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Euler class

In mathematics, specifically in algebraic topology, the Euler class is a characteristic class of oriented, real vector bundles. Like other characteristic classes, it measures how "twisted" the vector bundle is. In the case of the tangent bundle of a smooth manifold, it generalizes the classical notion of Euler characteristic. It is named after Leonhard Euler because of this.

Throughout this article is an oriented, real vector bundle of rank over a base space .

Formal definition edit

The Euler class   is an element of the integral cohomology group

 

constructed as follows. An orientation of   amounts to a continuous choice of generator of the cohomology

 

of each fiber   relative to the complement   of zero. From the Thom isomorphism, this induces an orientation class

 

in the cohomology of   relative to the complement   of the zero section  . The inclusions

 

where   includes into   as the zero section, induce maps

 

The Euler class e(E) is the image of u under the composition of these maps.

Properties edit

The Euler class satisfies these properties, which are axioms of a characteristic class:

  • Functoriality: If   is another oriented, real vector bundle and   is continuous and covered by an orientation-preserving map  , then  . In particular,  .
  • Whitney sum formula: If   is another oriented, real vector bundle, then the Euler class of their direct sum is given by  
  • Normalization: If   possesses a nowhere-zero section, then  .
  • Orientation: If   is   with the opposite orientation, then  .

Note that "Normalization" is a distinguishing feature of the Euler class. The Euler class obstructs the existence of a non-vanishing section in the sense that if   then   has no non-vanishing section.

Also unlike other characteristic classes, it is concentrated in a degree which depends on the rank of the bundle:  . By contrast, the Stiefel Whitney classes   live in   independent of the rank of  . This reflects the fact that the Euler class is unstable, as discussed below.

Vanishing locus of generic section edit

The Euler class corresponds to the vanishing locus of a section of   in the following way. Suppose that   is an oriented smooth manifold of dimension  . Let   be a smooth section that transversely intersects the zero section. Let   be the zero locus of  . Then   is a codimension   submanifold of   which represents a homology class   and   is the Poincaré dual of  .

Self-intersection edit

For example, if   is a compact submanifold, then the Euler class of the normal bundle of   in   is naturally identified with the self-intersection of   in  .

Relations to other invariants edit

In the special case when the bundle E in question is the tangent bundle of a compact, oriented, r-dimensional manifold, the Euler class is an element of the top cohomology of the manifold, which is naturally identified with the integers by evaluating cohomology classes on the fundamental homology class. Under this identification, the Euler class of the tangent bundle equals the Euler characteristic of the manifold. In the language of characteristic numbers, the Euler characteristic is the characteristic number corresponding to the Euler class.

Thus the Euler class is a generalization of the Euler characteristic to vector bundles other than tangent bundles. In turn, the Euler class is the archetype for other characteristic classes of vector bundles, in that each "top" characteristic class equals the Euler class, as follows.

Modding out by 2 induces a map

 

The image of the Euler class under this map is the top Stiefel-Whitney class wr(E). One can view this Stiefel-Whitney class as "the Euler class, ignoring orientation".

Any complex vector bundle E of complex rank d can be regarded as an oriented, real vector bundle E of real rank 2d. The Euler class of E is given by the highest dimensional Chern class  

Squares to top Pontryagin class edit

The Pontryagin class   is defined as the Chern class of the complexification of E:  .

The complexification   is isomorphic as an oriented bundle to  . Comparing Euler classes, we see that

 

If the rank r of E is even then   where   is the top dimensional Pontryagin class of  .

Instability edit

A characteristic class   is stable if   where   is a rank one trivial bundle. Unlike most other characteristic classes, the Euler class is unstable. In fact,  .

The Euler class is represented by a cohomology class in the classifying space BSO(k)  . The unstability of the Euler class shows that it is not the pull-back of a class in   under the inclusion  .

This can be seen intuitively in that the Euler class is a class whose degree depends on the dimension of the bundle (or manifold, if the tangent bundle): the Euler class is an element of   where   is the dimension of the bundle, while the other classes have a fixed dimension (e.g., the first Stiefel-Whitney class is an element of  ).

