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Eilenberg–MacLane space

In mathematics, specifically algebraic topology, an Eilenberg–MacLane space[note 1] is a topological space with a single nontrivial homotopy group.

Let G be a group and n a positive integer. A connected topological space X is called an Eilenberg–MacLane space of type , if it has n-th homotopy group isomorphic to G and all other homotopy groups trivial. Assuming that G is abelian in the case that , Eilenberg–MacLane spaces of type always exist, and are all weak homotopy equivalent. Thus, one may consider as referring to a weak homotopy equivalence class of spaces. It is common to refer to any representative as "a " or as "a model of ". Moreover, it is common to assume that this space is a CW-complex (which is always possible via CW approximation).

The name is derived from Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane, who introduced such spaces in the late 1940s.

As such, an Eilenberg–MacLane space is a special kind of topological space that in homotopy theory can be regarded as a building block for CW-complexes via fibrations in a Postnikov system. These spaces are important in many contexts in algebraic topology, including computations of homotopy groups of spheres, definition of cohomology operations, and for having a strong connection to singular cohomology.

A generalised Eilenberg–Maclane space is a space which has the homotopy type of a product of Eilenberg–Maclane spaces .

Examples edit

  • The unit circle   is a  .
  • The infinite-dimensional complex projective space   is a model of  .
  • The infinite-dimensional real projective space   is a  .
  • The wedge sum of k unit circles   is a  , where   is the free group on k generators.
  • The complement to any connected knot or graph in a 3-dimensional sphere   is of type  ; this is called the "asphericity of knots", and is a 1957 theorem of Christos Papakyriakopoulos.[1]
  • Any compact, connected, non-positively curved manifold M is a  , where   is the fundamental group of M. This is a consequence of the Cartan–Hadamard theorem.
  • An infinite lens space   given by the quotient of   by the free action   for   is a  . This can be shown using covering space theory and the fact that the infinite dimensional sphere is contractible.[2] Note this includes   as a  .
  • The configuration space of   points in the plane is a  , where   is the pure braid group on   strands.
  • Correspondingly, the nth unordered configuration space of   is a  , where   denotes the n-strand braid group. [3]
  • The infinite symmetric product   of a n-sphere is a  . More generally   is a   for all Moore spaces  .

Some further elementary examples can be constructed from these by using the fact that the product   is  . For instance the n-dimensional Torus   is a  .

Remark on constructing Eilenberg–MacLane spaces edit

For   and   an arbitrary group the construction of   is identical to that of the classifying space of the group  . Note that if G has a torsion element, then every CW-complex of type K(G,1) has to be infinite-dimensional.

There are multiple techniques for constructing higher Eilenberg-Maclane spaces. One of which is to construct a Moore space   for an abelian group  : Take the wedge of n-spheres, one for each generator of the group A and realise the relations between these generators by attaching (n+1)-cells via corresponding maps in   of said wedge sum. Note that the lower homotopy groups   are already trivial by construction. Now iteratively kill all higher homotopy groups   by successively attaching cells of dimension greater than  , and define   as direct limit under inclusion of this iteration.

Another useful technique is to use the geometric realization of simplicial abelian groups.[4] This gives an explicit presentation of simplicial abelian groups which represent Eilenberg-Maclane spaces.

Another simplicial construction, in terms of classifying spaces and universal bundles, is given in J. Peter May's book.[5]

Since taking the loop space lowers the homotopy groups by one slot, we have a canonical homotopy equivalence  , hence there is a fibration sequence

 .

Note that this is not a cofibration sequence ― the space   is not the homotopy cofiber of  .

This fibration sequence can be used to study the cohomology of   from   using the Leray spectral sequence. This was exploited by Jean-Pierre Serre while he studied the homotopy groups of spheres using the Postnikov system and spectral sequences.

Properties of Eilenberg–MacLane spaces edit

Bijection between homotopy classes of maps and cohomology edit

An important property of  's is that for any abelian group G, and any based CW-complex X, the set   of based homotopy classes of based maps from X to   is in natural bijection with the n-th singular cohomology group   of the space X. Thus one says that the   are representing spaces for singular cohomology with coefficients in G. Since

 

there is a distinguished element   corresponding to the identity. The above bijection is given by the pullback of that element  . This is similar to the Yoneda lemma of category theory.

