On the q-analog of homological algebra
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This is an attempt to generalize some basic facts of homological algebra to the case of "complexes" in which the differential satisfies the condition $d^N=0$ instead of the usual $d^2=0$. Instead of familiar sign factors, the constructions related to such "N-complexes" involve powers of q where q is a primitive Nth root of 1. We show that the homology (in a natural sense) of an N-complex is an $(N-1)$-complex which is $(N-1)$-exact, and the role of the Euler characteristic is played by the trigonometric sum $\sum q^i \dim(C^i)$. By q-deforming the de Rham differential we develop a version of the theory of differential forms which is coordinate-dependent but covariant with respect to a natural Hopf algebra. In particular, there is a meaningful formalism of connections with the curvature being an N-form given by the N th power of the covariant derivative. For $N=3$ the expression for the curvature is very similar to the Chern-Simons functional. This text was written in 1991.
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Operational Calculus on Curved Differentials: Optimal N-Complex Bounds and Persistent Homology
A normal form for curved differentials guarantees (4n-2)-complex structures from n-nilpotent curvature and gives Lipschitz control on persistent homology barcodes.
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