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Mayer–Vietoris sequence

In mathematics, particularly algebraic topology and homology theory, the Mayer–Vietoris sequence is an algebraic tool to help compute algebraic invariants of topological spaces, known as their homology and cohomology groups. The result is due to two Austrian mathematicians, Walther Mayer and Leopold Vietoris. The method consists of splitting a space into subspaces, for which the homology or cohomology groups may be easier to compute. The sequence relates the (co)homology groups of the space to the (co)homology groups of the subspaces. It is a natural long exact sequence, whose entries are the (co)homology groups of the whole space, the direct sum of the (co)homology groups of the subspaces, and the (co)homology groups of the intersection of the subspaces.

The Mayer–Vietoris sequence holds for a variety of cohomology and homology theories, including simplicial homology and singular cohomology. In general, the sequence holds for those theories satisfying the Eilenberg–Steenrod axioms, and it has variations for both reduced and relative (co)homology. Because the (co)homology of most spaces cannot be computed directly from their definitions, one uses tools such as the Mayer–Vietoris sequence in the hope of obtaining partial information. Many spaces encountered in topology are constructed by piecing together very simple patches. Carefully choosing the two covering subspaces so that, together with their intersection, they have simpler (co)homology than that of the whole space may allow a complete deduction of the (co)homology of the space. In that respect, the Mayer–Vietoris sequence is analogous to the Seifert–van Kampen theorem for the fundamental group, and a precise relation exists for homology of dimension one.

Background, motivation, and history

 
Leopold Vietoris on his 110th birthday

Like the fundamental group or the higher homotopy groups of a space, homology groups are important topological invariants. Although some (co)homology theories are computable using tools of linear algebra, many other important (co)homology theories, especially singular (co)homology, are not computable directly from their definition for nontrivial spaces. For singular (co)homology, the singular (co)chains and (co)cycles groups are often too big to handle directly. More subtle and indirect approaches become necessary. The Mayer–Vietoris sequence is such an approach, giving partial information about the (co)homology groups of any space by relating it to the (co)homology groups of two of its subspaces and their intersection.

The most natural and convenient way to express the relation involves the algebraic concept of exact sequences: sequences of objects (in this case groups) and morphisms (in this case group homomorphisms) between them such that the image of one morphism equals the kernel of the next. In general, this does not allow (co)homology groups of a space to be completely computed. However, because many important spaces encountered in topology are topological manifolds, simplicial complexes, or CW complexes, which are constructed by piecing together very simple patches, a theorem such as that of Mayer and Vietoris is potentially of broad and deep applicability.

Mayer was introduced to topology by his colleague Vietoris when attending his lectures in 1926 and 1927 at a local university in Vienna.[1] He was told about the conjectured result and a way to its solution, and solved the question for the Betti numbers in 1929.[2] He applied his results to the torus considered as the union of two cylinders.[3][4] Vietoris later proved the full result for the homology groups in 1930 but did not express it as an exact sequence.[5] The concept of an exact sequence only appeared in print in the 1952 book Foundations of Algebraic Topology by Samuel Eilenberg and Norman Steenrod[6] where the results of Mayer and Vietoris were expressed in the modern form.[7]

Basic versions for singular homology

Let X be a topological space and A, B be two subspaces whose interiors cover X. (The interiors of A and B need not be disjoint.) The Mayer–Vietoris sequence in singular homology for the triad (X, A, B) is a long exact sequence relating the singular homology groups (with coefficient group the integers Z) of the spaces X, A, B, and the intersection AB.[8] There is an unreduced and a reduced version.

Unreduced version

For unreduced homology, the Mayer–Vietoris sequence states that the following sequence is exact:[9]

 
 

Here i : ABA, j : ABB, k : AX, and l : BX are inclusion maps and   denotes the direct sum of abelian groups.

Boundary map

 
Illustration of the boundary map ∂ on the torus where the 1-cycle x = u + v is the sum of two 1-chains whose boundary lies in the intersection of A and B.

