In mathematics, homotopy groups are used in algebraic topology to classify topological spaces. The first and simplest homotopy group is the fundamental group, denoted
\pi1(X),
To define the n-th homotopy group, the base-point-preserving maps from an n-dimensional sphere (with base point) into a given space (with base point) are collected into equivalence classes, called homotopy classes. Two mappings are homotopic if one can be continuously deformed into the other. These homotopy classes form a group, called the n-th homotopy group,
\pin(X),
The notion of homotopy of paths was introduced by Camille Jordan.
In modern mathematics it is common to study a category by associating to every object of this category a simpler object that still retains sufficient information about the object of interest. Homotopy groups are such a way of associating groups to topological spaces.
That link between topology and groups lets mathematicians apply insights from group theory to topology. For example, if two topological objects have different homotopy groups, they cannot have the same topological structure - a fact that may be difficult to prove using only topological means. For example, the torus is different from the sphere: the torus has a "hole"; the sphere doesn't. However, since continuity (the basic notion of topology) only deals with the local structure, it can be difficult to formally define the obvious global difference. The homotopy groups, however, carry information about the global structure.
As for the example: the first homotopy group of the torus
T
\R2,
T\cong\R2/\Z2.
S2
Sn
\pin(X)
\pin(X)
g:[0,1]n\toX
For
n\ge1,
f\astg
f,g:[0,1]\toX
The idea of composition in the fundamental group is that of traveling the first path and the second in succession, or, equivalently, setting their two domains together. The concept of composition that we want for the n-th homotopy group is the same, except that now the domains that we stick together are cubes, and we must glue them along a face. We therefore define the sum of maps
f,g:[0,1]n\toX
For the corresponding definition in terms of spheres, define the sum
f+g
f,g:Sn\toX
\Psi
\Psi
Sn
If
n\geq2,
\pin
\pin.
It is tempting to try to simplify the definition of homotopy groups by omitting the base points, but this does not usually work for spaces that are not simply connected, even for path-connected spaces. The set of homotopy classes of maps from a sphere to a path connected space is not the homotopy group, but is essentially the set of orbits of the fundamental group on the homotopy group, and in general has no natural group structure.
A way out of these difficulties has been found by defining higher homotopy groupoids of filtered spaces and of n-cubes of spaces. These are related to relative homotopy groups and to n-adic homotopy groups respectively. A higher homotopy van Kampen theorem then enables one to derive some new information on homotopy groups and even on homotopy types. For more background and references, see "Higher dimensional group theory" and the references below.
A topological space has a hole with a d-dimensional boundary if-and-only-if it contains a d-dimensional sphere that cannot be shrunk continuously to a single point. This holds if-and-only-if there is a mapping that is not homotopic to a constant function. This holds if-and-only-if the d-th homotopy group of X is not trivial. In short, X has a hole with a d-dimensional boundary, if-and-only-if
\pid(X)\not\cong0
Let
p:E\toB
F,
Here the maps involving
\pi0
\pi0
Example: the Hopf fibration. Let B equal
S2
S3.
S1.
and the fact that
1) | |
\pi | |
n(S |
=0
n\geq2,
3) | |
\pi | |
n(S |
=
2) | |
\pi | |
n(S |
n\geq3.
2) | |
\pi | |
3(S |
=
3) | |
\pi | |
3(S |
=\Z.
In the case of a cover space, when the fiber is discrete, we have that
\pin(E)
\pin(B)
n>1,
\pin(E)
\pin(B)
n,
\pi1(B)
\pi1(E)
When the fibration is the mapping fibre, or dually, the cofibration is the mapping cone, then the resulting exact (or dually, coexact) sequence is given by the Puppe sequence.
There are many realizations of spheres as homogeneous spaces, which provide good tools for computing homotopy groups of Lie groups, and the classification of principal bundles on spaces made out of spheres.
There is a fibration[3]
giving the long exact sequence
which computes the low order homotopy groups of
\pii(SO(n-1))\cong\pii(SO(n))
i<n-1,
Sn-1
(n-2)
whose lower homotopy groups can be computed explicitly. Since
SO(3)\congRP3,
we have
\pii(SO(3))\cong
3) | |
\pi | |
i(S |
i>1.
3\right) | |
\pi | |
4\left(S |
=\Z/2,
Since
3\right) | |
\pi | |
2\left(S |
=0
\pi2(SO(4))=0.
\pi3(SO(4))\cong\Z ⊕ \Z
3\right) | |
\pi | |
4\left(S |
=\Z/2\to\Z=
3\right) | |
\pi | |
3\left(RP |
\pi4(SO(4))
Milnor[4] used the fact
\pi3(SO(4))=\Z ⊕ \Z
S4,
S7,
4
SO(4)
S3
There is a fibration
where
S2n+1
\Complexn+1.
CPn
n.
Calculation of homotopy groups is in general much more difficult than some of the other homotopy invariants learned in algebraic topology. Unlike the Seifert–van Kampen theorem for the fundamental group and the excision theorem for singular homology and cohomology, there is no simple known way to calculate the homotopy groups of a space by breaking it up into smaller spaces. However, methods developed in the 1980s involving a van Kampen type theorem for higher homotopy groupoids have allowed new calculations on homotopy types and so on homotopy groups. See for a sample result the 2010 paper by Ellis and Mikhailov.[5]
For some spaces, such as tori, all higher homotopy groups (that is, second and higher homotopy groups) are trivial. These are the so-called aspherical spaces. However, despite intense research in calculating the homotopy groups of spheres, even in two dimensions a complete list is not known. To calculate even the fourth homotopy group of
S2
Certain homotopy groups of n-connected spaces can be calculated by comparison with homology groups via the Hurewicz theorem.
There is also a useful generalization of homotopy groups,
\pin(X),
\pin(X,A)
(X,A),
X.
The construction is motivated by the observation that for an inclusion
i:(A,x0)\hookrightarrow(X,x0),
i*:\pin(A)\to\pin(X)
f:In\toX
F:In x I\toX
x0,
H | |
In x 1 |
=f,
In+1
The elements of such a group are homotopy classes of based maps
Dn\toX
Sn-1
f,g
F:Dn x [0,1]\toX
Sn-1
[0,1],
F(p,t)
A=\{x0\}
These groups are abelian for
n\geq3(E)
n=2
\pi1(A).
There is also a long exact sequence of relative homotopy groups that can be obtained via the Puppe sequence:
… \to\pin(A)\to\pin(X)\to\pin(X,A)\to\pin-1(A)\to …
The homotopy groups are fundamental to homotopy theory, which in turn stimulated the development of model categories. It is possible to define abstract homotopy groups for simplicial sets.
Homology groups are similar to homotopy groups in that they can represent "holes" in a topological space. However, homotopy groups are often very complex and hard to compute. In contrast, homology groups are commutative (as are the higher homotopy groups). Hence, it is sometimes said that "homology is a commutative alternative to homotopy".[6] Given a topological space
X,
\pin(X),
Hn(X).