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Rational homotopy theory

In mathematics and specifically in topology, rational homotopy theory is a simplified version of homotopy theory for topological spaces, in which all torsion in the homotopy groups is ignored.[1] It was founded by Dennis Sullivan (1977) and Daniel Quillen (1969).[1] This simplification of homotopy theory makes certain calculations much easier.

Rational homotopy types of simply connected spaces can be identified with (isomorphism classes of) certain algebraic objects called Sullivan minimal models, which are commutative differential graded algebras over the rational numbers satisfying certain conditions.

A geometric application was the theorem of Sullivan and Micheline Vigué-Poirrier (1976): every simply connected closed Riemannian manifold X whose rational cohomology ring is not generated by one element has infinitely many geometrically distinct closed geodesics.[2] The proof used rational homotopy theory to show that the Betti numbers of the free loop space of X are unbounded. The theorem then follows from a 1969 result of Detlef Gromoll and Wolfgang Meyer.

Rational spaces edit

A continuous map   of simply connected topological spaces is called a rational homotopy equivalence if it induces an isomorphism on homotopy groups tensored with the rational numbers  .[1] Equivalently: f is a rational homotopy equivalence if and only if it induces an isomorphism on singular homology groups with rational coefficients.[3] The rational homotopy category (of simply connected spaces) is defined to be the localization of the category of simply connected spaces with respect to rational homotopy equivalences. The goal of rational homotopy theory is to understand this category (i.e. to determine the information that can be recovered from rational homotopy equivalences).

One basic result is that the rational homotopy category is equivalent to a full subcategory of the homotopy category of topological spaces, the subcategory of rational spaces. By definition, a rational space is a simply connected CW complex all of whose homotopy groups are vector spaces over the rational numbers. For any simply connected CW complex  , there is a rational space  , unique up to homotopy equivalence, with a map   that induces an isomorphism on homotopy groups tensored with the rational numbers.[4] The space   is called the rationalization of  . This is a special case of Sullivan's construction of the localization of a space at a given set of prime numbers.

One obtains equivalent definitions using homology rather than homotopy groups. Namely, a simply connected CW complex   is a rational space if and only if its homology groups   are rational vector spaces for all  .[5] The rationalization of a simply connected CW complex   is the unique rational space   (up to homotopy equivalence) with a map   that induces an isomorphism on rational homology. Thus, one has

 

and

 

for all  .

These results for simply connected spaces extend with little change to nilpotent spaces (spaces whose fundamental group is nilpotent and acts nilpotently on the higher homotopy groups).

Computing the homotopy groups of spheres is a central open problem in homotopy theory. However, the rational homotopy groups of spheres were computed by Jean-Pierre Serre in 1951:

 

and

 

This suggests the possibility of describing the whole rational homotopy category in a practically computable way. Rational homotopy theory has realized much of that goal.

In homotopy theory, spheres and Eilenberg–MacLane spaces are two very different types of basic spaces from which all spaces can be built. In rational homotopy theory, these two types of spaces become much closer. In particular, Serre's calculation implies that   is the Eilenberg–MacLane space  . More generally, let X be any space whose rational cohomology ring is a free graded-commutative algebra (a tensor product of a polynomial ring on generators of even degree and an exterior algebra on generators of odd degree). Then the rationalization   is a product of Eilenberg–MacLane spaces. The hypothesis on the cohomology ring applies to any compact Lie group (or more generally, any loop space).[6] For example, for the unitary group SU(n),

 

Cohomology ring and homotopy Lie algebra edit

There are two basic invariants of a space X in the rational homotopy category: the rational cohomology ring   and the homotopy Lie algebra  . The rational cohomology is a graded-commutative algebra over  , and the homotopy groups form a graded Lie algebra via the Whitehead product. (More precisely, writing   for the loop space of X, we have that   is a graded Lie algebra over  . In view of the isomorphism  , this just amounts to a shift of the grading by 1.) For example, Serre's theorem above says that   is the free graded Lie algebra on one generator of degree  .

Another way to think of the homotopy Lie algebra is that the homology of the loop space of X is the universal enveloping algebra of the homotopy Lie algebra:[7]

 

Conversely, one can reconstruct the rational homotopy Lie algebra from the homology of the loop space as the subspace of primitive elements in the Hopf algebra  .[8]

A central result of the theory is that the rational homotopy category can be described in a purely algebraic way; in fact, in two different algebraic ways. First, Quillen showed that the rational homotopy category is equivalent to the homotopy category of connected differential graded Lie algebras. (The associated graded Lie algebra   is the homotopy Lie algebra.) Second, Quillen showed that the rational homotopy category is equivalent to the homotopy category of 1-connected differential graded cocommutative coalgebras.[9] (The associated coalgebra is the rational homology of X as a coalgebra; the dual vector space is the rational cohomology ring.) These equivalences were among the first applications of Quillen's theory of model categories.