The boundary maps ∂ lowering the dimension may be defined as follows.[10] An element in Hn(X) is the homology class of an n-cycle x which, by barycentric subdivision for example, can be written as the sum of two n-chains u and v whose images lie wholly in A and B, respectively. Thus ∂x = ∂(u + v) = 0 so that ∂u = −∂v. This implies that the images of both these boundary (n − 1)-cycles are contained in the intersection AB. Then ∂([x]) can be defined to be the class of ∂u in Hn−1(AB). Choosing another decomposition x = u′ + v′ does not affect [∂u], since ∂u + ∂v = ∂x = ∂u′ + ∂v′, which implies ∂u − ∂u′ = ∂(v′v), and therefore ∂u and ∂u′ lie in the same homology class; nor does choosing a different representative x′, since then ∂x′ = ∂x = 0. Notice that the maps in the Mayer–Vietoris sequence depend on choosing an order for A and B. In particular, the boundary map changes sign if A and B are swapped.

Reduced version

For reduced homology there is also a Mayer–Vietoris sequence, under the assumption that A and B have non-empty intersection.[11] The sequence is identical for positive dimensions and ends as:

 

Analogy with the Seifert–van Kampen theorem

There is an analogy between the Mayer–Vietoris sequence (especially for homology groups of dimension 1) and the Seifert–van Kampen theorem.[10][12] Whenever   is path-connected, the reduced Mayer–Vietoris sequence yields the isomorphism

 

where, by exactness,

 

This is precisely the abelianized statement of the Seifert–van Kampen theorem. Compare with the fact that   is the abelianization of the fundamental group   when   is path-connected.[13]

Basic applications

k-sphere

 
The decomposition for X = S2

To completely compute the homology of the k-sphere X = Sk, let A and B be two hemispheres of X with intersection homotopy equivalent to a (k − 1)-dimensional equatorial sphere. Since the k-dimensional hemispheres are homeomorphic to k-discs, which are contractible, the homology groups for A and B are trivial. The Mayer–Vietoris sequence for reduced homology groups then yields

 

Exactness immediately implies that the map ∂* is an isomorphism. Using the reduced homology of the 0-sphere (two points) as a base case, it follows[14]

 

where δ is the Kronecker delta. Such a complete understanding of the homology groups for spheres is in stark contrast with current knowledge of homotopy groups of spheres, especially for the case n > k about which little is known.[15]

Klein bottle

 
The Klein bottle (fundamental polygon with appropriate edge identifications) decomposed as two Möbius strips A (in blue) and B (in red).

A slightly more difficult application of the Mayer–Vietoris sequence is the calculation of the homology groups of the Klein bottle X. One uses the decomposition of X as the union of two Möbius strips A and B glued along their boundary circle (see illustration on the right). Then A, B and their intersection AB are homotopy equivalent to circles, so the nontrivial part of the sequence yields[16]

 

and the trivial part implies vanishing homology for dimensions greater than 2. The central map α sends 1 to (2, −2) since the boundary circle of a Möbius band wraps twice around the core circle. In particular α is injective so homology of dimension 2 also vanishes. Finally, choosing (1, 0) and (1, −1) as a basis for Z2, it follows

 

Wedge sums

 
This decomposition of the wedge sum X of two 2-spheres K and L yields all the homology groups of X.

Let X be the wedge sum of two spaces K and L, and suppose furthermore that the identified basepoint is a deformation retract of open neighborhoods UK and VL. Letting A = KV and B = UL it follows that AB = X and AB = UV, which is contractible by construction. The reduced version of the sequence then yields (by exactness)[17]

 

for all dimensions n. The illustration on the right shows X as the sum of two 2-spheres K and L. For this specific case, using the result from above for 2-spheres, one has

 

Suspensions

 
This decomposition of the suspension X of the 0-sphere Y yields all the homology groups of X.

If X is the suspension SY of a space Y, let A and B be the complements in X of the top and bottom 'vertices' of the double cone, respectively. Then X is the union AB, with A and B contractible. Also, the intersection AB is homotopy equivalent to Y. Hence the Mayer–Vietoris sequence yields, for all n,[18]

 

The illustration on the right shows the 1-sphere X as the suspension of the 0-sphere Y. Noting in general that the k-sphere is the suspension of the (k − 1)-sphere, it is easy to derive the homology groups of the k-sphere by induction, as above.

