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Serge Bouc
Green Functorsand G-sets
~ Springer
Author
Serge Bouc
Equipe des groupes finis
CNRS UMR 9994
UFR de Mathdmatiques
Universit6 Paris 7 - Denis Diderot
2, Place Jussieu
F-75251 Paris, France
e-mail: bouc@math.jussieu, fr
Cataloging-in-Publication Data applied for
Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CIP-Einheitsaufnahme
Bout, Serge:
Green functorsand G-sets / Serge Bouc. - Berlin ; Heidelberg ; New
York ; Barcelona ; Budapest ; Hong Kong ; London ; Milan ; Paris ;
Santa Clara ; Singapore ; Tokyo : Springer, 1997
(Lecture notes in mathematics ; 1671)
ISBN 3-540-63550-5
Mathematics Subject Classification (1991): 19A22, 20C05, 20J06, 18D35
ISSN 0075- 8434
ISBN 3-540-63550-5 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York
This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part
of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, re-use
of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other
way, and storage in data banks. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is
permitted only under the provisions of the German Copyright Law of September 9,
1965, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from
Springer-Verlag. Violations are liable for prosecution under the German Copyright
Law.
9 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 1997
Printed in Germany
The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, etc. in this
publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such
names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore
free for general use.
Typesetting: Camera-ready TEX output by the author
SPIN: 10553356 46/3142-543210 - Printed on acid-free paper
Contents
Mackey functors 5
1.1 Equivalent definitions 5
1.1.1 Definition in terms of subgroups 5
1.1.2 Definition in terms of G-sets 6
1.1.3 Definition as modules over the Mackey algebra 7
1.2 The Mackey functors M ~ My 8
1.3 Construction of
H(M,N)
and
M(~N 9
1.4 Identification of
H(M,N)
10
1.5 Identification of
M@N
12
1.6 Another identification of
MQN
16
1.7 FunctoriMity 24
1.8 n-fold tensor product 25
1.8.1 Definition 25
1.8.2 Universal property 29
1.9 Commutativity and associativity 38
1.10 Adjunction 38
Green functors 41
2.1 Definitions 41
2.2 Definition in terms of G-sets 46
2.3 Equivalence of the two definitions 48
2.4 The Burnside functor 52
2.4.1 The Burnside functor as Mackey functor 52
2.4.2 The Burnside functor as Green functor 55
2.4.3 The Burnside functor as initial object 57
2.4.4 The Burnside functor as unit 59
The category associated to a Green functor 61
3.1 Examples of modules over a Green functor 61
3.2 The category
CA
65
3.3 A-modules and representations of
CA
71
The algebra associated to a Green functor 81
4.1 The evaluation functors 81
4.2 Evaluation and equivalence 82
4.3 The algebra A(f/2) 84
4.4 Presentation by generators and relations 85
4.5 Examples 94
VI
CONTENTS
4.5.1 The Mackey algebra 94
4.5.2 The Yoshida algebra 95
Morita equivalence and relative projectivity
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
5.5
99
Morita equivalence of algebras A(X 2) 99
Relative projectivity 100
Cartesian product in
CA
103
5.3.1 Definition 103
5.3.2 Adjunction 107
5.3.3 Cartesian product in CA x CA 109
Morita equivalence and relative projectivity 112
Progenerators 114
5.5.1 Finitely generated modules 114
5.5.2 Idempotents and progenerators 115
Construction of Greenfunctors 123
6.1 The functors
H(M,M)
123
6.1.1 The product 5 125
6.2 The opposite functor of a Green functor 127
6.2.1 Right modules 129
6.2.2 The dual of an A-module 130
6.3 Tensor product of Greenfunctors 134
6.4 Bimodules 141
6.5 Commutants 143
6.6 The functors M | N 146
A Morita theory 153
7.1 Construction of bimodules 153
7.2 Morita contexts 154
7.3 Converse 160
7.4 A remark on bimodules 163
Composition
8,1
8.2
8.3
8.4
8.5
8.6
8.7
167
Bisets 167
Composition and tensor product 168
Composition andGreenfunctors 170
Composition and associated categories 173
Composition and modules 175
Functoriality 177
Example: induction and restriction 180
Adjoint constructions
9.1
9.2
9.3
9.4
9.5
9.6
183
A left adjoint to the flmctor Z ~-+ U OH Z 183
The categories
Du(X)
186
The functors Qu(M) 188
The functors
Lu(M)
193
Left adjunction 196
The functors
Su(M)
205
CONTENTS
VII
9.7
9.8
9.9
The functors
Ru(M)
207
Right adjunction 209
Examples 215
9.9.1 Induction and restriction 215
9.9.2 Inflation 217
9.9.3 Coinflation 217
10 Adjunction andGreenfunctors
10.1
10.2
10.3
10.4
10.5
10.6
10.7
10.8
223
