Mapping space

{{Short description|Concept in topology}}

In mathematics, especially in algebraic topology, the mapping space between two spaces is the space of all the (continuous) maps between them.

Viewing the set of all the maps as a space is useful because that allows for topological considerations. For example, a curve h: I \to \operatorname{Map}(X, Y) in the mapping space is exactly a homotopy.

Topologies

{{expand section|date=November 2024}}

A mapping space can be equipped with several topologies. A common one is the compact-open topology. Typically, there is then the adjoint relation

:\operatorname{Map}(X \times Y, Z) \simeq \operatorname{Map}(X, \operatorname{Map}(Y, Z))

and thus \operatorname{Map} is an analog of the Hom functor. (For pathological spaces, this relation may fail.)

Smooth mappings

For manifolds M, N, there is the subspace \mathcal{C}^r(M, N) \subset \operatorname{Map}(M, N) that consists of all the \mathcal{C}^r-smooth maps from M to N. It can be equipped with the weak or strong topology.

A basic approximation theorem says that \mathcal{C}_W^s(M, N) is dense in \mathcal{C}_S^r(M, N) for 1 \le s \le \infty, 0 \le r < s.{{harvnb|Hirsch|1997|loc=Ch. 2., § 2., Theorem 2.6.}}

References

{{reflist}}

  • {{cite book|author-link=Morris Hirsch|last=Hirsch|first=Morris|title=Differential Topology|publisher=Springer|year=1997|isbn=0-387-90148-5}}
  • {{cite book|last=Wall|first=C. T. C.|title=Differential Topology|date=4 July 2016 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TT5yDAAAQBAJ|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9781107153523}}

{{topology-stub}}

Category:Algebraic topology