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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Definition  





2 Examples  





3 Properties  





4 Notes  





5 References  





6 External links  














Quasi-fibration






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Quasifibration)

Inalgebraic topology, a quasifibration is a generalisation of fibre bundles and fibrations introduced by Albrecht Dold and René Thom. Roughly speaking, it is a continuous map p: EB having the same behaviour as a fibration regarding the (relative) homotopy groupsofE, B and p−1(x). Equivalently, one can define a quasifibration to be a continuous map such that the inclusion of each fibre into its homotopy fibre is a weak equivalence. One of the main applications of quasifibrations lies in proving the Dold-Thom theorem.

Definition[edit]

A continuous surjective map of topological spaces p: EB is called a quasifibration if it induces isomorphisms

for all xB, yp−1(x) and i ≥ 0. For i = 0,1 one can only speak of bijections between the two sets.

By definition, quasifibrations share a key property of fibrations, namely that a quasifibration p: EB induces a long exact sequence of homotopy groups

as follows directly from the long exact sequence for the pair (E, p−1(x)).

This long exact sequence is also functorial in the following sense: Any fibrewise map f: EE induces a morphism between the exact sequences of the pairs (E, p−1(x)) and (E, p−1(x)) and therefore a morphism between the exact sequences of a quasifibration. Hence, the diagram

commutes with f0 being the restriction of ftop−1(x) and x being an element of the form p(f(e)) for an ep−1(x).

An equivalent definition is saying that a surjective map p: EB is a quasifibration if the inclusion of the fibre p−1(b) into the homotopy fibre Fbofp over b is a weak equivalence for all bB. To see this, recall that Fb is the fibre of q under b where q: EpB is the usual path fibration construction. Thus, one has

and q is given by q(e, γ) = γ(1). Now consider the natural homotopy equivalence φ : EEp, given by φ(e) = (e, p(e)), where p(e) denotes the corresponding constant path. By definition, p factors through Ep such that one gets a commutative diagram

Applying πn yields the alternative definition.

Examples[edit]

Properties[edit]

The following is a direct consequence of the alternative definition of a fibration using the homotopy fibre:

Theorem. Every quasifibration p: EB factors through a fibration whose fibres are weakly homotopy equivalent to the ones of p.

A corollary of this theorem is that all fibres of a quasifibration are weakly homotopy equivalent if the base space is path-connected, as this is the case for fibrations.

Checking whether a given map is a quasifibration tends to be quite tedious. The following two theorems are designed to make this problem easier. They will make use of the following notion: Let p: EB be a continuous map. A subset Up(E) is called distinguished (with respect to p) if p: p−1(U) → U is a quasifibration.

Theorem. If the open subsets U,V and UV are distinguished with respect to the continuous map p: EB, then so is UV.[1]
Theorem. Let p: EB be a continuous map where B is the inductive limit of a sequence B1B2 ⊂ ... All Bn are moreover assumed to satisfy the first separation axiom. If all the Bn are distinguished, then p is a quasifibration.

To see that the latter statement holds, one only needs to bear in mind that continuous images of compact sets in B already lie in some Bn. That way, one can reduce it to the case where the assertion is known. These two theorems mean that it suffices to show that a given map is a quasifibration on certain subsets. Then one can patch these together in order to see that it holds on bigger subsets and finally, using a limiting argument, one sees that the map is a quasifibration on the whole space. This procedure has e.g. been used in the proof of the Dold-Thom theorem.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Dold and Thom (1958), Satz 2.2

References[edit]

External links[edit]


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