Further discussion

Relative form

A relative form of the Mayer–Vietoris sequence also exists. If YX and is the union of the interiors of CA and DB, then the exact sequence is:[19]

 

Naturality

The homology groups are natural in the sense that if   is a continuous map, then there is a canonical pushforward map of homology groups   such that the composition of pushforwards is the pushforward of a composition: that is,   The Mayer–Vietoris sequence is also natural in the sense that if

 

then the connecting morphism of the Mayer–Vietoris sequence,   commutes with  .[20] That is, the following diagram commutes[21] (the horizontal maps are the usual ones):

 

Cohomological versions

The Mayer–Vietoris long exact sequence for singular cohomology groups with coefficient group G is dual to the homological version. It is the following:[22]

 

where the dimension preserving maps are restriction maps induced from inclusions, and the (co-)boundary maps are defined in a similar fashion to the homological version. There is also a relative formulation.

As an important special case when G is the group of real numbers R and the underlying topological space has the additional structure of a smooth manifold, the Mayer–Vietoris sequence for de Rham cohomology is

 

where {U, V} is an open cover of X, ρ denotes the restriction map, and Δ is the difference. The map   is defined similarly as the map   from above. It can be briefly described as follows. For a cohomology class [ω] represented by closed form ω in UV, express ω as a difference of forms   via a partition of unity subordinate to the open cover {U, V}, for example. The exterior derivative U and V agree on UV and therefore together define an n + 1 form σ on X. One then has d([ω]) = [σ].

For de Rham cohomology with compact supports, there exists a "flipped" version of the above sequence:

 

where  , ,  are as above,   is the signed inclusion map   where   extends a form with compact support to a form on   by zero, and   is the sum.[23]

Derivation

Consider the long exact sequence associated to the short exact sequences of chain groups (constituent groups of chain complexes)

 

where α(x) = (x, −x), β(x, y) = x + y, and Cn(A + B) is the chain group consisting of sums of chains in A and chains in B.[9] It is a fact that the singular n-simplices of X whose images are contained in either A or B generate all of the homology group Hn(X).[24] In other words, Hn(A + B) is isomorphic to Hn(X). This gives the Mayer–Vietoris sequence for singular homology.

The same computation applied to the short exact sequences of vector spaces of differential forms

 

yields the Mayer–Vietoris sequence for de Rham cohomology.[25]

From a formal point of view, the Mayer–Vietoris sequence can be derived from the Eilenberg–Steenrod axioms for homology theories using the long exact sequence in homology.[26]

Other homology theories

The derivation of the Mayer–Vietoris sequence from the Eilenberg–Steenrod axioms does not require the dimension axiom,[27] so in addition to existing in ordinary cohomology theories, it holds in extraordinary cohomology theories (such as topological K-theory and cobordism).

Sheaf cohomology

From the point of view of sheaf cohomology, the Mayer–Vietoris sequence is related to Čech cohomology. Specifically, it arises from the degeneration of the spectral sequence that relates Čech cohomology to sheaf cohomology (sometimes called the Mayer–Vietoris spectral sequence) in the case where the open cover used to compute the Čech cohomology consists of two open sets.[28] This spectral sequence exists in arbitrary topoi.[29]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Hirzebruch 1999
  2. ^ Mayer 1929
  3. ^ Dieudonné 1989, p. 39
  4. ^ Mayer 1929, p. 41
  5. ^ Vietoris 1930
  6. ^ Corry 2004, p. 345
  7. ^ Eilenberg & Steenrod 1952, Theorem 15.3
  8. ^ Eilenberg & Steenrod 1952, §15
  9. ^ a b Hatcher 2002, p. 149
  10. ^ a b Hatcher 2002, p. 150
  11. ^ Spanier 1966, p. 187
  12. ^ Massey 1984, p. 240
  13. ^ Hatcher 2002, Theorem 2A.1, p. 166
  14. ^ Hatcher 2002, Example 2.46, p. 150
  15. ^ Hatcher 2002, p. 384
  16. ^ Hatcher 2002, p. 151
  17. ^ Hatcher 2002, Exercise 31 on page 158
  18. ^ Hatcher 2002, Exercise 32 on page 158
  19. ^ Hatcher 2002, p. 152
  20. ^ Massey 1984, p. 208
  21. ^ Eilenberg & Steenrod 1952, Theorem 15.4
  22. ^ Hatcher 2002, p. 203
  23. ^ Bott, Raoul. Differential forms in algebraic topology. Tu, Loring W. New York. ISBN 978-0-387-90613-3. OCLC 7597142.
  24. ^ Hatcher 2002, Proposition 2.21, p. 119
  25. ^ Bott & Tu 1982, §I.2
  26. ^ Hatcher 2002, p. 162
  27. ^ Kōno & Tamaki 2006, pp. 25–26
  28. ^ Dimca 2004, pp. 35–36
  29. ^ Verdier 1972 (SGA 4.V.3)