In particular, the second description implies that for any graded-commutative  -algebra A of the form

 

with each vector space   of finite dimension, there is a simply connected space X whose rational cohomology ring is isomorphic to A. (By contrast, there are many restrictions, not completely understood, on the integral or mod p cohomology rings of topological spaces, for prime numbers p.) In the same spirit, Sullivan showed that any graded-commutative  -algebra with   that satisfies Poincaré duality is the cohomology ring of some simply connected smooth closed manifold, except in dimension 4a; in that case, one also needs to assume that the intersection pairing on   is of the form   over  .[10]

One may ask how to pass between the two algebraic descriptions of the rational homotopy category. In short, a Lie algebra determines a graded-commutative algebra by Lie algebra cohomology, and an augmented commutative algebra determines a graded Lie algebra by reduced André–Quillen cohomology. More generally, there are versions of these constructions for differential graded algebras. This duality between commutative algebras and Lie algebras is a version of Koszul duality.

Sullivan algebras edit

For spaces whose rational homology in each degree has finite dimension, Sullivan classified all rational homotopy types in terms of simpler algebraic objects, Sullivan algebras. By definition, a Sullivan algebra is a commutative differential graded algebra over the rationals  , whose underlying algebra is the free commutative graded algebra   on a graded vector space

 

satisfying the following "nilpotence condition" on its differential d: the space V is the union of an increasing series of graded subspaces,  , where   on   and   is contained in  . In the context of differential graded algebras A, "commutative" is used to mean graded-commutative; that is,

 

for a in   and b in  .

The Sullivan algebra is called minimal if the image of d is contained in  , where   is the direct sum of the positive-degree subspaces of  .

A Sullivan model for a commutative differential graded algebra A is a Sullivan algebra   with a homomorphism   which induces an isomorphism on cohomology. If  , then A has a minimal Sullivan model which is unique up to isomorphism. (Warning: a minimal Sullivan algebra with the same cohomology algebra as A need not be a minimal Sullivan model for A: it is also necessary that the isomorphism of cohomology be induced by a homomorphism of differential graded algebras. There are examples of non-isomorphic minimal Sullivan models with isomorphic cohomology algebras.)

The Sullivan minimal model of a topological space edit

For any topological space X, Sullivan defined a commutative differential graded algebra  , called the algebra of polynomial differential forms on X with rational coefficients. An element of this algebra consists of (roughly) a polynomial form on each singular simplex of X, compatible with face and degeneracy maps. This algebra is usually very large (uncountable dimension) but can be replaced by a much smaller algebra. More precisely, any differential graded algebra with the same Sullivan minimal model as   is called a model for the space X. When X is simply connected, such a model determines the rational homotopy type of X.

To any simply connected CW complex X with all rational homology groups of finite dimension, there is a minimal Sullivan model   for  , which has the property that   and all the   have finite dimension. This is called the Sullivan minimal model of X; it is unique up to isomorphism.[11] This gives an equivalence between rational homotopy types of such spaces and such algebras, with the properties:

  • The rational cohomology of the space is the cohomology of its Sullivan minimal model.
  • The spaces of indecomposables in V are the duals of the rational homotopy groups of the space X.
  • The Whitehead product on rational homotopy is the dual of the "quadratic part" of the differential d.
  • Two spaces have the same rational homotopy type if and only if their minimal Sullivan algebras are isomorphic.
  • There is a simply connected space X corresponding to each possible Sullivan algebra with   and all the   of finite dimension.

When X is a smooth manifold, the differential algebra of smooth differential forms on X (the de Rham complex) is almost a model for X; more precisely it is the tensor product of a model for X with the reals and therefore determines the real homotopy type. One can go further and define the p-completed homotopy type of X for a prime number p. Sullivan's "arithmetic square" reduces many problems in homotopy theory to the combination of rational and p-completed homotopy theory, for all primes p.[12]

The construction of Sullivan minimal models for simply connected spaces extends to nilpotent spaces. For more general fundamental groups, things get more complicated; for example, the rational homotopy groups of a finite CW complex (such as the wedge  ) can be infinite-dimensional vector spaces.

Formal spaces edit

A commutative differential graded algebra A, again with  , is called formal if A has a model with vanishing differential. This is equivalent to requiring that the cohomology algebra of A (viewed as a differential algebra with trivial differential) is a model for A (though it does not have to be the minimal model). Thus the rational homotopy type of a formal space is completely determined by its cohomology ring.

Examples of formal spaces include spheres, H-spaces, symmetric spaces, and compact Kähler manifolds.[13] Formality is preserved under products and wedge sums. For manifolds, formality is preserved by connected sums.

