This article contains a collection of results and problems about
the Steenrod
algebra and related algebras acting on polynomials which non-specialists
in topology
may find of some interest. Although there are topological allusions throughout
the
article, the emphasis is on the algebraic development of the Steenrod algebra
and
its connections to the various topics indicated below.
Contents
1 Historical background 452
2 Differential operators and integral Steenrod squares 460
3 Symmetric functions and differential operators 471
4 Bases, excess and conjugates 476
5 The stripping technique 483
6 Iteration theory and nilpotence 490
7 The hit problem and invariant theory 495
8 The dual of [Ascr ](n) and graph theory 504
9 The Steenrod group 507
10 Computing in the Steenrod algebra 508
References 511
In Section 1 the scene is set with a few remarks on the early history
of the
Steenrod algebra [Ascr ]
at the prime 2 from a topologist's point of view, which puts
into context some of the problems posed later. In Section 2 the subject
is recast in
an algebraic framework, by citing recent work on integral versions of the
Steenrod
algebra defined in terms of differential operators. In Section 3 there
is an explanation
of how the divided differential operator algebra [Dscr ] relates to the
classical theory of
symmetric functions. In Section 4 some comments are made on a few of the
recently
discovered bases for the Steenrod algebra. The stripping technique in Section
5
refers to a standard action of a Hopf algebra on its dual, which is particularly
useful in the case of the Steenrod algebra for deriving relations from
relations when
implemented on suitable bases. In Section 6 a parallel is drawn between
certain
elementary aspects of the iteration theory of quadratic polynomials and
problems
about the nilpotence height of families of elements in the Steenrod algebra.
The hit
problem in Section 7 refers to the general question in algebra of finding
necessary
and sufficient conditions for an element in a graded module over a graded
ring to be
decomposable into elements of lower grading. Equivariant versions of this
problem
with respect to general linear groups over finite fields have attracted
attention in
the case of the Steenrod algebra acting on polynomials. Similar problems
arise with
respect to the symmetric groups and the algebra [Dscr ]. This subject relates
to topics in
classical invariant theory and modular representation theory. In Section
8 a number
of statements about the dual Steenrod algebra are transcribed into the
language
of graph theory. In Section 9 a standard method is employed for passing
from a
nilpotent algebra over a finite field of characteristic
p to a p-group, and questions
are raised about the locally finite 2-groups that arise in this way from
the Steenrod
algebra. Finally, in Section 10 there are a few comments on the use of
a computer
in evaluating expressions and testing relations in the Steenrod algebra.