The
cyclotomic trace map is a map from
algebraic K-theory (of a ring
A, say), to cyclic homology: :{\rm tr}: K_n (A) \to HC_{n-1} (A). In some situations, this map can be used to compute K-theory by means of this map. A pioneering result in this direction is a theorem of : it asserts that the map :K_n(A, I) \otimes \mathbf Q \to HC_{n-1} (A, I) \otimes \mathbf Q between the relative K-theory of
A with respect to a
nilpotent two-sided ideal
I to the relative cyclic homology (measuring the difference between K-theory or cyclic homology of
A and of
A/
I) is an isomorphism for
n≥1. While Goodwillie's result holds for arbitrary rings, a quick reduction shows that it is in essence only a statement about A \otimes_{\mathbf Z} \mathbf Q. For rings not containing
Q, cyclic homology must be replaced by topological cyclic homology in order to keep a close connection to K-theory. (If
Q is contained in
A, then cyclic homology and topological cyclic homology of
A agree.) This is in line with the fact that (classical)
Hochschild homology is less well-behaved than topological Hochschild homology for rings not containing
Q. proved a far-reaching generalization of Goodwillie's result, stating that for a commutative ring
A so that the
Henselian lemma holds with respect to the ideal
I, the relative K-theory is isomorphic to relative topological cyclic homology (without tensoring both with
Q). Their result also encompasses a theorem of , asserting that in this situation the relative K-theory spectrum modulo an integer
n which is invertible in
A vanishes. used Gabber's result and
Suslin rigidity to reprove Quillen's computation of the K-theory of
finite fields. ==See also==