References

  • Kōno, Akira; Tamaki, Dai (2006) [2002], Generalized cohomology, Iwanami Series in Modern Mathematics, Translations of Mathematical Monographs, vol. 230 (Translated from the 2002 Japanese edition by Tamaki ed.), Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-3514-2, MR 2225848

Further reading

mayer, vietoris, sequence, mathematics, particularly, algebraic, topology, homology, theory, algebraic, tool, help, compute, algebraic, invariants, topological, spaces, known, their, homology, cohomology, groups, result, austrian, mathematicians, walther, maye. In mathematics particularly algebraic topology and homology theory the Mayer Vietoris sequence is an algebraic tool to help compute algebraic invariants of topological spaces known as their homology and cohomology groups The result is due to two Austrian mathematicians Walther Mayer and Leopold Vietoris The method consists of splitting a space into subspaces for which the homology or cohomology groups may be easier to compute The sequence relates the co homology groups of the space to the co homology groups of the subspaces It is a natural long exact sequence whose entries are the co homology groups of the whole space the direct sum of the co homology groups of the subspaces and the co homology groups of the intersection of the subspaces The Mayer Vietoris sequence holds for a variety of cohomology and homology theories including simplicial homology and singular cohomology In general the sequence holds for those theories satisfying the Eilenberg Steenrod axioms and it has variations for both reduced and relative co homology Because the co homology of most spaces cannot be computed directly from their definitions one uses tools such as the Mayer Vietoris sequence in the hope of obtaining partial information Many spaces encountered in topology are constructed by piecing together very simple patches Carefully choosing the two covering subspaces so that together with their intersection they have simpler co homology than that of the whole space may allow a complete deduction of the co homology of the space In that respect the Mayer Vietoris sequence is analogous to the Seifert van Kampen theorem for the fundamental group and a precise relation exists for homology of dimension one Contents 1 Background motivation and history 2 Basic versions for singular homology 2 1 Unreduced version 2 2 Boundary map 2 3 Reduced version 2 4 Analogy with the Seifert van Kampen theorem 3 Basic applications 3 1 k sphere 3 2 Klein bottle 3 3 Wedge sums 3 4 Suspensions 4 Further discussion 4 1 Relative form 4 2 Naturality 4 3 Cohomological versions 4 4 Derivation 4 5 Other homology theories 4 6 Sheaf cohomology 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further readingBackground motivation and history Edit Leopold Vietoris on his 110th birthday Like the fundamental group or the higher homotopy groups of a space homology groups are important topological invariants Although some co homology theories are computable using tools of linear algebra many other important co homology theories especially singular co homology are not computable directly from their definition for nontrivial spaces For singular co homology the singular co chains and co cycles groups are often too big to handle directly More subtle and indirect approaches become necessary The Mayer Vietoris sequence is such an approach giving partial information about the co homology groups of any space by relating it to the co homology groups of two of its subspaces and their intersection The most natural and convenient way to express the relation involves the algebraic concept of exact sequences sequences of objects in this case groups and morphisms in this case group homomorphisms between them such that the image of one morphism equals the kernel of the next In general this does not allow co homology groups of a space to be completely computed However because many important spaces encountered in topology are topological manifolds simplicial complexes or CW complexes which are constructed by piecing together very simple patches a theorem such as that of Mayer and Vietoris is potentially of broad and deep applicability Mayer was introduced