolimits _{n = p + q} (d_1^{p, q} + (-1)^ p d_2^{p, q}) \]

If countable direct sums exist in $\mathcal{A}$ or if for each $n$ at most finitely many $A^{p, n - p}$ are nonzero, then $\text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })$ exists. Note that the definition is not symmetric in the indices $(p, q)$.

Remark 12.18.4. Let $\mathcal{A}$ be an additive category. Let $A^{\bullet , \bullet , \bullet }$ be a triple complex. The associated total complex is the complex with terms

\[ \text{Tot}^ n(A^{\bullet , \bullet , \bullet }) = \bigoplus \nolimits _{p + q + r = n} A^{p, q, r} \]

and differential

\[ d^ n_{\text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet , \bullet })} = \sum \nolimits _{p + q + r = n} d_1^{p, q, r} + (-1)^ pd_2^{p, q, r} + (-1)^{p + q}d_3^{p, q, r} \]

With this definition a simple calculation shows that the associated total complex is equal to

\[ \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet , \bullet }) = \text{Tot}(\text{Tot}_{12}(A^{\bullet , \bullet , \bullet })) = \text{Tot}(\text{Tot}_{23}(A^{\bullet , \bullet , \bullet })) \]

In other words, we can either first combine the first two of the variables and then combine sum of those with the last, or we can first combine the last two variables and then combine the first with the sum of the last two.

Remark 12.18.5. Let $\mathcal{A}$ be an additive category. Let $A^{\bullet , \bullet }$ be a double complex with differentials $d_1^{p, q}$ and $d_2^{p, q}$. Denote $A^{\bullet , \bullet }[a, b]$ the double complex with

\[ (A^{\bullet , \bullet }[a, b])^{p, q} = A^{p + a, q + b} \]

and differentials

\[ d_{A^{\bullet , \bullet }[a, b], 1}^{p, q} = (-1)^ a d_1^{p + a, q + b} \quad \text{and}\quad d_{A^{\bullet , \bullet }[a, b], 2}^{p, q} = (-1)^ b d_2^{p + a, q + b} \]

In this situation there is a well defined isomorphism

\[ \gamma : \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[a + b] \longrightarrow \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }[a, b]) \]

which in degree $n$ is given by the map

\[ \xymatrix{ (\text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[a + b])^ n = \bigoplus _{p + q = n + a + b} A^{p, q} \ar[d]^{\epsilon (p, q, a, b)\text{id}_{A^{p, q}}} \\ \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }[a, b])^ n = \bigoplus _{p' + q' = n} A^{p' + a, q' + b} } \]

for some sign $\epsilon (p, q, a, b)$. Of course the summand $A^{p, q}$ maps to the summand $A^{p' + a, q' + b}$ when $p = p' + a$ and $q = q' + b$. To figure out the conditions on these signs observe that on the source we have

\[ d|_{A^{p, q}} = (-1)^{a + b}\left(d_1^{p, q} + (-1)^ pd_2^{p, q}\right) \]

whereas on the target we have

\[ d|_{A^{p' + a, q' + b}} = (-1)^ ad_1^{p' + a, q' + b} + (-1)^{p'}(-1)^ bd_2^{p' + a, q' + b} \]

Thus our constraints are that

\[ (-1)^ a \epsilon (p, q, a, b) = \epsilon (p + 1, q, a, b)(-1)^{a + b} \Leftrightarrow \epsilon (p + 1, q, a, b) = (-1)^ b \epsilon (p, q, a, b) \]

and

\[ (-1)^{p' + b}\epsilon (p, q, a, b) = \epsilon (p, q + 1, a, b) (-1)^{a + b + p} \Leftrightarrow \epsilon (p, q, a, b) = \epsilon (p, q + 1, a, b) \]

Thus we choose $\epsilon (p, q, a, b) = (-1)^{pb}$.

Remark 12.18.6. Let $\mathcal{A}$ be an additive category with countable direct sums. Let $\text{DoubleComp}(\mathcal{A})$ denote the category of double complexes. We can consider an object $A^{\bullet , \bullet }$ of $\text{DoubleComp}(\mathcal{A})$ as a complex of complexes as follows

\[ \ldots \to A^{\bullet , -1} \to A^{\bullet , 0} \to A^{\bullet , 1} \to \ldots \]

For the variant where we switch the role of the indices, see Remark 12.18.7. In this remark we show that taking the associated total complex is compatible with all the structures on complexes we have studied in the chapter so far.