On the other hand, closed nilmanifolds are almost never formal: if M is a formal nilmanifold, then M must be the torus of some dimension.[14] The simplest example of a non-formal nilmanifold is the Heisenberg manifold, the quotient of the Heisenberg group of real 3×3 upper triangular matrices with 1's on the diagonal by its subgroup of matrices with integral coefficients. Closed symplectic manifolds need not be formal: the simplest example is the Kodaira–Thurston manifold (the product of the Heisenberg manifold with a circle). There are also examples of non-formal, simply connected symplectic closed manifolds.[15]

Non-formality can often be detected by Massey products. Indeed, if a differential graded algebra A is formal, then all (higher order) Massey products must vanish. The converse is not true: formality means, roughly speaking, the "uniform" vanishing of all Massey products. The complement of the Borromean rings is a non-formal space: it supports a nontrivial triple Massey product.

Examples edit

  • If X is a sphere of odd dimension  , its minimal Sullivan model has one generator a of degree   with  , and a basis of elements 1, a.
  • If X is a sphere of even dimension  , its minimal Sullivan model has two generators a and b of degrees   and  , with  ,  , and a basis of elements  ,  ,  , where the arrow indicates the action of d.
  • If X is the complex projective space   with  , its minimal Sullivan model has two generators u and x of degrees 2 and  , with   and  . It has a basis of elements  ,  ,  .
  • Suppose that V has 4 elements a, b, x, y of degrees 2, 3, 3 and 4 with differentials  ,  ,  ,  . Then this algebra is a minimal Sullivan algebra that is not formal. The cohomology algebra has nontrivial components only in dimension 2, 3, 6, generated respectively by a, b, and  . Any homomorphism from V to its cohomology algebra would map y to 0 and x to a multiple of b; so it would map   to 0. So V cannot be a model for its cohomology algebra. The corresponding topological spaces are two spaces with isomorphic rational cohomology rings but different rational homotopy types. Notice that   is in the Massey product  .

Elliptic and hyperbolic spaces edit

Rational homotopy theory revealed an unexpected dichotomy among finite CW complexes: either the rational homotopy groups are zero in sufficiently high degrees, or they grow exponentially. Namely, let X be a simply connected space such that   is a finite-dimensional  -vector space (for example, a finite CW complex has this property). Define X to be rationally elliptic if   is also a finite-dimensional  -vector space, and otherwise rationally hyperbolic. Then Félix and Halperin showed: if X is rationally hyperbolic, then there is a real number   and an integer N such that

 

for all  .[16]

For example, spheres, complex projective spaces, and homogeneous spaces for compact Lie groups are elliptic. On the other hand, "most" finite complexes are hyperbolic. For example:

  • The rational cohomology ring of an elliptic space satisfies Poincaré duality.[17]
  • If X is an elliptic space whose top nonzero rational cohomology group is in degree n, then each Betti number   is at most the binomial coefficient   (with equality for the n-dimensional torus).[18]
  • The Euler characteristic of an elliptic space X is nonnegative. If the Euler characteristic is positive, then all odd Betti numbers   are zero, and the rational cohomology ring of X is a complete intersection ring.[19]

There are many other restrictions on the rational cohomology ring of an elliptic space.[20]

Bott's conjecture predicts that every simply connected closed Riemannian manifold with nonnegative sectional curvature should be rationally elliptic. Very little is known about the conjecture, although it holds for all known examples of such manifolds.[21]

Halperin's conjecture asserts that the rational Serre spectral sequence of a fiber sequence of simply-connected spaces with rationally elliptic fiber of non-zero Euler characteristic vanishes at the second page.

A simply connected finite complex X is rationally elliptic if and only if the rational homology of the loop space   grows at most polynomially. More generally, X is called integrally elliptic if the mod p homology of   grows at most polynomially, for every prime number p. All known Riemannian manifolds with nonnegative sectional curvature are in fact integrally elliptic.[22]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Hess 1999, p. 757.
  2. ^ Félix, Oprea & Tanré (2008), Theorem 5.13.
  3. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Theorem 8.6.
  4. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Theorem 9.7.
  5. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Theorem 9.3.
  6. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Corollary to Proposition 16.7.
  7. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Theorem 21.5(i).
  8. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Theorem 21.5(iii).
  9. ^ Quillen (1969), Corollary II.6.2.
  10. ^ Sullivan (1977), Theorem 13.2.
  11. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Proposition 12.10.
  12. ^ May & Ponto (2012), section 13.1.
  13. ^ Félix, Oprea & Tanré (2008), Theorem 4.43.
  14. ^ Félix, Oprea & Tanré (2008), Remark 3.21.
  15. ^ Félix, Oprea & Tanré (2008), Theorem 8.29.
  16. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Theorem 33.2.
  17. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Proposition 38.3.
  18. ^ Pavlov (2002), Theorem 1.
  19. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), Proposition 32.10.
  20. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (2001), section 32.
  21. ^ Félix, Oprea & Tanré (2008), Conjecture 6.43.
  22. ^ Félix, Halperin & Thomas (1993), section 3.

