- Suspension (topology)
In
topology , the suspension "SX" of atopological space "X" is thequotient space ::
of the product of "X" with the
unit interval "I" = [0, 1] . Intuitively, we make "X" into a cylinder and collapse both ends to two points. One views "X" as "suspended" between the end points. One can also view the suspension as two cones on "X" glued together at their base (or as a quotient of a single cone).Given a continuous map there is a map defined by This makes into a
functor from the category of topological spaces into itself. In rough terms increases dimension of a space by one: it takes an "n"-sphere to an ("n" + 1)-sphere for "n" ≥ 0.Note that is homeomorphic to the join where is a
discrete space with two points.The space is sometimes called the unreduced, unbased, or free suspension of , to distinguish it from the reduced suspension described below.
The suspension can be used to construct a homomorphism of
homotopy group s, to which theFreudenthal suspension theorem applies. Inhomotopy theory , the phenomena which are preserved under suspension, in a suitable sense, make upstable homotopy theory .Reduced suspension
If "X" is a
pointed space (with basepoint "x"0), there is a variation of the suspension which is sometimes more useful. The reduced suspension or based suspension Σ"X" of "X" is the quotient space::.
This is the equivalent to taking "SX" and collapsing the line ("x"0 × "I") joining the two ends to a single point. The basepoint of Σ"X" is the
equivalence class of ("x"0, 0).One can show that the reduced suspension of "X" is
homeomorphic to thesmash product of "X" with theunit circle "S"1.:
For
well-behaved spaces, such asCW complex es, the reduced suspension of "X" ishomotopy equivalent to the ordinary suspension.Σ gives rise to a functor from the
category of pointed spaces to itself. An important property of this functor is that it is aleft adjoint to the functor taking a (based) space to itsloop space . In other words,:
naturally, where stands for continuous maps which preserve basepoints.
ee also
*
Cone (topology)
*Join (topology) References
*
Allen Hatcher , [http://www.math.cornell.edu/~hatcher/AT/ATpage.html "Algebraic topology."] Cambridge University Presses, Cambridge, 2002. xii+544 pp. ISBN 0-521-79160-X and ISBN 0-521-79540-0
*planetmath|id=3984|title=Suspension
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