Fundamental group: Difference between revisions
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One nice thing about all these homotopies is that they do not depend on additional properties of the ambient space, and the homotopies do not ''use'' any points of the space other than those used in the original loops. | One nice thing about all these homotopies is that they do not depend on additional properties of the ambient space, and the homotopies do not ''use'' any points of the space other than those used in the original loops. | ||
===Alternative definitions=== | |||
The '''fundamental group''' of a [[based topological space]] <math>(X,x_0)</math> is defined as the [[defining ingredient::set of path components]] of the [[defining ingredient::loop space of a based topological space|loop space]] of <math>(X,x_0)</math>, i.e.: | |||
<math>\! \pi_1(X,x_0) = \pi_0(\Omega(X,x_0))</math> | |||
The group structure arises as the structure induced on the quotient by the natural multiplication structure on <math>\Omega(X,x_0)</math>. Because that is a [[H-space]] under the multiplication, <math>\pi_0</math> of the space gets a monoid structure. It turns out that this monoid structure is also a group. | |||
This definition can be reconciled with the usual definition as follows: ''paths in the loop space of a based topological space are the same thing as homotopies of based loops in the original space.'' Thus, the set of path components of the loop space based at a point is the same thing as the set of homotopy classes of loops based at the point. Further, the composition used to give a H-space structure to <math>\Omega(X,x_0)</math> descends precisely to the group multiplication we use to define the fundamental group. | |||
==Related properties of topological spaces== | ==Related properties of topological spaces== | ||
Revision as of 23:56, 19 December 2010
Template:Group associated to based topospaces
Definition
Basic definition
The fundamental group of a based topological space is defined as follows:
- As a set, it is the set of all homotopy classes of loops at in . The homotopy class of a loop is denoted . Note here that homotopy class of loop in particular means that at every stage of the homotopy, we must have a loop based at . In particular, it is not the same thing as the intersection with loops based at of homotopy classes of paths in .
- The group structure is obtained as follows: the composite of two loops is obtained by first traversing the first loop, and then traversing the second loop. Explicitly, if are the two loops, then the composite of these is the loop given by for and for . Continuity of this new loop follows from the gluing lemma for closed subsets.
When the topological space is path-connected, the fundamental groups at any two basepoints are isomorphic. Further information: Actions of the fundamental group
Proof that this gives a group structure
All loops here are based at .
| Condition | How it is shown | Page detailing relevant homotopy |
|---|---|---|
| well defined | if and are homotopic to each other, and and are homotopic to each other, then and are homotopic to each other. | homotopy between composites of homotopic loops |
| existence of identity element | the identity element is the homotopy constant loop that stays at the base point. In other words, if we denote this loop by , then for any loop , the composite is homotopic to , and so is the composite . | homotopy between loop and composite with constant loop |
| existence of inverses | the inverses of a loop is the loop , i.e., the same loop done backward. In other words the composite of and this loop is homotopic to the constant loop. | homotopy between constant loop and composite of loop with inverse |
| associativity | for loops , the composite is homotopic to the composite . | homotopy between composites associated in different ways |
One nice thing about all these homotopies is that they do not depend on additional properties of the ambient space, and the homotopies do not use any points of the space other than those used in the original loops.
Alternative definitions
The fundamental group of a based topological space is defined as the set of path components of the loop space of , i.e.:
The group structure arises as the structure induced on the quotient by the natural multiplication structure on . Because that is a H-space under the multiplication, of the space gets a monoid structure. It turns out that this monoid structure is also a group.
This definition can be reconciled with the usual definition as follows: paths in the loop space of a based topological space are the same thing as homotopies of based loops in the original space. Thus, the set of path components of the loop space based at a point is the same thing as the set of homotopy classes of loops based at the point. Further, the composition used to give a H-space structure to descends precisely to the group multiplication we use to define the fundamental group.
Related properties of topological spaces
- A simply connected space is a topological space whose fundamental group is trivial
- For a H-space and hence in particular for any space that arises as a loop space, and for any topological monoid, the fundamental group is Abelian