References edit

  • Félix, Yves; Halperin, Stephen; Thomas, Jean-Claude (1993), "Elliptic spaces II", L'Enseignement mathématique, 39 (1–2): 25–32, doi:10.5169/seals-60412, MR 1225255
  • Félix, Yves; Halperin, Stephen; Thomas, Jean-Claude (2001), Rational Homotopy Theory, New York: Springer Nature, doi:10.1007/978-1-4613-0105-9, ISBN 0-387-95068-0, MR 1802847
  • Félix, Yves; Halperin, Stephen; Thomas, Jean-Claude (2015), Rational Homotopy Theory II, Singapore: World Scientific, doi:10.1142/9473, ISBN 978-981-4651-42-4, MR 3379890
  • Félix, Yves; Oprea, John; Tanré, Daniel (2008), Algebraic Models in Geometry, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-920651-3, MR 2403898
  • Griffiths, Phillip A.; Morgan, John W. (1981), Rational Homotopy Theory and Differential Forms, Boston: Birkhäuser, ISBN 3-7643-3041-4, MR 0641551
  • Hess, Kathryn (1999), "A history of rational homotopy theory", in James, Ioan M. (ed.), History of Topology, Amsterdam: North-Holland, pp. 757–796, doi:10.1016/B978-044482375-5/50028-6, ISBN 0-444-82375-1, MR 1721122
  • Hess, Kathryn (2007), "Rational homotopy theory: a brief introduction" (PDF), Interactions between Homotopy Theory and Algebra, Contemporary Mathematics, vol. 436, American Mathematical Society, pp. 175–202, arXiv:math/0604626, doi:10.1090/conm/436/08409, ISBN 9780821838143, MR 2355774
  • May, J. Peter; Ponto, Kathleen (2012), More Concise Algebraic Topology. Localization, Completion, and Model Categories (PDF), University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-51178-8, MR 2884233
  • Pavlov, Aleksandr V. (2002), "Estimates for the Betti numbers of rationally elliptic spaces", Siberian Mathematical Journal, 43 (6): 1080–1085, doi:10.1023/A:1021173418920, MR 1946233
  • Quillen, Daniel (1969), "Rational homotopy theory", Annals of Mathematics, 90 (2): 205–295, doi:10.2307/1970725, JSTOR 1970725, MR 0258031
  • Sullivan, Dennis (1977), "Infinitesimal computations in topology", Publications Mathématiques de l'IHÉS, 47: 269–331, doi:10.1007/bf02684341, hdl:10338.dmlcz/128041, MR 0646078
  • Sullivan, Dennis (2001) [1994], "Rational homotopy theory", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press
  • Sullivan, Dennis; Vigué-Poirrier, Micheline (1976), "The homology theory of the closed geodesic problem", Journal of Differential Geometry, 11 (4): 633–644, doi:10.4310/jdg/1214433729, MR 0455028

