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(Redirected from Fibrations)
Concept in algebraic topology
The notion of a fibration generalizes the notion of a fiber bundle and plays an important role in algebraic topology, a branch of mathematics.
A fibration (also called Hurewicz fibration) is a mapping satisfying the homotopy lifting property for all spaces The space is called base space and the space is called total space. The fiber over is the subspace
Serre fibration
A Serre fibration (also called weak fibration) is a mapping satisfying the homotopy lifting property for all CW-complexes.
Every Hurewicz fibration is a Serre fibration.
Quasifibration
A mapping is called quasifibration, if for every and holds that the induced mapping is an isomorphism.
Every Serre fibration is a quasifibration.
Examples
The projection onto the first factor is a fibration. That is, trivial bundles are fibrations.
Every covering is a fibration. Specifically, for every homotopy and every lift there exists a uniquely defined lift with
Every fiber bundle satisfies the homotopy lifting property for every CW-complex.
A fiber bundle with a paracompact and Hausdorff base space satisfies the homotopy lifting property for all spaces.
An example of a fibration which is not a fiber bundle is given by the mapping induced by the inclusion where a topological space and is the space of all continuous mappings with the compact-open topology.
The Hopf fibration is a non-trivial fiber bundle and, specifically, a Serre fibration.
Basic concepts
Fiber homotopy equivalence
A mapping between total spaces of two fibrations and with the same base space is a fibration homomorphism if the following diagram commutes:
The mapping is a fiber homotopy equivalence if in addition a fibration homomorphism exists, such that the mappings and are homotopic, by fibration homomorphisms, to the identities and
Pullback fibration
Given a fibration and a mapping , the mapping is a fibration, where is the pullback and the projections of onto and yield the following commutative diagram:
The fibration is called the pullback fibration or induced fibration.
Pathspace fibration
With the pathspace construction, any continuous mapping can be extended to a fibration by enlarging its domain to a homotopy equivalent space. This fibration is called pathspace fibration.
The pathspace fibration is given by the mapping with The fiber is also called the homotopy fiber of and consists of the pairs with and paths where and holds.
For the special case of the inclusion of the base point , an important example of the pathspace fibration emerges. The total space consists of all paths in which starts at This space is denoted by and is called path space. The pathspace fibration maps each path to its endpoint, hence the fiber consists of all closed paths. The fiber is denoted by and is called loop space.
For a fibration with fiber and base point the inclusion of the fiber into the homotopy fiber is a homotopy equivalence. The mapping with , where and is a path from to in the base space, is a fibration. Specifically it is the pullback fibration of the pathspace fibration along . This procedure can now be applied again to the fibration and so on. This leads to a long sequence:
The fiber of over a point consists of the pairs where is a path from to , i.e. the loop space . The inclusion of the fiber of into the homotopy fiber of is again a homotopy equivalence and iteration yields the sequence:
Due to the duality of fibration and cofibration, there also exists a sequence of cofibrations. These two sequences are known as the Puppe sequences or the sequences of fibrations and cofibrations.
Principal fibration
A fibration with fiber is called principal, if there exists a commutative diagram:
The bottom row is a sequence of fibrations and the vertical mappings are weak homotopy equivalences. Principal fibrations play an important role in Postnikov towers.
Long exact sequence of homotopy groups
For a Serre fibration there exists a long exact sequence of homotopy groups. For base points and this is given by:
The homomorphisms and are the induced homomorphisms of the inclusion and the projection
The homotopy groups are trivial for so there exist isomorphisms between and for
Analog the fibers in and in are contractible to a point. Further the short exact sequences split and there are families of isomorphisms:
and
Spectral sequence
Spectral sequences are important tools in algebraic topology for computing (co-)homology groups.
The Leray-Serre spectral sequence connects the (co-)homology of the total space and the fiber with the (co-)homology of the base space of a fibration. For a fibration with fiber where the base space is a path connected CW-complex, and an additive homology theory there exists a spectral sequence:
Fibrations do not yield long exact sequences in homology, as they do in homotopy. But under certain conditions, fibrations provide exact sequences in homology. For a fibration with fiber where base space and fiber are path connected, the fundamental group acts trivially on and in addition the conditions for and for hold, an exact sequence exists (also known under the name Serre exact sequence):
This sequence can be used, for example, to prove Hurewicz's theorem or to compute the homology of loopspaces of the form
For the special case of a fibration where the base space is a -sphere with fiber there exist exact sequences (also called Wang sequences) for homology and cohomology:
Orientability
For a fibration with fiber and a fixed commutative ring with a unit, there exists a contravariant functor from the fundamental groupoid of to the category of graded -modules, which assigns to the module and to the path class the homomorphism where is a homotopy class in
A fibration is called orientable over if for any closed path in the following holds:
Euler characteristic
For an orientable fibration over the field with fiber and path connected base space, the Euler characteristic of the total space is given by:
Here the Euler characteristics of the base space and the fiber are defined over the field .