In
algebraic topology
Algebraic topology is a branch of mathematics that uses tools from abstract algebra to study topological spaces. The basic goal is to find algebraic invariant (mathematics), invariants that classification theorem, classify topological spaces up t ...
, the cellular approximation theorem states that a
map
A map is a symbolic depiction of interrelationships, commonly spatial, between things within a space. A map may be annotated with text and graphics. Like any graphic, a map may be fixed to paper or other durable media, or may be displayed on ...
between
CW-complexes can always be taken to be of a specific type. Concretely, if ''X'' and ''Y'' are CW-complexes, and ''f'' : ''X'' → ''Y'' is a continuous map, then ''f'' is said to be ''cellular'', if ''f'' takes the
''n''-skeleton of ''X'' to the ''n''-skeleton of ''Y'' for all ''n'', i.e. if
for all ''n''. The content of the cellular approximation theorem is then that any continuous map ''f'' : ''X'' → ''Y'' between CW-complexes ''X'' and ''Y'' is
homotopic to a cellular map, and if ''f'' is already cellular on a subcomplex ''A'' of ''X'', then we can furthermore choose the homotopy to be stationary on ''A''. From an algebraic topological viewpoint, any map between CW-complexes can thus be taken to be cellular.
Idea of proof
The proof can be given by
induction after ''n'', with the statement that ''f'' is cellular on the skeleton ''X''
''n''. For the base case n=0, notice that every
path-component of ''Y'' must contain a 0-cell. The
image
An image or picture is a visual representation. An image can be Two-dimensional space, two-dimensional, such as a drawing, painting, or photograph, or Three-dimensional space, three-dimensional, such as a carving or sculpture. Images may be di ...
under ''f'' of a 0-cell of ''X'' can thus be connected to a 0-cell of ''Y'' by a path, but this gives a homotopy from ''f'' to a map which is cellular on the 0-skeleton of X.
Assume inductively that ''f'' is cellular on the (''n'' − 1)-skeleton of ''X'', and let ''e''
''n'' be an ''n''-cell of ''X''. The
closure of ''e''
''n'' is
compact
Compact as used in politics may refer broadly to a pact or treaty; in more specific cases it may refer to:
* Interstate compact, a type of agreement used by U.S. states
* Blood compact, an ancient ritual of the Philippines
* Compact government, a t ...
in ''X'', being the image of the characteristic map of the cell, and hence the image of the closure of ''e''
''n'' under ''f'' is also compact in ''Y''. Then it is a general result of CW-complexes that any compact subspace of a CW-complex meets (that is,
intersects non-trivial
In mathematics, the adjective trivial is often used to refer to a claim or a case which can be readily obtained from context, or a particularly simple object possessing a given structure (e.g., group, topological space). The noun triviality usual ...
ly) only finitely many cells of the complex. Thus ''f''(''e''
''n'') meets at most finitely many cells of ''Y'', so we can take
to be a cell of highest dimension meeting ''f''(''e''
''n''). If
, the map ''f'' is already cellular on ''e''
''n'', since in this case only cells of the ''n''-skeleton of ''Y'' meets ''f''(''e''
''n''), so we may assume that ''k'' > ''n''. It is then a technical, non-trivial result (see Hatcher) that the
restriction of ''f'' to
can be
homotoped relative to ''X''
''n-1'' to a map missing a point ''p'' ∈ ''e''
''k''. Since ''Y''
''k'' −
deformation retracts onto the subspace ''Y''
''k''-''e''
''k'', we can further homotope the restriction of ''f'' to
to a map, say, ''g'', with the property that ''g''(''e''
''n'') misses the cell ''e''
''k'' of ''Y'', still relative to ''X''
''n-1''. Since ''f''(''e''
''n'') met only finitely many cells of ''Y'' to begin with, we can repeat this process finitely many times to make
miss all cells of ''Y'' of dimension larger than ''n''.
We repeat this process for every ''n''-cell of ''X'', fixing cells of the subcomplex ''A'' on which ''f'' is already cellular, and we thus obtain a homotopy (relative to the (''n'' − 1)-skeleton of ''X'' and the ''n''-cells of ''A'') of the restriction of ''f'' to ''X''
''n'' to a map cellular on all cells of ''X'' of dimension at most ''n''. Using then the
homotopy extension property
In mathematics, in the area of algebraic topology, the homotopy extension property indicates which homotopies defined on a subspace can be extended to a homotopy defined on a larger space. The homotopy extension property of cofibrations is du ...
to extend this to a homotopy on all of ''X'', and patching these homotopies together, will finish the proof. For details, consult Hatcher.
