Quism
Pronunciation
Origin
Contraction of quasi-isomorphism.
Full definition of quism
Noun
quism
(plural quisms)- (mathematics) A quasi-isomorphism.
- 1990, Jan R, Strooker, Homological Questions in Local Algebra, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521315265, page 5:Most authors speak of a quasi-isomorphism or quism, but Bourbaki's term is more descriptive.
- 1992, Kathryn P. Hess, “Twisted tensor products of DGA’s and the Adams-Hilton model for the total space of a fibrationâ€, in Nigel Ray and Spike Walker (editors), Adams Memorial Symposium on Algebraic Topology (proceedings of a July 1990 symposium), Volume I, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-42074-7, page 51:Then the composition is a quism and therefore is an acceptable Adams-Hilton model for E.
- 2000, Alex Martsinkofsky, , Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra, Vol. 153 No. 1:By 3, the vertical maps are quisms.
- 2002, Martin Markl, Steven Shnider, James Stasheff, Operads in Algebra, Topology and Physics, American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-2134-3, page 201:Since Ïâ‚€ is a surjective quism, the Σ-module K is acyclic.