Difference between revisions of "Fundamental class"
(Importing text file) |
Ulf Rehmann (talk | contribs) m (tex encoded by computer) |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| − | + | <!-- | |
| + | f0421601.png | ||
| + | $#A+1 = 44 n = 0 | ||
| + | $#C+1 = 44 : ~/encyclopedia/old_files/data/F042/F.0402160 Fundamental class | ||
| + | Automatically converted into TeX, above some diagnostics. | ||
| + | Please remove this comment and the {{TEX|auto}} line below, | ||
| + | if TeX found to be correct. | ||
| + | --> | ||
| − | + | {{TEX|auto}} | |
| + | {{TEX|done}} | ||
| − | + | The fundamental class of an $ ( n - 1) $- | |
| + | connected topological space $ X $( | ||
| + | that is, a topological space $ X $ | ||
| + | such that $ \pi _ {i} ( X) = 0 $ | ||
| + | for $ i \leq n - 1 $) | ||
| + | is the element $ r _ {n} $ | ||
| + | of the group $ H ^ {n} ( X; \pi _ {n} ( X)) $ | ||
| + | that corresponds, under the isomorphism $ H ^ {n} ( X; \pi ) \approx \mathop{\rm Hom} ( H _ {n} ( X); \pi ) $ | ||
| + | that arises in the universal coefficient formula | ||
| − | + | $$ | |
| + | 0 \rightarrow \ | ||
| + | \mathop{\rm Ext} ( H _ {n - 1 } ( X); \pi ) \rightarrow \ | ||
| + | H ^ {n} ( X; \pi ) \rightarrow \mathop{\rm Hom} ( H _ {n} ( X); \pi ) \rightarrow 0, | ||
| + | $$ | ||
| − | + | to the inverse $ h ^ {-} 1 $ | |
| + | of the Hurewicz homomorphism $ h: \pi _ {n} ( X) \rightarrow H _ {n} ( X) $( | ||
| + | which is an isomorphism by the Hurewicz theorem (see [[Homotopy group|Homotopy group]])). If $ X $ | ||
| + | is a [[CW-complex|CW-complex]] (a cellular space), then the fundamental class $ r _ {n} $ | ||
| + | is the same as the first [[Obstruction|obstruction]] to the construction of a section of the [[Serre fibration|Serre fibration]] $ \Omega X \rightarrow EX \rightarrow X $, | ||
| + | which lies in $ H ^ {n} A ( X, \pi _ {n - 1 } ( \Omega X)) = H ^ {n} ( X; \pi _ {n} ( X)) $, | ||
| + | and also as the first obstruction to the construction of a homotopy of the identity mapping $ \mathop{\rm id} : X \rightarrow X $ | ||
| + | to a constant mapping. In case the $ ( n - 1) $- | ||
| + | dimensional skeleton of $ X $ | ||
| + | consists of a single point (in fact this assumption involves no loss of generality, since any $ ( n - 1) $- | ||
| + | dimensional CW-complex is homotopy equivalent to a CW-complex without cells of positive dimension less than $ n $), | ||
| + | the closure of each $ n $- | ||
| + | dimensional cell is an $ n $- | ||
| + | dimensional sphere, and so its characteristic mapping determines some element of the group $ \pi _ {n} ( X) $. | ||
| + | Since these cells form a basis of the group $ C _ {n} ( X) $, | ||
| + | it thus determines an $ n $- | ||
| + | dimensional [[Cochain|cochain]] in $ C ^ {n} ( X; \pi _ {n} ( X)) $. | ||
| + | This cochain is a [[Cocycle|cocycle]] and its cohomology class is also the fundamental class. | ||
| − | + | A fundamental class, or orientation class, of a connected oriented $ n $- | |
| + | dimensional manifold $ M $ | ||
| + | without boundary (respectively, with boundary $ \partial M $) | ||
| + | is a generator $ [ M] $ | ||
| + | of the group $ H _ {n} ( M) $( | ||
| + | respectively, of $ H _ {n} ( M, \partial M) $), | ||
| + | which is a free cyclic group. If $ M $ | ||
