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Postnikov system

In homotopy theory, a branch of algebraic topology, a Postnikov system (or Postnikov tower) is a way of decomposing a topological space's homotopy groups using an inverse system of topological spaces whose homotopy type at degree agrees with the truncated homotopy type of the original space . Postnikov systems were introduced by, and are named after, Mikhail Postnikov.

Definition

A Postnikov system of a path-connected space   is an inverse system of spaces

 

with a sequence of maps   compatible with the inverse system such that

  1. The map   induces an isomorphism   for every  .
  2.   for  .[1]: 410 
  3. Each map   is a fibration, and so the fiber   is an Eilenberg–MacLane space,  .

The first two conditions imply that   is also a  -space. More generally, if   is  -connected, then   is a  -space and all   for   are contractible. Note the third condition is only included optionally by some authors.

Existence

Postnikov systems exist on connected CW complexes,[1]: 354  and there is a weak homotopy-equivalence between   and its inverse limit, so

 ,

showing that   is a CW approximation of its inverse limit. They can be constructed on a CW complex by iteratively killing off homotopy groups. If we have a map   representing a homotopy class  , we can take the pushout along the boundary map  , killing off the homotopy class. For   this process can be repeated for all  , giving a space which has vanishing homotopy groups  . Using the fact that  can be constructed from   by killing off all homotopy maps  , we obtain a map  .

Main property

One of the main properties of the Postnikov tower, which makes it so powerful to study while computing cohomology, is the fact the spaces   are homotopic to a CW complex   which differs from   only by cells of dimension  .

Homotopy classification of fibrations

The sequence of fibrations  [2] have homotopically defined invariants, meaning the homotopy classes of maps  , give a well defined homotopy type  . The homotopy class of   comes from looking at the homotopy class of the classifying map for the fiber  . The associated classifying map is

 ,

hence the homotopy class   is classified by a homotopy class

 

called the n-th Postnikov invariant of  , since the homotopy classes of maps to Eilenberg-Maclane spaces gives cohomology with coefficients in the associated abelian group.

Fiber sequence for spaces with two nontrivial homotopy groups

One of the special cases of the homotopy classification is the homotopy class of spaces   such that there exists a fibration

 

giving a homotopy type with two non-trivial homotopy groups,  , and  . Then, from the previous discussion, the fibration map   gives a cohomology class in

 ,

which can also be interpreted as a group cohomology class. This space   can be considered a higher local system.

Examples of Postnikov towers

Postnikov tower of a K(G,n)

One of the conceptually simplest cases of a Postnikov tower is that of the Eilenberg–Maclane space  . This gives a tower with

 

Postnikov tower of S2

The Postnikov tower for the sphere   is a special case whose first few terms can be understood explicitly. Since we have the first few homotopy groups from the simply connectedness of  , degree theory of spheres, and the Hopf fibration, giving   for  , hence

 

Then,  , and   comes from a pullback sequence

 

which is an element in

 .

If this was trivial it would imply  . But, this is not the case! In fact, this is responsible for why strict infinity groupoids don't model homotopy types.[3] Computing this invariant requires more work, but can be explicitly found.[4] This is the quadratic form   on   coming from the Hopf fibration  . Note that each element in   gives a different homotopy 3-type.

Homotopy groups of spheres

One application of the Postnikov tower is the computation of homotopy groups of spheres.[5] For an  -dimensional sphere   we can use the Hurewicz theorem to show each   is contractible for  , since the theorem implies that the lower homotopy groups are trivial. Recall there is a spectral sequence for any Serre fibration, such as the fibration

 .

We can then form a homological spectral sequence with  -terms

 .

And the first non-trivial map to  ,

 ,

equivalently written as

 .

If it's easy to compute   and  , then we can get information about what this map looks like. In particular, if it's an isomorphism, we obtain a computation of  . For the case  , this can be computed explicitly using the path fibration for  , the main property of the Postnikov tower for   (giving  , and the universal coefficient theorem giving  . Moreover, because of the Freudenthal suspension theorem this actually gives the stable homotopy group   since   is stable for  .

