Telescoping Markov chain

From formulasearchengine
Revision as of 05:31, 10 January 2013 by en>Addbot (Bot: Removing Orphan Tag (Report Errors))
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

In the mathematical discipline of simplicial homology theory, a simplicial map is a map between simplicial complexes with the property that the images of the vertices of a simplex always span a simplex. Note that this implies that vertices have vertices for images.

Simplicial maps are thus determined by their effects on vertices. In particular, there are a finite number of simplicial maps between two given finite simplicial complexes.

Simplicial maps induce continuous maps between the underlying polyhedra of the simplicial complexes: one simply extends linearly using barycentric coordinates.

Simplicial maps which are bijective are called simplicial isomorphisms.

Simplicial approximation

Let be a continuous map between the underlying polyhedra of simplicial complexes and let us write for the star of a vertex. A simplicial map such that , is called a simplicial approximation to .

A simplicial approximation is homotopic to the map it approximates.

References

  • Munkres, James R.: Elements of Algebraic Topology, Westview Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0-201-62728-2.

See also