Acyclic space
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In mathematics, an acyclic space is a nonempty topological space X in which cycles are always boundaries, in the sense of homology theory. This implies that integral homology groups in all dimensions of X are isomorphic to the corresponding homology groups of a point.
In other words, using the idea of reduced homology,
It is common to consider such a space as a nonempty space without "holes"; for example, a circle or a sphere is not acyclic but a disc or a ball is acyclic. This condition however is weaker than asking that every closed loop in the space would bound a disc in the space, all we ask is that any closed loop—and higher dimensional analogue thereof—would bound something like a "two-dimensional surface." The condition of acyclicity on a space X implies, for example, for nice spaces—say, simplicial complexes—that any continuous map of X to the circle or to the higher spheres is null-homotopic.
If a space X is contractible, then it is also acyclic, by the homotopy invariance of homology. The converse is not true, in general. Nevertheless, if X is an acyclic CW complex, and if the fundamental group of X is trivial, then X is a contractible space, as follows from the Whitehead theorem and the Hurewicz theorem.
Examples
[edit]Acyclic spaces occur in topology, where they can be used to construct other, more interesting topological spaces.
For instance, if one removes a single point from a manifold M which is a homology sphere, one gets such a space. The homotopy groups of an acyclic space X do not vanish in general, because the fundamental group need not be trivial. For example, the punctured Poincaré homology sphere is an acyclic, 3-dimensional manifold which is not contractible.
This gives a repertoire of examples, since the first homology group is the abelianization of the fundamental group. With every perfect group G one can associate a (canonical, terminal) acyclic space, whose fundamental group is a central extension of the given group G.
The homotopy groups of these associated acyclic spaces are closely related to Quillen's plus construction on the classifying space BG.
Acyclic groups
[edit]An acyclic group is a group G whose classifying space BG is acyclic; in other words, all its (reduced) homology groups vanish, i.e., , for all . Every acyclic group is thus a perfect group, meaning its first homology group vanishes: , and in fact, a superperfect group, meaning the first two homology groups vanish: . The converse is not true: the binary icosahedral group is superperfect (hence perfect) but not acyclic.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Dror, Emmanuel (1972), "Acyclic spaces", Topology, 11 (4): 339–348, doi:10.1016/0040-9383(72)90030-4, MR 0315713
- Dror, Emmanuel (1973), "Homology spheres", Israel Journal of Mathematics, 15 (2): 115–129, doi:10.1007/BF02764597, MR 0328926
- Berrick, A. Jon; Hillman, Jonathan A. (2003), "Perfect and acyclic subgroups of finitely presentable groups", Journal of the London Mathematical Society, 68 (3): 683–698, doi:10.1112/S0024610703004587, MR 2009444, S2CID 30232002
External links
[edit]- "Acyclic groups", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]