Frobenius morphisms 223
Left adjoints and tensor product 227
The Greenfunctors Lu(A) 231
Lu(A)-modules
and adjunction 234
Right adjoints and tensor product 242
Ru(M)
as Lu(A)-module 250
Lu(A)-modules
and right adjoints 255
Examples and applications 264
10.8.1 Induction and restriction 264
10.8.2 The case
U/H
= 9 264
10.8.3 Adjunction and Morita contexts 266
11 The
11.1
11.2
11.3
11.4
11.5
11.6
simple modules 275
Generalities 275
Classification of the simple modules 275
The structure of algebras /i(H) 278
The structure of' simple modules 282
11.4.1 The isomorphism
SH,v(X) ~
Hom([XH],
V)~ G(H)
282
11.4.2 The A-module structure of
SH,V
289
The simple Greenfunctors 291
Simple functorsand endomorphisms 295
12 Centres
12.1 The centre of a Green functor
12.2
12.3
305
305
The functors CA 315
12.2.1 Another analogue of the centre 315
12.2.2 Endomorphisms of the restriction functor 323
12.2.3 Induction and inflation 329
Examples 332
12.3.] The functors
FPB
332
12.3.2 The blocks of Mackey algebra 335
Bibliography
337
Index 339
Introduction
The theory of Mackey functors has been developed during the last 25 years in a series
of papers by various authors (J.a. Green [8], a. Dress [5], T. Yoshida [17], J. Th~venaz
and P. Webb [13],[15],[14], G. Lewis [6]). It is an attempt to give a single framework
for the different theories of representations of a finite group and its subgroups.
The notion of Mackey functor for a group G can be essentially approached from
three points of view: the first one ([8]), which I call "naive", relics on the poset
of subgroups of G. The second one ([5],[17]) is more "categoric", and relies on the
category of G-sets. The third one ([15]) is "algebraic", and defines Mackey functors
as modules over the Mackey algebra.
Each of these points of view induces its own natural definitions, and the reason
why this subject is so rich is probably the possibility of translation between them.
For instance, the notion of minimal subgroup for a Mackey functor comes from the
first definition, the notion of induction of Mackey functors is quite natural with the
second, and the notion of projective Mackey functor is closely related to the third
one.
The various rings of representations of a group (linear, pernmtation, p-permuta-
tion ), and cohomology rings, are important examples of Mackey functors, having
moreover a product (tensor product or cup product). This situation has been axiom-
atized, and those functors have been generally called C-functors in the literature, or
Green functors.
This definition of a Green functor tora group G is a complement to the "naive"
definition of a Mackey fnnctor: to each subgroup of G corresponds a ring, and the vari-
ous rings are connected by operations of transfer and restriction, which are compatible
with the product through Frobenius relations.
The object of this work is to give a definition of Greenfunctors in terms of G-
sets, and to study various questions raised by this new definition. From that point
of view, a Green fimctor is a generalized ring, in the sense that the theory of Green
functors for the trivial group is the theory of ordinary rings. Now ring theory gives a
series of directions for possible generalizations, and I will treat some cases here (tensor
product, bimodnles, Morita theory, commutants, simple modules, centres).
The first chapter deals only with Mackey functors: my purpose was not to give a
full exposition of the theory, and I just recall the possible equivalent definitions, as
one can find for instance in the article of Thevenaz and Webb ([15]). I show next
how to build Mackey functors "with values in the Mackey functors", leading to the
functors 7-{(M, N) and
M@N,
which will be an essential tool: they are analogous
to the homomorphisms modules and tensor products for ordinary modules. Those
constructions already appear in Sasaki ([12]) and Lewis ([6]). Thc notion of r~dinear
map can be generalized in the form of r~-linear morphism of Mackey functors. The
2 INTROD UCTION
reader may find that this part is a bit long: this is because I have tried here to give
complete proofs, and as the subject is rather technical, this requires many details.
Chapter 2 is devoted to the definition of Greenfunctors in terms of G-sets, and to
the proof of the equivalence between this definition and the classical one. It is then
possible to define a module over a Green functor in terms of (-;-sets. I treat next the
fundamental case of the Bm-nside functor, which plays for Greenfunctors the role of
the ring Z of integers.