to topology by his colleague Vietoris when attending his lectures in 1926 and 1927 at a local university in Vienna 1 He was told about the conjectured result and a way to its solution and solved the question for the Betti numbers in 1929 2 He applied his results to the torus considered as the union of two cylinders 3 4 Vietoris later proved the full result for the homology groups in 1930 but did not express it as an exact sequence 5 The concept of an exact sequence only appeared in print in the 1952 book Foundations of Algebraic Topology by Samuel Eilenberg and Norman Steenrod 6 where the results of Mayer and Vietoris were expressed in the modern form 7 Basic versions for singular homology EditLet X be a topological space and A B be two subspaces whose interiors cover X The interiors of A and B need not be disjoint The Mayer Vietoris sequence in singular homology for the triad X A B is a long exact sequence relating the singular homology groups with coefficient group the integers Z of the spaces X A B and the intersection A B 8 There is an unreduced and a reduced version Unreduced version Edit For unreduced homology the Mayer Vietoris sequence states that the following sequence is exact 9 H n 1 X H n A B i j H n A H n B k l H n X H n 1 A B displaystyle cdots to H n 1 X xrightarrow partial H n A cap B xrightarrow left begin smallmatrix i j end smallmatrix right H n A oplus H n B xrightarrow k l H n X xrightarrow partial H n 1 A cap B to cdots H 0 A H 0 B k l H 0 X 0 displaystyle qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad qquad cdots to H 0 A oplus H 0 B xrightarrow k l H 0 X to 0 Here i A B A j A B B k A X and l B X are inclusion maps and displaystyle oplus denotes the direct sum of abelian groups Boundary map Edit Illustration of the boundary map on the torus where the 1 cycle x u v is the sum of two 1 chains whose boundary lies in the intersection of A and B The boundary maps lowering the dimension may be defined as follows 10 An element in Hn X is the homology class of an n cycle x which by barycentric subdivision for example can be written as the sum of two n chains u and v whose images lie wholly in A and B respectively Thus x u v 0 so that u v This implies that the images of both these boundary n 1 cycles are contained in the intersection A B Then x can be defined to be the class of u in Hn 1 A B Choosing another decomposition x u v does not affect u since u v x u v which implies u u v v and therefore u and u lie in the same homology class nor does choosing a different representative x since then x x 0 Notice that the maps in the Mayer Vietoris sequence depend on choosing an order for A and B In particular the boundary map changes sign if A and B are swapped Reduced version Edit For reduced homology there is also a Mayer Vietoris sequence under the assumption that A and B have non empty intersection 11 The sequence is identical for positive dimensions and ends as H 0 A B i j H 0 A H 0 B k l H 0 X 0 displaystyle cdots to tilde H 0 A cap B xrightarrow i j tilde H 0 A oplus tilde H 0 B xrightarrow k l tilde H 0 X to 0 Analogy with the Seifert van Kampen theorem Edit There is an analogy between the Mayer Vietoris sequence especially for homology groups of dimension 1 and the Seifert van Kampen theorem 10 12 Whenever A B displaystyle A cap B is path connected the reduced Mayer Vietoris sequence yields the isomorphism H 1 X H 1 A H 1 B Ker k l displaystyle H 1 X cong H 1 A oplus H 1 B text Ker k l where by exactness Ker k l Im i j displaystyle text Ker k l cong text Im i j This is precisely the abelianized statement of the Seifert van Kampen theorem Compare with the fact that H 1 X displaystyle H 1 X is the abelianization of the fundamental group p 1 X displaystyle pi 1 X when X displaystyle X is path connected 13 Basic applications Editk sphere Edit The decomposition for X S2 To completely compute the homology of the k sphere X Sk let A and B be two hemispheres of X with intersection homotopy equivalent to a k 1 dimensional equatorial sphere Since the k dimensional hemispheres are homeomorphic to k discs which are contractible the homology groups for A and B are trivial The Mayer Vietoris sequence for reduced homology groups then