Primitive element (co-algebra)
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (May 2024) |
In algebra, a primitive element of a co-algebra C (over an element g) is an element x that satisfies
where is the co-multiplication and g is an element of C that maps to the multiplicative identity 1 of the base field under the co-unit (g is called group-like).
If C is a bi-algebra, i.e., a co-algebra that is also an algebra (with certain compatibility conditions satisfied), then one usually takes g to be 1, the multiplicative identity of C. The bi-algebra C is said to be primitively generated if it is generated by primitive elements (as an algebra).
If C is a bi-algebra, then the set of primitive elements form a Lie algebra with the usual commutator bracket (graded commutator if C is graded).
If A is a connected graded cocommutative Hopf algebra over a field of characteristic zero, then the Milnor–Moore theorem states the universal enveloping algebra of the graded Lie algebra of primitive elements of A is isomorphic to A. (This also holds under slightly weaker requirements.)
References
[edit]