Semilocally simply connected space: Difference between revisions

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This article defines a homotopy-invariant property of topological spaces, i.e. a property of homotopy classes of topological spaces


View other homotopy-invariant properties of topological spaces OR view all properties of topological spaces

Definition

Symbol-free definition

A topological space is said to be semilocally simply connected or semilocally 1-connected if every point in the space has an open neighbourhood such that the inclusion map from that neighbourhood to the whoel space induces a trivial mapping at the level of fundamental groups.

Definition with symbols

A topological space is said to be semilocally simply connected if for any there exists a neighbourhood of such that the homomorphism of fundamental groups induced by the inclusion of in , is trivial, the inclusion being:

In other words, every loop about contained in , is nullhomotopic in .

Relation with other properties

Stronger properties

References

Textbook references

  • Topology (2nd edition) by James R. MunkresMore info, Page 494 (formal definition)
  • An Introduction to Algebraic Topology (Graduate Texts in Mathematics) by Joseph J. RotmanMore info, Page 297 (formal definition): Introduced as semilocally 1-connected
  • Algebraic Topology by Allen HatcherFull text PDFMore info, Page 63 (formal definition)
  • Algebraic Topology by Edwin H. SpanierMore info, Page 78 (forma definition): Introduced as semilocally 1-connected