fbpx
Wikipedia

CW complex

A CW complex (also called cellular complex or cell complex) is a kind of a topological space that is particularly important in algebraic topology.[1] It was introduced by J. H. C. Whitehead[2] to meet the needs of homotopy theory. This class of spaces is broader and has some better categorical properties than simplicial complexes, but still retains a combinatorial nature that allows for computation (often with a much smaller complex). The C stands for "closure-finite", and the W for "weak" topology.[2]

Definition edit

CW complex edit

A CW complex is constructed by taking the union of a sequence of topological spaces

 
such that each   is obtained from   by gluing copies of k-cells  , each homeomorphic to the open  -ball  , to   by continuous gluing maps  . The maps are also called attaching maps.

Each   is called the k-skeleton of the complex.

The topology of   is weak topology: a subset   is open iff   is open for each cell  .

In the language of category theory, the topology on   is the direct limit of the diagram

 
The name "CW" stands for "closure-finite weak topology", which is explained by the following theorem:

Theorem — A Hausdorff space X is homeomorphic to a CW complex iff there exists a partition of X into "open cells"  , each with a corresponding closure (or "closed cell")   that satisfies:

  • For each  , there exists a continuous surjection   from the  -dimensional closed ball such that
    • The restriction to the open ball  is a homeomorphism.
    • (closure-finiteness) The image of the boundary   is covered by a finite number of closed cells, each having cell dimension less than k.
  • (weak topology) A subset of X is closed if and only if it meets each closed cell in a closed set.

This partition of X is also called a cellulation.

The construction, in words edit

The CW complex construction is a straightforward generalization of the following process:

  • A 0-dimensional CW complex is just a set of zero or more discrete points (with the discrete topology).
  • A 1-dimensional CW complex is constructed by taking the disjoint union of a 0-dimensional CW complex with one or more copies of the unit interval. For each copy, there is a map that "glues" its boundary (its two endpoints) to elements of the 0-dimensional complex (the points). The topology of the CW complex is the topology of the quotient space defined by these gluing maps.
  • In general, an n-dimensional CW complex is constructed by taking the disjoint union of a k-dimensional CW complex (for some  ) with one or more copies of the n-dimensional ball. For each copy, there is a map that "glues" its boundary (the  -dimensional sphere) to elements of the  -dimensional complex. The topology of the CW complex is the quotient topology defined by these gluing maps.
  • An infinite-dimensional CW complex can be constructed by repeating the above process countably many times. Since the topology of the union   is indeterminate, one takes the direct limit topology, since the diagram is highly suggestive of a direct limit. This turns out to have great technical benefits.

Regular CW complexes edit

A regular CW complex is a CW complex whose gluing maps are homeomorphisms. Accordingly, the partition of X is also called a regular cellulation.

A loopless graph is represented by a regular 1-dimensional CW-complex. A closed 2-cell graph embedding on a surface is a regular 2-dimensional CW-complex. Finally, the 3-sphere regular cellulation conjecture claims that every 2-connected graph is the 1-skeleton of a regular CW-complex on the 3-dimensional sphere.[3]

Relative CW complexes edit

Roughly speaking, a relative CW complex differs from a CW complex in that we allow it to have one extra building block that does not necessarily possess a cellular structure. This extra-block can be treated as a (-1)-dimensional cell in the former definition.[4][5][6]

Examples edit

0-dimensional CW complexes edit

Every discrete topological space is a 0-dimensional CW complex.