A constructive proof of this theorem can be found here,[6] another making use of the relation between omega-spectra and generalized reduced cohomology theories can be found here [7] and the main idea is sketched later as well.

Loop spaces / Omega spectra edit

The loop space of an Eilenberg–MacLane space is again an Eilenberg–MacLane space:  . Further there is an adjoint relation between the loop-space and the reduced suspension:  , which gives   the structure of an abelian group, where the operation is the concatenation of loops. This makes the bijection   mentioned above a group isomorphism.

Also this property implies that Eilenberg–MacLane spaces with various n form an omega-spectrum, called an "Eilenberg–MacLane spectrum". This spectrum defines via   a reduced cohomology theory on based CW-complexes and for any reduced cohomology theory   on CW-complexes with   for   there is a natural isomorphism  , where   denotes reduced singular cohomology. Therefore these two cohomology theories coincide.

In a more general context, Brown representability says that every reduced cohomology theory on based CW-complexes comes from an omega-spectrum.

Relation with Homology edit

For a fixed abelian group   there are maps on the stable homotopy groups

 

induced by the map  . Taking the direct limit over these maps, one can verify that this defines a reduced homology theory

 

on CW complexes. Since   vanishes for  ,   agrees with reduced singular homology   with coefficients in G on CW-complexes.

Functoriality edit

It follows from the universal coefficient theorem for cohomology that the Eilenberg MacLane space is a quasi-functor of the group; that is, for each positive integer   if   is any homomorphism of abelian groups, then there is a non-empty set

 

satisfying   where   denotes the homotopy class of a continuous map   and  

Relation with Postnikov/Whitehead tower edit

Every connected CW-complex   possesses a Postnikov tower, that is an inverse system of spaces:

 

such that for every  :

  1. there are commuting maps  , which induce isomorphism on   for   ,
  2.   for  ,
  3. the maps   are fibrations with fiber  .

Dually there exists a Whitehead tower, which is a sequence of CW-complexes:

 

such that for every  :

  1. the maps   induce isomorphism on   for  ,
  2.   is n-connected,
  3. the maps   are fibrations with fiber  

With help of Serre spectral sequences computations of higher homotopy groups of spheres can be made. For instance   and   using a Whitehead tower of   can be found here,[8] more generally those of   using a Postnikov systems can be found here. [9]

Cohomology operations edit

For fixed natural numbers m,n and abelian groups G,H exists a bijection between the set of all cohomology operations   and   defined by  , where   is a fundamental class.

As a result, cohomology operations cannot decrease the degree of the cohomology groups and degree preserving cohomology operations are corresponding to coefficient homomorphism  . This follows from the Universal coefficient theorem for cohomology and the (m-1)-connectedness of  .

Some interesting examples for cohomology operations are Steenrod Squares and Powers, when   are finite cyclic groups. When studying those the importance of the cohomology of   with coefficients in   becomes apparent quickly;[10] some extensive tabeles of those groups can be found here. [11]

Group (co)homology edit

One can define the group (co)homology of G with coefficients in the group A as the singular (co)homology of the Eilenberg-MacLane space   with coefficients in A.

Further Applications edit

The loop space construction described above is used in string theory to obtain, for example, the string group, the fivebrane group and so on, as the Whitehead tower arising from the short exact sequence

 

with   the string group, and   the spin group. The relevance of   lies in the fact that there are the homotopy equivalences

 

for the classifying space  , and the fact  . Notice that because the complex spin group is a group extension

