Homology of compact orientable surfaces: Difference between revisions
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==Statement== | ==Statement== | ||
Suppose <math>g</math> is a nonnegative integer. We denote by <math> | Suppose <math>g</math> is a nonnegative integer. We denote by <math>\Sigma_g</math> the [[compact orientable surface]] of genus <math>g</math>, i.e., <math>\Sigma_g</math> is the [[connected sum of manifolds|connected sum]] of <math>g</math> copies of the [[2-torus]] <math>T = S^1 \times S^1</math>(and it is the [[2-sphere]] <math>S^2</math>when <math>g = 0</math>). In other words, <math>\Sigma_0 = S^2</math>, <math>\Sigma_1 = T</math>, <math>\Sigma_2 = T \# T</math>, and so on. | ||
===Unreduced version over the integers=== | ===Unreduced version over the integers=== | ||
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We have: | We have: | ||
<math>\tilde{H}_k(\Sigma_g;\mathbb{Z}) := \lbrace\begin{array}{rl} | <math>\tilde{H}_k(\Sigma_g;\mathbb{Z}) := \lbrace\begin{array}{rl} 0, & k = 0 \\\mathbb{Z}^{2g}, & k = 1 \\ \mathbb{Z}, & k = 2 \\ 0, & k > 2 \end{array}</math> | ||
===Unreduced version with coefficients in <math>M</math>=== | ===Unreduced version with coefficients in <math>M</math>=== | ||
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===Reduced version with coefficients in <math>M</math>=== | ===Reduced version with coefficients in <math>M</math>=== | ||
<math>\tilde{H}_k(\Sigma_g;M) := \lbrace\begin{array}{rl} | <math>\tilde{H}_k(\Sigma_g;M) := \lbrace\begin{array}{rl} 0, & k = 0 \\ M^{2g}, & k = 1 \\ M, & k = 2 \\ 0, & k > 2 \end{array}</math> | ||
==Related invariants== | ==Related invariants== | ||
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{| class="sortable" border="1" | {| class="sortable" border="1" | ||
! Invariant !! General description !! Description of value for | ! Invariant !! General description !! Description of value for genus <math>g</math> surface !! Comment | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Betti number]]s || The <math>k^{th}</math> Betti number <math>b_k</math> is the rank of the <math>k^{th}</math> homology group. || <math>b_0 = b_2 = 1</math>, <math>b_1 = 2g</math> || | | [[Betti number]]s || The <math>k^{th}</math> Betti number <math>b_k</math> is the rank of the torsion-free part of the <math>k^{th}</math> homology group. || <math>b_0 = b_2 = 1</math>, <math>b_1 = 2g</math>, all higher <math>b_k</math> are zero || | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Poincare polynomial]] || Generating polynomial for Betti numbers || <math>1 + 2gx + x^2</math>|| | | [[Poincare polynomial]] || Generating polynomial for Betti numbers || <math>1 + 2gx + x^2</math>|| | ||
Latest revision as of 02:30, 26 July 2011
This article describes the value (and the process used to compute it) of some homotopy invariant(s) for a topological space or family of topological spaces. The invariant is homology and the topological space/family is compact orientable surface
Get more specific information about compact orientable surface | Get more computations of homology
Statement
Suppose is a nonnegative integer. We denote by the compact orientable surface of genus , i.e., is the connected sum of copies of the 2-torus (and it is the 2-sphere when ). In other words, , , , and so on.
Unreduced version over the integers
We have:
In other words, the zeroth and second homology groups are both free of rank one, and the first homology group is , i.e., the free abelian group of rank .
Reduced version over the integers
We have:
Unreduced version with coefficients in
With coefficients in a module over a ring , we have:
Reduced version with coefficients in
Related invariants
These are all invariants that can be computed in terms of the homology groups.
| Invariant | General description | Description of value for genus surface | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Betti numbers | The Betti number is the rank of the torsion-free part of the homology group. | , , all higher are zero | |
| Poincare polynomial | Generating polynomial for Betti numbers | ||
| Euler characteristic | In particular, this means that the Euler characteristic is negative for , and also that the Euler characteristic and genus can be computed in terms of each other -- given the genus, we can find the Euler characteristic, and vice versa. |
Facts used in homology computation
- Homology of spheres: This tackles the case.
- Homology of torus: This tackles the case.
- Homology of connected sum: This tackles the inductive procedure of taking connected sums.