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nonexactness

Nonexactness, also written non-exactness, is a property of a sequence or complex that is not exact. In mathematics, a sequence of objects and morphisms is exact at a given object if the image of the preceding map equals the kernel of the following map. Non-exactness occurs when this equality fails at one or more positions, and it is often analyzed using homology or cohomology to measure the failure.

In chain complexes and homological algebra, a sequence of abelian groups (or modules) with boundary maps is

In differential geometry and calculus, the de Rham complex provides another setting for exactness: a form is

Consequences and interpretation: non-exactness indicates obstructions to solving equations or to expressing global primitives. It is

exact
at
a
position
when
im(d_prev)
=
ker(d_next).
Non-exactness
at
that
position
is
quantified
by
the
corresponding
homology
group,
H_n
=
ker(d_n)/im(d_{n+1}).
A
complex
is
exact
in
a
region
precisely
when
all
its
homology
groups
in
that
region
vanish;
nonzero
homology
indicates
where
the
sequence
fails
to
be
exact.
exact
if
it
is
the
exterior
derivative
of
a
lower-degree
form.
Closed
forms
satisfy
d
omega
=
0;
exact
forms
are
a
subset
of
closed
forms.
Non-exactness
arises
when
closed
forms
are
not
globally
exact,
which
is
captured
by
de
Rham
cohomology
and
reflects
topological
features
such
as
holes
or
nontrivial
cycles
in
the
underlying
space.
a
formal
way
to
quantify
the
failure
of
local
data
to
determine
global
structure,
and
it
is
central
to
the
study
of
homology,
cohomology,
and
the
global
properties
of
spaces
and
maps.
See
also
exact
sequence,
homology,
cohomology,
chain
complex,
and
de
Rham
cohomology.