Whitehead product: Difference between revisions

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Applications to ∞-groupoids: I deleted the entire section. If written correctly, it would only be of tangential relevance to the article. In its current state, it is needlessly speculative (it is not a conjecture that infinity groupoids model homotopy types, it is well known), says almost nothing concrete, and the only concrete thing it says, that strict infinity groupoids can't model the three sphere because of nontrivial Whitehead products, is wrong because the three sphere is an h-spac
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 22:30, 25 January 2024

In mathematics, the Whitehead product is a graded quasi-Lie algebra structure on the homotopy groups of a space. It was defined by J. H. C. Whitehead in Template:Harv.

The relevant MSC code is: 55Q15, Whitehead products and generalizations.

Definition

Given elements fπk(X),gπl(X), the Whitehead bracket

[f,g]πk+l1(X)

is defined as follows:

The product Sk×Sl can be obtained by attaching a (k+l)-cell to the wedge sum

SkSl;

the attaching map is a map

Sk+l1  ϕSkSl.

Represent f and g by maps

f:SkX

and

g:SlX,

then compose their wedge with the attaching map, as

Sk+l1  ϕSkSl  fgX.

The homotopy class of the resulting map does not depend on the choices of representatives, and thus one obtains a well-defined element of

πk+l1(X).

Grading

Note that there is a shift of 1 in the grading (compared to the indexing of homotopy groups), so πk(X) has degree (k1); equivalently, Lk=πk+1(X) (setting L to be the graded quasi-Lie algebra). Thus L0=π1(X) acts on each graded component.

Properties

The Whitehead product satisfies the following properties:

  • Bilinearity. [f,g+h]=[f,g]+[f,h],[f+g,h]=[f,h]+[g,h]
  • Graded Symmetry. [f,g]=(1)pq[g,f],fπpX,gπqX,p,q2
  • Graded Jacobi identity. (1)pr[[f,g],h]+(1)pq[[g,h],f]+(1)rq[[h,f],g]=0,fπpX,gπqX,hπrX with p,q,r2

Sometimes the homotopy groups of a space, together with the Whitehead product operation are called a graded quasi-Lie algebra; this is proven in Template:Harvtxt via the Massey triple product.

Relation to the action of π1

If fπ1(X), then the Whitehead bracket is related to the usual action of π1 on πk by

[f,g]=gfg,

where gf denotes the conjugation of g by f.

For k=1, this reduces to

[f,g]=fgf1g1,

which is the usual commutator in π1(X). This can also be seen by observing that the 2-cell of the torus S1×S1 is attached along the commutator in the 1-skeleton S1S1.

Whitehead products on H-spaces

For a path connected H-space, all the Whitehead products on π*(X) vanish. By the previous subsection, this is a generalization of both the facts that the fundamental groups of H-spaces are abelian, and that H-spaces are simple.

Suspension

All Whitehead products of classes απi(X), βπj(X) lie in the kernel of the suspension homomorphism Σ:πi+j1(X)πi+j(ΣX)

Examples

  • [idS2,idS2]=2ηπ3(S2), where η:S3S2 is the Hopf map.

This can be shown by observing that the Hopf invariant defines an isomorphism π3(S2) and explicitly calculating the cohomology ring of the cofibre of a map representing [idS2,idS2]. Using the Pontryagin–Thom construction there is a direct geometric argument, using the fact that the preimage of a regular point is a copy of the Hopf link.

See also

References

Template:Reflist