Homotopy: Difference between revisions
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It is further true that if <math>F</math> is jointly continuous, then for each <math>t \in [0,1]</math>, <math>\gamma_F(t)</math> is a continuous map. Thus, the homotopy from <math>f</math> to <math>g</math> is a map <math>\gamma</math> from <math>[0,1]</math> to the set <math>C(X,Y)</math> of all continuous maps from <math>X</math> to <math>Y</math>, where <math>\gamma_R(0) = f</math> and <math>\gamma_F(1) = g</math>. | It is further true that if <math>F</math> is jointly continuous, then for each <math>t \in [0,1]</math>, <math>\gamma_F(t)</math> is a continuous map. Thus, the homotopy from <math>f</math> to <math>g</math> is a map <math>\gamma</math> from <math>[0,1]</math> to the set <math>C(X,Y)</math> of all continuous maps from <math>X</math> to <math>Y</math>, where <math>\gamma_R(0) = f</math> and <math>\gamma_F(1) = g</math>. | ||
However, any set map from <math>[0,1]</math> to <math>C(X,Y)</math> need not be a homotopy, because the corresponding map <math>F</math> need not be jointly continuous. | However, any set map from <math>[0,1]</math> to <math>C(X,Y)</math> need not be a homotopy, because the corresponding map <math>F</math> need not be jointly continuous. It turns out that when both <math>X</math> and <math>Y</math> are [[compactly generated Hausdorff space]]s, then a map <math>\gamma:[0,1] \to C(X,Y)</math> is a [[continuous map]] to <math>C(X,Y)</math> equipped with the [[compact-open topology]] iff the corresponding <math>F_\gamma</math> is a jointly continuous map. | ||
===Variant: a homotopy that takes time <math>T > 0</math>=== | ===Variant: a homotopy that takes time <math>T > 0</math>=== | ||
Latest revision as of 23:28, 20 December 2010
Definition
We begin by defining homotopies that take time , but in the last subsection consider a variant notion of a homotopy that could take time .
Definition as a jointly continuous map from the product with the unit interval
Suppose are topological spaces and are continuous maps from to . Let be the closed unit interval .
A jointly continuous map is termed a homotopy from to if for every , and .
Note that has to be a continuous map from equipped with the product topology. It is not sufficient to require that be a separately continuous map in each coordinate, i.e., it is not enough to insist that is continuous for each and is continuous for each .
Definition as a path in a function space
This definition works (at least) in the case that both and are compactly generated Hausdorff spaces (probably in more cases). Under this definition, a homotopy between two continuous maps is a path from the point to the point in the topological space defined as the set of continuous maps from to equipped with the compact-open topology.
Equivalence of definitions
A map is equivalent to a map from to the space of functions from to , via the following rule:
and in reverse:
It is further true that if is jointly continuous, then for each , is a continuous map. Thus, the homotopy from to is a map from to the set of all continuous maps from to , where and .
However, any set map from to need not be a homotopy, because the corresponding map need not be jointly continuous. It turns out that when both and are compactly generated Hausdorff spaces, then a map is a continuous map to equipped with the compact-open topology iff the corresponding is a jointly continuous map.
Variant: a homotopy that takes time
Suppose are topological spaces and are continuous maps from to . A homotopy from to that takes time is a continuous map such that and for all in .
Given any homotopy that takes time , there is a linear scaling of the homotopy to a homotopy that takes time , which would make it a homotopy in the first sense. The main advantage of considering homotopies that take time is that these have an associative multiplication.
Related notions
- Self-homotopy. Also check out Category:Properties of self-homotopies
- Smooth homotopy and piecewise smooth homotopy
- Linear homotopy and piecewise linear homotopy
Facts
Fill this in later