Configuration space (mathematics)

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The configuration space of all unordered pairs of points on the circle is the Möbius strip.

In mathematics, a configuration space is a construction closely related to state spaces or phase spaces in physics. In physics, these are used to describe the state of a whole system as a single point in a high-dimensional space. In mathematics, they are used to describe assignments of a collection of points to positions in a topological space. More specifically, configuration spaces in mathematics are particular examples of configuration spaces in physics in the particular case of several non-colliding particles.

Definition

For a topological space X and a positive integer n, let Xn be the Cartesian product of n copies of X, equipped with the product topology. The nth (ordered) configuration space of X is the set of n-tuples of pairwise distinct points in X:

Confn(X):=Xn{(x1,x2,,xn)Xnxi=xj for some ij}.[1]

This space is generally endowed with the subspace topology from the inclusion of Confn(X) into Xn. It is also sometimes denoted F(X,n), Fn(X), or 𝒞n(X).[2]

There is a natural action of the symmetric group Sn on the points in Confn(X) given by

Sn×Confn(X)Confn(X)(σ,x)σ(x)=(xσ(1),xσ(2),,xσ(n)).

This action gives rise to the Template:Varth unordered configuration space of Template:Var,

UConfn(X):=Confn(X)/Sn,

which is the orbit space of that action. The intuition is that this action "forgets the names of the points". The unordered configuration space is sometimes denoted 𝒰𝒞n(X),[2] Bn(X), or Cn(X). The collection of unordered configuration spaces over all n is the Ran space, and comes with a natural topology.

Alternative formulations

For a topological space X and a finite set S, the configuration space of Template:Var with particles labeled by Template:Var is

ConfS(X):={ff:SX is injective}.

For n, define 𝐧:={1,2,,n}. Then the Template:Varth configuration space of X is denoted simply Confn(X).[3]

Examples

  • The space of ordered configuration of two points in 𝐑2 is homeomorphic to the product of the Euclidean 3-space with a circle, i.e. Conf2(𝐑2)𝐑3×S1.[2]
  • More generally, the configuration space of two points in 𝐑n is homotopy equivalent to the sphere Sn1.[4]
  • The configuration space of n points in 𝐑2 is the classifying space of the nth braid group (see below).

Connection to braid groups

Template:Main

The Template:Var-strand braid group on a connected topological space Template:Var is

Bn(X):=π1(UConfn(X)),

the fundamental group of the Template:Varth unordered configuration space of Template:Var. The Template:Var-strand pure braid group on Template:Var is[2]

Pn(X):=π1(Confn(X)).

The first studied braid groups were the Artin braid groups Bnπ1(UConfn(𝐑2)). While the above definition is not the one that Emil Artin gave, Adolf Hurwitz implicitly defined the Artin braid groups as fundamental groups of configuration spaces of the complex plane considerably before Artin's definition (in 1891).[5]

It follows from this definition and the fact that Confn(𝐑2) and UConfn(𝐑2) are Eilenberg–MacLane spaces of type K(π,1), that the unordered configuration space of the plane UConfn(𝐑2) is a classifying space for the Artin braid group, and Confn(𝐑2) is a classifying space for the pure Artin braid group, when both are considered as discrete groups.[6]

Configuration spaces of manifolds

If the original space X is a manifold, its ordered configuration spaces are open subspaces of the powers of X and are thus themselves manifolds. The configuration space of distinct unordered points is also a manifold, while the configuration space of not necessarily distinctTemplate:Clarify unordered points is instead an orbifold.

A configuration space is a type of classifying space or (fine) moduli space. In particular, there is a universal bundle π:EnCn which is a sub-bundle of the trivial bundle Cn×XCn, and which has the property that the fiber over each point pCn is the n element subset of X classified by p.

Homotopy invariance

The homotopy type of configuration spaces is not homotopy invariant. For example, the spaces Confn(m) are not homotopy equivalent for any two distinct values of m: Confn(0) is empty for n2, Confn() is not connected for n2, Confn(2) is an Eilenberg–MacLane space of type K(π,1), and Confn(m) is simply connected for m3.

It used to be an open question whether there were examples of compact manifolds which were homotopy equivalent but had non-homotopy equivalent configuration spaces: such an example was found only in 2005 by Riccardo Longoni and Paolo Salvatore. Their example are two three-dimensional lens spaces, and the configuration spaces of at least two points in them. That these configuration spaces are not homotopy equivalent was detected by Massey products in their respective universal covers.[7] Homotopy invariance for configuration spaces of simply connected closed manifolds remains open in general, and has been proved to hold over the base field 𝐑.[8][9] Real homotopy invariance of simply connected compact manifolds with simply connected boundary of dimension at least 4 was also proved.[10]

Configuration spaces of graphs

Some results are particular to configuration spaces of graphs. This problem can be related to robotics and motion planning: one can imagine placing several robots on tracks and trying to navigate them to different positions without collision. The tracks correspond to (the edges of) a graph, the robots correspond to particles, and successful navigation corresponds to a path in the configuration space of that graph.[11]

For any graph Γ, Confn(Γ) is an Eilenberg–MacLane space of type K(π,1)[11] and strong deformation retracts to a CW complex of dimension b(Γ), where b(Γ) is the number of vertices of degree at least 3.[11][12] Moreover, UConfn(Γ) and Confn(Γ) deformation retract to non-positively curved cubical complexes of dimension at most min(n,b(Γ)).[13][14]

Configuration spaces of mechanical linkages

One also defines the configuration space of a mechanical linkage with the graph Γ its underlying geometry. Such a graph is commonly assumed to be constructed as concatenation of rigid rods and hinges. The configuration space of such a linkage is defined as the totality of all its admissible positions in the Euclidean space equipped with a proper metric. The configuration space of a generic linkage is a smooth manifold, for example, for the trivial planar linkage made of n rigid rods connected with revolute joints, the configuration space is the n-torus Tn.[15][16] The simplest singularity point in such configuration spaces is a product of a cone on a homogeneous quadratic hypersurface by a Euclidean space. Such a singularity point emerges for linkages which can be divided into two sub-linkages such that their respective endpoints trace-paths intersect in a non-transverse manner, for example linkage which can be aligned (i.e. completely be folded into a line).[17]

Compactification

The configuration space Confn(X) of distinct points is non-compact, having ends where the points tend to approach each other (become confluent). Many geometric applications require compact spaces, so one would like to compactify Confn(X), i.e., embed it as an open subset of a compact space with suitable properties. Approaches to this problem have been given by Raoul Bott and Clifford Taubes,[18] as well as William Fulton and Robert MacPherson.[19]

See also

Template:Portal

References

Template:Reflist

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