| + | can be triangulated, then the fundamental class is the homology class of the cycle that is the sum of all coherent oriented $ n $- | ||
| + | dimensional simplices of an arbitrary triangulation of it. For each $ q $, | ||
| + | the homomorphism | ||
| − | + | $$ | |
| + | D _ {M} : \ | ||
| + | H ^ {q} ( M) \rightarrow \ | ||
| + | H _ {n - q } ( M),\ \ | ||
| + | D _ {M} : \ | ||
| + | x \rightarrow x \cap [ M], | ||
| + | $$ | ||
| − | is an isomorphism, called [[Poincaré duality|Poincaré duality]] (if | + | where the $ \cap $- |
| + | product is defined by the formula | ||
| + | |||
| + | $$ | ||
| + | x ( y \cap c) = \ | ||
| + | ( x \cup y) ( c) ,\ \ | ||
| + | \mathop{\rm dim} x + | ||
| + | \mathop{\rm dim} y = \ | ||
| + | \mathop{\rm dim} c, | ||
| + | $$ | ||
| + | |||
| + | is an isomorphism, called [[Poincaré duality|Poincaré duality]] (if $ M $ | ||
| + | has boundary $ \partial M $, | ||
| + | then $ D _ {M} : H ^ {q} ( M) \rightarrow H _ {n - q } ( M, \partial M) $). | ||
| + | One also speaks of the fundamental class for non-oriented (but connected) manifolds $ M $( | ||
| + | with boundary); in this case one means by it the unique element of $ H _ {n} ( M; \mathbf Z _ {2} ) $( | ||
| + | respectively, of $ H _ {n} ( M, \partial M; \mathbf Z _ {2} ) $) | ||
| + | different from zero. In this case there is also a Poincaré duality. | ||
====References==== | ====References==== | ||
<table><TR><TD valign="top">[1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D.B. Fuks, A.T. Fomenko, V.L. Gutenmakher, "Homotopic topology" , Moscow (1969) (In Russian)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[2]</TD> <TD valign="top"> R.E. Mosher, M.C. Tangora, "Cohomology operations and applications in homotopy theory" , Harper & Row (1968)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[3]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D. Husemoller, "Fibre bundles" , McGraw-Hill (1966)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[4]</TD> <TD valign="top"> E.H. Spanier, "Algebraic topology" , McGraw-Hill (1966)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[5]</TD> <TD valign="top"> A. Dold, "Lectures on algebraic topology" , Springer (1980)</TD></TR></table> | <table><TR><TD valign="top">[1]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D.B. Fuks, A.T. Fomenko, V.L. Gutenmakher, "Homotopic topology" , Moscow (1969) (In Russian)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[2]</TD> <TD valign="top"> R.E. Mosher, M.C. Tangora, "Cohomology operations and applications in homotopy theory" , Harper & Row (1968)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[3]</TD> <TD valign="top"> D. Husemoller, "Fibre bundles" , McGraw-Hill (1966)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[4]</TD> <TD valign="top"> E.H. Spanier, "Algebraic topology" , McGraw-Hill (1966)</TD></TR><TR><TD valign="top">[5]</TD> <TD valign="top"> A. Dold, "Lectures on algebraic topology" , Springer (1980)</TD></TR></table> | ||
Revision as of 19:40, 5 June 2020
The fundamental class of an $ ( n - 1) $-
connected topological space $ X $(
that is, a topological space $ X $
such that $ \pi _ {i} ( X) = 0 $
for $ i \leq n - 1 $)
is the element $ r _ {n} $
of the group $ H ^ {n} ( X; \pi _ {n} ( X)) $
that corresponds, under the isomorphism $ H ^ {n} ( X; \pi ) \approx \mathop{\rm Hom} ( H _ {n} ( X); \pi ) $
