Cartesian factorization
(in topology)
A factorization of a space into a topological product. An important problem on non-trivial Cartesian factorizations concerns the cubes and the Euclidean spaces \mathbf R^n. For instance, if a space M is obtained from \mathbf R^m, 3\leq m<n, by identifying the points of an arc l\subset\mathbf R^m for which \pi_1(\mathbf R^m\setminus l)\neq1 (cf. Wild imbedding), then M\times\mathbf R=\mathbf R^{m+1} and M\times M=\mathbf R^{2m}. Any smooth compact contractible manifold M^m is a factor of an I^n, n>m. Any factor of I^n, n<4, is an I^m, m<n.
References
[1] | Itogi Nauk. Algebra. Topol. Geom. 1965 (1967) pp. 227; 243 |
Comments
Another famous example is Bing's "Dog Bone" decomposition of 3-dimensional Euclidean space, its product with a line is homeomorphic to 4-dimensional Euclidean space.
References
[a1] | R.H. Bing, "The cartesian product of a certain nonmanifold and a line is E^4," Ann. of Math. , 70 (1959) pp. 399–412. Zbl 0089.39501 |
[a2] | R.J. Daverman, "Decompositions of manifolds" , Acad. Press (1986). Zbl 0608.57002 |
Cartesian factorization. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Cartesian_factorization&oldid=32893