In chapter 3, I build a category CA associated to a Green functor ,4, and show that
the category of A-modules is equivalent to the category of representations of CA. This
category is a generalization of a construction of Lindner ([9]) for Mackey functors, and
of the category of permutation modules studied by Yoshida ([17]) for cohomological
Mackey functors.
Chapter 4 describes the algebra associated to a Green functor: this algebra enters
the scene if one looks %r G-sets ~ suct~ that the evaluation functor at ft is an equiva-
lence of categories between the category of representations of Cn and the category of
Endc~(f~)-modules. This algebra generalizes the Mackev algebra defined by Theve-
naz and Webb ([1.5]) and the Hecke algebra, of Yoshida ([17]). It is possible to give a
definition of this algebra by generators and relations.
This algebra depends on the set f/, but only up to Morita equivalence. Chapter 5
is devoted to the relation between those Morita equivalences and the classical notion
of relative projectivity of a Green functor with respect to a G-set (see for instance
the article of Webb [16]). More generaliy, I will deduce some progenerators for the
category of A-modules.
Chapter 6 introduces some tools giving new Greenfunctors from known ones: after
a neat description of the Greenfunctors ~(/11,/1I), I define the opposite functor of
a Green flmctor, which leads to the notion of right module over a Green functor. A
natural example is the dual of a left module. The notion of tensor product of Green
functors leads naturally to the definition of bimodule, and the notion of comnmtant
to a definition of the Mackey functors 7t.4(M, N) and
M(~,4N.
Those constructions are the natural framework for Morita contexts, in chapter 7.
The usual Morita theory can be generalized without difficulty to the case of Green
functors for a given group G.
The chapters S,9, and 10 examine the relations between Greenfunctorsand bisets:
this notion provides a single framework for induction, restriction, inflation, and coin-
flation of Mackey functors (see [2]).
In chapter 8, I show how the composition with U, if U is a G-set-H, gives a
Green functor A o U for the group H starting with a Green functor A for the group
G. This construction passes down to the associated categories, so there is a corre-
sponding functor from
CAoU
to Ca. This gives a functor between the categories of
representations, which can also be obtained by composition with U. I study next
the functoriality of these constructions with respect to U, and give the example of
induction and restriction.
Chapter 9 is devoted to the construction of the associated adjoint functors: I build
a left and a right adjoint to the functors of composition with a biset /14 ~ 114 o U
for Mackey fnnctors, and I give the classical examples of induction, restriction and
inflation, and also the less well-known example of coinfiation.
Chapter 10 is the most technical of this work: I show how the previous left adjoint
INTROD UCTION 3
functors give rise to Green functors, and I study the associated functorsand their
adjoints between the corresponding categories of modules. An important consequence
of this is the compatibility of left adjoints of composition with tensor products, which
proves that if there is a surjective Morita context for two Greenfunctors A and B
for the group G, then there is one for all the residual rings A(H) and B(H), for any
subgroup H of G.
In chapter 11, I classify the simple modules over a Green functor, and describe
their structure. Applying those results to the Green functor
A@A ~
I obtain a new
proof of the theorem of Th4venaz classifying the simple Green functors. Finally, I
study how the simple modules (or similarly defined modules) behave with respect to
the constructions ~(-,-) and -Q
Chapter 12 gives two possible generalizations of the notion of centre of a ring, one
in terms of commutants, the other in terms of natural transformations of functors.
The first one gives a decomposition of any Green functor using the idempotents of
the Burnside ring, and shows that up to (usual) Morita equivalence, it is possible to
consider only the case of Greenfunctors which are projective relative to certain sets
of solvable rr-subgroups. The second one keeps track of the blocks of the associated
algebras. Then I give the example of the fixed points functors, and recover the iso-
morphism between the center of Yoshida algebra and the center of the group algebra.
Next, the example of the Burnside ring leads to the natural bijection between the
p-blocks of the group algebra and the blocks of the p-part of the Mackey algebra.
Chapter 1
Mackey functors
All the groups and sets with group action considered in this book will be finite.
1.1 Equivalent definitions
Throughout this section, I denote by G a (finite) group and R a ring, that may be
non-commutative. First I will recall briefly the three possible definitions of Mackey
functors: the first one is due to Green ([8]), the second to Dress ([5]), and the third
to Th6venaz and Webb ([15]).