The fact that the Euler class is unstable should not be seen as a "defect": rather, it means that the Euler class "detects unstable phenomena". For instance, the tangent bundle of an even dimensional sphere is stably trivial but not trivial (the usual inclusion of the sphere   has trivial normal bundle, thus the tangent bundle of the sphere plus a trivial line bundle is the tangent bundle of Euclidean space, restricted to  , which is trivial), thus other characteristic classes all vanish for the sphere, but the Euler class does not vanish for even spheres, providing a non-trivial invariant.

Examples edit

Spheres edit

The Euler characteristic of the n-sphere Sn is:

 

Thus, there is no non-vanishing section of the tangent bundle of even spheres (this is known as the Hairy ball theorem). In particular, the tangent bundle of an even sphere is nontrivial—i.e.,   is not a parallelizable manifold, and cannot admit a Lie group structure.

For odd spheres, S2n−1R2n, a nowhere vanishing section is given by

 

which shows that the Euler class vanishes; this is just n copies of the usual section over the circle.

As the Euler class for an even sphere corresponds to  , we can use the fact that the Euler class of a Whitney sum of two bundles is just the cup product of the Euler classes of the two bundles to see that there are no other subbundles of the tangent bundle than the tangent bundle itself and the null bundle, for any even-dimensional sphere.

Since the tangent bundle of the sphere is stably trivial but not trivial, all other characteristic classes vanish on it, and the Euler class is the only ordinary cohomology class that detects non-triviality of the tangent bundle of spheres: to prove further results, one must use secondary cohomology operations or K-theory.

Circle edit

The cylinder is a line bundle over the circle, by the natural projection  . It is a trivial line bundle, so it possesses a nowhere-zero section, and so its Euler class is 0. It is also isomorphic to the tangent bundle of the circle; the fact that its Euler class is 0 corresponds to the fact that the Euler characteristic of the circle is 0.

See also edit

Other classes edit

References edit

  • Bott, Raoul and Tu, Loring W. (1982). Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-90613-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Bredon, Glen E. (1993). Topology and Geometry. Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-97926-3.
  • Milnor, John W.; Stasheff, James D. (1974). Characteristic Classes. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-08122-0.