Note that similar techniques can be applied using the Whitehead tower (below) for computing   and  , giving the first two non-trivial stable homotopy groups of spheres.

Postnikov towers of spectra

In addition to the classical Postnikov tower, there is a notion of Postnikov towers in stable homotopy theory constructed on spectra[6]pg 85-86.

Definition

For a spectrum   a postnikov tower of   is a diagram in the homotopy category of spectra,  , given by

 ,

with maps

 

commuting with the   maps. Then, this tower is a Postnikov tower if the following two conditions are satisfied:

  1.   for  ,
  2.   is an isomorphism for  ,

where   are stable homotopy groups of a spectrum. It turns out every spectrum has a Postnikov tower and this tower can be constructed using a similar kind of inductive procedure as the one given above.

Whitehead tower

Given a CW complex  , there is a dual construction to the Postnikov tower called the Whitehead tower. Instead of killing off all higher homotopy groups, the Whitehead tower iteratively kills off lower homotopy groups. This is given by a tower of CW complexes,

 ,

where

  1. The lower homotopy groups are zero, so   for  .
  2. The induced map   is an isomorphism for  .
  3. The maps   are fibrations with fiber  .

Implications

Notice   is the universal cover of   since it is a covering space with a simply connected cover. Furthermore, each   is the universal  -connected cover of  .

Construction

The spaces   in the Whitehead tower are constructed inductively. If we construct a   by killing off the higher homotopy groups in  ,[7] we get an embedding  . If we let

 

for some fixed basepoint  , then the induced map   is a fiber bundle with fiber homeomorphic to

 ,

and so we have a Serre fibration

 .

Using the long exact sequence in homotopy theory, we have that   for  ,   for  , and finally, there is an exact sequence

 ,

where if the middle morphism is an isomorphism, the other two groups are zero. This can be checked by looking at the inclusion   and noting that the Eilenberg–Maclane space has a cellular decomposition

 ; thus,
 ,

giving the desired result.

As a homotopy fiber

Another way to view the components in the Whitehead tower is as a homotopy fiber. If we take

 

from the Postnikov tower, we get a space   which has

 

Whitehead tower of spectra

The dual notion of the Whitehead tower can be defined in a similar manner using homotopy fibers in the category of spectra. If we let

 

then this can be organized in a tower giving connected covers of a spectrum. This is a widely used construction[8][9][10] in bordism theory because the coverings of the unoriented cobordism spectrum   gives other bordism theories[10]

 

such as string bordism.

Whitehead tower and string theory

In Spin geometry the   group is constructed as the universal cover of the Special orthogonal group  , so   is a fibration, giving the first term in the Whitehead tower. There are physically relevant interpretations for the higher parts in this tower, which can be read as

 

where   is the  -connected cover of   called the string group, and   is the  -connected cover called the fivebrane group.[11][12]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Hatcher, Allen. Algebraic Topology (PDF).
  2. ^ Kahn, Donald W. (1963-03-01). "Induced maps for Postnikov systems" (PDF). Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 107 (3): 432–450. doi:10.1090/s0002-9947-1963-0150777-x. ISSN 0002-9947.
  3. ^ Simpson, Carlos (1998-10-09). "Homotopy types of strict 3-groupoids". arXiv:math/9810059.
  4. ^ Eilenberg, Samuel; MacLane, Saunders (1954). "On the Groups  , III: Operations and Obstructions". Annals of Mathematics. 60 (3): 513–557. doi:10.2307/1969849. ISSN 0003-486X. JSTOR 1969849.
  5. ^ Laurențiu-George, Maxim. "Spectral sequences and homotopy groups of spheres" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 19 May 2017.
  6. ^ On Thom Spectra, Orientability, and Cobordism. Springer Monographs in Mathematics. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer. 1998. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-77751-9. ISBN 978-3-540-62043-3.
  7. ^ Maxim, Laurențiu. "Lecture Notes on Homotopy Theory and Applications" (PDF). p. 66. (PDF) from the original on 16 February 2020.
  8. ^ Hill, Michael A. (2009). "The string bordism of BE8 and BE8 × BE8 through dimension 14". Illinois Journal of Mathematics. 53 (1): 183–196. doi:10.1215/ijm/1264170845. ISSN 0019-2082.
  9. ^ Bunke, Ulrich; Naumann, Niko (2014-12-01). "Secondary invariants for string bordism and topological modular forms". Bulletin des Sciences Mathématiques. 138 (8): 912–970. doi:10.1016/j.bulsci.2014.05.002. ISSN 0007-4497.
  10. ^ a b Szymik, Markus (2019). "String bordism and chromatic characteristics". In Daniel G. Davis; Hans-Werner Henn; J. F. Jardine; Mark W. Johnson; Charles Rezk (eds.). Homotopy Theory: Tools and Applications. Contemporary Mathematics. Vol. 729. pp. 239–254. arXiv:1312.4658. doi:10.1090/conm/729/14698. ISBN 9781470442446. S2CID 56461325.
  11. ^ "Mathematical physics – Physical application of Postnikov tower, String(n) and Fivebrane(n)". Physics Stack Exchange. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  12. ^ "at.algebraic topology – What do Whitehead towers have to do with physics?". MathOverflow. Retrieved 2020-02-16.