rational, homotopy, theory, mathematics, specifically, topology, rational, homotopy, theory, simplified, version, homotopy, theory, topological, spaces, which, torsion, homotopy, groups, ignored, founded, dennis, sullivan, 1977, daniel, quillen, 1969, this, si. In mathematics and specifically in topology rational homotopy theory is a simplified version of homotopy theory for topological spaces in which all torsion in the homotopy groups is ignored 1 It was founded by Dennis Sullivan 1977 and Daniel Quillen 1969 1 This simplification of homotopy theory makes certain calculations much easier Rational homotopy types of simply connected spaces can be identified with isomorphism classes of certain algebraic objects called Sullivan minimal models which are commutative differential graded algebras over the rational numbers satisfying certain conditions A geometric application was the theorem of Sullivan and Micheline Vigue Poirrier 1976 every simply connected closed Riemannian manifold X whose rational cohomology ring is not generated by one element has infinitely many geometrically distinct closed geodesics 2 The proof used rational homotopy theory to show that the Betti numbers of the free loop space of X are unbounded The theorem then follows from a 1969 result of Detlef Gromoll and Wolfgang Meyer Contents 1 Rational spaces 2 Cohomology ring and homotopy Lie algebra 3 Sullivan algebras 4 The Sullivan minimal model of a topological space 5 Formal spaces 6 Examples 7 Elliptic and hyperbolic spaces 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesRational spaces editA continuous map f X Y displaystyle f colon X to Y nbsp of simply connected topological spaces is called a rational homotopy equivalence if it induces an isomorphism on homotopy groups tensored with the rational numbers Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp 1 Equivalently f is a rational homotopy equivalence if and only if it induces an isomorphism on singular homology groups with rational coefficients 3 The rational homotopy category of simply connected spaces is defined to be the localization of the category of simply connected spaces with respect to rational homotopy equivalences The goal of rational homotopy theory is to understand this category i e to determine the information that can be recovered from rational homotopy equivalences One basic result is that the rational homotopy category is equivalent to a full subcategory of the homotopy category of topological spaces the subcategory of rational spaces By definition a rational space is a simply connected CW complex all of whose homotopy groups are vector spaces over the rational numbers For any simply connected CW complex X displaystyle X nbsp there is a rational space X Q displaystyle X mathbb Q nbsp unique up to homotopy equivalence with a map X X Q displaystyle X to X mathbb Q nbsp that induces an isomorphism on homotopy groups tensored with the rational numbers 4 The space X Q displaystyle X mathbb Q nbsp is called the rationalization of X displaystyle X nbsp This is a special case of Sullivan s construction of the localization of a space at a given set of prime numbers One obtains equivalent definitions using homology rather than homotopy groups Namely a simply connected CW complex X displaystyle X nbsp is a rational space if and only if its homology groups H i X Z displaystyle H i X mathbb Z nbsp are rational vector spaces for all i gt 0 displaystyle i gt 0 nbsp 5 The rationalization of a simply connected CW complex X displaystyle X nbsp is the unique rational space X X Q displaystyle X to X mathbb Q nbsp up to homotopy equivalence with a map X X Q displaystyle X to X mathbb Q nbsp that induces an isomorphism on rational homology Thus one has p i X Q p i X Q displaystyle pi i X mathbb Q cong pi i X otimes mathbb Q nbsp and H i X Q Z H i X Z Q H i X Q displaystyle H i X mathbb Q mathbb Z cong H i X mathbb Z otimes mathbb Q cong H i X mathbb Q nbsp for all i gt 0 displaystyle i gt 0 nbsp These results for simply connected spaces extend with little change to nilpotent spaces spaces whose fundamental group is nilpotent and acts nilpotently on the higher homotopy groups Computing the homotopy groups of spheres is a central open problem in homotopy theory However the rational homotopy groups of spheres were computed by Jean Pierre Serre in 1951 p i S 2 a 1 Q Q if i 2 a 1 0 otherwise displaystyle pi i S 2a 1 otimes mathbb Q cong begin cases mathbb Q amp text if i 2a 1 0 amp text otherwise end cases nbsp and p i S 2 a Q Q if i 2 a or i 4 a 1 0 otherwise displaystyle pi i S 2a otimes mathbb Q cong begin cases mathbb Q amp text if i 2a text or i 4a 1 0 amp text otherwise end cases nbsp This suggests the possibility of describing the whole rational homotopy category in a practically computable way Rational homotopy theory has realized much of that goal In homotopy theory spheres and Eilenberg MacLane spaces are two very different types of basic spaces from which all spaces can be built In rational homotopy theory these two types of spaces become much closer In particular Serre s calculation implies that S Q 2 a 1 displaystyle S mathbb Q 2a 1 nbsp is the Eilenberg MacLane space K Q 2 a 1 displaystyle K mathbb Q 2a 1 nbsp More generally let X be any space whose rational cohomology ring is a free graded commutative algebra a tensor product of a polynomial ring on generators of even degree and an exterior algebra on generators of odd degree Then the rationalization X Q displaystyle X mathbb Q nbsp is a product of Eilenberg MacLane spaces The hypothesis on the cohomology ring applies to any compact Lie group or more generally any loop space 6 For example for the unitary group SU n SU n Q S Q 3 S Q 5 S Q 2 n 1 displaystyle operatorname SU n mathbb Q simeq S mathbb Q 3 times S mathbb Q 5 times cdots times S mathbb Q 2n 1 nbsp Cohomology ring and homotopy Lie algebra editThere are two basic invariants of a space X in the rational homotopy category the rational cohomology ring H X Q displaystyle