 ,

the String group can be thought of as a "higher" complex spin group extension, in the sense of higher group theory since the space   is an example of a higher group. It can be thought of the topological realization of the groupoid   whose object is a single point and whose morphisms are the group  . Because of these homotopical properties, the construction generalizes: any given space   can be used to start a short exact sequence that kills the homotopy group   in a topological group.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Saunders Mac Lane originally spelt his name "MacLane" (without a space), and co-published the papers establishing the notion of Eilenberg–MacLane spaces under this name. (See e.g. MR13312) In this context it is therefore conventional to write the name without a space.
  1. ^ Papakyriakopoulos, C. D. (15 January 1957). "On Dehn's lemma and the asphericity of knots". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 43 (1): 169–172. Bibcode:1957PNAS...43..169P. doi:10.1073/pnas.43.1.169. PMC 528404. PMID 16589993.
  2. ^ "general topology - Unit sphere in $\mathbb{R}^\infty$ is contractible?". Mathematics Stack Exchange. Retrieved 2020-09-01.
  3. ^ Lucas Williams "Configuration spaces for the working undergraduate",arXiv , November 5, 2019. Retrieved 2021-06-14
  4. ^ "gt.geometric topology - Explicit constructions of K(G,2)?". MathOverflow. Retrieved 2020-10-28.
  5. ^ May, J. Peter. A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology (PDF). Chapter 16, section 5: University of Chicago Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  6. ^ Xi Yin "On Eilenberg-MacLanes Spaces" 2021-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 2021-06-14
  7. ^ Allen Hatcher "Algebraic Topology", Cambridge University Press, 2001. Retrieved 2021-06-14
  8. ^ Xi Yin "On Eilenberg-MacLanes Spaces" 2021-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 2021-06-14
  9. ^ Allen Hatcher Spectral Sequences, Retrieved 2021-04-25
  10. ^ Cary Malkievich , Retrieved 2021-06-14
  11. ^ Integral Cohomology of Finite Postnikov Towers

References edit

Foundational articles edit

Cartan seminar and applications edit

The Cartan seminar contains many fundamental results about Eilenberg-Maclane spaces including their homology and cohomology, and applications for calculating the homotopy groups of spheres.

