ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Let $G$, $R$ and $A$ be topological groups. Suppose that $G$ and $R$ act continuously on $A$, and $G$ acts continuously on $R$. In this paper, we define a partially crossed topological $G-R$-bimodule $(A,mu)$, where $mu:Arightarrow R$ is a continuous homomorphism. Let $Der_{c}(G,(A,mu))$ be the set of all $(alpha,r)$ such that $alpha:Grightarrow A$ is a continuous crossed homomorphism and $mualpha(g)=r^{g}r^{-1}$. We introduce a topology on $Der_{c}(G,(A,mu))$. We show that $Der_{c}(G,(A,mu))$ is a topological group, wherever $G$ and $R$ are locally compact. We define the first cohomology, $H^{1}(G,(A,mu))$, of $G$ with coefficients in $(A,mu)$ as a quotient space of $Der_{c}(G,(A,mu))$. Also, we state conditions under which $H^{1}(G,(A,mu))$ is a topological group. Finally, we show that under what conditions $H^{1}(G,(A,mu))$ is one of the following: $k$-space, discrete, locally compact and compact.
Let $G$ be a topological group and $A$ a topological $G$-module (not necessarily abelian). In this paper, we define $H^{0}(G,A)$ and $H^{1}(G,A)$ and will find a six terms exact cohomology sequence involving $H^{0}$ and $H^{1}$. We will extend it to
In this paper we introduce a new definition of the first non-abelian cohomology of topological groups. We relate the cohomology of a normal subgroup $N$ of a topological group $G$ and the quotient $G/N$ to the cohomology of $G$. We get the inflation-
Let $A$ be an abelian topological $G$-module. We give an interpretion for the second cohomology, $H^{2}(G,A)$, of $G$ with coefficients in $A$. As a result we show that if $P$ is a projective topological group, then $H^{2}(P,A)=0$ for every abelian topological $P$-module $A$.
For an odd prime p the cohomology ring of an elementary abelian p-group is polynomial tensor exterior. We show that the ideal of essential classes is the Steenrod closure of the class generating the top exterior power. As a module over the polynomial
We give a model-theoretic treatment of the fundamental results of Kechris-Pestov-Todorv{c}evi{c} theory in the more general context of automorphism groups of not necessarily countable structures. One of the main points is a description of the univers