First, observe that the shift functor on double complexes viewed as complexes of complexes in the manner given above is the functor $[0, 1]$ defined in Remark 12.18.5. By Remark 12.18.5 the functor

\[ \text{Tot} : \text{DoubleComp}(\mathcal{A}) \to \text{Comp}(\mathcal{A}) \]

is compatible with shift functors, in the sense that we have a functorial isomorphism $\gamma : \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[1] \to \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }[0, 1])$.

Second, if

\[ f, g : A^{\bullet , \bullet } \to B^{\bullet , \bullet } \]

are homotopic when $f$ and $g$ are viewed as morphisms of complexes of complexes in the manner given above, then

\[ \text{Tot}(f), \text{Tot}(g) : \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet }) \]

are homotopic maps of complexes. Indeed, let $h = (h^ q)$ be a homotopy between $f$ and $g$. If we denote $h^{p, q} : A^{p, q} \to B^{p, q - 1}$ the component in degree $p$ of $h^ q$, then this means that

\[ f^{p, q} - g^{p, q} = d_2^{p, q - 1} \circ h^{p, q} + h^{p, q + 1} \circ d_2^{p, q} \]

The fact that $h^ q : A^{\bullet , q} \to B^{\bullet , q - 1}$ is a map of complexes means that

\[ d_1^{p, q - 1} \circ h^{p, q} = h^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} \]

Let us define $h' = ((h')^ n)$ the homotopy given by the maps $(h')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^{n - 1}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })$ using $(-1)^ ph^{p, q}$ on the summand $A^{p, q}$ for $p + q = n$. Then we see that

\[ d_{\text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })} \circ h' + h' \circ d_{\text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })} \]

restricted to the summand $A^{p, q}$ is equal to

\[ d_1^{p, q - 1} \circ (-1)^ p h^{p, q} + (-1)^ p d_2^{p, q - 1} \circ (-1)^ p h^{p, q} + (-1)^{p + 1} h^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} + (-1)^ p h^{p, q + 1} \circ (-1)^ p d_2^{p, q} \]

which evaluates to $f^{p, q} - g^{p, q}$ by the equations given above. This proves the second compatibility.

Third, suppose that in the paragraph above we have $f = g$. Then the assignment $h \leadsto h'$ above is compatible with the identification of Lemma 12.14.9. More precisely, if we view $h$ as a morphism of complexes of complexes $A^{\bullet , \bullet } \to B^{\bullet , \bullet }[0, -1]$ via this lemma then

\[ \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \xrightarrow {\text{Tot}(h)} \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet }[0, -1]) \xrightarrow {\gamma ^{-1}} \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })[-1] \]

is equal to $h'$ viewed as a morphism of complexes via the lemma. Here $\gamma $ is the identification of Remark 12.18.5. The verification of this third point is immediate.

Fourth, let

\[ 0 \to A^{\bullet , \bullet } \to B^{\bullet , \bullet } \to C^{\bullet , \bullet } \to 0 \]

be a complex of double complexes and suppose we are given splittings $s^ q : C^{\bullet , q} \to B^{\bullet , q}$ and $\pi ^ q : B^{\bullet , q} \to A^{\bullet , q}$ of this as in Lemma 12.14.10 when we view double complexes as complexes of complexes in the manner given above. This on the one hand produces a map

\[ \delta : C^{\bullet , \bullet } \longrightarrow A^{\bullet , \bullet }[0, 1] \]

by the procedure in Lemma 12.14.10. On the other hand taking $\text{Tot}$ we obtain a complex

\[ 0 \to \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to 0 \]

which is termwise split (see below) and hence comes with a morphism

\[ \delta ' : \text{Tot}(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \longrightarrow \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[1] \]

well defined up to homotopy by Lemmas 12.14.10 and 12.14.12. Claim: these maps agree in the sense that