yields 0 H n S k H n 1 S k 1 0 displaystyle cdots longrightarrow 0 longrightarrow tilde H n left S k right xrightarrow overset partial tilde H n 1 left S k 1 right longrightarrow 0 longrightarrow cdots Exactness immediately implies that the map is an isomorphism Using the reduced homology of the 0 sphere two points as a base case it follows 14 H n S k d k n Z Z if n k 0 if n k displaystyle tilde H n left S k right cong delta kn mathbb Z begin cases mathbb Z amp mbox if n k 0 amp mbox if n neq k end cases where d is the Kronecker delta Such a complete understanding of the homology groups for spheres is in stark contrast with current knowledge of homotopy groups of spheres especially for the case n gt k about which little is known 15 Klein bottle Edit The Klein bottle fundamental polygon with appropriate edge identifications decomposed as two Mobius strips A in blue and B in red A slightly more difficult application of the Mayer Vietoris sequence is the calculation of the homology groups of the Klein bottle X One uses the decomposition of X as the union of two Mobius strips A and B glued along their boundary circle see illustration on the right Then A B and their intersection A B are homotopy equivalent to circles so the nontrivial part of the sequence yields 16 0 H 2 X Z a Z Z H 1 X 0 displaystyle 0 rightarrow tilde H 2 X rightarrow mathbb Z xrightarrow overset alpha mathbb Z oplus mathbb Z rightarrow tilde H 1 X rightarrow 0 and the trivial part implies vanishing homology for dimensions greater than 2 The central map a sends 1 to 2 2 since the boundary circle of a Mobius band wraps twice around the core circle In particular a is injective so homology of dimension 2 also vanishes Finally choosing 1 0 and 1 1 as a basis for Z2 it follows H n X d 1 n Z Z 2 Z Z 2 if n 1 0 if n 1 displaystyle tilde H n left X right cong delta 1n mathbb Z oplus mathbb Z 2 begin cases mathbb Z oplus mathbb Z 2 amp mbox if n 1 0 amp mbox if n neq 1 end cases Wedge sums Edit This decomposition of the wedge sum X of two 2 spheres K and L yields all the homology groups of X Let X be the wedge sum of two spaces K and L and suppose furthermore that the identified basepoint is a deformation retract of open neighborhoods U K and V L Letting A K V and B U L it follows that A B X and A B U V which is contractible by construction The reduced version of the sequence then yields by exactness 17 H n K L H n K H n L displaystyle tilde H n K vee L cong tilde H n K oplus tilde H n L for all dimensions n The illustration on the right shows X as the sum of two 2 spheres K and L For this specific case using the result from above for 2 spheres one has H n S 2 S 2 d 2 n Z Z Z Z if n 2 0 if n 2 displaystyle tilde H n left S 2 vee S 2 right cong delta 2n mathbb Z oplus mathbb Z left begin matrix mathbb Z oplus mathbb Z amp mbox if n 2 0 amp mbox if n neq 2 end matrix right Suspensions Edit This decomposition of the suspension X of the 0 sphere Y yields all the homology groups of X If X is the suspension SY of a space Y let A and B be the complements in X of the top and bottom vertices of the double cone respectively Then X is the union A B with A and B contractible Also the intersection A B is homotopy equivalent to Y Hence the Mayer Vietoris sequence yields for all n 18 H n S Y H n 1 Y displaystyle tilde H n SY cong tilde H n 1 Y The illustration on the right shows the 1 sphere X as the suspension of the 0 sphere Y Noting in general that the k sphere is the suspension of the k 1 sphere it is easy to derive the homology groups of the k sphere by induction as above Further discussion EditRelative form Edit A relative form of the Mayer Vietoris sequence also exists If Y X and is the union of the interiors of C A and D B then the exact sequence is 19 H n A B C D i j H n A C H n B D k l H n X Y H n 1 A B C D displaystyle cdots to H n A cap B C cap D xrightarrow i j H n A C oplus H n B D xrightarrow k l H n X Y xrightarrow partial H n 1 A cap B C cap D to cdots Naturality Edit The homology groups are natural in the sense that if f X 1 X 2 displaystyle f X 1 to X 2 is a continuous map then there is a canonical pushforward map of homology groups f H k X 1 H k X 2 displaystyle f H k X 1 to H k X 2 