Sphere: Difference between revisions
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===Homology groups=== | ===Homology groups=== | ||
{{further|[[homology of spheres]]}} | |||
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 <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. | ||
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===Cohomology groups and cohomology ring=== | ===Cohomology groups and cohomology ring=== | ||
{{further|[[cohomology of spheres]]}} | |||
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 <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. | ||
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===Homotopy groups=== | ===Homotopy groups=== | ||
{{further|[[n-sphere is (n-1)-connected]]}} | {{further|[[homotopy of spheres]], [[n-sphere is (n-1)-connected]]}} | ||
For <math>k < n</math>, the homotopy group <math>\pi_k(S^n)</math> is the [[trivial group]]. <math>\pi_n(S^n) \cong \mathbb{Z}</math>, with the identity map <math>S^n \to S^n</math> being a generator. | For <math>k < n</math>, the homotopy group <math>\pi_k(S^n)</math> is the [[trivial group]]. <math>\pi_n(S^n) \cong \mathbb{Z}</math>, with the identity map <math>S^n \to S^n</math> being a generator. | ||
Latest revision as of 00:23, 31 March 2011
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 .
Inductive definition
Inductively, is defined as a discrete two-point space, and for any natural number , is defined as the suspension of .
This definition is illuminative because many of the results about spheres, particularly those involving algebraic topology and the computation of homology and cohomology, are easily derived from corresponding results about suspensions.
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 |
| one-point compactification of | homeomorphic via stereographic projection |
| for : universal cover of real projective space , which is the space of lines in | homeomorphic, diffeomorphic, also isometric if we choose the natural metric. |
Algebraic topology
Homology groups
Further information: homology of spheres
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
Further information: cohomology of spheres
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 cohomology.
Homotopy groups
Further information: homotopy of spheres, n-sphere is (n-1)-connected
For , the homotopy group is the trivial group. , with the identity map being a generator.
The cases are discussed below:
| Case | What can we say? |
|---|---|
| is trivial for all | |
| is a finite abelian group |