In mathematics, an Adams operation, denoted ÃÂ<sup>k</sup> for natural numbers k, is a cohomology operation in topological K-theory, or any allied operation in algebraic K-theory or other types of algebraic construction, defined on a pattern introduced by Frank Adams. The basic idea is to implement some fundamental identities in symmetric function theory, at the level of vector bundles or other representing object in more abstract theories.
Adams operations can be defined more generally in any λ-ring.
Adams operations ÃÂ<sup>k</sup> on K theory (algebraic or topological) are characterized by the following properties.
The fundamental idea is that for a vector bundle V on a topological space X, there is an analogy between Adams operators and exterior powers, in which
as
of the roots ñ of a polynomial P(t). (Cf. Newton's identities.) Here ÃÂ<sup>k</sup> denotes the k-th exterior power. From classical algebra it is known that the power sums are certain integral polynomials Q<sub>k</sub> in the ÃÂ<sub>k</sub>. The idea is to apply the same polynomials to the ÃÂ<sup>k</sup>(V), taking the place of ÃÂ<sub>k</sub>. This calculation can be defined in a K-group, in which vector bundles may be formally combined by addition, subtraction and multiplication (tensor product). The polynomials here are called Newton polynomials (not, however, the Newton polynomials of interpolation theory).
Justification of the expected properties comes from the line bundle case, where V is a Whitney sum of line bundles. In this special case the result of any Adams operation is naturally a vector bundle, not a linear combination of ones in K-theory. Treating the line bundle direct factors formally as roots is something rather standard in algebraic topology (cf. the LerayâÂÂHirsch theorem). In general a mechanism for reducing to that case comes from the splitting principle for vector bundles.
The Adams operation has a simple expression in group representation theory. Let G be a group and ÃÂ a representation of G with character ÃÂ. The representation ÃÂ<sup>k</sup>(ÃÂ) has character