1-dimensional CW complexes edit

Some examples of 1-dimensional CW complexes are:[7]

  • An interval. It can be constructed from two points (x and y), and the 1-dimensional ball B (an interval), such that one endpoint of B is glued to x and the other is glued to y. The two points x and y are the 0-cells; the interior of B is the 1-cell. Alternatively, it can be constructed just from a single interval, with no 0-cells.
  • A circle. It can be constructed from a single point x and the 1-dimensional ball B, such that both endpoints of B are glued to x. Alternatively, it can be constructed from two points x and y and two 1-dimensional balls A and B, such that the endpoints of A are glued to x and y, and the endpoints of B are glued to x and y too.
  • A graph. Given a graph, a 1-dimensional CW complex can be constructed in which the 0-cells are the vertices and the 1-cells are the edges of the graph. The endpoints of each edge are identified with the incident vertices to it. This realization of a combinatorial graph as a topological space is sometimes called a topological graph.
    • 3-regular graphs can be considered as generic 1-dimensional CW complexes. Specifically, if X is a 1-dimensional CW complex, the attaching map for a 1-cell is a map from a two-point space to X,  . This map can be perturbed to be disjoint from the 0-skeleton of X if and only if   and   are not 0-valence vertices of X.
  • The standard CW structure on the real numbers has as 0-skeleton the integers   and as 1-cells the intervals  . Similarly, the standard CW structure on   has cubical cells that are products of the 0 and 1-cells from  . This is the standard cubic lattice cell structure on  .

Finite-dimensional CW complexes edit

Some examples of finite-dimensional CW complexes are:[7]

  • An n-dimensional sphere. It admits a CW structure with two cells, one 0-cell and one n-cell. Here the n-cell   is attached by the constant mapping from its boundary   to the single 0-cell. An alternative cell decomposition has one (n-1)-dimensional sphere (the "equator") and two n-cells that are attached to it (the "upper hemi-sphere" and the "lower hemi-sphere"). Inductively, this gives   a CW decomposition with two cells in every dimension k such that  .
  • The n-dimensional real projective space. It admits a CW structure with one cell in each dimension.
  • The terminology for a generic 2-dimensional CW complex is a shadow.[8]
  • A polyhedron is naturally a CW complex.
  • Grassmannian manifolds admit a CW structure called Schubert cells.
  • Differentiable manifolds, algebraic and projective varieties have the homotopy-type of CW complexes.
  • The one-point compactification of a cusped hyperbolic manifold has a canonical CW decomposition with only one 0-cell (the compactification point) called the Epstein–Penner Decomposition. Such cell decompositions are frequently called ideal polyhedral decompositions and are used in popular computer software, such as SnapPea.

Infinite-dimensional CW complexes edit

Non CW-complexes edit

  • An infinite-dimensional Hilbert space is not a CW complex: it is a Baire space and therefore cannot be written as a countable union of n-skeletons, each of which being a closed set with empty interior. This argument extends to many other infinite-dimensional spaces.
  • The hedgehog space   is homotopic to a CW complex (the point) but it does not admit a CW decomposition, since it is not locally contractible.
  • The Hawaiian earring is not homotopic to a CW complex. It has no CW decomposition, because it is not locally contractible at origin. It is not homotopy equivalent to a CW complex, because it has no good open cover.

Properties edit

  • CW complexes are locally contractible (Hatcher, prop. A.4).
  • If a space is homotopic to a CW complex, then it has a good open cover.[9] A good open cover is an open cover, such that every nonempty finite intersection is contractible.
  • CW complexes are paracompact. Finite CW complexes are compact. A compact subspace of a CW complex is always contained in a finite subcomplex.[10][11]
  • CW complexes satisfy the Whitehead theorem: a map between CW complexes is a homotopy equivalence if and only if it induces an isomorphism on all homotopy groups.
  • A covering space of a CW complex is also a CW complex.
  • The product of two CW complexes can be made into a CW complex. Specifically, if X and Y are CW complexes, then one can form a CW complex X × Y in which each cell is a product of a cell in X and a cell in Y, endowed with the weak topology. The underlying set of X × Y is then the Cartesian product of X and Y, as expected. In addition, the weak topology on this set often agrees with the more familiar product topology on X × Y, for example if either X or Y is finite. However, the weak topology can be finer than the product topology, for example if neither X nor Y is locally compact. In this unfavorable case, the product X × Y in the product topology is not a CW complex. On the other hand, the product of X and Y in the category of compactly generated spaces agrees with the weak topology and therefore defines a CW complex.
  • Let X and Y be CW complexes. Then the function spaces Hom(X,Y) (with the compact-open topology) are not CW complexes in general. If X is finite then Hom(X,Y) is homotopy equivalent to a CW complex by a theorem of John Milnor (1959).[12] Note that X and Y are compactly generated Hausdorff spaces, so Hom(X,Y) is often taken with the compactly generated variant of the compact-open topology; the above statements remain true.[13]

