Excision theorem explained
In algebraic topology, a branch of mathematics, the excision theorem is a theorem about relative homology and one of the Eilenberg–Steenrod axioms. Given a topological space
and subspaces
and
such that
is also a subspace of
, the theorem says that under certain circumstances, we can cut out (
excise)
from both spaces such that the relative homologies of the pairs
(X\setminusU,A\setminusU)
into
are isomorphic.
This assists in computation of singular homology groups, as sometimes after excising an appropriately chosen subspace we obtain something easier to compute.
Theorem
Statement
If
are as above, we say that
can be
excised if the inclusion map of the pair
(X\setminusU,A\setminusU)
into
induces an isomorphism on the relative homologies:
The theorem states that if the closure of
is contained in the
interior of
, then
can be excised.
Often, subspaces that do not satisfy this containment criterion still can be excised - it suffices to be able to find a deformation retract of the subspaces onto subspaces that do satisfy it.
Proof Sketch
The proof of the excision theorem is quite intuitive, though the details are rather involved. The idea is to subdivide the simplices in a relative cycle in
to get another chain consisting of "smaller" simplices, and continuing the process until each simplex in the chain lies entirely in the interior of
or the interior of
. Since these form an open cover for
and simplices are
compact, we can eventually do this in a finite number of steps. This process leaves the original homology class of the chain unchanged (this says the subdivision operator is
chain homotopic to the identity map on homology).In the relative homology
, then, this says all the terms contained entirely in the interior of
can be dropped without affecting the homology class of the cycle. This allows us to show that the inclusion map is an isomorphism, as each relative cycle is equivalent to one that avoids
entirely.
Applications
Eilenberg–Steenrod Axioms
The excision theorem is taken to be one of the Eilenberg-Steenrod axioms.
Mayer-Vietoris Sequences
The Mayer–Vietoris sequence may be derived with a combination of excision theorem and the long-exact sequence.[1]
Suspension Theorem for Homology
The excision theorem may be used to derive the suspension theorem for homology, which says
\tilde{H}n(X)\cong\tilde{H}n+1(SX)
for all
, where
is the
suspension of
.
[2] Invariance of Dimension
If nonempty open sets
and
are homeomorphic, then m = n. This follows from the excision theorem, the long exact sequence for the pair
, and the fact that
deformation retracts onto a sphere.In particular,
is not homeomorphic to
if
.
[3] See also
Bibliography
Notes and References
- See Hatcher 2002, p.149, for example
- See Hatcher 2002, p.132, for example
- See Hatcher 2002, p.135