postnikov, system, homotopy, theory, branch, algebraic, topology, postnikov, tower, decomposing, topological, space, homotopy, groups, using, inverse, system, topological, spaces, whose, homotopy, type, degree, displaystyle, agrees, with, truncated, homotopy, . In homotopy theory a branch of algebraic topology a Postnikov system or Postnikov tower is a way of decomposing a topological space s homotopy groups using an inverse system of topological spaces whose homotopy type at degree k displaystyle k agrees with the truncated homotopy type of the original space X displaystyle X Postnikov systems were introduced by and are named after Mikhail Postnikov Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Existence 1 2 Main property 1 3 Homotopy classification of fibrations 1 3 1 Fiber sequence for spaces with two nontrivial homotopy groups 2 Examples of Postnikov towers 2 1 Postnikov tower of a K G n 2 2 Postnikov tower of S2 3 Homotopy groups of spheres 4 Postnikov towers of spectra 4 1 Definition 5 Whitehead tower 5 1 Implications 5 2 Construction 5 3 As a homotopy fiber 6 Whitehead tower of spectra 7 Whitehead tower and string theory 8 See also 9 ReferencesDefinition EditA Postnikov system of a path connected space X displaystyle X is an inverse system of spaces X n p n X n 1 p n 1 p 3 X 2 p 2 X 1 p 1 displaystyle cdots to X n xrightarrow p n X n 1 xrightarrow p n 1 cdots xrightarrow p 3 X 2 xrightarrow p 2 X 1 xrightarrow p 1 with a sequence of maps ϕ n X X n displaystyle phi n colon X to X n compatible with the inverse system such that The map ϕ n X X n displaystyle phi n colon X to X n induces an isomorphism p i X p i X n displaystyle pi i X to pi i X n for every i n displaystyle i leq n p i X n 0 displaystyle pi i X n 0 for i gt n displaystyle i gt n 1 410 Each map p n X n X n 1 displaystyle p n colon X n to X n 1 is a fibration and so the fiber F n displaystyle F n is an Eilenberg MacLane space K p n X n displaystyle K pi n X n The first two conditions imply that X 1 displaystyle X 1 is also a K p 1 X 1 displaystyle K pi 1 X 1 space More generally if X displaystyle X is n 1 displaystyle n 1 connected then X n displaystyle X n is a K p n X n displaystyle K pi n X n space and all X i displaystyle X i for i lt n displaystyle i lt n are contractible Note the third condition is only included optionally by some authors Existence Edit Postnikov systems exist on connected CW complexes 1 354 and there is a weak homotopy equivalence between X displaystyle X and its inverse limit so X lim X n displaystyle X simeq varprojlim X n showing that X displaystyle X is a CW approximation of its inverse limit They can be constructed on a CW complex by iteratively killing off homotopy groups If we have a map f S n X displaystyle f colon S n to X representing a homotopy class f p n X displaystyle f in pi n X we can take the pushout along the boundary map S n e n 1 displaystyle S n to e n 1 killing off the homotopy class For X m displaystyle X m this process can be repeated for all n gt m displaystyle n gt m giving a space which has vanishing homotopy groups p n X m displaystyle pi n X m Using the fact that X n 1 displaystyle X n 1 can be constructed from X n displaystyle X n by killing off all homotopy maps S n X n displaystyle S n to X n we obtain a map X n X n 1 displaystyle X n to X n 1 Main property Edit One of the main properties of the Postnikov tower which makes it so powerful to study while computing cohomology is the fact the spaces X n displaystyle X n are homotopic to a CW complex X n displaystyle mathfrak X n which differs from X displaystyle X only by cells of dimension