Homology and cohomology of CW complexes edit

Singular homology and cohomology of CW complexes is readily computable via cellular homology. Moreover, in the category of CW complexes and cellular maps, cellular homology can be interpreted as a homology theory. To compute an extraordinary (co)homology theory for a CW complex, the Atiyah–Hirzebruch spectral sequence is the analogue of cellular homology.

Some examples:

  • For the sphere,   take the cell decomposition with two cells: a single 0-cell and a single n-cell. The cellular homology chain complex   and homology are given by:
 
since all the differentials are zero.
Alternatively, if we use the equatorial decomposition with two cells in every dimension
 
and the differentials are matrices of the form   This gives the same homology computation above, as the chain complex is exact at all terms except   and  
  • For   we get similarly
 

Both of the above examples are particularly simple because the homology is determined by the number of cells—i.e.: the cellular attaching maps have no role in these computations. This is a very special phenomenon and is not indicative of the general case.

Modification of CW structures edit

There is a technique, developed by Whitehead, for replacing a CW complex with a homotopy-equivalent CW complex that has a simpler CW decomposition.

Consider, for example, an arbitrary CW complex. Its 1-skeleton can be fairly complicated, being an arbitrary graph. Now consider a maximal forest F in this graph. Since it is a collection of trees, and trees are contractible, consider the space   where the equivalence relation is generated by   if they are contained in a common tree in the maximal forest F. The quotient map   is a homotopy equivalence. Moreover,   naturally inherits a CW structure, with cells corresponding to the cells of   that are not contained in F. In particular, the 1-skeleton of   is a disjoint union of wedges of circles.

Another way of stating the above is that a connected CW complex can be replaced by a homotopy-equivalent CW complex whose 0-skeleton consists of a single point.

Consider climbing up the connectivity ladder—assume X is a simply-connected CW complex whose 0-skeleton consists of a point. Can we, through suitable modifications, replace X by a homotopy-equivalent CW complex where   consists of a single point? The answer is yes. The first step is to observe that   and the attaching maps to construct   from   form a group presentation. The Tietze theorem for group presentations states that there is a sequence of moves we can perform to reduce this group presentation to the trivial presentation of the trivial group. There are two Tietze moves:

1) Adding/removing a generator. Adding a generator, from the perspective of the CW decomposition consists of adding a 1-cell and a 2-cell whose attaching map consists of the new 1-cell and the remainder of the attaching map is in  . If we let   be the corresponding CW complex   then there is a homotopy equivalence   given by sliding the new 2-cell into X.
2) Adding/removing a relation. The act of adding a relation is similar, only one is replacing X by   where the new 3-cell has an attaching map that consists of the new 2-cell and remainder mapping into  . A similar slide gives a homotopy-equivalence  .

If a CW complex X is n-connected one can find a homotopy-equivalent CW complex   whose n-skeleton   consists of a single point. The argument for   is similar to the   case, only one replaces Tietze moves for the fundamental group presentation by elementary matrix operations for the presentation matrices for   (using the presentation matrices coming from cellular homology. i.e.: one can similarly realize elementary matrix operations by a sequence of addition/removal of cells or suitable homotopies of the attaching maps.

'The' homotopy category edit

The homotopy category of CW complexes is, in the opinion of some experts, the best if not the only candidate for the homotopy category (for technical reasons the version for pointed spaces is actually used).[14] Auxiliary constructions that yield spaces that are not CW complexes must be used on occasion. One basic result is that the representable functors on the homotopy category have a simple characterisation (the Brown representability theorem).

