cofibration
In mathematics, in particular homotopy theory, a continuous mapping between topological spaces
:,
is a cofibration if it has the homotopy extension property with respect to all topological spaces . That is, is a cofibration if for each topological space , and for any continuous maps and with , for any homotopy from to , there is a continuous map and a homotopy from to such that for all and . (Here, denotes the unit interval .)
This definition is formally dual to that of a fibration, which is required to satisfy the homotopy lifting property with respect to all spaces; this is one instance of the broader Eckmann–Hilton duality in topology.
Cofibrations are a fundamental concept of homotopy theory. Quillen has proposed the notion of model category as a formal framework for doing homotopy theory in more general categories; a model category is endowed with three distinguished classes of morphisms called fibrations, cofibrations and weak equivalences satisfying certain lifting and factorization axioms.
Definition
= Homotopy theory =
In what follows, let denote the unit interval.
A map of topological spaces is called a cofibration{{Cite book|last=May, J. Peter.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/41266205|title=A concise course in algebraic topology|date=1999|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=0-226-51182-0|location=Chicago|oclc=41266205}}pg 51 if for any map such that there is an extension to (meaning: there is a map such that ), we can extend a homotopy of maps to a homotopy of maps , where
We can encode this condition in the following commutative diagramframelesswhere is the path space of equipped with the compact-open topology.
For the notion of a cofibration in a model category, see model category.
Examples
= In topology =
Topologists have long studied notions of "good subspace embedding", many of which imply that the map is a cofibration, or the converse, or have similar formal properties with regards to homology. In 1937, Borsuk proved that if is a binormal space ( is normal, and its product with the unit interval is normal) then every closed subspace of has the homotopy extension property with respect to any absolute neighborhood retract. Likewise, if is a closed subspace of and the subspace inclusion is an absolute neighborhood retract, then the inclusion of into is a cofibration.Edwin Spanier, Algebraic Topology, 1966, p. 57.Garth Warner, Topics in Topology and Homotopy Theory, section 6.
Hatcher's introductory textbook Algebraic Topology uses a technical notion of good pair which has the same long exact sequence in singular homology associated to a cofibration, but it is not equivalent. The notion of cofibration is distinguished from these because its homotopy-theoretic definition is more amenable to formal analysis and generalization.
If is a continuous map between topological spaces, there is an associated topological space called the mapping cylinder of . There is a canonical subspace embedding and a projection map such that as pictured in the commutative diagram below. Moreover, is a cofibration and is a homotopy equivalence. This result can be summarized by saying that "every map is equivalent in the homotopy category to a cofibration."
:File:Mapping cylinder from X to Y.png
Arne Strøm has proved a strengthening of this result, that every map factors as the composition of a cofibration and a homotopy equivalence which is also a fibration.Arne Strøm, The homotopy category is a homotopy category
A topological space with distinguished basepoint is said to be well-pointed if the inclusion map is a cofibration.
The inclusion map of the boundary sphere of a solid disk is a cofibration for every .
A frequently used fact is that a cellular inclusion is a cofibration (so, for instance, if is a CW pair, then is a cofibration). This follows from the previous fact and the fact that cofibrations are stable under pushout, because pushouts are the gluing maps to the skeleton.
= In chain complexes =
Let be an Abelian category with enough projectives.
If we let be the category of chain complexes which are in degrees , then there is a model category structure{{Cite book|last=Quillen, Daniel G.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/294862881|title=Homotopical algebra|date=1967|publisher=Springer-Verlag|isbn=978-3-540-03914-3|location=Berlin|oclc=294862881}}pg 1.2 where the weak equivalences are the quasi-isomorphisms, the fibrations are the epimorphisms, and the cofibrations are maps
which are degreewise monic and the cokernel complex is a complex of projective objects in . It follows that the cofibrant objects are the complexes whose objects are all projective.= Simplicial sets =
Properties
- For Hausdorff spaces, every cofibration is a closed inclusion (injective with closed image); the result also generalizes to weak Hausdorff spaces.
- The pushout of a cofibration is a cofibration. That is, if is any (continuous) map (between compactly generated spaces), and is a cofibration, then the induced map is a cofibration.
- The mapping cylinder can be understood as the pushout of and the embedding (at one end of the unit interval) . That is, the mapping cylinder can be defined as . By the universal property of the pushout, is a cofibration precisely when a mapping cylinder can be constructed for every space X.
- There is a cofibration (A, X), if and only if there is a retraction from to , since this is the pushout and thus induces maps to every space sensible in the diagram.
- Similar equivalences can be stated for deformation-retract pairs, and for neighborhood deformation-retract pairs.
Constructions with cofibrations
= Cofibrant replacement =
Note that in a model category if is not a cofibration, then the mapping cylinder forms a cofibrant replacement. In fact, if we work in just the category of topological spaces, the cofibrant replacement for any map from a point to a space forms a cofibrant replacement.
= Cofiber =
For a cofibration we define the cofiber to be the induced quotient space . In general, for , the cofiberpg 59 is defined as the quotient space
which is the mapping cone of . Homotopically, the cofiber acts as a homotopy cokernel of the map . In fact, for pointed topological spaces, the homotopy colimit ofIn fact, the sequence of maps comes equipped with the cofiber sequence which acts like a distinguished triangle in triangulated categories.See also
References
{{reflist}}
- [http://www.math.uchicago.edu/~may/CONCISE/ConciseRevised.pdf Peter May, "A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology"] : chapter 6 defines and discusses cofibrations, and they are used throughout
- {{cite book |url=http://groupoids.org.uk/topgpds.html |first=Ronald |last=Brown |author-link=Ronald Brown (mathematician) |title=Topology and Groupoids |chapter=7. Cofibrations |isbn=978-1-4196-2722-4 }} Chapter 7 has many results not found elsewhere.
{{Manifolds}}