The tensor algebra has two different
coalgebra structures. One is compatible with the tensor product, and thus can be extended to a
bialgebra, and can be further be extended with an antipode to a
Hopf algebra structure. The other structure, although simpler, cannot be extended to a bialgebra. The first structure is developed immediately below; the second structure is given in the section on the
cofree coalgebra, further down. The development provided below can be equally well applied to the
exterior algebra, using the wedge symbol \wedge in place of the tensor symbol \otimes; a sign must also be kept track of, when permuting elements of the exterior algebra. This correspondence also lasts through the definition of the bialgebra, and on to the definition of a Hopf algebra. That is, the exterior algebra can also be given a Hopf algebra structure. Similarly, the
symmetric algebra can also be given the structure of a Hopf algebra, in exactly the same fashion, by replacing everywhere the tensor product \otimes by the symmetrized tensor product \otimes_\mathrm{Sym}, i.e. that product where v\otimes_\mathrm{Sym} w = w\otimes_\mathrm{Sym} v. In each case, this is possible because the alternating product \wedge and the symmetric product \otimes_\mathrm{Sym} obey the required consistency conditions for the definition of a bialgebra and Hopf algebra; this can be explicitly checked in the manner below. Whenever one has a product obeying these consistency conditions, the construction goes through; insofar as such a product gave rise to a quotient space, the quotient space inherits the Hopf algebra structure. In the language of
category theory, one says that there is a
functor from the category of -vector spaces to the category of -associative algebras. But there is also a functor taking vector spaces to the category of exterior algebras, and a functor taking vector spaces to symmetric algebras. There is a
natural map from to each of these. Verifying that quotienting preserves the Hopf algebra structure is the same as verifying that the maps are indeed natural.
Coproduct The coalgebra is obtained by defining a
coproduct or diagonal operator :\Delta: TV\to TV\boxtimes TV Here, TV is used as a short-hand for T(V) to avoid an explosion of parentheses. The \boxtimes symbol is used to denote the "external" tensor product, needed for the definition of a coalgebra. It is being used to distinguish it from the "internal" tensor product \otimes, which is already being used to denote multiplication in the tensor algebra (see the section
Multiplication, below, for further clarification on this issue). In order to avoid confusion between these two symbols, most texts will replace \otimes by a plain dot, or even drop it altogether, with the understanding that it is implied from context. This then allows the \otimes symbol to be used in place of the \boxtimes symbol. This is not done below, and the two symbols are used independently and explicitly, so as to show the proper location of each. The result is a bit more verbose, but should be easier to comprehend. The definition of the operator \Delta is most easily built up in stages, first by defining it for elements v\in V\subset TV and then by homomorphically extending it to the whole algebra. A suitable choice for the coproduct is then :\Delta: v \mapsto v\boxtimes 1 + 1\boxtimes v and :\Delta: 1 \mapsto 1 \boxtimes 1 where 1\in K=T^0V\subset TV is the unit of the field K. By linearity, one obviously has :\Delta(k)=k(1\boxtimes 1)=k\boxtimes 1=1\boxtimes k for all k\in K. It is straightforward to verify that this definition satisfies the axioms of a coalgebra: that is, that :(\mathrm{id}_{TV} \boxtimes \Delta) \circ \Delta = (\Delta \boxtimes \mathrm{id}_{TV}) \circ \Delta where \mathrm{id}_{TV}: x\mapsto x is the identity map on TV. Indeed, one gets :((\mathrm{id}_{TV} \boxtimes \Delta) \circ \Delta)(v) = v\boxtimes 1 \boxtimes 1 + 1\boxtimes v \boxtimes 1 + 1 \boxtimes 1 \boxtimes v and likewise for the other side. At this point, one could invoke a lemma, and say that \Delta extends trivially, by linearity, to all of TV, because TV is a