n 2 displaystyle geq n 2 Homotopy classification of fibrations Edit The sequence of fibrations p n X n X n 1 displaystyle p n X n to X n 1 2 have homotopically defined invariants meaning the homotopy classes of maps p n displaystyle p n give a well defined homotopy type X Ob h T o p displaystyle X in operatorname Ob hTop The homotopy class of p n displaystyle p n comes from looking at the homotopy class of the classifying map for the fiber K p n X n displaystyle K pi n X n The associated classifying map is X n 1 B K p n X n K p n X n 1 displaystyle X n 1 to B K pi n X n simeq K pi n X n 1 hence the homotopy class p n displaystyle p n is classified by a homotopy class p n X n 1 K p n X n 1 H n 1 X n 1 p n X displaystyle p n in X n 1 K pi n X n 1 cong H n 1 X n 1 pi n X called the n th Postnikov invariant of X displaystyle X since the homotopy classes of maps to Eilenberg Maclane spaces gives cohomology with coefficients in the associated abelian group Fiber sequence for spaces with two nontrivial homotopy groups Edit One of the special cases of the homotopy classification is the homotopy class of spaces X displaystyle X such that there exists a fibration K A n X p 1 X displaystyle K A n to X to pi 1 X giving a homotopy type with two non trivial homotopy groups p 1 X G displaystyle pi 1 X G and p n X A displaystyle pi n X A Then from the previous discussion the fibration map B G K A n 1 displaystyle BG to K A n 1 gives a cohomology class in H n 1 B G A displaystyle H n 1 BG A which can also be interpreted as a group cohomology class This space X displaystyle X can be considered a higher local system Examples of Postnikov towers EditPostnikov tower of a K G n Edit One of the conceptually simplest cases of a Postnikov tower is that of the Eilenberg Maclane space K G n displaystyle K G n This gives a tower with X i for i lt n X i K G n for i n displaystyle begin matrix X i simeq amp text for i lt n X i simeq K G n amp text for i geq n end matrix Postnikov tower of S2 Edit The Postnikov tower for the sphere S 2 displaystyle S 2 is a special case whose first few terms can be understood explicitly Since we have the first few homotopy groups from the simply connectedness of S 2 displaystyle S 2 degree theory of spheres and the Hopf fibration giving p k S 2 p k S 3 displaystyle pi k S 2 simeq pi k S 3 for k 3 displaystyle k geq 3 hence p 1 S 2 0 p 2 S 2 Z p 3 S 2 Z p 4 S 2 Z 2 displaystyle begin matrix pi 1 S 2 amp 0 pi 2 S 2 amp mathbb Z pi 3 S 2 amp mathbb Z pi 4 S 2 amp mathbb Z 2 end matrix Then X 2 S 2 2 K Z 2 displaystyle X 2 S 2 2 K mathbb Z 2 and X 3 displaystyle X 3 comes from a pullback sequence X 3 X 2 K Z 4 displaystyle begin matrix X 3 amp to amp downarrow amp amp downarrow X 2 amp to amp K mathbb Z 4 end matrix which is an element in p 3 K Z 2 K Z 4 H 4 C P Z displaystyle p 3 in K mathbb Z 2 K mathbb Z 4 cong H 4 mathbb CP infty mathbb Z If this was trivial it would imply X 3 K Z 2 K Z 3 displaystyle X 3 simeq K mathbb Z 2 times K mathbb Z 3 But this is not the case In fact this is responsible for why strict infinity groupoids don t model homotopy types 3 Computing this invariant requires more work but can be explicitly found 4 This is the quadratic form x x 2 displaystyle x mapsto x 2 on Z Z displaystyle mathbb Z to mathbb Z coming from the Hopf fibration S 3 S 2 displaystyle S 3 to S 2 Note that each element in H 4 C P displaystyle H 4 mathbb CP infty gives a different homotopy 3 type Homotopy groups of spheres EditOne application of the Postnikov tower is the computation of homotopy groups of spheres 5 For an n displaystyle n dimensional sphere S n