Change of fiber
In algebraic topology, given a fibration p:E→B, the change of fiber is a map between the fibers induced by paths in B.
Since a covering is a fibration, the construction generalizes the corresponding facts in the theory of covering spaces.
Definition
If β is a path in B that starts at, say, b, then we have the homotopy where the first map is a projection. Since p is a fibration, by the homotopy lifting property, h lifts to a homotopy with . We have:
- .
(There might be an ambiguity and so need not be well-defined.)
Let denote the set of path classes in B. We claim that the construction determines the map:
- the set of homotopy classes of maps.
Suppose β, β' are in the same path class; thus, there is a homotopy h from β to β'. Let
- .
Drawing a picture, there is a homeomorphism that restricts to a homeomorphism . Let be such that , and .
Then, by the homotopy lifting property, we can lift the homotopy to w such that w restricts to . In particular, we have , establishing the claim.
It is clear from the construction that the map is a homomorphism: if ,
where is the constant path at b. It follows that has inverse. Hence, we can actually say:
- the set of homotopy classes of homotopy equivalences.
Also, we have: for each b in B,
- { [ƒ] | homotopy equivalence }
which is a group homomorphism (the right-hand side is clearly a group.) In other words, the fundamental group of B at b acts on the fiber over b, up to homotopy. This fact is a useful substitute for the absence of the structure group.
Consequence
One consequence of the construction is the below:
- The fibers of p over a path-component is homotopy equivalent to each other.
References
- James F. Davis, Paul Kirk, Lecture Notes in Algebraic Topology
- May, J. A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology
This article has not been added to any content categories. Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles, in addition to a stub category. (January 2016) |