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Hatcher, Allen (2002). Algebraic topology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-79540-0. This textbook defines CW complexes in the first chapter and uses them throughout; includes an appendix on the topology of CW complexes. A free electronic version is available on the author's homepage.
  2. ^ a b Whitehead, J. H. C. (1949a). "Combinatorial homotopy. I." (PDF). Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 55 (5): 213–245. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1949-09175-9. MR 0030759. (open access)
  3. ^ De Agostino, Sergio (2016). The 3-Sphere Regular Cellulation Conjecture (PDF). International Workshop on Combinatorial Algorithms.
  4. ^ Davis, James F.; Kirk, Paul (2001). Lecture Notes in Algebraic Topology. Providence, R.I.: American Mathematical Society.
  5. ^ "CW complex in nLab".
  6. ^ "CW-complex - Encyclopedia of Mathematics".
  7. ^ a b Archived at Ghostarchive and the : channel, Animated Math (2020). "1.3 Introduction to Algebraic Topology. Examples of CW Complexes". Youtube.
  8. ^ Turaev, V. G. (1994). Quantum invariants of knots and 3-manifolds. De Gruyter Studies in Mathematics. Vol. 18. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter & Co. ISBN 9783110435221.
  9. ^ Milnor, John (February 1959). "On Spaces Having the Homotopy Type of a CW-Complex". Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 90 (2): 272–280. doi:10.2307/1993204. ISSN 0002-9947. JSTOR 1993204.
  10. ^ Hatcher, Allen, Algebraic topology, Cambridge University Press (2002). ISBN 0-521-79540-0. A free electronic version is available on the author's homepage
  11. ^ Hatcher, Allen, Vector bundles and K-theory, preliminary version available on the authors homepage
  12. ^ Milnor, John (1959). "On spaces having the homotopy type of a CW-complex". Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 90 (2): 272–280. doi:10.1090/s0002-9947-1959-0100267-4. JSTOR 1993204.
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  14. ^ For example, the opinion "The class of CW complexes (or the class of spaces of the same homotopy type as a CW complex) is the most suitable class of topological spaces in relation to homotopy theory" appears in Baladze, D.O. (2001) [1994], "CW-complex", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press

General references edit

  • Lundell, A. T.; Weingram, S. (1970). The topology of CW complexes. Van Nostrand University Series in Higher Mathematics. ISBN 0-442-04910-2.
  • Brown, R.; Higgins, P.J.; Sivera, R. (2011). Nonabelian Algebraic Topology:filtered spaces, crossed complexes, cubical homotopy groupoids. European Mathematical Society Tracts in Mathematics Vol 15. ISBN 978-3-03719-083-8. More details on the [1] first author's home page]