Computing integral cohomology rings edit

Other encyclopedic references edit

  • Encyclopedia of Mathematics
  • Eilenberg-Mac Lane space at the nLab

eilenberg, maclane, space, mathematics, specifically, algebraic, topology, note, topological, space, with, single, nontrivial, homotopy, group, group, positive, integer, connected, topological, space, called, type, displaystyle, homotopy, group, displaystyle, . In mathematics specifically algebraic topology an Eilenberg MacLane space note 1 is a topological space with a single nontrivial homotopy group Let G be a group and n a positive integer A connected topological space X is called an Eilenberg MacLane space of type K G n displaystyle K G n if it has n th homotopy group pn X displaystyle pi n X isomorphic to G and all other homotopy groups trivial Assuming that G is abelian in the case that n gt 1 displaystyle n gt 1 Eilenberg MacLane spaces of type K G n displaystyle K G n always exist and are all weak homotopy equivalent Thus one may consider K G n displaystyle K G n as referring to a weak homotopy equivalence class of spaces It is common to refer to any representative as a K G n displaystyle K G n or as a model of K G n displaystyle K G n Moreover it is common to assume that this space is a CW complex which is always possible via CW approximation The name is derived from Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane who introduced such spaces in the late 1940s As such an Eilenberg MacLane space is a special kind of topological space that in homotopy theory can be regarded as a building block for CW complexes via fibrations in a Postnikov system These spaces are important in many contexts in algebraic topology including computations of homotopy groups of spheres definition of cohomology operations and for having a strong connection to singular cohomology A generalised Eilenberg Maclane space is a space which has the homotopy type of a product of Eilenberg Maclane spaces mK Gm m displaystyle prod m K G m m Contents 1 Examples 2 Remark on constructing Eilenberg MacLane spaces 3 Properties of Eilenberg MacLane spaces 3 1 Bijection between homotopy classes of maps and cohomology 3 2 Loop spaces Omega spectra 3 3 Relation with Homology 3 4 Functoriality 3 5 Relation with Postnikov Whitehead tower 3 6 Cohomology operations 3 7 Group co homology 3 8 Further Applications 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Foundational articles 6 2 Cartan seminar and applications 6 3 Computing integral cohomology rings 6 4 Other encyclopedic referencesExamples editThe unit circle S1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp is a K Z 1 displaystyle K mathbb Z 1 nbsp The infinite dimensional complex projective space CP displaystyle mathbb CP infty nbsp is a model of K Z 2 displaystyle K mathbb Z 2 nbsp The infinite dimensional real projective space RP displaystyle mathbb RP infty nbsp is a K Z 2 1 displaystyle K mathbb Z 2 1 nbsp The wedge sum of k unit circles i 1kS1 displaystyle textstyle bigvee i 1 k S 1 nbsp is a K Fk 1 displaystyle K F k 1 nbsp where Fk displaystyle F k nbsp is the free group on k generators The complement to any connected knot or graph in a 3 dimensional sphere S3 displaystyle S 3 nbsp is of type K G 1 displaystyle K G 1 nbsp this is called the asphericity of knots and is a 1957 theorem of Christos Papakyriakopoulos 1 Any compact connected non positively curved manifold M is a K G 1 displaystyle K Gamma 1 nbsp where G p1 M displaystyle Gamma pi 1 M nbsp is the fundamental group of M This is a consequence of the Cartan Hadamard theorem An infinite lens space L q displaystyle L infty q nbsp given by the quotient of S displaystyle S infty nbsp by the free action z e2pim qz displaystyle z mapsto e 2 pi im q z nbsp for m Z q displaystyle m in mathbb Z q nbsp is a K Z q 1 displaystyle K mathbb Z q 1 nbsp This can be shown using covering space theory and the fact that the infinite dimensional sphere is contractible 2 Note this includes RP displaystyle mathbb RP infty nbsp as a K Z 2 1 displaystyle K mathbb Z 2 1 nbsp The configuration space of n displaystyle n nbsp points in the plane is a K Pn 1 displaystyle K P n 1 nbsp where Pn displaystyle P n nbsp is the pure braid group on n displaystyle n nbsp strands Correspondingly the nth unordered configuration space of R2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 nbsp is a K Bn 1 displaystyle K B n 1 nbsp where Bn displaystyle B n nbsp denotes the n strand braid group 3 The infinite symmetric product SP Sn displaystyle SP S n nbsp of a n sphere is a K Z n displaystyle K mathbb Z n nbsp More generally SP M G n displaystyle SP M G n nbsp is a K G n displaystyle K G n nbsp for all Moore spaces M G n displaystyle M