1.1.1 Definition in terms of subgroups
One of the possible definitions of Mackey functors
is
the following:
A Mackey functor for the group G, with values in the category R-Mod of R-modules,
consists of a collection of R-modules
M(H),
indexed by the subgroups H of G, to-
ll M(H) + M(K)
whenever Ir is a gerber with maps t H :
M(K) + M(H)
and r K :
subgroup of H, and maps
Cc,H : M(H) , M(~H)
for x 6 G, such that:
HK A'H
9 If L C_ t( C_ H, then
th-t L :
t H
and
r L r K
= r H.
9 If x, y E G and H G G, then
CyjHCx, H
:
Cyx, H.
XH H
=
7,~H
Moreover
9 If x E G and H C_ G,
then Cx,H tH = t.KCx, K
and
cx,icr K xKceG H.
e~,H = Id
if x E H.
9 (Mackey axiom) If L C H _D K, then
H H L K
FL
tA" E
=
~LnxKCx,LXAA-FLxnA.
xEL\H/K
H
The maps tK H are called
transfers
or
traces,
and the maps
r K
are called
restrictions.
A morphism 6 from a Mackey functor M to a Mackey functor N consists of a
collection of morphisms of R-modules OH :
M(H) + N(H),
for H C_ G, such that if
6 CHAPTER I. MACKEY FUNCTORS
K C_ H and x E G, the squares
Oi< 0~< OH
M(I<) - , N(K) M(K) , N(K) M(H) , N(H)
M(H) , N(H) M(H) , N(H) M(~H) , N(~H)
OH OH OzH
are commutative.
1.1.2 Definition in terms of G-sets
If K and H are subgroups of G, then the morphisms of G-sets from
G/K
to
G/H
are
in one to one correspondence with the classes
xH,
where x E G is such that K ~ C H.
This observation provides a way to extend a Mackey functor M to any
G-set X,
by
choosing a system of representatives of orbits G\X, and defining
M(X) = 0 M(G~)
x6G\X
There is a way to make this equality functori~l in X, and this leads to the following
definition:
Definition:
Let R be a ring. If G is a (finite) group, let G-set be the category of
finite sets with a left G action. A Mackey flmctor for the group G, with values in
R-Mod, is a bifunctor from G-set to R-Mod, i.e. a couple of flmctors (M*, M.) ,
with M* contravariant and M. covariant, which coincide on objects (i.e. M*(X) =
M.(X) = M(X) for any G-set X). This biflmctor is supposed to have the two
following properties:
9 (M1) If X and Y
are G-sets,
let ix and iv be the respective injections from X
and Y into X [I Y, then the maps M*(ix) | M*(iv) and M.(ix) | M.(iv) are
mutual inverse
R-module isomorphisms between M ( X LI Y) and M ( X ) | M (Y).
9 (M2)~f
T ~ Y
'1 1 o
Z , X
~s a cartesian (or pull-back) square of G-sets, then M*(/3).M.(a)
= M.(5).M*(7).
A morphism
0
from the Mackey functor M to the Mackey functor N is a natural
transformation of bifunctors, consisting of a morphism Ox : M(X) ~ N(X) for any
G-set X, such that for any morphism of G-sets f : X + Y, the squares
Ox Ox
M(X) ., N(X) M(X) , N(X)
M(Y) , N(Y) M(Y) , N(Y)
Oy Oy
[...]... the category MackR(G) of Mackey functors for G over R, which is equivalent to #R(G)-Mod I will check the conditions (M1) and (M2) for this bifunctor, proving that Y ~ M r is a Mackey functor with values in the category of Mackey functors 1.3 CONSTRUCTION OF H(M, N) AND M@N 9 For the condition (M1), let Y and Y' be G-sets, and i and i' be the respective injections from Y and Y' into Y II Y' If X is a... I have also 0 (m ~,~{o)a.,,) and this proves that 0' is well defined Now if ,z E M ( H ) and ~r ~ N ( H ) , then K So 0'0 is the i d e n t i t y And if m E M and n E ~v, then m = ~Ifc(; t~rn, and n 72z @~,R(G) 7), = Z = H = Ix tH'tn .
Bisets 167
Composition and tensor product 168
Composition and Green functors 170
Composition and associated categories 173
Composition and modules 175
Functoriality.
The simple Green functors 291
Simple functors and endomorphisms 295
12 Centres
12.1 The centre of a Green functor
12.2
12.3
305
305
The functors