such that the composition of pushforwards is the pushforward of a composition that is g h g h displaystyle g circ h g circ h The Mayer Vietoris sequence is also natural in the sense that if X 1 A 1 B 1 X 2 A 2 B 2 and f A 1 A 2 f B 1 B 2 displaystyle begin matrix X 1 A 1 cup B 1 X 2 A 2 cup B 2 end matrix qquad text and qquad begin matrix f A 1 subset A 2 f B 1 subset B 2 end matrix then the connecting morphism of the Mayer Vietoris sequence displaystyle partial commutes with f displaystyle f 20 That is the following diagram commutes 21 the horizontal maps are the usual ones H n 1 X 1 H n A 1 B 1 H n A 1 H n B 1 H n X 1 H n 1 A 1 B 1 f f f f f H n 1 X 2 H n A 2 B 2 H n A 2 H n B 2 H n X 2 H n 1 A 2 B 2 displaystyle begin matrix cdots amp H n 1 X 1 amp longrightarrow amp H n A 1 cap B 1 amp longrightarrow amp H n A 1 oplus H n B 1 amp longrightarrow amp H n X 1 amp longrightarrow amp H n 1 A 1 cap B 1 amp longrightarrow amp cdots amp f Bigg downarrow amp amp f Bigg downarrow amp amp f Bigg downarrow amp amp f Bigg downarrow amp amp f Bigg downarrow cdots amp H n 1 X 2 amp longrightarrow amp H n A 2 cap B 2 amp longrightarrow amp H n A 2 oplus H n B 2 amp longrightarrow amp H n X 2 amp longrightarrow amp H n 1 A 2 cap B 2 amp longrightarrow amp cdots end matrix Cohomological versions Edit The Mayer Vietoris long exact sequence for singular cohomology groups with coefficient group G is dual to the homological version It is the following 22 H n X G H n A G H n B G H n A B G H n 1 X G displaystyle cdots to H n X G to H n A G oplus H n B G to H n A cap B G to H n 1 X G to cdots where the dimension preserving maps are restriction maps induced from inclusions and the co boundary maps are defined in a similar fashion to the homological version There is also a relative formulation As an important special case when G is the group of real numbers R and the underlying topological space has the additional structure of a smooth manifold the Mayer Vietoris sequence for de Rham cohomology is H n X r H n U H n V D H n U V d H n 1 X displaystyle cdots to H n X xrightarrow rho H n U oplus H n V xrightarrow Delta H n U cap V xrightarrow d H n 1 X to cdots where U V is an open cover of X r denotes the restriction map and D is the difference The map d displaystyle d is defined similarly as the map displaystyle partial from above It can be briefly described as follows For a cohomology class w represented by closed form w in U V express w as a difference of forms w U w V displaystyle omega U omega V via a partition of unity subordinate to the open cover U V for example The exterior derivative dwU and dwV agree on U V and therefore together define an n 1 form s on X One then has d w s For de Rham cohomology with compact supports there exists a flipped version of the above sequence H c n U V d H c n U H c n V S H c n X d H c n 1 U V displaystyle cdots to H c n U cap V xrightarrow delta H c n U oplus H c n V xrightarrow Sigma H c n X xrightarrow d H c n 1 U cap V to cdots where U displaystyle U V displaystyle V X displaystyle X are as above d displaystyle delta is the signed inclusion map d w i U w i V w displaystyle delta omega mapsto i U omega i V omega where i U displaystyle i U extends a form with compact support to a form on U displaystyle U by zero and S displaystyle Sigma is the sum 23 Derivation Edit Consider the long exact sequence associated to the short exact sequences of chain groups constituent groups of chain complexes 0 C n A B a C n A C n B b C n A B 0 displaystyle 0 to C n A cap B xrightarrow alpha C n A oplus C n B xrightarrow beta C n A B to 0 where a x x x b x y x y and Cn A B is the chain group consisting of sums of chains in A and chains in B 9 It is a fact that the singular n simplices of X whose images are contained in either A or B generate all of the homology group Hn X 24 In other words Hn A B is isomorphic to Hn X This gives the Mayer Vietoris sequence for singular homology The same computation applied to the short exact sequences of vector spaces of differential forms 0 W n X W n U W n V W n U V 0 displaystyle 0 to Omega n X to Omega n U oplus Omega n V to Omega n U cap V to 0 yields the Mayer Vietoris sequence for de Rham cohomology 25 From