G n nbsp Some further elementary examples can be constructed from these by using the fact that the product K G n K H n displaystyle K G n times K H n nbsp is K G H n displaystyle K G times H n nbsp For instance the n dimensional Torus Tn displaystyle mathbb T n nbsp is a K Zn 1 displaystyle K mathbb Z n 1 nbsp Remark on constructing Eilenberg MacLane spaces editFor n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp and G displaystyle G nbsp an arbitrary group the construction of K G 1 displaystyle K G 1 nbsp is identical to that of the classifying space of the group G displaystyle G nbsp Note that if G has a torsion element then every CW complex of type K G 1 has to be infinite dimensional There are multiple techniques for constructing higher Eilenberg Maclane spaces One of which is to construct a Moore space M A n displaystyle M A n nbsp for an abelian group A displaystyle A nbsp Take the wedge of n spheres one for each generator of the group A and realise the relations between these generators by attaching n 1 cells via corresponding maps in pn Sn displaystyle pi n bigvee S n nbsp of said wedge sum Note that the lower homotopy groups pi lt n M A n displaystyle pi i lt n M A n nbsp are already trivial by construction Now iteratively kill all higher homotopy groups pi gt n M A n displaystyle pi i gt n M A n nbsp by successively attaching cells of dimension greater than n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp and define K A n displaystyle K A n nbsp as direct limit under inclusion of this iteration Another useful technique is to use the geometric realization of simplicial abelian groups 4 This gives an explicit presentation of simplicial abelian groups which represent Eilenberg Maclane spaces Another simplicial construction in terms of classifying spaces and universal bundles is given in J Peter May s book 5 Since taking the loop space lowers the homotopy groups by one slot we have a canonical homotopy equivalence K G n WK G n 1 displaystyle K G n simeq Omega K G n 1 nbsp hence there is a fibration sequence K G n K G n 1 displaystyle K G n to to K G n 1 nbsp Note that this is not a cofibration sequence the space K G n 1 displaystyle K G n 1 nbsp is not the homotopy cofiber of K G n displaystyle K G n to nbsp This fibration sequence can be used to study the cohomology of K G n 1 displaystyle K G n 1 nbsp from K G n displaystyle K G n nbsp using the Leray spectral sequence This was exploited by Jean Pierre Serre while he studied the homotopy groups of spheres using the Postnikov system and spectral sequences Properties of Eilenberg MacLane spaces editBijection between homotopy classes of maps and cohomology edit An important property of K G n displaystyle K G n nbsp s is that for any abelian group G and any based CW complex X the set X K G n displaystyle X K G n nbsp of based homotopy classes of based maps from X to K G n displaystyle K G n nbsp is in natural bijection with the n th singular cohomology group Hn X G displaystyle H n X G nbsp of the space X Thus one says that the K G n s displaystyle K G n s nbsp are representing spaces for singular cohomology with coefficients in G Since Hn K G n G Hom Hn K G n Z G Hom pn K G n G Hom G G displaystyle begin array rcl H n K G n G amp amp operatorname Hom H n K G n mathbb Z G amp amp operatorname Hom pi n K G n G amp amp operatorname Hom G G end array nbsp there is a distinguished element u Hn K G n G displaystyle u in H n K G n G nbsp corresponding to the identity The above bijection is given by the pullback of that element f f u displaystyle f mapsto f u nbsp This is similar to the Yoneda lemma of category theory A constructive proof of this theorem can be found here 6 another making use of the relation between omega spectra and generalized reduced cohomology theories can be found here 7 and the main idea is sketched later as well Loop spaces Omega spectra edit The loop space of an Eilenberg MacLane space is again an Eilenberg MacLane space WK G n K G n 1 displaystyle Omega K G n cong K G n 1 nbsp Further there is an adjoint relation between the loop space and the reduced suspension SX Y X WY displaystyle Sigma X Y X Omega Y nbsp which gives X K G n X W2K G n 2 displaystyle X K G n cong X Omega 2 K G n 2 nbsp the structure of an abelian group where the operation is the concatenation of loops This makes the bijection X K G n Hn X G displaystyle X K G n to H n X G nbsp mentioned above a group isomorphism Also this property implies that Eilenberg MacLane spaces with various n form an omega spectrum called an Eilenberg MacLane spectrum This spectrum defines via X hn X X K G n displaystyle X mapsto h n X X K G n nbsp a reduced cohomology theory on based CW complexes and for any reduced