complex, also, called, cellular, complex, cell, complex, kind, topological, space, that, particularly, important, algebraic, topology, introduced, whitehead, meet, needs, homotopy, theory, this, class, spaces, broader, some, better, categorical, properties, th. A CW complex also called cellular complex or cell complex is a kind of a topological space that is particularly important in algebraic topology 1 It was introduced by J H C Whitehead 2 to meet the needs of homotopy theory This class of spaces is broader and has some better categorical properties than simplicial complexes but still retains a combinatorial nature that allows for computation often with a much smaller complex The C stands for closure finite and the W for weak topology 2 Contents 1 Definition 1 1 CW complex 1 1 1 The construction in words 1 2 Regular CW complexes 1 3 Relative CW complexes 2 Examples 2 1 0 dimensional CW complexes 2 2 1 dimensional CW complexes 2 3 Finite dimensional CW complexes 2 4 Infinite dimensional CW complexes 2 5 Non CW complexes 3 Properties 4 Homology and cohomology of CW complexes 5 Modification of CW structures 6 The homotopy category 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 General referencesDefinition editCW complex edit A CW complex is constructed by taking the union of a sequence of topological spaces X 1 X 0 X 1 displaystyle emptyset X 1 subset X 0 subset X 1 subset cdots nbsp such that each X k displaystyle X k nbsp is obtained from X k 1 displaystyle X k 1 nbsp by gluing copies of k cells e a k a displaystyle e alpha k alpha nbsp each homeomorphic to the open k displaystyle k nbsp ball D k displaystyle D k nbsp to X k 1 displaystyle X k 1 nbsp by continuous gluing maps g a k e a k X k 1 displaystyle g alpha k partial e alpha k to X k 1 nbsp The maps are also called attaching maps Each X k displaystyle X k nbsp is called the k skeleton of the complex The topology of X k X k displaystyle X cup k X k nbsp is weak topology a subset U X displaystyle U subset X nbsp is open iff U e a k displaystyle U cap e alpha k nbsp is open for each cell e a k displaystyle e alpha k nbsp In the language of category theory the topology on X displaystyle X nbsp is the direct limit of the diagramX 1 X 0 X 1 displaystyle X 1 hookrightarrow X 0 hookrightarrow X 1 hookrightarrow cdots nbsp The name CW stands for closure finite weak topology which is explained by the following theorem Theorem A Hausdorff space X is homeomorphic to a CW complex iff there exists a partition of X into open cells e a k displaystyle e alpha k circ nbsp each with a corresponding closure or closed cell e a k c l e a k displaystyle e alpha k cl e alpha k circ nbsp that satisfies For each e a k displaystyle e alpha k nbsp there exists a continuous surjection g a k D k e a k displaystyle g alpha k D k to e alpha k nbsp from the k displaystyle k nbsp dimensional closed ball such that The restriction to the open ball g a k B k e a k displaystyle g alpha k B k to e alpha k circ nbsp is a homeomorphism closure finiteness The image of the boundary g a k D k displaystyle g alpha k partial D k nbsp is covered by a finite number of closed cells each having cell dimension less than k weak topology A subset of X is closed if and only if it meets each closed cell in a closed set This partition of X is also called a cellulation The construction in words edit The CW complex construction is a straightforward generalization of the following process A 0 dimensional CW complex is just a set of zero or more discrete points with the discrete topology A 1 dimensional CW complex is constructed by taking the disjoint union of a 0 dimensional CW complex with one or more copies of the unit interval For each copy there is a map that glues its boundary its two endpoints to elements of the 0 dimensional complex the points The topology of the CW complex is the topology of the quotient space defined by these gluing maps In general an n dimensional CW complex is constructed by taking the disjoint union of a k dimensional CW complex for some k lt n displaystyle k lt n nbsp with one or more copies of the n dimensional ball For each copy there is a map that glues its boundary the n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp dimensional sphere to elements of the k displaystyle k nbsp dimensional complex The topology of the CW complex is the quotient topology defined by these gluing maps An infinite dimensional CW complex can be constructed by repeating the above process countably many times Since the topology of the union k X k displaystyle cup k X k nbsp is indeterminate one takes the direct limit topology since the diagram is highly suggestive of a direct limit This turns out to have great technical benefits Regular CW complexes edit A regular CW complex is a CW complex whose gluing maps are homeomorphisms Accordingly the partition of X is also called a regular cellulation A loopless graph is represented by a regular 1 dimensional CW complex A closed 2 cell graph