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===Cohomology groups and cohomology ring=== | ===Cohomology groups and cohomology ring=== | ||
With coefficients in <math>\mathbb{Z}</math>, the <math>n</math>-sphere <math>S^n</math> has <math>H^n(S^n) | With coefficients in <math>\mathbb{Z}</math>, the <math>n</math>-sphere <math>S^n</math> has <math>H^0(S^n) \cong H^n(S^n) \cong \mathbb{Z}</math> and <math>H^k(S^n) = 0</math> for <math>k \notin \{ 0,n\}</math>. In particular, the <math>n</math>-sphere is <math>(n - 1)</math>-connected. | ||
With coefficients in any <math>R</math>-module <math>M</math> for a ring <math>R</math>, the <math>n</math>-sphere <math>S^n</math> has <math>H^n(S^n) = M</math> and <math>H^k(S^n) = 0</math> for all <math>k \ne n</math>. | With coefficients in any <math>R</math>-module <math>M</math> for a ring <math>R</math>, the <math>n</math>-sphere <math>S^n</math> has <math>H^n(S^n) = M</math> and <math>H^k(S^n) = 0</math> for all <math>k \ne n</math>. | ||
The cohomology ring is isomorphic to <math>\mathbb{Z}[x]/(x^2)</math>, where <math>x</math> is a generator of the <amth>n^{th}</math> cohomology. | |||
Revision as of 04:08, 9 November 2010
Definition
As a subset of Euclidean space
The unit -sphere is defined as the subset of Euclidean space comprising those points whose distance from the origin is .
Particular cases
| sphere | |
|---|---|
| 0 | -- discrete two-point space |
| 1 | circle |
| 2 | 2-sphere |
| 3 | 3-sphere |
Equivalent spaces
| Space | How strongly is it equivalent to the circle? |
|---|---|
| boundary of the -hypercube | homeomorphic; not diffeomorphic because of sharp edges |
| boundary of the -simplex | homeomorphic; not diffeomorphic because of sharp edges |
| ellipsoid in | equivalent via affine transformation |
Algebraic topology
Homology groups
With coefficients in , the -sphere has and for . In particular, the -sphere is -connected.
Interpretations in terms of various homology theories:
Fill this in later
With coefficients in any -module for a ring , the -sphere has and for all .
Cohomology groups and cohomology ring
With coefficients in , the -sphere has and for . In particular, the -sphere is -connected.
With coefficients in any -module for a ring , the -sphere has and for all .
The cohomology ring is isomorphic to , where is a generator of the <amth>n^{th}</math> cohomology.