H X mathbb Q nbsp and the homotopy Lie algebra p X Q displaystyle pi X otimes mathbb Q nbsp The rational cohomology is a graded commutative algebra over Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp and the homotopy groups form a graded Lie algebra via the Whitehead product More precisely writing W X displaystyle Omega X nbsp for the loop space of X we have that p W X Q displaystyle pi Omega X otimes mathbb Q nbsp is a graded Lie algebra over Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp In view of the isomorphism p i X p i 1 W X displaystyle pi i X cong pi i 1 Omega X nbsp this just amounts to a shift of the grading by 1 For example Serre s theorem above says that p W S n Q displaystyle pi Omega S n otimes mathbb Q nbsp is the free graded Lie algebra on one generator of degree n 1 displaystyle n 1 nbsp Another way to think of the homotopy Lie algebra is that the homology of the loop space of X is the universal enveloping algebra of the homotopy Lie algebra 7 H W X Q U p W X Q displaystyle H Omega X mathbb Q cong U pi Omega X otimes mathbb Q nbsp Conversely one can reconstruct the rational homotopy Lie algebra from the homology of the loop space as the subspace of primitive elements in the Hopf algebra H W S n Q displaystyle H Omega S n otimes mathbb Q nbsp 8 A central result of the theory is that the rational homotopy category can be described in a purely algebraic way in fact in two different algebraic ways First Quillen showed that the rational homotopy category is equivalent to the homotopy category of connected differential graded Lie algebras The associated graded Lie algebra ker d im d displaystyle ker d operatorname im d nbsp is the homotopy Lie algebra Second Quillen showed that the rational homotopy category is equivalent to the homotopy category of 1 connected differential graded cocommutative coalgebras 9 The associated coalgebra is the rational homology of X as a coalgebra the dual vector space is the rational cohomology ring These equivalences were among the first applications of Quillen s theory of model categories In particular the second description implies that for any graded commutative Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp algebra A of the form A Q A 2 A 3 displaystyle A mathbb Q oplus A 2 oplus A 3 oplus cdots nbsp with each vector space A i displaystyle A i nbsp of finite dimension there is a simply connected space X whose rational cohomology ring is isomorphic to A By contrast there are many restrictions not completely understood on the integral or mod p cohomology rings of topological spaces for prime numbers p In the same spirit Sullivan showed that any graded commutative Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp algebra with A 1 0 displaystyle A 1 0 nbsp that satisfies Poincare duality is the cohomology ring of some simply connected smooth closed manifold except in dimension 4a in that case one also needs to assume that the intersection pairing on A 2 a displaystyle A 2a nbsp is of the form x i 2 displaystyle sum pm x i 2 nbsp over Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp 10 One may ask how to pass between the two algebraic descriptions of the rational homotopy category In short a Lie algebra determines a graded commutative algebra by Lie algebra cohomology and an augmented commutative algebra determines a graded Lie algebra by reduced Andre Quillen cohomology More generally there are versions of these constructions for differential graded algebras This duality between commutative algebras and Lie algebras is a version of Koszul duality Sullivan algebras editFor spaces whose rational homology in each degree has finite dimension Sullivan classified all rational homotopy types in terms of simpler algebraic objects Sullivan algebras By definition a Sullivan algebra is a commutative differential graded algebra over the rationals Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp whose underlying algebra is the free commutative graded algebra V displaystyle bigwedge V nbsp on a graded vector space V n gt 0 V n displaystyle V bigoplus n gt 0 V n nbsp satisfying the following nilpotence condition on its differential d the space V is the union of an increasing series of graded subspaces V 0 V 1 displaystyle V 0 subseteq V 1 subseteq cdots nbsp where d 0 displaystyle d 0 nbsp on V 0 displaystyle V 0 nbsp and d V k displaystyle d V k nbsp is contained in V k 1 displaystyle bigwedge V k 1 nbsp In the context of differential graded algebras A commutative is used to mean graded commutative that is a b 1 i j b a displaystyle ab 1 ij ba nbsp for a in A i displaystyle A i nbsp and b in A j displaystyle A j nbsp The Sullivan algebra is called minimal if the image of d is contained in V 2 displaystyle bigwedge V 2 nbsp where V displaystyle bigwedge V nbsp is the direct sum of the positive degree subspaces of V displaystyle bigwedge V nbsp A Sullivan model for a commutative differential graded algebra A is a Sullivan algebra V displaystyle bigwedge V nbsp with a homomorphism V A displaystyle bigwedge V to A nbsp which induces an isomorphism on cohomology If A 0 Q displaystyle A 0 mathbb Q nbsp then A has a minimal Sullivan model which is unique up to isomorphism Warning a minimal Sullivan algebra with the same cohomology algebra as A need not be a minimal Sullivan model for A it is also necessary that the isomorphism of cohomology be induced by a homomorphism of differential graded algebras There are examples of non isomorphic minimal Sullivan models with isomorphic cohomology algebras The Sullivan minimal model of a topological space editFor any topological space X Sullivan defined a commutative differential graded algebra A P L X displaystyle A PL X nbsp called the algebra of polynomial differential forms on X with rational coefficients An element of this algebra consists of roughly a polynomial form on each singular simplex of X compatible with face and degeneracy maps This algebra is usually very large uncountable dimension but can be replaced by