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A theory of modules over posets is developed to define computationally feasible, topologically interpretable data structures, in terms of birth and death of homology classes, for persistent homology with multiple real parameters. To replace the noetherian hypothesis in the general setting of modules over posets, a finitely encoded condition is defined combinatorially and developed algebraically. It captures topological tameness of persistent homology. Poset-modules satisfying it can be specified by fringe presentations that reflect birth-and-death descriptions of persistence. A syzygy theorem characterizes finitely encoded modules as admitting appropriately finite presentations and resolutions. The geometric and algebraic theory focuses on modules over real polyhedral groups (real vector spaces with polyhedral positive cones) and a parallel theory over discrete polyhedral groups (abelian groups with finitely generated positive cones). Existence of primary decomposition is proved over arbitrary polyhedral partially ordered abelian groups, but the real and discrete cases carry enough geometry and, crucially in the real case, topology to induce complete theories of minimal primary and secondary decomposition, associated and attached faces, minimal generators and cogenerators, socles and tops, minimal upset covers and downset hulls, Matlis duality, and minimal fringe presentation. Real semialgebraic properties of data are preserved by functorial constructions. Tops and socles become functorial birth and death spaces for multiparameter persistence modules. They yield functorial QR codes and elder morphisms for modules over real and discrete polyhedral groups that generalize and categorify the bar code and elder rule for persistent homology in one parameter. The disparate ways that QR codes and elder morphisms model bar codes coalesce, in one parameter, to functorial bar codes.
We develop some aspects of the homological algebra of persistence modules, in both the one-parameter and multi-parameter settings, considered as either sheaves or graded modules. The two theories are different. We consider the graded module and sheaf
The classical persistence algorithm virtually computes the unique decomposition of a persistence module implicitly given by an input simplicial filtration. Based on matrix reduction, this algorithm is a cornerstone of the emergent area of topological
Multiparameter persistence is a natural extension of the well-known persistent homology, which has attracted a lot of interest. However, there are major theoretical obstacles preventing the full development of this promising theory. In this paper w
We present a generalization of the induced matching theorem and use it to prove a generalization of the algebraic stability theorem for $mathbb{R}$-indexed pointwise finite-dimensional persistence modules. Via numerous examples, we show how the gener
The notion of persistence partial matching, as a generalization of partial matchings between persistence modules, is introduced. We study how to obtain a persistence partial matching $mathcal{G}_f$, and a partial matching $mathcal{M}_f$, induced by a