Path space fibration

In algebraic topology, the path space fibration over a pointed space ( X , ) {\displaystyle (X,*)} [1] is a fibration of the form[2]

Ω X P X χ χ ( 1 ) X {\displaystyle \Omega X\hookrightarrow PX{\overset {\chi \mapsto \chi (1)}{\to }}X}

where

  • P X {\displaystyle PX} is the based path space of the pointed space ( X , ) {\displaystyle (X,*)} ; that is, P X = { f : I X f   continuous , f ( 0 ) = } {\displaystyle PX=\{f\colon I\to X\mid f\ {\text{continuous}},f(0)=*\}} equipped with the compact-open topology.
  • Ω X {\displaystyle \Omega X} is the fiber of χ χ ( 1 ) {\displaystyle \chi \mapsto \chi (1)} over the base point of ( X , ) {\displaystyle (X,*)} ; thus it is the loop space of ( X , ) {\displaystyle (X,*)} .

The free path space of X, that is, Map ( I , X ) = X I {\displaystyle \operatorname {Map} (I,X)=X^{I}} , consists of all maps from I to X that do not necessarily begin at a base point, and the fibration X I X {\displaystyle X^{I}\to X} given by, say, χ χ ( 1 ) {\displaystyle \chi \mapsto \chi (1)} , is called the free path space fibration.

The path space fibration can be understood to be dual to the mapping cone.[clarification needed] The fiber of the based fibration is called the mapping fiber or, equivalently, the homotopy fiber.

Mapping path space

If f : X Y {\displaystyle f\colon X\to Y} is any map, then the mapping path space P f {\displaystyle P_{f}} of f {\displaystyle f} is the pullback of the fibration Y I Y , χ χ ( 1 ) {\displaystyle Y^{I}\to Y,\,\chi \mapsto \chi (1)} along f {\displaystyle f} . (A mapping path space satisfies the universal property that is dual to that of a mapping cylinder, which is a push-out. Because of this, a mapping path space is also called a mapping cocylinder.[3])

Since a fibration pulls back to a fibration, if Y is based, one has the fibration

F f P f p Y {\displaystyle F_{f}\hookrightarrow P_{f}{\overset {p}{\to }}Y}

where p ( x , χ ) = χ ( 0 ) {\displaystyle p(x,\chi )=\chi (0)} and F f {\displaystyle F_{f}} is the homotopy fiber, the pullback of the fibration P Y χ χ ( 1 ) Y {\displaystyle PY{\overset {\chi \mapsto \chi (1)}{\longrightarrow }}Y} along f {\displaystyle f} .

Note also f {\displaystyle f} is the composition

X ϕ P f p Y {\displaystyle X{\overset {\phi }{\to }}P_{f}{\overset {p}{\to }}Y}

where the first map ϕ {\displaystyle \phi } sends x to ( x , c f ( x ) ) {\displaystyle (x,c_{f(x)})} ; here c f ( x ) {\displaystyle c_{f(x)}} denotes the constant path with value f ( x ) {\displaystyle f(x)} . Clearly, ϕ {\displaystyle \phi } is a homotopy equivalence; thus, the above decomposition says that any map is a fibration up to homotopy equivalence.

If f {\displaystyle f} is a fibration to begin with, then the map ϕ : X P f {\displaystyle \phi \colon X\to P_{f}} is a fiber-homotopy equivalence and, consequently,[4] the fibers of f {\displaystyle f} over the path-component of the base point are homotopy equivalent to the homotopy fiber F f {\displaystyle F_{f}} of f {\displaystyle f} .

Moore's path space

By definition, a path in a space X is a map from the unit interval I to X. Again by definition, the product of two paths α , β {\displaystyle \alpha ,\beta } such that α ( 1 ) = β ( 0 ) {\displaystyle \alpha (1)=\beta (0)} is the path β α : I X {\displaystyle \beta \cdot \alpha \colon I\to X} given by:

( β α ) ( t ) = { α ( 2 t ) if  0 t 1 / 2 β ( 2 t 1 ) if  1 / 2 t 1 {\displaystyle (\beta \cdot \alpha )(t)={\begin{cases}\alpha (2t)&{\text{if }}0\leq t\leq 1/2\\\beta (2t-1)&{\text{if }}1/2\leq t\leq 1\\\end{cases}}} .