euler, class, mathematics, specifically, algebraic, topology, characteristic, class, oriented, real, vector, bundles, like, other, characteristic, classes, measures, twisted, vector, bundle, case, tangent, bundle, smooth, manifold, generalizes, classical, noti. In mathematics specifically in algebraic topology the Euler class is a characteristic class of oriented real vector bundles Like other characteristic classes it measures how twisted the vector bundle is In the case of the tangent bundle of a smooth manifold it generalizes the classical notion of Euler characteristic It is named after Leonhard Euler because of this Throughout this article E displaystyle E is an oriented real vector bundle of rank r displaystyle r over a base space X displaystyle X Contents 1 Formal definition 2 Properties 2 1 Vanishing locus of generic section 2 2 Self intersection 3 Relations to other invariants 3 1 Squares to top Pontryagin class 3 2 Instability 4 Examples 4 1 Spheres 4 1 1 Circle 5 See also 5 1 Other classes 6 ReferencesFormal definition editThe Euler class e E displaystyle e E nbsp is an element of the integral cohomology group H r X Z displaystyle H r X mathbf Z nbsp constructed as follows An orientation of E displaystyle E nbsp amounts to a continuous choice of generator of the cohomology H r R r R r 0 Z H r 1 S r 1 Z Z displaystyle H r mathbf R r mathbf R r setminus 0 mathbf Z cong tilde H r 1 S r 1 mathbf Z cong mathbf Z nbsp of each fiber R r displaystyle mathbf R r nbsp relative to the complement R r 0 displaystyle mathbf R r setminus 0 nbsp of zero From the Thom isomorphism this induces an orientation class u H r E E E 0 Z displaystyle u in H r E E setminus E 0 mathbf Z nbsp in the cohomology of E displaystyle E nbsp relative to the complement E E 0 displaystyle E setminus E 0 nbsp of the zero section E 0 displaystyle E 0 nbsp The inclusions X E E E E 0 displaystyle X emptyset hookrightarrow E emptyset hookrightarrow E E setminus E 0 nbsp where X displaystyle X nbsp includes into E displaystyle E nbsp as the zero section induce maps H r E E E 0 Z H r E Z H r X Z displaystyle H r E E setminus E 0 mathbf Z to H r E mathbf Z to H r X mathbf Z nbsp The Euler class e E is the image of u under the composition of these maps Properties editThe Euler class satisfies these properties which are axioms of a characteristic class Functoriality If F Y displaystyle F to Y nbsp is another oriented real vector bundle and f Y X displaystyle f colon Y to X nbsp is continuous and covered by an orientation preserving map F E displaystyle F to E nbsp then e F f e E displaystyle e F f e E nbsp In particular e f E f e E displaystyle e f E f e E nbsp Whitney sum formula If F X displaystyle F to X nbsp is another oriented real vector bundle then the Euler class of their direct sum is given by e E F e E e F displaystyle e E oplus F e E smile e F nbsp Normalization If E displaystyle E nbsp possesses a nowhere zero section then e E 0 displaystyle e E 0 nbsp Orientation If E displaystyle overline E nbsp is E displaystyle E nbsp with the opposite orientation then e E e E displaystyle e overline E e E nbsp Note that Normalization is a distinguishing feature of the Euler class The Euler class obstructs the existence of a non vanishing section in the sense that if e E 0 displaystyle e E neq 0 nbsp then E displaystyle E nbsp has no non vanishing section Also unlike other characteristic classes it is concentrated in a degree which depends on the rank of the bundle e E H r X displaystyle e E in H r X nbsp By contrast the Stiefel Whitney classes w i E displaystyle w i E nbsp live in H i X Z 2 displaystyle H i X mathbb Z 2 nbsp independent of the rank of E displaystyle E nbsp This reflects the fact that the Euler class is unstable as discussed below Vanishing locus of generic section edit The Euler class corresponds to the vanishing locus of a section of E displaystyle E nbsp in the following way Suppose that X displaystyle X nbsp is an oriented smooth manifold of dimension d displaystyle d nbsp Let s X E displaystyle sigma colon X to E nbsp be a smooth section that transversely intersects the zero section Let Z X displaystyle Z subseteq X nbsp be the zero locus of s displaystyle sigma nbsp Then Z displaystyle Z nbsp is a codimension r displaystyle r nbsp submanifold of X displaystyle X nbsp which represents a homology class Z H d r X Z displaystyle Z in H d r X mathbf Z nbsp and e E displaystyle e E nbsp is the Poincare dual of Z displaystyle Z nbsp Self intersection edit For example if Y displaystyle Y nbsp is a compact submanifold then the Euler class of the normal bundle of Y displaystyle Y nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp is naturally identified with the self intersection of Y displaystyle Y nbsp in X displaystyle X nbsp Relations to other invariants editIn the special case when the bundle E in question is the tangent bundle of a compact oriented r dimensional manifold the Euler class is an element of the top cohomology of the manifold which is naturally identified with the integers by evaluating cohomology classes on the fundamental homology class Under this identification the Euler class of the tangent bundle equals the Euler characteristic of the manifold In the language of characteristic numbers the Euler characteristic is the characteristic number corresponding to the Euler class Thus the Euler class is a generalization of the Euler characteristic to vector bundles other than tangent bundles In turn the Euler class is the archetype for other characteristic classes of vector bundles in that each top characteristic class equals the Euler