Mapping space

From testwiki
Revision as of 03:08, 27 January 2025 by imported>David Eppstein (References: templatize)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description In mathematics, especially in algebraic topology, the mapping space between two spaces is the space of all the (continuous) maps between them.

Viewing the set of all the maps as a space is useful because that allows for topological considerations. For example, a curve h:IMap(X,Y) in the mapping space is exactly a homotopy.

Topologies

Template:Expand section

A mapping space can be equipped with several topologies. A common one is the compact-open topology. Typically, there is then the adjoint relation

Map(X×Y,Z)Map(X,Map(Y,Z))

and thus Map is an analog of the Hom functor. (For pathological spaces, this relation may fail.)

Smooth mappings

For manifolds M,N, there is the subspace 𝒞r(M,N)Map(M,N) that consists of all the 𝒞r-smooth maps from M to N. It can be equipped with the weak or strong topology.

A basic approximation theorem says that 𝒞Ws(M,N) is dense in 𝒞Sr(M,N) for 1s,0r<s.[1]

References

Template:Reflist


Template:Topology-stub