that arises in the universal coefficient formula
$$ 0 \rightarrow \ \mathop{\rm Ext} ( H _ {n - 1 } ( X); \pi ) \rightarrow \ H ^ {n} ( X; \pi ) \rightarrow \mathop{\rm Hom} ( H _ {n} ( X); \pi ) \rightarrow 0, $$
to the inverse $ h ^ {-} 1 $ of the Hurewicz homomorphism $ h: \pi _ {n} ( X) \rightarrow H _ {n} ( X) $( which is an isomorphism by the Hurewicz theorem (see Homotopy group)). If $ X $ is a CW-complex (a cellular space), then the fundamental class $ r _ {n} $ is the same as the first obstruction to the construction of a section of the Serre fibration $ \Omega X \rightarrow EX \rightarrow X $, which lies in $ H ^ {n} A ( X, \pi _ {n - 1 } ( \Omega X)) = H ^ {n} ( X; \pi _ {n} ( X)) $, and also as the first obstruction to the construction of a homotopy of the identity mapping $ \mathop{\rm id} : X \rightarrow X $ to a constant mapping. In case the $ ( n - 1) $- dimensional skeleton of $ X $ consists of a single point (in fact this assumption involves no loss of generality, since any $ ( n - 1) $- dimensional CW-complex is homotopy equivalent to a CW-complex without cells of positive dimension less than $ n $), the closure of each $ n $- dimensional cell is an $ n $- dimensional sphere, and so its characteristic mapping determines some element of the group $ \pi _ {n} ( X) $. Since these cells form a basis of the group $ C _ {n} ( X) $, it thus determines an $ n $- dimensional cochain in $ C ^ {n} ( X; \pi _ {n} ( X)) $. This cochain is a cocycle and its cohomology class is also the fundamental class.
A fundamental class, or orientation class, of a connected oriented $ n $- dimensional manifold $ M $ without boundary (respectively, with boundary $ \partial M $) is a generator $ [ M] $ of the group $ H _ {n} ( M) $( respectively, of $ H _ {n} ( M, \partial M) $), which is a free cyclic group. If $ M $ can be triangulated, then the fundamental class is the homology class of the cycle that is the sum of all coherent oriented $ n $- dimensional simplices of an arbitrary triangulation of it. For each $ q $, the homomorphism
$$ D _ {M} : \ H ^ {q} ( M) \rightarrow \ H _ {n - q } ( M),\ \ D _ {M} : \ x \rightarrow x \cap [ M], $$
where the $ \cap $- product is defined by the formula
$$ x ( y \cap c) = \ ( x \cup y) ( c) ,\ \ \mathop{\rm dim} x + \mathop{\rm dim} y = \ \mathop{\rm dim} c, $$
is an isomorphism, called Poincaré duality (if $ M $ has boundary $ \partial M $, then $ D _ {M} : H ^ {q} ( M) \rightarrow H _ {n - q } ( M, \partial M) $). One also speaks of the fundamental class for non-oriented (but connected) manifolds $ M $( with boundary); in this case one means by it the unique element of $ H _ {n} ( M; \mathbf Z _ {2} ) $( respectively, of $ H _ {n} ( M, \partial M; \mathbf Z _ {2} ) $) different from zero. In this case there is also a Poincaré duality.
References
| [1] | D.B. Fuks, A.T. Fomenko, V.L. Gutenmakher, "Homotopic topology" , Moscow (1969) (In Russian) |
| [2] | R.E. Mosher, M.C. Tangora, "Cohomology operations and applications in homotopy theory" , Harper & Row (1968) |
| [3] | D. Husemoller, "Fibre bundles" , McGraw-Hill (1966) |
| [4] | E.H. Spanier, "Algebraic topology" , McGraw-Hill (1966) |
| [5] | A. Dold, "Lectures on algebraic topology" , Springer (1980) |
Fundamental class. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Fundamental_class&oldid=12646