Applications
Some homotopy groups
The cellular approximation theorem can be used to immediately calculate some
homotopy group
In mathematics, homotopy groups are used in algebraic topology to classify topological spaces. The first and simplest homotopy group is the fundamental group, denoted \pi_1(X), which records information about loops in a space. Intuitively, homo ...
s. In particular, if
Cellular approximation for pairs
Let ''f'':''(X,A)''→''(Y,B)'' be a map of
CW-pairs, that is, ''f'' is a map from ''X'' to ''Y'', and the image of
A\subseteq X \, under ''f'' sits inside ''B''. Then ''f'' is homotopic to a cellular map ''(X,A)''→''(Y,B)''. To see this, restrict ''f'' to ''A'' and use cellular approximation to obtain a homotopy of ''f'' to a cellular map on ''A''. Use the homotopy extension property to extend this homotopy to all of ''X'', and apply cellular approximation again to obtain a map cellular on ''X'', but without violating the cellular property on ''A''.
As a consequence, we have that a CW-pair ''(X,A)'' is
n-connected
In algebraic topology, homotopical connectivity is a property describing a topological space based on the dimension of its holes. In general, low homotopical connectivity indicates that the space has at least one low-dimensional hole. The concep ...
, if all cells of
X-A have dimension strictly greater than ''n'': If
i\leq n \,, then any map
(D^i,\partial D^i) \,→''(X,A)'' is homotopic to a cellular map of pairs, and since the ''n''-skeleton of ''X'' sits inside ''A'', any such map is homotopic to a map whose image is in ''A'', and hence it is 0 in the relative homotopy group
\pi_i(X,A) \,.
We have in particular that
(X,X^n)\, is ''n''-connected, so it follows from the long exact sequence of homotopy groups for the pair
(X,X^n) \, that we have isomorphisms
\pi_i(X^n) \,→
\pi_i(X) \, for all
i and a surjection \pi_n(X^n) \,→\pi_n(X) \,.
CW approximation
For every space ''X'' one can construct a CW complex ''Z'' and a
weak homotopy equivalence f \colon Z\to X that is called a CW approximation to ''X''. CW approximation, being a weak homotopy equivalence, induces isomorphisms on homology and cohomology groups of ''X''. Thus one often can use CW approximation to reduce a general statement to a simpler version that only concerns CW complexes.
CW approximation is constructed inducting on
skeleta Z_i of
Z, so that the maps
(f_i)_*\colon \pi_k (Z_i)\to \pi_k(X) are isomorphic for
k< i and are onto for
k=i (for any basepoint). Then
Z_ is built from
Z_i by attaching (i+1)-cells that (for all basepoints)
* are attached by the mappings
S^i \to Z_i that generate the kernel of
\pi_i (Z_i)\to \pi_i(X) (and are mapped to ''X'' by the contraction of the corresponding spheroids)
* are attached by constant mappings and are mapped to ''X'' to generate
\pi_(X) (or
\pi_(X)/(f_i)_* (\pi_ (Z_i)) ).
The cellular approximation ensures then that adding (i+1)-cells doesn't affect
\pi_k (Z_i)\stackrel \pi_k (X) for
k, while \pi_i (Z_i) gets factored by the classes of the attachment mappings S^i \to Z_i of these cells giving \pi_i (Z_)\stackrel \pi_i (X). Surjectivity of \pi_ (Z_)\to \pi_ (X) is evident from the second step of the construction.
References
* {{Citation , last1=Hatcher , first1=Allen , title=Algebraic topology , url=http://pi.math.cornell.edu/~hatcher/AT/ATpage.html , publisher=
Cambridge University Press
Cambridge University Press was the university press of the University of Cambridge. Granted a letters patent by King Henry VIII in 1534, it was the oldest university press in the world. Cambridge University Press merged with Cambridge Assessme ...
, isbn=978-0-521-79540-1 , year=2005
Theorems in algebraic topology