Smith space

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In mathematics, especially in algebraic topology, the homotopy limit and colimit are variants of the notions of limit and colimit. They are denoted by holim and hocolim, respectively.

Introductory examples

Homotopy pushout

The concept of homotopy colimit is a generalization of homotopy pushouts. This notion is motivated by the following observation: the (ordinary) pushout

DnSn1pt

is the space obtained by contracting the n-1-sphere (which is the boundary of the n-dimensional disk) to a single point. This space is homeomorphic to the n-sphere Sn. On the other hand, the pushout

ptSn1pt

is a point. Therefore, even though the (contractible) disk Dn was replaced by a point, (which is homotopy equivalent to the disk), the two pushouts are not homotopy (or weakly) equivalent.

Therefore, the pushout is not well-aligned with a principle of homotopy theory, which considers weakly equivalent spaces as carrying the same information: if one (or more) of the spaces used to form the pushout is replaced by a weakly equivalent space, the pushout is not guaranteed to stay weakly equivalent. The homotopy pushout does not share this defect.

The homotopy pushout of two maps ABC of topological spaces is defined as

AB×[0,1]BB×[0,1]0C,

i.e., instead of glueing B in both A and C, two copies of a cylinder on B are glued together and their ends are glued to A and C. For example, the homotopy colimit of the diagram (whose maps are projections)

X0X0×X1X1

is the join X0*X1.

It can be shown that the homotopy pushout does not share the defect of the ordinary pushout: replacing A, B and / or C by a homotopic space, the homotopy pushout will also be homotopic. In this sense, the homotopy pushouts treats homotopic spaces as well as the (ordinary) pushout does with homeomorphic spaces.

Mapping telescope

The homotopy colimit of a sequence of spaces

X1X2,

is the mapping telescope.[1]

General definition

Treating examples such as the mapping telescope and the homotopy pushout on an equal footing can be achieved by considering an I-diagram of spaces, where I is some "indexing" category. This is nothing but a functor

X:ISpaces,

i.e., to each object i in I, one assigns a space Xi and maps between them, according to the maps in i. The category of such diagrams is denoted SpacesI.

There is a natural functor called the diagonal,

Δ:SpacesSpacesI

which sends any space X to the diagram which consists of X everywhere (and the identity of X as maps between them). In (ordinary) category theory, the right adjoint to this functor is the limit. The homotopy limit is defined by altering this situation: it is the right adjoint to

Δ:SpacesSpacesI

which sends a space X to the I-diagram which at some object i gives

X×|N(I/i)|

Here I / i is the over-category (its objects are arrows ji, where j is any object of I), N is the nerve of this category and |-| is the topological realization of this simplicial set.[2]

Relation to the (ordinary) colimit and limit

There is always a map

hocolimXicolimXi.

Typically, this map is not a weak equivalence. For example, the homotopy pushout encountered above always maps to the ordinary pushout. This map is not typically a weak equivalence, for example the join is not weakly equivalent to the pushout of X0X0×X1X1, which is a point.

Further examples and applications

Just as limit is used to complete a ring, holim is used to complete a spectrum.

References

  1. Hatcher's Algebraic Topology, 4.G.
  2. Bousfield & Kan: Homotopy limits, Completions and Localizations, Springer, LNM 304. Section XI.3.3
  • Hatcher, Algebraic Topology

Further reading