Hurkyl said:
Well, I think so... I mean, I'm pretty sure...
For example, the alternating square of a 2d vector space is 1d, whose symmetric square is also 1d. While the symmetric square of a 2d vector space is 3d, and its alternating square is 3d again. So clearly they cannot be isomorphic.
But why do you ask? You sound like you know something I don't. Please share.
Hurkyl said:
But in any case, he doesn't need equality, or even a canonical isomorphism; he just needs a canonical embedding of one in the other.
OK, so is there such an embedding? I'm playing around with it, maybe a map
\operatorname{Alt}^2(\operatorname{Sym}^2V)\to\operatorname{Sym}^2(\operatorname{Alt}^2V)
for example I'm thinking given by something like
(a\otimes_\sigma b)\wedge(c\otimes_\sigma d)\mapsto (a\wedge c)\otimes_\sigma(b\wedge d)+(a\wedge d)\otimes_\sigma(b\wedge c)
maybe.
But this map is no embedding. It takes
(e_1\otimes_\sigma e_1)\wedge(e_1\otimes_\sigma e_2)
to zero.
I am dubious about your suggestion.