Nose cone design

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Revision as of 17:32, 27 December 2013 by en>Andersenman (Haack series: added an image to illustrate Haack series shapes)
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In mathematics, in particular homotopy theory, a continuous mapping

i:AX,

where A and X are topological spaces, is a cofibration if it satisfies the homotopy extension property with respect to all spaces Y. The name is because the dual condition, the homotopy lifting property, defines fibrations. For a more general notion of cofibration see the article about model categories.

Basic theorems

  • For Hausdorff spaces a cofibration is a closed inclusion (injective with closed image); for suitable spaces, a converse holds
  • Every map can be replaced by a cofibration via the mapping cylinder construction
  • There is a cofibration (A, X), if and only if there is a retraction from
X×I
to
(A×I)(X×{0}),

since this is the pushout and thus induces maps to every space sensible in the diagram.

Examples

  • Cofibrations are preserved under push-outs and composition, as one sees from the definition via diagram-chasing.
  • A frequently used fact is that a cellular inclusion is a cofibration (so, for instance, if (X,A) is a CW pair, then AX is a cofibration). This follows from the previous fact since Sn1Dn is a cofibration for every n.

References

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