a formal point of view the Mayer Vietoris sequence can be derived from the Eilenberg Steenrod axioms for homology theories using the long exact sequence in homology 26 Other homology theories Edit The derivation of the Mayer Vietoris sequence from the Eilenberg Steenrod axioms does not require the dimension axiom 27 so in addition to existing in ordinary cohomology theories it holds in extraordinary cohomology theories such as topological K theory and cobordism Sheaf cohomology Edit From the point of view of sheaf cohomology the Mayer Vietoris sequence is related to Cech cohomology Specifically it arises from the degeneration of the spectral sequence that relates Cech cohomology to sheaf cohomology sometimes called the Mayer Vietoris spectral sequence in the case where the open cover used to compute the Cech cohomology consists of two open sets 28 This spectral sequence exists in arbitrary topoi 29 See also EditExcision theorem Zig zag lemmaNotes Edit Hirzebruch 1999 Mayer 1929 Dieudonne 1989 p 39 Mayer 1929 p 41 Vietoris 1930 Corry 2004 p 345 Eilenberg amp Steenrod 1952 Theorem 15 3 Eilenberg amp Steenrod 1952 15 a b Hatcher 2002 p 149 a b Hatcher 2002 p 150 Spanier 1966 p 187 Massey 1984 p 240 Hatcher 2002 Theorem 2A 1 p 166 Hatcher 2002 Example 2 46 p 150 Hatcher 2002 p 384 Hatcher 2002 p 151 Hatcher 2002 Exercise 31 on page 158 Hatcher 2002 Exercise 32 on page 158 Hatcher 2002 p 152 Massey 1984 p 208 Eilenberg amp Steenrod 1952 Theorem 15 4 Hatcher 2002 p 203 Bott Raoul Differential forms in algebraic topology Tu Loring W New York ISBN 978 0 387 90613 3 OCLC 7597142 Hatcher 2002 Proposition 2 21 p 119 Bott amp Tu 1982 I 2 Hatcher 2002 p 162 Kōno amp Tamaki 2006 pp 25 26 Dimca 2004 pp 35 36 Verdier 1972 SGA 4 V 3 References EditBott Raoul Tu Loring W 1982 Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90613 3 Corry Leo 2004 Modern Algebra and the Rise of Mathematical Structures Birkhauser p 345 ISBN 3 7643 7002 5 Dieudonne Jean 1989 A History of Algebraic and Differential Topology 1900 1960 Birkhauser p 39 ISBN 0 8176 3388 X Dimca Alexandru 2004 Sheaves in topology Universitext Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 642 18868 8 ISBN 978 3 540 20665 1 MR 2050072Eilenberg Samuel Steenrod Norman 1952 Foundations of Algebraic Topology Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 07965 3 Hatcher Allen 2002 Algebraic Topology Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79540 1 MR 1867354 Hirzebruch Friedrich 1999 Emmy Noether and Topology in Teicher M ed The Heritage of Emmy Noether Israel Mathematical Conference Proceedings Bar Ilan University American Mathematical Society Oxford University Press pp 61 63 ISBN 978 0 19 851045 1 OCLC 223099225 Kōno Akira Tamaki Dai 2006 2002 Generalized cohomology Iwanami Series in Modern Mathematics Translations of Mathematical Monographs vol 230 Translated from the 2002 Japanese edition by Tamaki ed Providence RI American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 3514 2 MR 2225848Massey William 1984 Algebraic Topology An Introduction Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 90271 5 Mayer Walther 1929 Uber abstrakte Topologie Monatshefte fur Mathematik 36 1 1 42 doi 10 1007 BF02307601 ISSN 0026 9255 in German Spanier Edwin 1966 Algebraic Topology Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 94426 5 Verdier Jean Louis 1972 Cohomologie dans les topos in Artin Michael Grothendieck Alexander Verdier Jean Louis eds Seminaire de Geometrie Algebrique du Bois Marie 1963 64 Theorie des topos et cohomologie etale des schemas SGA 4 Tome 2 Lecture Notes in Mathematics in French vol 270 Berlin Heidelberg Springer Verlag p 1 doi 10 1007 BFb0061320 ISBN 978 3 540 06012 3Vietoris Leopold 1930 Uber die Homologiegruppen der Vereinigung zweier Komplexe Monatshefte fur Mathematik 37 159 62 doi 10 1007 BF01696765 in German Further reading EditReitberger Heinrich 2002 Leopold Vietoris 1891 2002 PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 49 20 ISSN 0002 9920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mayer Vietoris sequence amp oldid 1105670779, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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