\[ \text{Tot}(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \xrightarrow {\text{Tot}(\delta )} \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }[0, 1]) \xrightarrow {\gamma ^{-1}} \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[1] \]

is equal to $\delta '$ where $\gamma $ is as in Remark 12.18.5. To see this denote $s^{p, q} : C^{p, q} \to B^{\bullet , q}$ and $\pi ^{p, q} : B^{p, q} \to A^{p, q}$ the components of $s^ q$ and $\pi ^ q$. As splittings $(s')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^ n(B^{\bullet , \bullet })$ and $(\pi ')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(B^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^ n(A^{\bullet , \bullet })$ we use the maps whose components are $s^{p, q}$ and $\pi ^{p, q}$ for $p + q = n$. We recall that

\[ (\delta ')^ n = (\pi ')^{n + 1} \circ d_{\text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })}^ n \circ (s')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^{n + 1}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \]

The restriction of this to the summand $C^{p, q}$ is equal to

\[ \pi ^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q} + \pi ^{p, q + 1} \circ (-1)^ p d_2^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q} = \pi ^{p, q + 1} \circ (-1)^ p d_2^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q} \]

The equality holds because $s^ q$ is a morphism of complexes (with $d_1$ as differential) and because $\pi ^{p + 1, q} \circ s^{p + 1, q} = 0$ as $s$ and $\pi $ correspond to a direct sum decomposition of $B$ in every bidegree. On the other hand, for $\delta $ we have

\[ \delta ^ q = \pi ^ q \circ d_2 \circ s^ q : C^{\bullet , q} \to A^{\bullet , q + 1} \]

whose restriction to the summand $C^{p, q}$ is equal to $\pi ^{p, q + 1} \circ d_2^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q}$. The difference in signs is exactly canceled out by the sign of $(-1)^ p$ in the isomorphism $\gamma $ and the fourth claim is proven.

Remark 12.18.7. Let $\mathcal{A}$ be an additive category with countable direct sums. Let $\text{DoubleComp}(\mathcal{A})$ denote the category of double complexes. We can consider an object $A^{\bullet , \bullet }$ of $\text{DoubleComp}(\mathcal{A})$ as a complex of complexes as follows

\[ \ldots \to A^{-1, \bullet } \to A^{0, \bullet } \to A^{1, \bullet } \to \ldots \]

For the variant where we switch the role of the indices, see Remark 12.18.6. In this remark we show that taking the associated total complex is compatible with all the structures on complexes we have studied in the chapter so far.

First, observe that the shift functor on double complexes viewed as complexes of complexes in the manner given above is the functor $[1, 0]$ defined in Remark 12.18.5. By Remark 12.18.5 the functor

\[ \text{Tot} : \text{DoubleComp}(\mathcal{A}) \to \text{Comp}(\mathcal{A}) \]

is compatible with shift functors, in the sense that we have a functorial isomorphism $\gamma : \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[1] \to \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }[1, 0])$.

Second, if

\[ f, g : A^{\bullet , \bullet } \to B^{\bullet , \bullet } \]

are homotopic when $f$ and $g$ are viewed as morphisms of complexes of complexes in the manner given above, then

\[ \text{Tot}(f), \text{Tot}(g) : \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet }) \]

are homotopic maps of complexes. Indeed, let $h = (h^ p)$ be a homotopy between $f$ and $g$. If we denote $h^{p, q} : A^{p, q} \to B^{p - 1, q}$ the component in degree $p$ of $h^ q$, then this means that

\[ f^{p, q} - g^{p, q} = d_1^{p - 1, q} \circ h^{p, q} + h^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} \]

The fact that $h^ p : A^{p, \bullet } \to B^{p - 1, \bullet }$ is a map of complexes means that

\[ d_2^{p - 1, q} \circ h^{p, q} = h^{p, q + 1} \circ d_2^{p, q} \]

Let us define $h' = ((h')^ n)$ the homotopy given by the maps $(h')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^{n - 1}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })$ using $h^{p, q}$ on the summand $A^{p, q}$ for $p + q = n$. Then we see that

\[ d_{\text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })} \circ h' + h' \circ d_{\text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })} \]

restricted to the summand $A^{p, q}$ is equal to

\[ d_1^{p - 1, q} \circ h^{p, q} + (-1)^{p - 1} d_2^{p - 1, q} \circ h^{p, q} + h^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} + h^{p, q + 1} \circ (-1)^ p d_2^{p, q} \]

which evaluates to $f^{p, q} - g^{p, q}$ by the equations given above. This proves the second compatibility.

