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In
mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, particularly
topology Topology (from the Greek language, Greek words , and ) is the branch of mathematics concerned with the properties of a Mathematical object, geometric object that are preserved under Continuous function, continuous Deformation theory, deformat ...
, the homeomorphism group of a
topological space In mathematics, a topological space is, roughly speaking, a Geometry, geometrical space in which Closeness (mathematics), closeness is defined but cannot necessarily be measured by a numeric Distance (mathematics), distance. More specifically, a to ...
is the group consisting of all
homeomorphism In mathematics and more specifically in topology, a homeomorphism ( from Greek roots meaning "similar shape", named by Henri Poincaré), also called topological isomorphism, or bicontinuous function, is a bijective and continuous function ...
s from the space to itself with function composition as the group operation. They are important to the theory of topological spaces, generally exemplary of automorphism groups and topologically invariant in the group isomorphism sense.


Properties and examples

There is a natural
group action In mathematics, a group action of a group G on a set S is a group homomorphism from G to some group (under function composition) of functions from S to itself. It is said that G acts on S. Many sets of transformations form a group under ...
of the homeomorphism group of a space on that space. Let X be a topological space and denote the homeomorphism group of X by G. The action is defined as follows: \begin G\times X &\longrightarrow X\\ (\varphi, x) &\longmapsto \varphi(x) \end This is a group action since for all \varphi,\psi\in G, \varphi\cdot(\psi\cdot x)=\varphi(\psi(x))=(\varphi\circ\psi)(x), where \cdot denotes the group action, and the
identity element In mathematics, an identity element or neutral element of a binary operation is an element that leaves unchanged every element when the operation is applied. For example, 0 is an identity element of the addition of real numbers. This concept is use ...
of G (which is the identity function on X) sends points to themselves. If this action is transitive, then the space is said to be homogeneous.


Topology

As with other sets of maps between topological spaces, the homeomorphism group can be given a topology, such as the compact-open topology. In the case of regular, locally compact spaces the group multiplication is then continuous. If the space is compact and Hausdorff, the inversion is continuous as well and \operatorname(X) becomes a
topological group In mathematics, topological groups are the combination of groups and topological spaces, i.e. they are groups and topological spaces at the same time, such that the continuity condition for the group operations connects these two structures ...
. If X is Hausdorff, locally compact, and locally connected this holds as well. Some locally compact separable metric spaces exhibit an inversion map that is not continuous, resulting in \text(X) not forming a topological group.


Mapping class group

In
geometric topology In mathematics, geometric topology is the study of manifolds and Map (mathematics)#Maps as functions, maps between them, particularly embeddings of one manifold into another. History Geometric topology as an area distinct from algebraic topo ...
especially, one considers the quotient group obtained by quotienting out by isotopy, called the mapping class group: :(X) = (X) / _0(X). The MCG can also be interpreted as the 0th homotopy group, (X) = \pi_0((X)). This yields the short exact sequence: :1 \rightarrow _0(X) \rightarrow (X) \rightarrow (X) \rightarrow 1. In some applications, particularly surfaces, the homeomorphism group is studied via this short exact sequence, and by first studying the mapping class group and group of isotopically trivial homeomorphisms, and then (at times) the extension.


See also

* Mapping class group


References

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Homeomorphism Group Group theory Topology Topological groups