a much smaller algebra More precisely any differential graded algebra with the same Sullivan minimal model as A P L X displaystyle A PL X nbsp is called a model for the space X When X is simply connected such a model determines the rational homotopy type of X To any simply connected CW complex X with all rational homology groups of finite dimension there is a minimal Sullivan model V displaystyle bigwedge V nbsp for A P L X displaystyle A PL X nbsp which has the property that V 1 0 displaystyle V 1 0 nbsp and all the V k displaystyle V k nbsp have finite dimension This is called the Sullivan minimal model of X it is unique up to isomorphism 11 This gives an equivalence between rational homotopy types of such spaces and such algebras with the properties The rational cohomology of the space is the cohomology of its Sullivan minimal model The spaces of indecomposables in V are the duals of the rational homotopy groups of the space X The Whitehead product on rational homotopy is the dual of the quadratic part of the differential d Two spaces have the same rational homotopy type if and only if their minimal Sullivan algebras are isomorphic There is a simply connected space X corresponding to each possible Sullivan algebra with V 1 0 displaystyle V 1 0 nbsp and all the V k displaystyle V k nbsp of finite dimension When X is a smooth manifold the differential algebra of smooth differential forms on X the de Rham complex is almost a model for X more precisely it is the tensor product of a model for X with the reals and therefore determines the real homotopy type One can go further and define the p completed homotopy type of X for a prime number p Sullivan s arithmetic square reduces many problems in homotopy theory to the combination of rational and p completed homotopy theory for all primes p 12 The construction of Sullivan minimal models for simply connected spaces extends to nilpotent spaces For more general fundamental groups things get more complicated for example the rational homotopy groups of a finite CW complex such as the wedge S 1 S 2 displaystyle S 1 vee S 2 nbsp can be infinite dimensional vector spaces Formal spaces editA commutative differential graded algebra A again with A 0 Q displaystyle A 0 mathbb Q nbsp is called formal if A has a model with vanishing differential This is equivalent to requiring that the cohomology algebra of A viewed as a differential algebra with trivial differential is a model for A though it does not have to be the minimal model Thus the rational homotopy type of a formal space is completely determined by its cohomology ring Examples of formal spaces include spheres H spaces symmetric spaces and compact Kahler manifolds 13 Formality is preserved under products and wedge sums For manifolds formality is preserved by connected sums On the other hand closed nilmanifolds are almost never formal if M is a formal nilmanifold then M must be the torus of some dimension 14 The simplest example of a non formal nilmanifold is the Heisenberg manifold the quotient of the Heisenberg group of real 3 3 upper triangular matrices with 1 s on the diagonal by its subgroup of matrices with integral coefficients Closed symplectic manifolds need not be formal the simplest example is the Kodaira Thurston manifold the product of the Heisenberg manifold with a circle There are also examples of non formal simply connected symplectic closed manifolds 15 Non formality can often be detected by Massey products Indeed if a differential graded algebra A is formal then all higher order Massey products must vanish The converse is not true formality means roughly speaking the uniform vanishing of all Massey products The complement of the Borromean rings is a non formal space it supports a nontrivial triple Massey product Examples editIf X is a sphere of odd dimension 2 n 1 gt 1 displaystyle 2n 1 gt 1 nbsp its minimal Sullivan model has one generator a of degree 2 n 1 displaystyle 2n 1 nbsp with d a 0 displaystyle da 0 nbsp and a basis of elements 1 a If X is a sphere of even dimension 2 n gt 0 displaystyle 2n gt 0 nbsp its minimal Sullivan model has two generators a and b of degrees 2 n displaystyle 2n nbsp and 4 n 1 displaystyle 4n 1 nbsp with d b a 2 displaystyle db a 2 nbsp d a 0 displaystyle da 0 nbsp and a basis of elements 1 a b a 2 displaystyle 1 a b to a 2 nbsp a b a 3 displaystyle ab to a 3 nbsp a 2 b a 4 displaystyle a 2 b to a 4 ldots nbsp where the arrow indicates the action of d If X is the complex projective space C P n displaystyle mathbb CP n nbsp with n gt 0 displaystyle n gt 0 nbsp its minimal Sullivan model has two generators u and x of degrees 2 and 2 n 1 displaystyle 2n 1 nbsp with d u 0 displaystyle du 0 nbsp and d x u n 1 displaystyle dx u n 1 nbsp It has a basis of elements 1 u u 2 u n displaystyle 1 u u 2 ldots u n nbsp x u n 1 displaystyle x to u n 1 nbsp x u u n 2 displaystyle xu to u n 2 ldots nbsp Suppose that V has 4 elements a b x y of degrees 2 3 3 and 4 with differentials d a 0 displaystyle da 0 nbsp d b 0 displaystyle db 0 nbsp d x a 2 displaystyle dx a 2 nbsp d y a b displaystyle dy ab nbsp Then this algebra is a minimal Sullivan algebra that is not formal The cohomology algebra has nontrivial components only in dimension 2 3 6 generated respectively by a b and x b a y displaystyle xb ay nbsp Any homomorphism from V to its cohomology algebra would map y to 0 and x to a multiple of b so it would map x b a y displaystyle xb ay nbsp to 0 So V cannot be a model for its cohomology algebra The corresponding topological spaces are two spaces with isomorphic rational cohomology rings but different rational homotopy types Notice that x b a y displaystyle xb ay nbsp is in the Massey product a a b displaystyle langle a a b rangle nbsp Elliptic and hyperbolic spaces editRational homotopy theory revealed an unexpected dichotomy among finite CW complexes either the rational homotopy groups are zero in sufficiently high degrees or they grow exponentially Namely let X be a simply connected space such