Third, suppose that in the paragraph above we have $f = g$. Then the assignment $h \leadsto h'$ above is compatible with the identification of Lemma 12.14.9. More precisely, if we view $h$ as a morphism of complexes of complexes $A^{\bullet , \bullet } \to B^{\bullet , \bullet }[-1, 0]$ via this lemma then

\[ \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \xrightarrow {\text{Tot}(h)} \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet }[-1, 0]) \xrightarrow {\gamma ^{-1}} \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })[-1] \]

is equal to $h'$ viewed as a morphism of complexes via the lemma. Here $\gamma $ is the identification of Remark 12.18.5. The verification of this third point is immediate.

Fourth, let

\[ 0 \to A^{\bullet , \bullet } \to B^{\bullet , \bullet } \to C^{\bullet , \bullet } \to 0 \]

be a complex of double complexes and suppose we are given splittings $s^ p : C^{p, \bullet } \to B^{p, \bullet }$ and $\pi ^ p : B^{p, \bullet } \to A^{p, \bullet }$ of this as in Lemma 12.14.10 when we view double complexes as complexes of complexes in the manner given above. This on the one hand produces a map

\[ \delta : C^{\bullet , \bullet } \longrightarrow A^{\bullet , \bullet }[0, 1] \]

by the procedure in Lemma 12.14.10. On the other hand taking $\text{Tot}$ we obtain a complex

\[ 0 \to \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to 0 \]

which is termwise split (see below) and hence comes with a morphism

\[ \delta ' : \text{Tot}(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \longrightarrow \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[1] \]

well defined up to homotopy by Lemmas 12.14.10 and 12.14.12. Claim: these maps agree in the sense that

\[ \text{Tot}(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \xrightarrow {\text{Tot}(\delta )} \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }[1, 0]) \xrightarrow {\gamma ^{-1}} \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[1] \]

is equal to $\delta '$ where $\gamma $ is as in Remark 12.18.5. To see this denote $s^{p, q} : C^{p, q} \to B^{\bullet , q}$ and $\pi ^{p, q} : B^{p, q} \to A^{p, q}$ the components of $s^ q$ and $\pi ^ q$. As splittings $(s')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^ n(B^{\bullet , \bullet })$ and $(\pi ')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(B^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^ n(A^{\bullet , \bullet })$ we use the maps whose components are $s^{p, q}$ and $\pi ^{p, q}$ for $p + q = n$. We recall that

\[ (\delta ')^ n = (\pi ')^{n + 1} \circ d_{\text{Tot}(B^{\bullet , \bullet })}^ n \circ (s')^ n : \text{Tot}^ n(C^{\bullet , \bullet }) \to \text{Tot}^{n + 1}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }) \]

The restriction of this to the summand $C^{p, q}$ is equal to

\[ \pi ^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q} + \pi ^{p, q + 1} \circ (-1)^ p d_2^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q} = \pi ^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q} \]

The equality holds because $s^ p$ is a morphism of complexes (with $d_2$ as differential) and because $\pi ^{p, q + 1} \circ s^{p, q + 1} = 0$ as $s$ and $\pi $ correspond to a direct sum decomposition of $B$ in every bidegree. On the other hand, for $\delta $ we have

\[ \delta ^ p = \pi ^ p \circ d_1 \circ s^ p : C^{p, \bullet } \to A^{p + 1, \bullet } \]

whose restriction to the summand $C^{p, q}$ is equal to $\pi ^{p + 1, q} \circ d_1^{p, q} \circ s^{p, q}$. Thus we get the same as before which matches with the fact that the isomorphism $\gamma : \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet })[1] \to \text{Tot}(A^{\bullet , \bullet }[1, 0])$ is defined without the intervention of signs.


Comments (4)

Comment #6630 by Nik on

In the last line there is a " \ " missing in the second on the

Comment #7076 by Nick on

In the last line it says "intervetion" instead of "intervention".


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