displaystyle S n we can use the Hurewicz theorem to show each S i n displaystyle S i n is contractible for i lt n displaystyle i lt n since the theorem implies that the lower homotopy groups are trivial Recall there is a spectral sequence for any Serre fibration such as the fibration K p n 1 X n 1 F n 1 S n 1 n S n n K Z n displaystyle K pi n 1 X n 1 simeq F n 1 to S n 1 n to S n n simeq K mathbb Z n We can then form a homological spectral sequence with E 2 displaystyle E 2 terms E p q 2 H p K Z n H q K p n 1 S n n 1 displaystyle E p q 2 H p left K mathbb Z n H q left K left pi n 1 left S n right n 1 right right right And the first non trivial map to p n 1 S n displaystyle pi n 1 left S n right d 0 n 1 n 1 H n 2 K Z n H 0 K Z n H n 1 K p n 1 S n n 1 displaystyle d 0 n 1 n 1 colon H n 2 K mathbb Z n to H 0 left K mathbb Z n H n 1 left K left pi n 1 left S n right n 1 right right right equivalently written as d 0 n 1 n 1 H n 2 K Z n p n 1 S n displaystyle d 0 n 1 n 1 colon H n 2 K mathbb Z n to pi n 1 left S n right If it s easy to compute H n 1 S n 1 n displaystyle H n 1 left S n 1 n right and H n 2 S n 2 n displaystyle H n 2 left S n 2 n right then we can get information about what this map looks like In particular if it s an isomorphism we obtain a computation of p n 1 S n displaystyle pi n 1 left S n right For the case n 3 displaystyle n 3 this can be computed explicitly using the path fibration for K Z 3 displaystyle K mathbb Z 3 the main property of the Postnikov tower for X 4 S 3 cells of dimension 6 displaystyle mathfrak X 4 simeq S 3 cup text cells of dimension geq 6 giving H 4 X 4 H 5 X 4 0 displaystyle H 4 X 4 H 5 X 4 0 and the universal coefficient theorem giving p 4 S 3 Z 2 displaystyle pi 4 left S 3 right mathbb Z 2 Moreover because of the Freudenthal suspension theorem this actually gives the stable homotopy group p 1 S displaystyle pi 1 mathbb S since p n k S n displaystyle pi n k left S n right is stable for n k 2 displaystyle n geq k 2 Note that similar techniques can be applied using the Whitehead tower below for computing p 4 S 3 displaystyle pi 4 left S 3 right and p 5 S 3 displaystyle pi 5 left S 3 right giving the first two non trivial stable homotopy groups of spheres Postnikov towers of spectra EditIn addition to the classical Postnikov tower there is a notion of Postnikov towers in stable homotopy theory constructed on spectra 6 pg 85 86 Definition Edit For a spectrum E displaystyle E a postnikov tower of E displaystyle E is a diagram in the homotopy category of spectra Ho Spectra displaystyle text Ho textbf Spectra given by E 2 p 2 E 1 p 1 E 0 displaystyle cdots to E 2 xrightarrow p 2 E 1 xrightarrow p 1 E 0 with maps t n E E n displaystyle tau n colon E to E n commuting with the p n displaystyle p n maps Then this tower is a Postnikov tower if the following two conditions are satisfied p i S E n 0 displaystyle pi i mathbb S left E n right 0 for i gt n displaystyle i gt n t n p i S E p i S E n displaystyle left tau n right colon pi i mathbb S E to pi i mathbb S left E n right is an isomorphism for i n displaystyle i leq n where p i S displaystyle pi i mathbb S are stable homotopy groups of a spectrum It turns out every spectrum has a Postnikov tower and this tower can be constructed using a similar kind of inductive procedure as the one given above Whitehead tower EditGiven a CW complex X displaystyle X there is a dual construction to the Postnikov tower called the Whitehead tower Instead of killing off all higher homotopy groups the Whitehead tower iteratively kills off lower homotopy groups This is given by a tower of CW complexes X 3 X 2 