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Algebraic topology

Algebraic topology is a branch of mathematics that uses tools from abstract algebra to study topological spaces. The basic goal is to find algebraic invariants that classify topological spaces up to homeomorphism, though usually most classify up to homotopy equivalence.

For the topology of pointwise convergence, see Algebraic topology (object).

Although algebraic topology primarily uses algebra to study topological problems, using topology to solve algebraic problems is sometimes also possible. Algebraic topology, for example, allows for a convenient proof that any subgroup of a free group is again a free group.

Method of algebraic invariants[edit]

An older name for the subject was combinatorial topology, implying an emphasis on how a space X was constructed from simpler ones[2] (the modern standard tool for such construction is the CW complex). In the 1920s and 1930s, there was growing emphasis on investigating topological spaces by finding correspondences from them to algebraic groups, which led to the change of name to algebraic topology.[3] The combinatorial topology name is still sometimes used to emphasize an algorithmic approach based on decomposition of spaces.[4]


In the algebraic approach, one finds a correspondence between spaces and groups that respects the relation of homeomorphism (or more general homotopy) of spaces. This allows one to recast statements about topological spaces into statements about groups, which have a great deal of manageable structure, often making these statements easier to prove. Two major ways in which this can be done are through fundamental groups, or more generally homotopy theory, and through homology and cohomology groups. The fundamental groups give us basic information about the structure of a topological space, but they are often nonabelian and can be difficult to work with. The fundamental group of a (finite) simplicial complex does have a finite presentation.


Homology and cohomology groups, on the other hand, are abelian and in many important cases finitely generated. Finitely generated abelian groups are completely classified and are particularly easy to work with.

Setting in category theory[edit]

In general, all constructions of algebraic topology are functorial; the notions of category, functor and natural transformation originated here. Fundamental groups and homology and cohomology groups are not only invariants of the underlying topological space, in the sense that two topological spaces which are homeomorphic have the same associated groups, but their associated morphisms also correspond—a continuous mapping of spaces induces a group homomorphism on the associated groups, and these homomorphisms can be used to show non-existence (or, much more deeply, existence) of mappings.


One of the first mathematicians to work with different types of cohomology was Georges de Rham. One can use the differential structure of smooth manifolds via de Rham cohomology, or Čech or sheaf cohomology to investigate the solvability of differential equations defined on the manifold in question. De Rham showed that all of these approaches were interrelated and that, for a closed, oriented manifold, the Betti numbers derived through simplicial homology were the same Betti numbers as those derived through de Rham cohomology. This was extended in the 1950s, when Samuel Eilenberg and Norman Steenrod generalized this approach. They defined homology and cohomology as functors equipped with natural transformations subject to certain axioms (e.g., a weak equivalence of spaces passes to an isomorphism of homology groups), verified that all existing (co)homology theories satisfied these axioms, and then proved that such an axiomatization uniquely characterized the theory.

The : every continuous map from the unit n-disk to itself has a fixed point.

Brouwer fixed point theorem

The free rank of the nth homology group of a is the nth Betti number, which allows one to calculate the Euler–Poincaré characteristic.

simplicial complex

One can use the differential structure of via de Rham cohomology, or Čech or sheaf cohomology to investigate the solvability of differential equations defined on the manifold in question.

smooth manifolds

A manifold is when the top-dimensional integral homology group is the integers, and is non-orientable when it is 0.

orientable

The admits a nowhere-vanishing continuous unit vector field if and only if n is odd. (For n = 2, this is sometimes called the "hairy ball theorem".)

n-sphere

The : any continuous map from the n-sphere to Euclidean n-space identifies at least one pair of antipodal points.

Borsuk–Ulam theorem

Any subgroup of a is free. This result is quite interesting, because the statement is purely algebraic yet the simplest known proof is topological. Namely, any free group G may be realized as the fundamental group of a graph X. The main theorem on covering spaces tells us that every subgroup H of G is the fundamental group of some covering space Y of X; but every such Y is again a graph. Therefore, its fundamental group H is free. On the other hand, this type of application is also handled more simply by the use of covering morphisms of groupoids, and that technique has yielded subgroup theorems not yet proved by methods of algebraic topology; see Higgins (1971).

free group

.

Topological combinatorics

Classic applications of algebraic topology include:

Allegretti, Dylan G. L. (2008), (Discusses generalized versions of van Kampen's theorem applied to topological spaces and simplicial sets).

Simplicial Sets and van Kampen's Theorem

(1993), Topology and Geometry, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, vol. 139, Springer, ISBN 0-387-97926-3.

Bredon, Glen E.

(2007), Higher dimensional group theory, archived from the original on 2016-05-14, retrieved 2022-08-17 (Gives a broad view of higher-dimensional van Kampen theorems involving multiple groupoids).

Brown, R.

Brown, R.; Razak, A. (1984), "A van Kampen theorem for unions of non-connected spaces", Arch. Math., 42: 85–88, :10.1007/BF01198133, S2CID 122228464. "Gives a general theorem on the fundamental groupoid with a set of base points of a space which is the union of open sets."

doi

Brown, R.; Hardie, K.; Kamps, H.; Porter, T. (2002), , Theory Appl. Categories, 10 (2): 71–93.

"The homotopy double groupoid of a Hausdorff space"

Brown, R.; Higgins, P.J. (1978), "On the connection between the second relative homotopy groups of some related spaces", Proc. London Math. Soc., S3-36 (2): 193–212, :10.1112/plms/s3-36.2.193. "The first 2-dimensional version of van Kampen's theorem."

doi

Brown, Ronald; Higgins, Philip J.; Sivera, Rafael (2011), , European Mathematical Society Tracts in Mathematics, vol. 15, European Mathematical Society, arXiv:math/0407275, ISBN 978-3-03719-083-8, archived from the original on 2009-06-04 This provides a homotopy theoretic approach to basic algebraic topology, without needing a basis in singular homology, or the method of simplicial approximation. It contains a lot of material on crossed modules.

Nonabelian Algebraic Topology: Filtered Spaces, Crossed Complexes, Cubical Homotopy Groupoids

Fraleigh, John B. (1976), A First Course In Abstract Algebra (2nd ed.), Reading: , ISBN 0-201-01984-1

Addison-Wesley

; Harper, John R. (1981), Algebraic Topology: A First Course, Revised edition, Mathematics Lecture Note Series, Westview/Perseus, ISBN 9780805335576. A functorial, algebraic approach originally by Greenberg with geometric flavoring added by Harper.

Greenberg, Marvin J.

(2002), Algebraic Topology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-79540-0. A modern, geometrically flavoured introduction to algebraic topology.

Hatcher, Allen

Higgins, Philip J. (1971), , Van Nostrand Reinhold, ISBN 9780442034061

Notes on categories and groupoids

Maunder, C. R. F. (1970), Algebraic Topology, London: Van Nostrand Reinhold,  0-486-69131-4.

ISBN

(2008), Algebraic Topology, EMS Textbooks in Mathematics, European Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-3-03719-048-7

tom Dieck, Tammo

(1933), "On the connection between the fundamental groups of some related spaces", American Journal of Mathematics, 55 (1): 261–7, JSTOR 51000091

van Kampen, Egbert

, Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]

"Algebraic topology"

(1999). A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology (PDF). University of Chicago Press. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2008-09-27. Section 2.7 provides a category-theoretic presentation of the theorem as a colimit in the category of groupoids.

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