Semilocally simply connected space

From Topospaces

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


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Definition

A topological space is said to be semilocally simply connected or semilocally 1-connected if it satisfies the following equivalent conditions:

  1. For any there exists an open subset such that the homomorphism of fundamental groups induced by the inclusion of in is trivial (i.e., the image of the inclusion is the trivial subgroup), the inclusion being: . Note that if and/or are not connected, we interpret the fundamental groups as referring to the fundamental groups of the path components of in the respective subsets.
  2. For any and any open subset of containing , there exists an open subset such that and the homomorphism of fundamental groups induced by the inclusion of in is trivial (i.e., the image of the inclusion is the trivial subgroup), the inclusion being: . In other words, every loop about contained in , is nullhomotopic in . Note that if and/or are not connected, we interpret the fundamental groups as referring to the fundamental groups of the path components of in and respectively.

Note that the term is typically used for spaces that are locally path-connected spaces. In this case, we can assume that the open subset is path-connected.

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