X 1 X displaystyle cdots to X 3 to X 2 to X 1 to X where The lower homotopy groups are zero so p i X n 0 displaystyle pi i X n 0 for i n displaystyle i leq n The induced map p i p i X n p i X displaystyle pi i colon pi i X n to pi i X is an isomorphism for i gt n displaystyle i gt n The maps X n X n 1 displaystyle X n to X n 1 are fibrations with fiber K p n X n 1 displaystyle K pi n X n 1 Implications Edit Notice X 1 X displaystyle X 1 to X is the universal cover of X displaystyle X since it is a covering space with a simply connected cover Furthermore each X n X displaystyle X n to X is the universal n displaystyle n connected cover of X displaystyle X Construction Edit The spaces X n displaystyle X n in the Whitehead tower are constructed inductively If we construct a K p n 1 X n 1 displaystyle K left pi n 1 X n 1 right by killing off the higher homotopy groups in X n displaystyle X n 7 we get an embedding X n K p n 1 X n 1 displaystyle X n to K pi n 1 X n 1 If we let X n 1 f I K p n 1 X n 1 f 0 p and f 1 X n displaystyle X n 1 left f colon I to K left pi n 1 X n 1 right f 0 p text and f 1 in X n right for some fixed basepoint p displaystyle p then the induced map X n 1 X n displaystyle X n 1 to X n is a fiber bundle with fiber homeomorphic to W K p n 1 X n 1 K p n 1 X n displaystyle Omega K left pi n 1 X n 1 right simeq K left pi n 1 X n right and so we have a Serre fibration K p n 1 X n X n X n 1 displaystyle K left pi n 1 X n right to X n to X n 1 Using the long exact sequence in homotopy theory we have that p i X n p i X n 1 displaystyle pi i X n pi i left X n 1 right for i n 1 displaystyle i geq n 1 p i X n p i X n 1 0 displaystyle pi i X n pi i X n 1 0 for i lt n 1 displaystyle i lt n 1 and finally there is an exact sequence 0 p n 1 X n 1 p n 1 X n p n K p n 1 X n p n X n 1 0 displaystyle 0 to pi n 1 left X n 1 to pi n 1 X n right mathrel overset partial rightarrow pi n K left pi n 1 X n right to pi n left X n 1 right to 0 where if the middle morphism is an isomorphism the other two groups are zero This can be checked by looking at the inclusion X n K p n 1 X n 1 displaystyle X n to K pi n 1 X n 1 and noting that the Eilenberg Maclane space has a cellular decomposition X n 1 cells of dimension n 2 displaystyle X n 1 cup text cells of dimension geq n 2 thus p n 1 X n p n 1 K p n 1 X n 1 p n K p n 1 X n displaystyle pi n 1 left X n right cong pi n 1 left K left pi n 1 X n 1 right right cong pi n left K left pi n 1 X n right right giving the desired result As a homotopy fiber Edit Another way to view the components in the Whitehead tower is as a homotopy fiber If we take Hofiber ϕ n X X n displaystyle text Hofiber phi n X to X n from the Postnikov tower we get a space X n displaystyle X n which has p k X n p k X k gt n 0 k n displaystyle pi k X n begin cases pi k X amp k gt n 0 amp k leq n end cases Whitehead tower of spectra EditThe dual notion of the Whitehead tower can be defined in a similar manner using homotopy fibers in the category of spectra If we let E n Hofiber t n E E n displaystyle E langle n rangle operatorname Hofiber left tau n E to E n right then this can be organized in a tower giving connected covers of a spectrum This is a widely used construction 8 9 10 in bordism theory because the coverings of the unoriented cobordism spectrum M O displaystyle M text O gives other bordism theories 10 M String M O 8 M Spin M O 4 M SO M O 2 displaystyle begin aligned M text String amp M text O langle 8 rangle M text Spin amp M text O langle 4 rangle M text SO amp M text O langle 2 rangle end aligned such as string bordism Whitehead tower and string