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Free loop

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In the mathematical field of topology, a free loop is a variant of the notion of a loop. Whereas a loop has a distinguished point on it, called its basepoint, a free loop lacks such a distinguished point. Formally, let be a topological space. Then a free loop in is an equivalence class of continuous functions from the circle to . Two loops are equivalent if they differ by a reparameterization of the circle. That is, if there exists a homeomorphism such that

Thus, a free loop, as opposed to a based loop used in the definition of the fundamental group, is a map from the circle to the space without the basepoint-preserving restriction. Assuming the space is path-connected, free homotopy classes of free loops correspond to conjugacy classes in the fundamental group.

Recently, interest in the space of all free loops has grown with the advent of string topology, i.e. the study of new algebraic structures on the homology of the free loop space.

See also

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Further reading

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  • Brylinski, Jean-Luc: Loop spaces, characteristic classes and geometric quantization. Reprint of the 1993 edition. Modern Birkhäuser Classics. Birkhäuser Boston, Inc., Boston, MA, 2008.
  • Cohen and Voronov: Notes on String Topology