cohomology theory h displaystyle h nbsp on CW complexes with hn S0 0 displaystyle h n S 0 0 nbsp for n 0 displaystyle n neq 0 nbsp there is a natural isomorphism hn X H n X h0 S0 displaystyle h n X cong tilde H n X h 0 S 0 nbsp where H displaystyle tilde H nbsp denotes reduced singular cohomology Therefore these two cohomology theories coincide In a more general context Brown representability says that every reduced cohomology theory on based CW complexes comes from an omega spectrum Relation with Homology edit For a fixed abelian group G displaystyle G nbsp there are maps on the stable homotopy groups pq ns X K G n pq n 1s X SK G n pq n 1s X K G n 1 displaystyle pi q n s X wedge K G n cong pi q n 1 s X wedge Sigma K G n to pi q n 1 s X wedge K G n 1 nbsp induced by the map SK G n K G n 1 displaystyle Sigma K G n to K G n 1 nbsp Taking the direct limit over these maps one can verify that this defines a reduced homology theory hq X lim n pq ns X K G n displaystyle h q X varinjlim n pi q n s X wedge K G n nbsp on CW complexes Since hq S0 lim pq ns K G n displaystyle h q S 0 varinjlim pi q n s K G n nbsp vanishes for q 0 displaystyle q neq 0 nbsp h displaystyle h nbsp agrees with reduced singular homology H G displaystyle tilde H cdot G nbsp with coefficients in G on CW complexes Functoriality edit It follows from the universal coefficient theorem for cohomology that the Eilenberg MacLane space is a quasi functor of the group that is for each positive integer n displaystyle n nbsp if a G G displaystyle a colon G to G nbsp is any homomorphism of abelian groups then there is a non empty set K a n f f K G n K G n Hn f a displaystyle K a n f f colon K G n to K G n H n f a nbsp satisfying K a b n K a n K b n and 1 K 1 n displaystyle K a circ b n supset K a n circ K b n text and 1 in K 1 n nbsp where f displaystyle f nbsp denotes the homotopy class of a continuous map f displaystyle f nbsp and S T s t s S t T displaystyle S circ T s circ t s in S t in T nbsp Relation with Postnikov Whitehead tower edit Every connected CW complex X displaystyle X nbsp possesses a Postnikov tower that is an inverse system of spaces X3 p3X2 p2X1 K p1 X 1 displaystyle cdots to X 3 xrightarrow p 3 X 2 xrightarrow p 2 X 1 simeq K pi 1 X 1 nbsp such that for every n displaystyle n nbsp there are commuting maps X Xn displaystyle X to X n nbsp which induce isomorphism on pi displaystyle pi i nbsp for i n displaystyle i leq n nbsp pi Xn 0 displaystyle pi i X n 0 nbsp for i gt n displaystyle i gt n nbsp the maps Xn pnXn 1 displaystyle X n xrightarrow p n X n 1 nbsp are fibrations with fiber K pn X n displaystyle K pi n X n nbsp Dually there exists a Whitehead tower which is a sequence of CW complexes X3 X2 X1 X displaystyle cdots to X 3 to X 2 to X 1 to X nbsp such that for every n displaystyle n nbsp the maps Xn X displaystyle X n to X nbsp induce isomorphism on pi displaystyle pi i nbsp for i gt n displaystyle i gt n nbsp Xn displaystyle X n nbsp is n connected the maps Xn Xn 1 displaystyle X n to X n 1 nbsp are fibrations with fiber K pn X n 1 displaystyle K pi n X n 1 nbsp With help of Serre spectral sequences computations of higher homotopy groups of spheres can be made For instance p4 S3 displaystyle pi 4 S 3 nbsp and p5 S3 displaystyle pi 5 S 3 nbsp using a Whitehead tower of S3 displaystyle S 3 nbsp can be found here 8 more generally those of pn i Sn i 3 displaystyle pi n i S n i leq 3 nbsp using a Postnikov systems can be found here 9 Cohomology operations edit For fixed natural numbers m n and abelian groups G H exists a bijection between the set of all cohomology operations 8 Hm G Hn H displaystyle Theta H m cdot G to H n cdot H nbsp and Hn K G m H displaystyle H n K G m H nbsp defined by 8 8 a displaystyle Theta mapsto Theta alpha nbsp where a Hm K G m G displaystyle alpha in H m K G m G nbsp is a fundamental class As a result cohomology operations cannot decrease the degree of the cohomology groups and degree preserving cohomology operations are corresponding to coefficient homomorphism Hom G H displaystyle operatorname Hom G H nbsp This follows from the Universal coefficient theorem for cohomology and the m 1 connectedness of K G m displaystyle K G m nbsp Some interesting examples for cohomology operations are Steenrod Squares and Powers when G H displaystyle G H nbsp are finite cyclic groups When studying those the importance of the cohomology of K Z p n displaystyle K mathbb Z p n nbsp with coefficients in Z p displaystyle mathbb Z p nbsp becomes apparent quickly 10 some extensive tabeles of those groups can be found here 11 Group co homology edit One can define the group co homology of G with coefficients in the group A as the singular co homology of the Eilenberg MacLane