- Eilenberg-MacLane space
In
mathematics , an Eilenberg-MacLane space is a special kind oftopological space that can be regarded as a building block forhomotopy theory . These spaces are important in many contexts inalgebraic topology , including stage-by-stage constructions of spaces, computations ofhomotopy group s of spheres, and definition ofcohomology operation s. The name is forSamuel Eilenberg andSaunders Mac Lane , who introduced such spaces in the late 1940s.Let "G" be a group and "n" a positive integer. A connected topological space "X" is called an Eilenberg–MacLane space of type "K"("G","n"), if it has "n"-th
homotopy group "π"n(X) isomorphic to "G" and all other homotopy groups trivial. If "n" > 1 then "G" must be abelian. Then an Eilenberg–Mac Lane space exists, as aCW-complex , and is unique up to aweak homotopy equivalence . By abuse of language, any such space is often called just "K"("G","n").Examples
* The
unit circle is a .
* The infinite-dimensionalcomplex projective space is a model of .
* The infinite-dimensionalreal projective space is a .
* Thewedge sum of "k" unit circles is a "K"("G","1") for "G" thefree group on "k" generators.Further elementary examples can be constructed from these by using the obvious fact that the product is a .A "K"("G","n") can be constructed stage-by-stage, as a
CW complex , starting with a wedge of "n"-sphere s, one for each generator of the group "G", and adding cells in (possibly infinite number of) higher dimensions so as to kill all extra homotopy.Properties of Eilenberg–MacLane spaces
An important property of "K"("G","n") is that, for any abelian group "G", and any CW-complex "X", the set
: ["X", "K"("G","n")]
of homotopy classes of maps from "X" to "K"("G","n") is in natural bijection with the "n"-th singular cohomology group
:"H""n"("X"; "G")
of the space "X". Thus one says that the "K"("G","n") are
representing space s for cohomology with coefficients in "G".Another version of this result, due to Peter J. Huber, establishes a bijection with the "n"-th ech cohomology group when "X" is Hausdorff and
paracompact and "G" is countable, or when "X" is Hausdorff, paracompact and compactly generated and "G" is arbitrary. A further result of Morita establishes a bijection with the "n"-th numerable ech cohomology group for an arbitrary topological space "X" and "G" an arbitrary abelian group.Every CW-complex possesses a
Postnikov tower , that is, it is homotopy equivalent to an iterated fibration with fibers the Eilenberg–Mac Lane spaces.There is a method due to
Jean-Pierre Serre which allows one, at least theoretically, to compute homotopy groups of spaces using aspectral sequence for special fibrations with Eilenberg–Mac Lane spaces for fibers.ee also
*
Brown representability theorem , regarding representation spaces
*Moore space, the homology analogue.References
*S. Eilenberg, S. MacLane, Relations between homology and homotopy groups of spaces Ann. of Math. 46 (1945) pp. 480–509
*S. Eilenberg, S. MacLane, Relations between homology and homotopy groups of spaces. II Ann. of Math. 51 (1950) pp. 514–533
*Peter J. Huber (1961), Homotopical cohomology and ech cohomology, "Mathematische Annalen " 144 , 73–76.
*Kiiti Morita (1975), ech cohomology and covering dimension for topological spaces, "Fundamenta Mathematicae " 87, 31–52.
*springer|title=Eilenberg-MacLane space|id=E/e035200|first=Yu.B.|last= Rudyak
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.