Cofibration Explained
In mathematics, in particular homotopy theory, a continuous mapping between topological spaces
,
is a cofibration if it has the homotopy extension property with respect to all topological spaces
. That is,
is a cofibration if for each topological space
, and for any continuous maps
and
with
, for any
homotopy
from
to
, there is a continuous map
and a homotopy
from
to
such that
for all
and
. (Here,
denotes the unit interval
.)
This definition is formally dual to that of a fibration, which is required to satisfy the homotopy lifting property with respect to all spaces; this is one instance of the broader Eckmann–Hilton duality in topology.
Cofibrations are a fundamental concept of homotopy theory. Quillen has proposed the notion of model category as a formal framework for doing homotopy theory in more general categories; a model category is endowed with three distinguished classes of morphisms called fibrations, cofibrations and weak equivalences satisfying certain lifting and factorization axioms.
Definition
Homotopy theory
In what follows, let
denote the unit interval.
A map
of topological spaces is called a
cofibration[1] pg 51 if for any map
such that there is an extension to
, meaning there is a map
such that
, we can extend a homotopy of maps
to a homotopy of maps
, where
\begin{align}
H(a,0)&=f(a)\\
H'(x,0)&=f'(x)
\end{align}
We can encode this condition in the following commutative diagram
where
is the
path space of
equipped with the compact-open topology.
For the notion of a cofibration in a model category, see model category.
Examples
In topology
Topologists have long studied notions of "good subspace embedding", many of which imply that the map is a cofibration, or the converse, or have similar formal properties with regards to homology. In 1937, Borsuk proved that if
is a
binormal space (
is normal, and its product with the unit interval
is normal) then every closed subspace of
has the homotopy extension property with respect to any absolute neighborhood retract. Likewise, if
is a closed subspace of
and the subspace inclusion
A x I\cupX x {1}\subsetX x I
is an absolute neighborhood retract, then the inclusion of
into
is a cofibration.
[2] [3] Hatcher's introductory textbook
Algebraic Topology uses a technical notion of
good pair which has the same long exact sequence in singular homology associated to a cofibration, but it is not equivalent. The notion of cofibration is distinguished from these because its homotopy-theoretic definition is more amenable to formal analysis and generalization.
If
is a continuous map between topological spaces, there is an associated topological space
called the
mapping cylinder of
. There is a canonical subspace embedding
and a projection map
such that
as pictured in the commutative diagram below. Moreover,
is a cofibration and
is a homotopy equivalence. This result can be summarized by saying that "every map is equivalent in the homotopy category to a cofibration."
Arne Strøm has proved a strengthening of this result, that every map
factors as the composition of a cofibration and a homotopy equivalence which is also a
fibration.
[4] A topological space
with distinguished basepoint
is said to be
well-pointed if the inclusion map
is a cofibration.
The inclusion map
of the boundary sphere of a solid disk is a cofibration for every
.
A frequently used fact is that a cellular inclusion is a cofibration (so, for instance, if
is a
CW pair, then
is a cofibration). This follows from the previous fact and the fact that cofibrations are stable under pushout, because pushouts are the gluing maps to the
skeleton.
In chain complexes
Let
be an
Abelian category with enough projectives.If we let
be the category of chain complexes which are
in degrees
, then there is a model category structure
[5] pg 1.2 where the weak equivalences are the
quasi-isomorphisms, the fibrations are the epimorphisms, and the cofibrations are maps
which are degreewise monic and the cokernel complex
is a complex of
projective objects in
. It follows that the cofibrant objects are the complexes whose objects are all projective.
Simplicial sets
The category
of simplicial sets
pg 1.3 there is a model category structure where the fibrations are precisely the Kan fibrations, cofibrations are all injective maps, and weak equivalences are simplicial maps which become homotopy equivalences after applying the geometric realization functor.
Properties
is any (continuous) map (between compactly generated spaces), and
is a cofibration, then the induced map
is a cofibration.
and the embedding (at one end of the unit interval)
. That is, the mapping cylinder can be defined as
. By the
universal property of the pushout,
is a cofibration precisely when a mapping cylinder can be constructed for every space
X.
- There is a cofibration (A, X), if and only if there is a retraction from
to
, since this is the
pushout and thus induces maps to every space sensible in the diagram.
- Similar equivalences can be stated for deformation-retract pairs, and for neighborhood deformation-retract pairs.
Constructions with cofibrations
Cofibrant replacement
Note that in a model category
if
is not a cofibration, then the mapping cylinder
forms a
cofibrant replacement. In fact, if we work in just the category of topological spaces, the cofibrant replacement for any map from a point to a space forms a cofibrant replacement.
Cofiber
For a cofibration
we define the
cofiber to be the induced quotient space
. In general, for
, the
cofiberpg 59 is defined as the quotient space
which is the mapping cone of
. Homotopically, the cofiber acts as a homotopy cokernel of the map
. In fact, for pointed topological spaces, the
homotopy colimit of
}\left(\beginX & \xrightarrow & Y \\\downarrow & & \\\end\right) = C_f
In fact, the sequence of maps
comes equipped with the
cofiber sequence which acts like a
distinguished triangle in triangulated categories.
See also
References
Notes and References
- Book: May, J. Peter.. A concise course in algebraic topology. 1999. University of Chicago Press. 0-226-51182-0. Chicago. 41266205.
- Edwin Spanier, Algebraic Topology, 1966, p. 57.
- Garth Warner, Topics in Topology and Homotopy Theory, section 6.
- Arne Strøm, The homotopy category is a homotopy category
- Book: Quillen, Daniel G.. Homotopical algebra. 1967. Springer-Verlag. 978-3-540-03914-3. Berlin. 294862881.