In mathematics, the Leray spectral sequence was a pioneering example in homological algebra, introduced in 1946 by Jean Leray. It is usually seen nowadays as a special case of the Grothendieck spectral sequence.
The formulation was of a spectral sequence, expressing the relationship holding in sheaf cohomology between two topological spaces X and Y, and set up by a continuous mapping
At the time of Leray's work, neither of the two concepts involved (spectral sequence, sheaf cohomology) had reached anything like a definitive state. Therefore it is rarely the case that Leray's result is quoted in its original form. After much work, in the seminar of Henri Cartan in particular, a statement was reached of this kind: assuming some hypotheses on X and Y, and a sheaf F on X, there is a direct image sheaf
on Y.
There are also higher direct images
The E2 term of the typical Leray spectral sequence is
The required statement is that this abuts to the sheaf cohomology
In the formulation achieved by Alexander Grothendieck by about 1957, this is the Grothendieck spectral sequence for the composition of two derived functors.
Earlier (1948/9) the implications for fibrations were extracted as the Serre spectral sequence, which makes no use of sheaves.