free object and V is a
generator of the free algebra, and \Delta is a homomorphism. However, it is insightful to provide explicit expressions. So, for v\otimes w \in T^2V, one has (by definition) the homomorphism :\Delta: v\otimes w \mapsto \Delta(v)\otimes \Delta(w) Expanding, one has :\begin{align} \Delta (v\otimes w) &= (v\boxtimes 1 + 1\boxtimes v) \otimes (w\boxtimes 1 + 1\boxtimes w) \\ &= (v\otimes w) \boxtimes 1 + v\boxtimes w + w\boxtimes v + 1 \boxtimes (v\otimes w) \end{align} In the above expansion, there is no need to ever write 1\otimes v as this is just plain-old scalar multiplication in the algebra; that is, one trivially has that 1\otimes v = 1\cdot v = v. The extension above preserves the algebra grading. That is, :\Delta: T^2V \to \bigoplus_{k=0}^2 T^kV \boxtimes T^{2-k}V Continuing in this fashion, one can obtain an explicit expression for the coproduct acting on a homogenous element of order
m: :\begin{align} \Delta(v_1\otimes\cdots\otimes v_m) &= \Delta(v_1)\otimes\cdots\otimes\Delta(v_m) \\ &= \sum_{p=0}^m \left(v_1\otimes \cdots \otimes v_p\right) \;\omega \; \left(v_{p+1}\otimes \cdots \otimes v_m\right) \\ &= \sum_{p=0}^m \; \sum_{\sigma\in\mathrm{Sh}(p,m-p)} \; \left(v_{\sigma(1)}\otimes\dots\otimes v_{\sigma(p)}\right) \boxtimes \left(v_{\sigma(p+1)}\otimes\dots\otimes v_{\sigma(m)}\right) \end{align} where the \omega symbol, which should appear as ш, the sha, denotes the
shuffle product. This is expressed in the second summation, which is taken over all
(p, m − p)-shuffles. The shuffle is :\begin{aligned} \operatorname{Sh}(p,q) = \{\sigma:\{1,\dots,p+q\}\to\{1,\dots,p+q\}\;\mid \;&\sigma \text{ is bijective},\;\sigma(1) By convention, one takes that Sh(
m,0) and Sh(0,
m) equals {id: {1, ...,
m} → {1, ...,
m}}. It is also convenient to take the pure tensor products v_{\sigma(1)}\otimes\dots\otimes v_{\sigma(p)} and v_{\sigma(p+1)}\otimes\dots\otimes v_{\sigma(m)} to equal 1 for
p = 0 and
p =
m, respectively (the empty product in TV). The shuffle follows directly from the first axiom of a co-algebra: the relative order of the elements v_k is
preserved in the riffle shuffle: the riffle shuffle merely splits the ordered sequence into two ordered sequences, one on the left, and one on the right. Equivalently, :\Delta(v_1\otimes\cdots\otimes v_n) = \sum_{S\subseteq \{1,\dots,n\}} \left(\prod_{k=1 \atop k \in S}^n v_k\right) \boxtimes \left(\prod_{k=1 \atop k \notin S}^n v_k\right)\!, where the products are in TV, and where the sum is over all subsets of \{1,\dots,n\}. As before, the algebra grading is preserved: :\Delta: T^mV \to \bigoplus_{k=0}^m T^kV \boxtimes T^{(m-k)}V
Counit The counit \epsilon : TV \to K is given by the projection of the field component out from the algebra. This can be written as \epsilon: v\mapsto 0 for v\in V and \epsilon: k\mapsto k for k\in K=T^0V. By homomorphism under the tensor product \otimes, this extends to :\epsilon: x\mapsto 0 for all x\in T^1V \oplus T^2V\oplus \cdots It is a straightforward matter to verify that this counit satisfies the needed axiom for the coalgebra: :(\mathrm{id} \boxtimes \epsilon) \circ \Delta = \mathrm{id} = (\epsilon \boxtimes \mathrm{id}) \circ \Delta. Working this explicitly, one has :\begin{align} ((\mathrm{id} \boxtimes \epsilon) \circ \Delta)(x) &=(\mathrm{id} \boxtimes \epsilon)(1\boxtimes x + x \boxtimes 1) \\ &=1\boxtimes \epsilon(x) + x \boxtimes \epsilon(1) \\ &=0 + x \boxtimes 1 \\ &\cong x \end{align} where, for the last step, one has made use of the isomorphism TV\boxtimes K \cong TV, as is appropriate for the defining axiom of the counit. == Bialgebra==