This product, in general, fails to be associative on the nose: ( γ β ) α γ ( β α ) {\displaystyle (\gamma \cdot \beta )\cdot \alpha \neq \gamma \cdot (\beta \cdot \alpha )} , as seen directly. One solution to this failure is to pass to homotopy classes: one has [ ( γ β ) α ] = [ γ ( β α ) ] {\displaystyle [(\gamma \cdot \beta )\cdot \alpha ]=[\gamma \cdot (\beta \cdot \alpha )]} . Another solution is to work with paths of arbitrary lengths, leading to the notions of Moore's path space and Moore's path space fibration, described below.[5] (A more sophisticated solution is to rethink composition: work with an arbitrary family of compositions; see the introduction of Lurie's paper,[6] leading to the notion of an operad.)

Given a based space ( X , ) {\displaystyle (X,*)} , we let

P X = { f : [ 0 , r ] X r 0 , f ( 0 ) = } . {\displaystyle P'X=\{f\colon [0,r]\to X\mid r\geq 0,f(0)=*\}.}

An element f of this set has a unique extension f ~ {\displaystyle {\widetilde {f}}} to the interval [ 0 , ) {\displaystyle [0,\infty )} such that f ~ ( t ) = f ( r ) , t r {\displaystyle {\widetilde {f}}(t)=f(r),\,t\geq r} . Thus, the set can be identified as a subspace of Map ( [ 0 , ) , X ) {\displaystyle \operatorname {Map} ([0,\infty ),X)} . The resulting space is called the Moore path space of X, after John Coleman Moore, who introduced the concept. Then, just as before, there is a fibration, Moore's path space fibration:

Ω X P X p X {\displaystyle \Omega 'X\hookrightarrow P'X{\overset {p}{\to }}X}

where p sends each f : [ 0 , r ] X {\displaystyle f:[0,r]\to X} to f ( r ) {\displaystyle f(r)} and Ω X = p 1 ( ) {\displaystyle \Omega 'X=p^{-1}(*)} is the fiber. It turns out that Ω X {\displaystyle \Omega X} and Ω X {\displaystyle \Omega 'X} are homotopy equivalent.

Now, we define the product map

μ : P X × Ω X P X {\displaystyle \mu :P'X\times \Omega 'X\to P'X}

by: for f : [ 0 , r ] X {\displaystyle f\colon [0,r]\to X} and g : [ 0 , s ] X {\displaystyle g\colon [0,s]\to X} ,

μ ( g , f ) ( t ) = { f ( t ) if  0 t r g ( t r ) if  r t s + r {\displaystyle \mu (g,f)(t)={\begin{cases}f(t)&{\text{if }}0\leq t\leq r\\g(t-r)&{\text{if }}r\leq t\leq s+r\\\end{cases}}} .

This product is manifestly associative. In particular, with μ restricted to Ω'X × Ω'X, we have that Ω'X is a topological monoid (in the category of all spaces). Moreover, this monoid Ω'X acts on P'X through the original μ. In fact, p : P X X {\displaystyle p:P'X\to X} is an Ω'X-fibration.[7]

Notes

  1. ^ Throughout the article, spaces are objects of the category of "reasonable" spaces; e.g., the category of compactly generated weak Hausdorff spaces.
  2. ^ Davis & Kirk 2001, Theorem 6.15. 2.
  3. ^ Davis & Kirk 2001, § 6.8.
  4. ^ using the change of fiber
  5. ^ Whitehead 1978, Ch. III, § 2.
  6. ^ Lurie, Jacob (October 30, 2009). "Derived Algebraic Geometry VI: E[k]-Algebras" (PDF).
  7. ^ Let G = Ω'X and P = P'X. That G preserves the fibers is clear. To see, for each γ in P, the map G p 1 ( p ( γ ) ) , g γ g {\displaystyle G\to p^{-1}(p(\gamma )),\,g\mapsto \gamma g} is a weak equivalence, we can use the following lemma:

    Lemma — Let p: DB, q: EB be fibrations over an unbased space B, f: DE a map over B. If B is path-connected, then the following are equivalent:

    • f is a weak equivalence.
    • f : p 1 ( b ) q 1 ( b ) {\displaystyle f:p^{-1}(b)\to q^{-1}(b)} is a weak equivalence for some b in B.
    • f : p 1 ( b ) q 1 ( b ) {\displaystyle f:p^{-1}(b)\to q^{-1}(b)} is a weak equivalence for every b in B.

    We apply the lemma with B = I , D = I × G , E = I × X P , f ( t , g ) = ( t , α ( t ) g ) {\displaystyle B=I,D=I\times G,E=I\times _{X}P,f(t,g)=(t,\alpha (t)g)} where α is a path in P and IX is t → the end-point of α(t). Since p 1 ( p ( γ ) ) = G {\displaystyle p^{-1}(p(\gamma ))=G} if γ is the constant path, the claim follows from the lemma. (In a nutshell, the lemma follows from the long exact homotopy sequence and the five lemma.)

References