I'm reading the paper "Improved algebraic fibering" by Sam Fisher (https://arxiv.org/pdf/2112.00397.pdf) and in the proof of lemma 6.4 it claims the followng:
$(\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}\ast\mathbb{Z})ax\subset Z_n(\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}G}\otimes_{\mathbb{F}G} P_\ast)$, where $P_\ast$ is a free resolution of $\mathbb{F}$ and $(\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}\ast\mathbb{Z})ax$ is an infinite dimensional $\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}$-subspace of $Z_n(\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}\otimes_{\mathbb{F}K} P_\ast)$. Hence, $b_p^{\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}}(K)<\infty$ implies that there exists $b\in\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}\ast\mathbb{Z}$ such that $bax=\partial y$ for some $y\in\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}\otimes_{\mathbb{F}K}P_{n+1}$.
Here $b_p^{\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}}(K)=\dim_{\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}}\text{Tor}_p^{{\mathbb{F}K}}(\mathbb{F},\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K})$ is a generalized version of $\ell^2$-betti numbers (The usual $\ell^2$-Betti numbers are obtained by setting $\mathbb{F}=\mathbb{Q}$ which implies $\mathcal{D}_{\mathbb{F}K}=\mathcal{D}(\mathbb{Q})$, which is the Linnell ring)
Maybe that is an easy question, or a property of $\text{Tor}$ that I am forgetting, but I don't understand why knowing that the betti number is finite give us that information.
Thanks for your help.