space K G 1 displaystyle K G 1 nbsp with coefficients in A Further Applications edit The loop space construction described above is used in string theory to obtain for example the string group the fivebrane group and so on as the Whitehead tower arising from the short exact sequence 0 K Z 2 String n Spin n 0 displaystyle 0 rightarrow K mathbb Z 2 rightarrow operatorname String n rightarrow operatorname Spin n rightarrow 0 nbsp with String n displaystyle text String n nbsp the string group and Spin n displaystyle text Spin n nbsp the spin group The relevance of K Z 2 displaystyle K mathbb Z 2 nbsp lies in the fact that there are the homotopy equivalences K Z 1 U 1 BZ displaystyle K mathbb Z 1 simeq U 1 simeq B mathbb Z nbsp for the classifying space BZ displaystyle B mathbb Z nbsp and the fact K Z 2 BU 1 displaystyle K mathbb Z 2 simeq BU 1 nbsp Notice that because the complex spin group is a group extension 0 K Z 1 SpinC n Spin n 0 displaystyle 0 to K mathbb Z 1 to text Spin mathbb C n to text Spin n to 0 nbsp the String group can be thought of as a higher complex spin group extension in the sense of higher group theory since the space K Z 2 displaystyle K mathbb Z 2 nbsp is an example of a higher group It can be thought of the topological realization of the groupoid BU 1 displaystyle mathbf B U 1 nbsp whose object is a single point and whose morphisms are the group U 1 displaystyle U 1 nbsp Because of these homotopical properties the construction generalizes any given space K Z n displaystyle K mathbb Z n nbsp can be used to start a short exact sequence that kills the homotopy group pn 1 displaystyle pi n 1 nbsp in a topological group See also editClassifying space for the case n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp Brown representability theorem regarding representation spaces Moore space the homology analogue Notes edit Saunders Mac Lane originally spelt his name MacLane without a space and co published the papers establishing the notion of Eilenberg MacLane spaces under this name See e g MR13312 In this context it is therefore conventional to write the name without a space Papakyriakopoulos C D 15 January 1957 On Dehn s lemma and the asphericity of knots Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 43 1 169 172 Bibcode 1957PNAS 43 169P doi 10 1073 pnas 43 1 169 PMC 528404 PMID 16589993 general topology Unit sphere in mathbb R infty is contractible Mathematics Stack Exchange Retrieved 2020 09 01 Lucas Williams Configuration spaces for the working undergraduate arXiv November 5 2019 Retrieved 2021 06 14 gt geometric topology Explicit constructions of K G 2 MathOverflow Retrieved 2020 10 28 May J Peter A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology PDF Chapter 16 section 5 University of Chicago Press a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Xi Yin On Eilenberg MacLanes Spaces Archived 2021 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2021 06 14 Allen Hatcher Algebraic Topology Cambridge University Press 2001 Retrieved 2021 06 14 Xi Yin On Eilenberg MacLanes Spaces Archived 2021 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2021 06 14 Allen Hatcher Spectral Sequences Retrieved 2021 04 25 Cary Malkievich The Steenrod algebra Retrieved 2021 06 14 Integral Cohomology of Finite Postnikov TowersReferences editFoundational articles edit Eilenberg Samuel MacLane Saunders 1945 Relations between homology and homotopy groups of spaces Annals of Mathematics Second Series 46 3 480 509 doi 10 2307 1969165 JSTOR 1969165 MR 0013312 Eilenberg Samuel MacLane Saunders 1950 Relations between homology and homotopy groups of spaces II Annals of Mathematics Second Series 51 3 514 533 doi 10 2307 1969365 JSTOR 1969365 MR 0035435 Eilenberg Samuel MacLane Saunders 1954 On the groups H P n displaystyle H Pi n nbsp III Operations and obstructions Annals of Mathematics 60 3 513 557 doi 10 2307 1969849 JSTOR 1969849 MR 0065163 Cartan seminar and applications edit The Cartan seminar contains many fundamental results about Eilenberg Maclane spaces including their homology and cohomology and applications for calculating the homotopy groups of spheres http www numdam org volume SHC 1954 1955 7 Archived 2022 04 25 at the Wayback MachineComputing integral cohomology rings edit Derived functors of the divided power functors Integral Cohomology of Finite Postnikov Towers Co homology of the Eilenberg MacLane spaces K G n Other encyclopedic references edit Encyclopedia of Mathematics Eilenberg Mac Lane space at the nLab Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eilenberg MacLane space amp oldid 1210846627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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