embedding on a surface is a regular 2 dimensional CW complex Finally the 3 sphere regular cellulation conjecture claims that every 2 connected graph is the 1 skeleton of a regular CW complex on the 3 dimensional sphere 3 Relative CW complexes edit Roughly speaking a relative CW complex differs from a CW complex in that we allow it to have one extra building block that does not necessarily possess a cellular structure This extra block can be treated as a 1 dimensional cell in the former definition 4 5 6 Examples edit0 dimensional CW complexes edit Every discrete topological space is a 0 dimensional CW complex 1 dimensional CW complexes edit Some examples of 1 dimensional CW complexes are 7 An interval It can be constructed from two points x and y and the 1 dimensional ball B an interval such that one endpoint of B is glued to x and the other is glued to y The two points x and y are the 0 cells the interior of B is the 1 cell Alternatively it can be constructed just from a single interval with no 0 cells A circle It can be constructed from a single point x and the 1 dimensional ball B such that both endpoints of B are glued to x Alternatively it can be constructed from two points x and y and two 1 dimensional balls A and B such that the endpoints of A are glued to x and y and the endpoints of B are glued to x and y too A graph Given a graph a 1 dimensional CW complex can be constructed in which the 0 cells are the vertices and the 1 cells are the edges of the graph The endpoints of each edge are identified with the incident vertices to it This realization of a combinatorial graph as a topological space is sometimes called a topological graph 3 regular graphs can be considered as generic 1 dimensional CW complexes Specifically if X is a 1 dimensional CW complex the attaching map for a 1 cell is a map from a two point space to X f 0 1 X displaystyle f 0 1 to X nbsp This map can be perturbed to be disjoint from the 0 skeleton of X if and only if f 0 displaystyle f 0 nbsp and f 1 displaystyle f 1 nbsp are not 0 valence vertices of X The standard CW structure on the real numbers has as 0 skeleton the integers Z displaystyle mathbb Z nbsp and as 1 cells the intervals n n 1 n Z displaystyle n n 1 n in mathbb Z nbsp Similarly the standard CW structure on R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp has cubical cells that are products of the 0 and 1 cells from R displaystyle mathbb R nbsp This is the standard cubic lattice cell structure on R n displaystyle mathbb R n nbsp Finite dimensional CW complexes edit Some examples of finite dimensional CW complexes are 7 An n dimensional sphere It admits a CW structure with two cells one 0 cell and one n cell Here the n cell D n displaystyle D n nbsp is attached by the constant mapping from its boundary S n 1 displaystyle S n 1 nbsp to the single 0 cell An alternative cell decomposition has one n 1 dimensional sphere the equator and two n cells that are attached to it the upper hemi sphere and the lower hemi sphere Inductively this gives S n displaystyle S n nbsp a CW decomposition with two cells in every dimension k such that 0 k n displaystyle 0 leq k leq n nbsp The n dimensional real projective space It admits a CW structure with one cell in each dimension The terminology for a generic 2 dimensional CW complex is a shadow 8 A polyhedron is naturally a CW complex Grassmannian manifolds admit a CW structure called Schubert cells Differentiable manifolds algebraic and projective varieties have the homotopy type of CW complexes The one point compactification of a cusped hyperbolic manifold has a canonical CW decomposition with only one 0 cell the compactification point called the Epstein Penner Decomposition Such cell decompositions are frequently called ideal polyhedral decompositions and are used in popular computer software such as SnapPea Infinite dimensional CW complexes edit Non CW complexes edit An infinite dimensional Hilbert space is not a CW complex it is a Baire space and therefore cannot be written as a countable union of n skeletons each of which being a closed set with empty interior This argument extends to many other infinite dimensional spaces The hedgehog space r e 2 p i 8 0 r 1 8 Q C displaystyle re 2 pi i theta 0 leq r leq 1 theta in mathbb Q subseteq mathbb C nbsp is homotopic to a CW complex the point but it does not admit a CW decomposition since it is not locally contractible The Hawaiian earring is not homotopic to a CW complex It has no CW decomposition because it is not locally contractible at origin It is not homotopy equivalent to a CW complex because it has no good open cover Properties editCW complexes are locally contractible Hatcher prop A 4 If a space is homotopic to a CW complex then it has a good open cover 9 A good open cover is an open cover such that every nonempty finite intersection is contractible CW complexes are paracompact Finite CW complexes are compact A compact subspace of a CW complex is always contained in a finite