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I noticed that the generator of the second stable stem b is the square of the generator of the first stable stem a, in the sense that if take two copies of a and smash product them together you get b out. I'm wondering if there are any ( many) other exmples of this. What are the elements in the stable homotopy of spheres which a squares in the above sense?

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Appendix 3 of Ravenel's Green Book, http://www.math.rochester.edu/u/faculty/doug/mu.html#repub, has a chart of stable homotopy groups including much of the multiplicative structure. Figure A3.1 depicts some of this structure visually, while Table A3.3 lists the elements out by name and degree.

The next example of a square after \eta^2 is the element in the sixth stable stem, which is the square of the Hopf map \nu in the third stable stem.

Though stable homotopy is not multiplicatively finitely generated, you can consider Toda brackets, which are a form of higher multiplication in homotopy analogous to Massey products in cohomology, and it is known that the entire stable homotopy groups of spheres are generated by Toda brackets on the Hopf elements 2, \eta, \nu, and \sigma.

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Thanks, that answer is quite helpful. – michael freedman Nov 11 2009 at 0:21
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As is standard for people who've been topologists for some time, Chris may have forgotten that there are primes other than 2 when he lists the generators. – Tyler Lawson Nov 11 2009 at 4:08
Here is a reference for the result that Chris is citing, namely that the homotopy groups of spheres are generated by the hopf maps under the operations of Toda brackets (and their higher analogs): Cohen, Joel M. (1968), "The decomposition of stable homotopy.", Annals of Mathematics (2) 87: 305–320, doi:10.2307/1970586, MR0231377. – Chris Schommer-Pries May 6 2010 at 13:53
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See the "ring structure" section for the stable homotopy groups of spheres: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homotopy_groups_of_spheres

This ring structure is well understood in the range that the homotopy groups of spheres are known. There are further operations called Toda brackets. The story goes on.

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Surely 'well-understood' is an exaggeration! – Robert Bruner Nov 23 2010 at 19:34

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