class as follows Modding out by 2 induces a map H r X Z H r X Z 2 Z displaystyle H r X mathbf Z to H r X mathbf Z 2 mathbf Z nbsp The image of the Euler class under this map is the top Stiefel Whitney class wr E One can view this Stiefel Whitney class as the Euler class ignoring orientation Any complex vector bundle E of complex rank d can be regarded as an oriented real vector bundle E of real rank 2d The Euler class of E is given by the highest dimensional Chern class e E c d E H 2 d X displaystyle e E c d E in H 2d X nbsp Squares to top Pontryagin class edit The Pontryagin class p r E displaystyle p r E nbsp is defined as the Chern class of the complexification of E p r E c 2 r C E displaystyle p r E c 2r mathbf C otimes E nbsp The complexification C E displaystyle mathbf C otimes E nbsp is isomorphic as an oriented bundle to E E displaystyle E oplus E nbsp Comparing Euler classes we see that e E e E e E E e E C c r E C H 2 r X Z displaystyle e E smile e E e E oplus E e E otimes mathbf C c r E otimes mathbf C in H 2r X mathbf Z nbsp If the rank r of E is even then e E e E c r E p r 2 E displaystyle e E smile e E c r E p r 2 E nbsp where p r 2 E displaystyle p r 2 E nbsp is the top dimensional Pontryagin class of E displaystyle E nbsp Instability edit A characteristic class c displaystyle c nbsp is stable if c E R 1 c E displaystyle c E oplus underline R 1 c E nbsp where R 1 displaystyle underline R 1 nbsp is a rank one trivial bundle Unlike most other characteristic classes the Euler class is unstable In fact e E R 1 e E e R 1 0 displaystyle e E oplus underline R 1 e E smile e underline R 1 0 nbsp The Euler class is represented by a cohomology class in the classifying space BSO k e H k B S O k displaystyle e in H k mathrm BSO k nbsp The unstability of the Euler class shows that it is not the pull back of a class in H k B S O k 1 displaystyle H k mathrm BSO k 1 nbsp under the inclusion B S O k B S O k 1 displaystyle mathrm BSO k to mathrm BSO k 1 nbsp This can be seen intuitively in that the Euler class is a class whose degree depends on the dimension of the bundle or manifold if the tangent bundle the Euler class is an element of H d X displaystyle H d X nbsp where d displaystyle d nbsp is the dimension of the bundle while the other classes have a fixed dimension e g the first Stiefel Whitney class is an element of H 1 X displaystyle H 1 X nbsp The fact that the Euler class is unstable should not be seen as a defect rather it means that the Euler class detects unstable phenomena For instance the tangent bundle of an even dimensional sphere is stably trivial but not trivial the usual inclusion of the sphere S n R n 1 displaystyle S n subseteq mathrm R n 1 nbsp has trivial normal bundle thus the tangent bundle of the sphere plus a trivial line bundle is the tangent bundle of Euclidean space restricted to S n displaystyle S n nbsp which is trivial thus other characteristic classes all vanish for the sphere but the Euler class does not vanish for even spheres providing a non trivial invariant Examples editSpheres edit The Euler characteristic of the n sphere Sn is x S n 1 1 n 2 n even 0 n odd displaystyle chi mathbf S n 1 1 n begin cases 2 amp n text even 0 amp n text odd end cases nbsp Thus there is no non vanishing section of the tangent bundle of even spheres this is known as the Hairy ball theorem In particular the tangent bundle of an even sphere is nontrivial i e S 2 n displaystyle S 2n nbsp is not a parallelizable manifold and cannot admit a Lie group structure For odd spheres S2n 1 R2n a nowhere vanishing section is given by x 2 x 1 x 4 x 3 x 2 n x 2 n 1 displaystyle x 2 x 1 x 4 x 3 dots x 2n x 2n 1 nbsp which shows that the Euler class vanishes this is just n copies of the usual section over the circle As the Euler class for an even sphere corresponds to 2 S 2 n H 2 n S 2 n Z displaystyle 2 S 2n in H 2n S 2n mathbf Z nbsp we can use the fact that the Euler class of a Whitney sum of two bundles is just the cup product of the Euler classes of the two bundles to see that there are no other subbundles of the tangent bundle than the tangent bundle itself and the null bundle for any even dimensional sphere Since the tangent bundle of the sphere is stably trivial but not trivial all other characteristic classes vanish on it and the Euler class is the only ordinary cohomology class that detects non triviality of the tangent bundle of spheres to prove further results one must use secondary cohomology operations or K theory Circle edit The cylinder is a line bundle over the circle by the natural projection R 1 S 1 S 1 displaystyle mathrm R 1 times S 1 to S 1 nbsp It is a trivial line bundle so it possesses a nowhere zero section and so its Euler class is 0 It is also isomorphic to the tangent bundle of the circle the fact that its Euler class is 0 corresponds to the fact that the Euler characteristic of the circle is 0 See also editVandermonde polynomial Thom isomorphism Generalized Gauss Bonnet theorem Other classes edit Chern class Pontryagin class Stiefel Whitney classReferences editBott Raoul and Tu Loring W 1982 Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 90613 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bredon Glen E 1993 Topology and Geometry Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 97926 3 Milnor John W Stasheff James D 1974 Characteristic Classes Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08122 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Euler class amp oldid 1214431010, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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