subcomplex 10 11 CW complexes satisfy the Whitehead theorem a map between CW complexes is a homotopy equivalence if and only if it induces an isomorphism on all homotopy groups A covering space of a CW complex is also a CW complex The product of two CW complexes can be made into a CW complex Specifically if X and Y are CW complexes then one can form a CW complex X Y in which each cell is a product of a cell in X and a cell in Y endowed with the weak topology The underlying set of X Y is then the Cartesian product of X and Y as expected In addition the weak topology on this set often agrees with the more familiar product topology on X Y for example if either X or Y is finite However the weak topology can be finer than the product topology for example if neither X nor Y is locally compact In this unfavorable case the product X Y in the product topology is not a CW complex On the other hand the product of X and Y in the category of compactly generated spaces agrees with the weak topology and therefore defines a CW complex Let X and Y be CW complexes Then the function spaces Hom X Y with the compact open topology are not CW complexes in general If X is finite then Hom X Y is homotopy equivalent to a CW complex by a theorem of John Milnor 1959 12 Note that X and Y are compactly generated Hausdorff spaces so Hom X Y is often taken with the compactly generated variant of the compact open topology the above statements remain true 13 Homology and cohomology of CW complexes editSingular homology and cohomology of CW complexes is readily computable via cellular homology Moreover in the category of CW complexes and cellular maps cellular homology can be interpreted as a homology theory To compute an extraordinary co homology theory for a CW complex the Atiyah Hirzebruch spectral sequence is the analogue of cellular homology Some examples For the sphere S n displaystyle S n nbsp take the cell decomposition with two cells a single 0 cell and a single n cell The cellular homology chain complex C displaystyle C nbsp and homology are given by C k Z k 0 n 0 k 0 n H k Z k 0 n 0 k 0 n displaystyle C k begin cases mathbb Z amp k in 0 n 0 amp k notin 0 n end cases quad H k begin cases mathbb Z amp k in 0 n 0 amp k notin 0 n end cases nbsp dd since all the differentials are zero Alternatively if we use the equatorial decomposition with two cells in every dimensionC k Z 2 0 k n 0 otherwise displaystyle C k begin cases mathbb Z 2 amp 0 leqslant k leqslant n 0 amp text otherwise end cases nbsp dd and the differentials are matrices of the form 1 1 1 1 displaystyle left begin smallmatrix 1 amp 1 1 amp 1 end smallmatrix right nbsp This gives the same homology computation above as the chain complex is exact at all terms except C 0 displaystyle C 0 nbsp and C n displaystyle C n nbsp For P n C displaystyle mathbb P n mathbb C nbsp we get similarly H k P n C Z 0 k 2 n even 0 otherwise displaystyle H k left mathbb P n mathbb C right begin cases mathbb Z amp 0 leqslant k leqslant 2n text even 0 amp text otherwise end cases nbsp dd Both of the above examples are particularly simple because the homology is determined by the number of cells i e the cellular attaching maps have no role in these computations This is a very special phenomenon and is not indicative of the general case Modification of CW structures editThere is a technique developed by Whitehead for replacing a CW complex with a homotopy equivalent CW complex that has a simpler CW decomposition Consider for example an arbitrary CW complex Its 1 skeleton can be fairly complicated being an arbitrary graph Now consider a maximal forest F in this graph Since it is a collection of trees and trees are contractible consider the space X displaystyle X sim nbsp where the equivalence relation is generated by x y displaystyle x sim y nbsp if they are contained in a common tree in the maximal forest F The quotient map X X displaystyle X to X sim nbsp is a homotopy equivalence Moreover X displaystyle X sim nbsp naturally inherits a CW structure with cells corresponding to the cells of X displaystyle X nbsp that are not contained in F In particular the 1 skeleton of X displaystyle X sim nbsp is a disjoint union of wedges of circles Another way of stating the above is that a connected CW complex can be replaced by a homotopy equivalent CW complex whose 0 skeleton consists of a single point Consider climbing up the connectivity ladder assume X is a simply connected CW complex whose 0 skeleton consists of a point Can we through suitable modifications replace X by a homotopy equivalent CW complex where X 1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp consists of a single point The answer is yes The first step is to observe that X 1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp and the attaching maps to construct X 2 displaystyle X 2 nbsp from X 1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp form a group presentation The Tietze theorem for group presentations states that there