Fixed-point property: Difference between revisions
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| [[complex projective space]] <math>\mathbb{P}^n(\mathbb{C}), n \ge 1</math> || <math>2n</math> || Even <math>n</math>: Yes<br>Odd <math>n</math>: No || For <math>n</math> odd, we use the mapping <math>[a_1:a_2:a_3:a_4:\dots:a_n:a_{n+1}] \mapsto [-\overline{a_2}:\overline{a_1}:-\overline{a_4}:\overline{a_3}:\dots:-\overline{a_{n+1}}:\overline{a_n}]</math>. Note that the map has no fixed points because solviing the fixed point condition gives <math>|a_1|^2 + |a_2|^2 = |a_3|^2 + |a_4|^2 = \dots = |a_n|^2 + |a_{n+1}|^2 = 0</math>, forcing <math>a_1 = a_2 = \dots = a_n = a_{n+1} = 0</math>. | | [[complex projective space]] <math>\mathbb{P}^n(\mathbb{C}), n \ge 1</math> || <math>2n</math> || Even <math>n</math>: Yes<br>Odd <math>n</math>: No || For <math>n</math> odd, we use the mapping <math>[a_1:a_2:a_3:a_4:\dots:a_n:a_{n+1}] \mapsto [-\overline{a_2}:\overline{a_1}:-\overline{a_4}:\overline{a_3}:\dots:-\overline{a_{n+1}}:\overline{a_n}]</math>. Note that the map has no fixed points because solviing the fixed point condition gives <math>|a_1|^2 + |a_2|^2 = |a_3|^2 + |a_4|^2 = \dots = |a_n|^2 + |a_{n+1}|^2 = 0</math>, forcing <math>a_1 = a_2 = \dots = a_n = a_{n+1} = 0</math>. | ||
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| [[compact orientable surface]] of genus <math>g \ge 0</math> || 2 || <math>g = 0,1</math>: No<br>g \ge 2</math>: Yes || | | [[compact orientable surface]] of genus <math>g \ge 0</math> || 2 || <math>g = 0,1</math>: No<br><math>g \ge 2</math>: Yes || | ||
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Revision as of 17:56, 27 July 2011
This article defines a property of topological spaces: a property that can be evaluated to true/false for any topological space|View a complete list of properties of topological spaces
Definition
A topological space is said to have the fixed-point property if every continuous map (not necessarily a self-homeomorphism) from the topological space to itself has a fixed point.
Relation with other properties
Stronger properties
- acyclic compact polyhedron (nonempty)
- rationally acyclic compact polyhedron (nonempty)
Examples
Manifolds without boundary
| Manifold or family of manifolds | Dimension in terms of parameter | Does it satisfy the fixed-point property? | Proof/explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| sphere | No | The antipodal map is a fixed-point-free self-map (in fact, it's a self-homeomorphism without fixed points). | |
| real projective space | Even : Yes Odd : No |
For even, follows from rationally acyclic compact polyhedron has fixed-point property. For odd, we use the mapping . Note that the map has no fixed points because solving the fixed point condition gives , forcing . | |
| complex projective space | Even : Yes Odd : No |
For odd, we use the mapping . Note that the map has no fixed points because solviing the fixed point condition gives , forcing . | |
| compact orientable surface of genus | 2 | : No : Yes |
Manifolds with boundary
Facts
In general, we combine the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem with the structure of the cohomology ring of the space to determine whether or not it has the fixed-point property. For instance, we can show that complex projective space in even dimensions has the fixed-point property, by combining the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem with the fact that the trace on the homology is where is the trace on the second homology.
Metaproperties
Retract-hereditariness
This property of topological spaces is hereditary on retracts, viz if a space has the property, so does any retract of it
View all retract-hereditary properties of topological spaces
Every retract of a space with the fixed-point property also has the fixed-point property. Further information: fixed-point property is retract-hereditary