In addition to the axiomatic structure the Steenrod algebra satisfies, it has a number of additional useful properties.
Basis for the Steenrod algebra (for p=2) and (for p>2) described the structure of the Steenrod algebra of stable mod p cohomology operations, showing that it is generated by the Bockstein homomorphism together with the Steenrod reduced powers, and the Adem relations generate the ideal of relations between these generators. In particular they found an explicit basis for the Steenrod algebra. This basis relies on a certain notion of admissibility for integer sequences. We say a sequence :i_1, i_2, \ldots, i_n is
admissible if for each j, we have that i_j \ge 2i_{j+1}. Then the elements :Sq^I = Sq^{i_1} \cdots Sq^{i_n}, where I is an admissible sequence, form a basis (the Serre–Cartan basis) for the mod 2 Steenrod algebra, called the
admissible basis. There is a similar basis for the case p>2 consisting of the elements :Sq_p^I = Sq_p^{i_1} \cdots Sq_p^{i_n}, such that :i_j\ge pi_{j+1} :i_j\equiv 0,1\bmod 2(p-1) :Sq_p^{2k(p-1)} = P^k :Sq_p^{2k(p-1)+1} = \beta P^k
Hopf algebra structure and the Milnor basis The Steenrod algebra has more structure than a graded \mathbf{F}_p-algebra. It is also a
Hopf algebra, so that in particular there is a diagonal or
comultiplication map :\psi \colon A \to A \otimes A induced by the Cartan formula for the action of the Steenrod algebra on the cup product. This map is easier to describe than the product map, and is given by :\psi(Sq^k) = \sum_{i+j=k} Sq^i \otimes Sq^j :\psi(P^k) = \sum_{i+j=k} P^i \otimes P^j :\psi(\beta) = \beta\otimes1+1\otimes\beta. These formulas imply that the Steenrod algebra is
co-commutative. The linear dual of \psi makes the (graded)
linear dual A_* of
A into an algebra. proved, for p = 2, that A_* is a
polynomial algebra, with one generator \xi_k of degree 2^k-1, for every
k, and for p > 2 the dual Steenrod algebra A_* is the tensor product of the polynomial algebra in generators \xi_k of degree 2p^k-2 (k\ge 1) and the exterior algebra in generators τk of degree 2p^k-1 (k\ge 0). The monomial basis for A_* then gives another choice of basis for
A, called the Milnor basis. The dual to the Steenrod algebra is often more convenient to work with, because the multiplication is (super) commutative. The comultiplication for A_* is the dual of the product on
A; it is given by :\psi(\xi_n) = \sum_{i=0}^n \xi_{n-i}^{p^i} \otimes \xi_i. where \xi_0=1, and :\psi(\tau_n) = \tau_n\otimes 1 + \sum_{i=0}^n \xi_{n-i}^{p^i} \otimes \tau_i if p>2. The only
primitive elements of A_* for p=2 are the elements of the form \xi_1^{2^i}, and these are dual to the Sq^{2^i} (the only indecomposables of
A).
Relation to formal groups The
dual Steenrod algebras are supercommutative Hopf algebras, so their spectra are algebra supergroup schemes. These group schemes are closely related to the automorphisms of 1-dimensional additive formal groups. For example, if p=2 then the dual Steenrod algebra is the group scheme of automorphisms of the 1-dimensional additive formal group scheme x+y that are the identity to first order. These automorphisms are of the form :x\rightarrow x + \xi_1x^2+\xi_2x^4+\xi_3x^8+\cdots == Finite sub-Hopf algebras ==