The Tensor Product of Chain Complexes as a Total ComplexThe Double Complex Behind
The Tensor Product of Chain Complexes as a Total Complex
A good way to understand the monoidal structure on
This point of view explains both parts of the definition:
and
The first formula says that total degree is obtained by adding bidegrees. The second formula is the sign convention that makes the total differential square to zero.
Throughout,
So the differential has degree
The Double Complex Behind
Given two chain complexes
There are two evident differentials. The horizontal one is induced by the differential of
The vertical one is induced by the differential of
On the nose, these two maps commute:
Indeed,
But for a total complex, commuting differentials are not what we want. If one simply tried
then
The first and last terms vanish, but the middle terms add:
Since
So the total differential cannot be the naive sum. A sign has to be inserted.
Totalizing the Double Complex
The tensor product complex
Thus, if
The total differential is
Equivalently,
where
This is the usual formula for the tensor product of chain complexes.
The sign depends on the degree of the left factor. Conceptually, the vertical differential has to pass across the horizontal degree
Why This Sign Works
Let
Then
We want the two pieces to anticommute:
Compute on
On the other hand, after applying
Since
Therefore
That is the whole reason for the sign.
Direct Verification of
Let
Apply
The second term gives
Thus
Since
we get
Without the sign
A Small Example: Tensoring Two Two-Term Complexes
Let
and
with nonzero terms in degrees
Then
In degree
In degree
In degree
So
With the above ordering of the middle term, the first differential is
Indeed,
The second differential is
Therefore
This is the smallest place where the sign becomes visible. The minus sign is not cosmetic; it is exactly what makes the composition vanish.
The Unit Complex
The tensor unit in
Then
Only the summand with
Similarly,
Thus
So
Associativity
There is a natural isomorphism
On the underlying graded modules, both sides have degree
The differential on a pure tensor
This is just the same total-complex rule, now for a triple complex.
So the associativity isomorphism is not merely an isomorphism of graded modules; it is an isomorphism of chain complexes.
The Koszul Symmetry
Since
But in chain complexes the symmetry is not the naive map
This is the Koszul sign rule.
It says that when an element of degree
Odd-degree elements anticommute with odd-degree elements. Everything else commutes.
This sign is forced by the condition that
Checking That the Symmetry Is a Chain Map
Let
First compute
Using the differential on
So
Now compute
For the first term,
For the second term,
Hence
Modulo
and
Therefore
This agrees with
So
Tensor Product of Chain Maps
If
are chain maps, then
is defined on pure tensors by
Because
The verification that
Since
Using
we get
This is exactly
Hence
A Note on Homogeneous Maps
In the ordinary category
If
The sign appears because
With this convention, one may write the differential on
The sign in the second term is already built into the tensor product of homogeneous maps.
Compatibility with Chain Homotopy
The tensor product also behaves correctly with chain homotopy.
Suppose
is null-homotopic. Thus there is a degree
such that
Then for any complex
and
For the first statement, define
A direct computation gives
For the second statement, the homotopy needs a sign:
Then
Thus null-homotopic maps are closed under tensoring on either side.
Consequently, null-homotopic maps form a tensor ideal in
This is why the tensor product descends to the homotopy category
The formula is simply
The Final Picture
The monoidal structure on
Then
with
The total differential is
In element notation,
From this total-complex viewpoint, the usual features of
and, when
via
So the slogan is:
The rest is bookkeeping: the bookkeeping of degrees, and the bookkeeping of signs.
Null-Homotopic Maps Form a Tensor Ideal
The tensor product of chain complexes is not merely compatible with chain maps. It is also compatible with chain homotopies.
The statement is:
Let
Thus
such that
In components, this says
We shall check that
Additivity
If
and
then
Also,
So each
Closure Under Composition
Suppose
is null-homotopic, say
Let
be arbitrary chain maps. Then
Since
Therefore
So
Thus null-homotopic maps form a two-sided ideal in the ordinary categorical sense.
Closure Under Tensoring on the Right
Now let
is null-homotopic.
Define a degree
by
Let
On the other hand,
so
Adding the two expressions gives
The two terms involving
Hence
Therefore
Closure Under Tensoring on the Left
The other side is similar, but a sign is needed.
We want to prove that
is null-homotopic.
Define
by
Let
Also,
Therefore
Since
And
Thus
Adding gives
Again, the terms involving
So
Hence
The sign
in the definition of
The Tensor Ideal Statement
Combining the previous observations, null-homotopic maps satisfy:
for all composable chain maps
More generally, if
is any chain map, then
is null-homotopic, and
is null-homotopic.
Thus
Consequently, the tensor product descends to the homotopy category
Indeed, if
then
Both terms on the right are null-homotopic. Hence
So the formula
is well-defined in
The Internal Hom Complex
The tensor product on
For chain complexes
Thus an element
is a homogeneous map of degree
The differential is
In components,
Since
Why
Let
Applying
Substitute the formula for
Expanding,
The first and last terms vanish because
The middle terms cancel because
Therefore
So
Chain Maps and Homotopies Inside the Hom Complex
The definition of
First,
is the group of degree
But
Thus
if and only if
So
Next,
consists of degree
For such an
But this is exactly the form of a null-homotopic map.
Hence
Therefore
This is the clean conceptual meaning of the homotopy category: its morphisms are the degree-zero homology classes of the mapping complex.
The Tensor-Hom Adjunction
The internal Hom is right adjoint to tensor product.
There is a natural isomorphism of chain complexes
This is the tensor-Hom adjunction in
At the level of homogeneous maps, the correspondence is the usual currying operation.
Let
be a homogeneous map of degree
by
If
So
Conversely, given a homogeneous map
of degree
by
These two constructions are inverse to each other.
Compatibility with Differentials
The main point is that the currying isomorphism is not just an isomorphism of graded modules. It is an isomorphism of chain complexes.
Let
First compute the differential after currying.
Since
On the other hand,
Since
Using
we get
This agrees with
Therefore currying commutes with differentials:
Thus
as chain complexes.
Ordinary Adjunction and Homotopy Adjunction
Taking degree-zero cycles gives the ordinary adjunction in
Taking degree-zero homology gives the corresponding adjunction in the homotopy category:
So the closed monoidal structure is already visible before passing to derived categories.
In the derived category
and
But at the level of
Summary
The monoidal structure on
First, null-homotopic maps form a tensor ideal:
This is why the tensor product descends from
Second, the tensor product has an internal right adjoint:
The Hom complex also explains chain homotopy:
while
Hence
So the passage
is already encoded inside the internal Hom complex.