theory EditIn Spin geometry the Spin n displaystyle operatorname Spin n group is constructed as the universal cover of the Special orthogonal group SO n displaystyle operatorname SO n so Z 2 Spin n S O n displaystyle mathbb Z 2 to operatorname Spin n to SO n is a fibration giving the first term in the Whitehead tower There are physically relevant interpretations for the higher parts in this tower which can be read as Fivebrane n String n Spin n SO n displaystyle cdots to operatorname Fivebrane n to operatorname String n to operatorname Spin n to operatorname SO n where String n displaystyle operatorname String n is the 3 displaystyle 3 connected cover of SO n displaystyle operatorname SO n called the string group and Fivebrane n displaystyle operatorname Fivebrane n is the 7 displaystyle 7 connected cover called the fivebrane group 11 12 See also EditAdams spectral sequence Eilenberg MacLane space CW complex Obstruction theory Stable homotopy theory Homotopy groups of spheres Higher groupReferences Edit a b Hatcher Allen Algebraic Topology PDF Kahn Donald W 1963 03 01 Induced maps for Postnikov systems PDF Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 107 3 432 450 doi 10 1090 s0002 9947 1963 0150777 x ISSN 0002 9947 Simpson Carlos 1998 10 09 Homotopy types of strict 3 groupoids arXiv math 9810059 Eilenberg Samuel MacLane Saunders 1954 On the Groups H P n displaystyle H Pi n III Operations and Obstructions Annals of Mathematics 60 3 513 557 doi 10 2307 1969849 ISSN 0003 486X JSTOR 1969849 Laurențiu George Maxim Spectral sequences and homotopy groups of spheres PDF Archived PDF from the original on 19 May 2017 On Thom Spectra Orientability and Cobordism Springer Monographs in Mathematics Berlin Heidelberg Springer 1998 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 77751 9 ISBN 978 3 540 62043 3 Maxim Laurențiu Lecture Notes on Homotopy Theory and Applications PDF p 66 Archived PDF from the original on 16 February 2020 Hill Michael A 2009 The string bordism of BE8 and BE8 BE8 through dimension 14 Illinois Journal of Mathematics 53 1 183 196 doi 10 1215 ijm 1264170845 ISSN 0019 2082 Bunke Ulrich Naumann Niko 2014 12 01 Secondary invariants for string bordism and topological modular forms Bulletin des Sciences Mathematiques 138 8 912 970 doi 10 1016 j bulsci 2014 05 002 ISSN 0007 4497 a b Szymik Markus 2019 String bordism and chromatic characteristics In Daniel G Davis Hans Werner Henn J F Jardine Mark W Johnson Charles Rezk eds Homotopy Theory Tools and Applications Contemporary Mathematics Vol 729 pp 239 254 arXiv 1312 4658 doi 10 1090 conm 729 14698 ISBN 9781470442446 S2CID 56461325 Mathematical physics Physical application of Postnikov tower String n and Fivebrane n Physics Stack Exchange Retrieved 2020 02 16 at algebraic topology What do Whitehead towers have to do with physics MathOverflow Retrieved 2020 02 16 Postnikov Mikhail M 1951 Determination of the homology groups of a space by means of the homotopy invariants Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 76 359 362 Lecture Notes on Homotopy Theory and Applications Determination of the Second Homology and Cohomology Groups of a Space by Means of Homotopy Invariants gives accessible examples of postnikov invariants Hatcher Allen 2002 Algebraic topology Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79540 1 Handwritten notes PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2020 02 13 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postnikov system amp oldid 1119097222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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