Nerve complex

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Constructing the nerve of an open good cover containing 3 sets in the plane.

In topology, the nerve complex of a set family is an abstract complex that records the pattern of intersections between the sets in the family. It was introduced by Pavel Alexandrov[1] and now has many variants and generalisations, among them the Čech nerve of a cover, which in turn is generalised by hypercoverings. It captures many of the interesting topological properties in an algorithmic or combinatorial way.[2]

Basic definition

Let I be a set of indices and C be a family of sets (Ui)iI. The nerve of C is a set of finite subsets of the index set I. It contains all finite subsets JI such that the intersection of the Ui whose subindices are in J is non-empty:[3]Template:Rp

N(C):={JI:jJUj,J finite set}.

In Alexandrov's original definition, the sets (Ui)iI are open subsets of some topological space X.

The set N(C) may contain singletons (elements iI such that Ui is non-empty), pairs (pairs of elements i,jI such that UiUj), triplets, and so on. If JN(C), then any subset of J is also in N(C), making N(C) an abstract simplicial complex. Hence N(C) is often called the nerve complex of C.

Examples

  1. Let X be the circle S1 and C={U1,U2}, where U1 is an arc covering the upper half of S1 and U2 is an arc covering its lower half, with some overlap at both sides (they must overlap at both sides in order to cover all of S1). Then N(C)={{1},{2},{1,2}}, which is an abstract 1-simplex.
  2. Let X be the circle S1 and C={U1,U2,U3}, where each Ui is an arc covering one third of S1, with some overlap with the adjacent Ui. Then N(C)={{1},{2},{3},{1,2},{2,3},{3,1}}. Note that {1,2,3} is not in N(C) since the common intersection of all three sets is empty; so N(C) is an unfilled triangle.

The Čech nerve

Given an open cover C={Ui:iI} of a topological space X, or more generally a cover in a site, we can consider the pairwise fibre products Uij=Ui×XUj, which in the case of a topological space are precisely the intersections UiUj. The collection of all such intersections can be referred to as C×XC and the triple intersections as C×XC×XC.

By considering the natural maps UijUi and UiUii, we can construct a simplicial object S(C) defined by S(C)n=C×X×XC, n-fold fibre product. This is the Čech nerve.[4]

By taking connected components we get a simplicial set, which we can realise topologically: |S(π0(C))|.

Nerve theorems

The nerve complex N(C) is a simple combinatorial object. Often, it is much simpler than the underlying topological space (the union of the sets in C). Therefore, a natural question is whether the topology of N(C) is equivalent to the topology of C.

In general, this need not be the case. For example, one can cover any n-sphere with two contractible sets U1 and U2 that have a non-empty intersection, as in example 1 above. In this case, N(C) is an abstract 1-simplex, which is similar to a line but not to a sphere.

However, in some cases N(C) does reflect the topology of X. For example, if a circle is covered by three open arcs, intersecting in pairs as in Example 2 above, then N(C) is a 2-simplex (without its interior) and it is homotopy-equivalent to the original circle.[5]

A nerve theorem (or nerve lemma) is a theorem that gives sufficient conditions on C guaranteeing that N(C) reflects, in some sense, the topology of C. A functorial nerve theorem is a nerve theorem that is functorial in an appropriate sense, which is, for example, crucial in topological data analysis.[6]

Leray's nerve theorem

The basic nerve theorem of Jean Leray says that, if any intersection of sets in N(C) is contractible (equivalently: for each finite JI the set iJUi is either empty or contractible; equivalently: C is a good open cover), then N(C) is homotopy-equivalent to C.

Borsuk's nerve theorem

There is a discrete version, which is attributed to Borsuk.[7][3]Template:Rp Let K1,...,Kn be abstract simplicial complexes, and denote their union by K. Let Ui = ||Ki|| = the geometric realization of Ki, and denote the nerve of {U1, ... , Un } by N.

If, for each nonempty JI, the intersection iJUi is either empty or contractible, then N is homotopy-equivalent to K.

A stronger theorem was proved by Anders Bjorner.[8] if, for each nonempty JI, the intersection iJUi is either empty or (k-|J|+1)-connected, then for every jk, the j-th homotopy group of N is isomorphic to the j-th homotopy group of K. In particular, N is k-connected if-and-only-if K is k-connected.

Čech nerve theorem

Another nerve theorem relates to the Čech nerve above: if X is compact and all intersections of sets in C are contractible or empty, then the space |S(π0(C))| is homotopy-equivalent to X.[9]

Homological nerve theorem

The following nerve theorem uses the homology groups of intersections of sets in the cover.[10] For each finite JI, denote HJ,j:=H~j(iJUi)= the j-th reduced homology group of iJUi.

If HJ,j is the trivial group for all J in the k-skeleton of N(C) and for all j in {0, ..., k-dim(J)}, then N(C) is "homology-equivalent" to X in the following sense:

  • H~j(N(C))H~j(X) for all j in {0, ..., k};
  • if H~k+1(N(C))≇0 then H~k+1(X)≇0 .

See also

References