Notes:CW-Complex

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Overview

I get CW-Complexes in terms of what they are but no so much in terms of a formal definition. This page details my research.

Munkres: Elements of Algebraic Topology

A CW-Complex is a topological space, (X,J), and a collection of (pairwise) disjoint open cells, {eα}αI, with X=αIeα, such that:

  1. (X,J) is a Hausdorff space
  2. For each open m-cell, eα, there exists a continuous map, fα:¯BmX such that:
    1. fα maps Bm[Note 1] homeomorphically onto eα and
    2. fα((¯Bm)) "into"[Note 2] a finite union of open cells, each of dimension (strictly) less than m
  3. A set AP(X) is closed in (X,J) if and only if αI[A¯eα is closed in ¯eα]

Hatcher: Algebraic Topology - Appendix

A CW-Complex is constructed as follows:

  1. Start with X0, the 0-cells of X
  2. Inductively, form the n-skeleton, Xn, from Xn1 by attaching n-cells, enα via maps, φα:Sn1Xn1.
    • This means that Xn is the quotient space of Xn1αDnα under the identifications:
      • xφα(x) for xDnα
    the cell enα is the homeomorphic image of DnαDnα under the quotient map
  3. X=nNXn with the weak topology.
    • A set AP(X) is open if and only if nN[AXn is open in Xn]

Algebraic Topology: An Intuitive Approach

We build an "attaching space" called a (finite) cell complex inductively from the following recipe:

  • Ingredients:
  • Construction:
    • X0:=k0i=1ˉe0i
    • Set X(1):=k1i=1ˉe1i
    • Define X(1):=k1i=1ˉe1i (where we consider each ˉe1i as a subspace of R
      • We could consider X(1) as a subset of k1i=1R for boundary purposes.
    • We must now construct an attaching map: h1:X(1)X0 to attach X(1) to X0
    • Define: X1:=X0h1X(1):=X0X(1)xh1(x)
    • Set X(2):=k2i=1ˉe2i
    • Specify an attaching map, h2:X(2)X1
    • And so on until we obtain Xn, then let X:=Xn - this final product is an n-dimensional cell complex.
      • For each q{0,,n} we call Xq a q-skeleton of X.
      • For a cell complex X we get 3 maps:
        1. For each q-cell, eqj we have the canonical inclusion map: iq,j:ˉeqjX(q)
        2. The canonical quotient map: π:X(q)Xq Caveat:what on earth.... - oh okay, might be canonical injection followed by projection of the quotient
        3. The inclusion map i:XqX
      • The composition of these maps: ϕqj:=iπiq,j:ˉeqjX
        • Called the characteristic map of the eqj cell.
          • The restriction of the characteristic map to the boundary, ˉeqj should agree with the restriction of the attaching map hq:X(q)Xq1 to ˉeqj

Klein bottle example

With 2-cells A and B:

  • A oriented (a)+(c)+b and
  • B oriented c+b+a
A CW-complex for the Klein bottle

I will almost certainly loose my paper notes.

  • X0:={(v,v)}
  • X(1):=i{a,b,c}¯B1=j{a,b,c}{(j,p) | p¯B1}={(a,1),,(a,1)a,(b,1),,(b,1)b,(c,1),,(c,1)c}

At this point X0 "looks like" a point and X(1) "looks like" 3 separate straight lines.


Now we need an attaching map:

  • h1:X(1)X0

The boundary is with X(1) considered as a subset of i{a,b,c}R, so in this case:

  • X(1)={(a,1),(a,1),(b,1),(b,1),(c,1),(c,1)}

Of course h1 maps every point in the boundary to (v,v) - the only vertex there is.


Note that h1 is continuous, as h11()= and h11({(v,v)})=X(1) (we consider the codomain with the subspace topology, X0 really can only have the trivial topology as a topology.


Now we can form an adjunction space:

  • X1:=X0X(1)xh1(x)=X0h1X(1)
    • It is easy to see that X0X(1) "looks like" 3 lines of length 2 that are disconnected and a point, also disconnected.
    • We then identify the end points of those 3 lines with the point v
      • Caveat:I think there are a few ways to do this ultimately the space "looks like" a point with 3 loops coming off it. Like a clover shape. But how do we preserve orientation? Does it matter? What do the different directions of each loop (and as the image of which of the 3 lines) correspond to?

2-cells

This is slightly trickier. Note: it doesn't matter if we consider a ¯B2 as a "disk" or a "square", as these are homeomorphic.

  • X(2):=AB
    which is the set that contains (i,(x,y)) given i=A or i=B and (x,y)¯B2.

The attaching map:

  • h2:X(2)X1 - where we consider X(2) as a subset of R2R2, meaning:
    • X(2)={(i,(x,y)) | i{A,B}(x,y)S1} - S1 is a circle centred at the origin of radius 1.

Notes

  1. Jump up Bm=Int(¯Bm)
  2. Jump up Into means nothing special, all functions map the domain into the co-domain, it is a common first-year mistake to look at the association of "onto" with "surjection" and associate into with "injection" - I mention this here to record Munkres' exact phrasing

References