that H X Q displaystyle H X mathbb Q nbsp is a finite dimensional Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp vector space for example a finite CW complex has this property Define X to be rationally elliptic if p X Q displaystyle pi X otimes mathbb Q nbsp is also a finite dimensional Q displaystyle mathbb Q nbsp vector space and otherwise rationally hyperbolic Then Felix and Halperin showed if X is rationally hyperbolic then there is a real number C gt 1 displaystyle C gt 1 nbsp and an integer N such that i 1 n dim Q p i X Q C n displaystyle sum i 1 n dim mathbb Q pi i X otimes mathbb Q geq C n nbsp for all n N displaystyle n geq N nbsp 16 For example spheres complex projective spaces and homogeneous spaces for compact Lie groups are elliptic On the other hand most finite complexes are hyperbolic For example The rational cohomology ring of an elliptic space satisfies Poincare duality 17 If X is an elliptic space whose top nonzero rational cohomology group is in degree n then each Betti number b i X displaystyle b i X nbsp is at most the binomial coefficient n i displaystyle binom n i nbsp with equality for the n dimensional torus 18 The Euler characteristic of an elliptic space X is nonnegative If the Euler characteristic is positive then all odd Betti numbers b 2 i 1 X displaystyle b 2i 1 X nbsp are zero and the rational cohomology ring of X is a complete intersection ring 19 There are many other restrictions on the rational cohomology ring of an elliptic space 20 Bott s conjecture predicts that every simply connected closed Riemannian manifold with nonnegative sectional curvature should be rationally elliptic Very little is known about the conjecture although it holds for all known examples of such manifolds 21 Halperin s conjecture asserts that the rational Serre spectral sequence of a fiber sequence of simply connected spaces with rationally elliptic fiber of non zero Euler characteristic vanishes at the second page A simply connected finite complex X is rationally elliptic if and only if the rational homology of the loop space W X displaystyle Omega X nbsp grows at most polynomially More generally X is called integrally elliptic if the mod p homology of W X displaystyle Omega X nbsp grows at most polynomially for every prime number p All known Riemannian manifolds with nonnegative sectional curvature are in fact integrally elliptic 22 See also editMandell s theorem analogue of rational homotopy theory in p adic settings Chromatic homotopy theoryNotes edit a b c Hess 1999 p 757 Felix Oprea amp Tanre 2008 Theorem 5 13 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Theorem 8 6 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Theorem 9 7 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Theorem 9 3 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Corollary to Proposition 16 7 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Theorem 21 5 i Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Theorem 21 5 iii Quillen 1969 Corollary II 6 2 Sullivan 1977 Theorem 13 2 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Proposition 12 10 May amp Ponto 2012 section 13 1 Felix Oprea amp Tanre 2008 Theorem 4 43 Felix Oprea amp Tanre 2008 Remark 3 21 Felix Oprea amp Tanre 2008 Theorem 8 29 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Theorem 33 2 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Proposition 38 3 Pavlov 2002 Theorem 1 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 Proposition 32 10 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 2001 section 32 Felix Oprea amp Tanre 2008 Conjecture 6 43 Felix Halperin amp Thomas 1993 section 3 References editFelix Yves Halperin Stephen Thomas Jean Claude 1993 Elliptic spaces II L Enseignement mathematique 39 1 2 25 32 doi 10 5169 seals 60412 MR 1225255 Felix Yves Halperin Stephen Thomas Jean Claude 2001 Rational Homotopy Theory New York Springer Nature doi 10 1007 978 1 4613 0105 9 ISBN 0 387 95068 0 MR 1802847 Felix Yves Halperin Stephen Thomas Jean Claude 2015 Rational Homotopy Theory II Singapore World Scientific doi 10 1142 9473 ISBN 978 981 4651 42 4 MR 3379890 Felix Yves Oprea John Tanre Daniel 2008 Algebraic Models in Geometry Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 920651 3 MR 2403898 Griffiths Phillip A Morgan John W 1981 Rational Homotopy Theory and Differential Forms Boston Birkhauser ISBN 3 7643 3041 4 MR 0641551 Hess Kathryn 1999 A history of rational homotopy theory in James Ioan M ed History of Topology Amsterdam North Holland pp 757 796 doi 10 1016 B978 044482375 5 50028 6 ISBN 0 444 82375 1 MR 1721122 Hess Kathryn 2007 Rational homotopy theory a brief introduction PDF Interactions between Homotopy Theory and Algebra Contemporary Mathematics vol 436 American Mathematical Society pp 175 202 arXiv math 0604626 doi 10 1090 conm 436 08409 ISBN 9780821838143 MR 2355774 May J Peter Ponto Kathleen 2012 More Concise Algebraic Topology Localization Completion and Model Categories PDF University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 51178 8 MR 2884233 Pavlov Aleksandr V 2002 Estimates for the Betti numbers of rationally elliptic spaces Siberian Mathematical Journal 43 6 1080 1085 doi 10 1023 A 1021173418920 MR 1946233 Quillen Daniel 1969 Rational homotopy theory Annals of Mathematics 90 2 205 295 doi 10 2307 1970725 JSTOR 1970725 MR 0258031 Sullivan Dennis 1977 Infinitesimal computations in topology Publications Mathematiques de l IHES 47 269 331 doi 10 1007 bf02684341 hdl 10338 dmlcz 128041 MR 0646078 Sullivan Dennis 2001 1994 Rational homotopy theory Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press Sullivan Dennis Vigue Poirrier Micheline 1976 The homology theory of the closed geodesic problem Journal of Differential Geometry 11 4 633 644 doi 10 4310 jdg 1214433729 MR 0455028 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rational homotopy theory amp oldid 1199305528, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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