is a sequence of moves we can perform to reduce this group presentation to the trivial presentation of the trivial group There are two Tietze moves 1 Adding removing a generator Adding a generator from the perspective of the CW decomposition consists of adding a 1 cell and a 2 cell whose attaching map consists of the new 1 cell and the remainder of the attaching map is in X 1 displaystyle X 1 nbsp If we let X displaystyle tilde X nbsp be the corresponding CW complex X X e 1 e 2 displaystyle tilde X X cup e 1 cup e 2 nbsp then there is a homotopy equivalence X X displaystyle tilde X to X nbsp given by sliding the new 2 cell into X 2 Adding removing a relation The act of adding a relation is similar only one is replacing X by X X e 2 e 3 displaystyle tilde X X cup e 2 cup e 3 nbsp where the new 3 cell has an attaching map that consists of the new 2 cell and remainder mapping into X 2 displaystyle X 2 nbsp A similar slide gives a homotopy equivalence X X displaystyle tilde X to X nbsp If a CW complex X is n connected one can find a homotopy equivalent CW complex X displaystyle tilde X nbsp whose n skeleton X n displaystyle X n nbsp consists of a single point The argument for n 2 displaystyle n geq 2 nbsp is similar to the n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp case only one replaces Tietze moves for the fundamental group presentation by elementary matrix operations for the presentation matrices for H n X Z displaystyle H n X mathbb Z nbsp using the presentation matrices coming from cellular homology i e one can similarly realize elementary matrix operations by a sequence of addition removal of cells or suitable homotopies of the attaching maps The homotopy category editThe homotopy category of CW complexes is in the opinion of some experts the best if not the only candidate for the homotopy category for technical reasons the version for pointed spaces is actually used 14 Auxiliary constructions that yield spaces that are not CW complexes must be used on occasion One basic result is that the representable functors on the homotopy category have a simple characterisation the Brown representability theorem See also editAbstract cell complex The notion of CW complex has an adaptation to smooth manifolds called a handle decomposition which is closely related to surgery theory References editNotes edit Hatcher Allen 2002 Algebraic topology Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 79540 0 This textbook defines CW complexes in the first chapter and uses them throughout includes an appendix on the topology of CW complexes A free electronic version is available on the author s homepage a b Whitehead J H C 1949a Combinatorial homotopy I PDF Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 55 5 213 245 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1949 09175 9 MR 0030759 open access De Agostino Sergio 2016 The 3 Sphere Regular Cellulation Conjecture PDF International Workshop on Combinatorial Algorithms Davis James F Kirk Paul 2001 Lecture Notes in Algebraic Topology Providence R I American Mathematical Society CW complex in nLab CW complex Encyclopedia of Mathematics a b Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine channel Animated Math 2020 1 3 Introduction to Algebraic Topology Examples of CW Complexes Youtube Turaev V G 1994 Quantum invariants of knots and 3 manifolds De Gruyter Studies in Mathematics Vol 18 Berlin Walter de Gruyter amp Co ISBN 9783110435221 Milnor John February 1959 On Spaces Having the Homotopy Type of a CW Complex Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 90 2 272 280 doi 10 2307 1993204 ISSN 0002 9947 JSTOR 1993204 Hatcher Allen Algebraic topology Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 79540 0 A free electronic version is available on the author s homepage Hatcher Allen Vector bundles and K theory preliminary version available on the authors homepage Milnor John 1959 On spaces having the homotopy type of a CW complex Trans Amer Math Soc 90 2 272 280 doi 10 1090 s0002 9947 1959 0100267 4 JSTOR 1993204 Compactly Generated Spaces PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2012 08 26 For example the opinion The class of CW complexes or the class of spaces of the same homotopy type as a CW complex is the most suitable class of topological spaces in relation to homotopy theory appears in Baladze D O 2001 1994 CW complex Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press General references edit Lundell A T Weingram S 1970 The topology of CW complexes Van Nostrand University Series in Higher Mathematics ISBN 0 442 04910 2 Brown R Higgins P J Sivera R 2011 Nonabelian Algebraic Topology filtered spaces crossed complexes cubical homotopy groupoids European Mathematical Society Tracts in Mathematics Vol 15 ISBN 978 3 03719 083 8 More details on the 1 first author s home page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title CW complex amp oldid 1217452319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.