Solutions To Homework Problems: November 25, 2015
Solutions To Homework Problems: November 25, 2015
Solutions To Homework Problems: November 25, 2015
Contents
1 Homework Assignment # 1 1
2 Homework assignment #2 6
3 Homework Assignment # 3 9
4 Homework Assignment # 4 14
5 Homework Assignment # 5 20
6 Homework Assignment # 6 25
7 Homework Assignment # 7 32
8 Homework Assignment # 8 37
9 Homework Assignment #9 41
10 Homework Assignment # 10 46
1 Homework Assignment # 1
1. Show that the - definition of continuity of a map f : X Y between metric spaces is
equivalent to the definition of continuity in terms of open subsets.
Proof. Suppose f is --continuous (i.e., continuous in the sense of the - definition of
continuity) and that U is an open subset of Y . We need to show that f 1 (U ) is an open
subset of X. The definition of an open subset U of a metric space implies that U can be
written as a union of open balls Bi , i I. Then
[ [
f 1 (U ) = f 1 ( Bi ) = f 1 (Bi ),
iI iI
and hence it suffices to show that the inverse image of a ball B in Y is an open subset of
X. So let B = B (y0 ) = {y Y | d(y, y0 ) < } and let x0 be an element of f 1 (B). Then
1
the continuity of f in the - sense implies that there is some > 0 such that B (x0 )
f 1 (B (y0 )). This shows that f is continuous.
Conversely, assume that f is continuous (as defined via open sets). To show that f is
--continuous let x X and > 0. Then f 1 (B (f (x)) is an open subset of X containing
x. Hence there is some > 0 such that the ball B (x) is contained in f 1 (B (f (x))). In
other words, f (B (x)) B (f (x)), which implies
Proof. Part (a). Suppose U T, i.e., U is an open subset of X w.r.t. the topology T. Then
U is the union of subsets Bi belonging to B. By assumption, each Bi is the union of subsets
belonging to B0 , and hence U is the union of subsets belonging to B0 and consequently
U T 0 . Analogously, U T 0 implies U T, and hence the topologies T and T 0 coincide.
Part (b). We recall that the metric topology on a set X equipped with a metric d(x, y) is
generated by the collection of subsets of X consisting of the open balls B (x) = {y X |
d(y, x) < } of any radius > 0 around any point x X. Specializing to X = Rn , let us
denote by B (x) (resp. B0 (x)) the open ball of radius around x Rn for the Euclidean
metric d (resp. the `1 -metric d1 ), and by B (resp. B0 ) the collection of all balls B (x) (resp.
B0 (x)). By part (a) it suffices to show that
Comparing balls defined w.r.t. the Euclidean metric d with those w.r.t. the metric d1 will
require inequalities comparing the distances d(x, y) and d1 (x, y) for x, y Rn . We recall
that d(x, y) = ||x y||, and d1 (x, y) = ||x y||1 , where
q
||v|| := v12 + + vn2 and ||v||1 := |v1 | + + |vn |
is the standard norm (resp. the 1-norm) of a vector v Rn . These norms are related by the
inequalities
||v|| ||v||1 ||v||1 n||v||.
2
The first inequality follows from
Here the second inclusion is a consequence of the triangle inequality for the metric d, since
if z B (y), then
d(z, x) d(z, y) + d(y, x) < + d(y, x) = ,
and hence z B (x). This proves (1). Statement (2) is proved similarly: assume y B0 (x)
and set := d(y, x) > 0. Then
where the second inclusion is a consequence of the triangle inequality for the metric d1 .
Part (c). For (x, y) Rm Rn = Rm+n , the relationship between ||x||1 , ||y||1 and ||(x, y)||1
is given by
||(x, y)||1 = |x1 | + + |xm | + |y1 | + + |yn | = ||(x, y)||1 ,
which is simpler than the corresponding relationship between the Euclidean norms of these
vectors. This equality implies in particular
B0 1 (x) B0 2 (y) B0 1 +2 ((x, y)) and B0 ((x, y)) B0 (x) B0 (y). (1.2)
This motivates us to compare the d1 metric topology on Rm+n with the product topology of
Rm and Rn , with each factor equipped with the d1 metric topology. A basis for the metric
topology for Rm+n is given by the balls B0 ((x, y)) Rm+n . A basis for the product topology
is given by U V , where U Rm , V Rn are subsets which are unions of open balls in
Rm and Rn , respectively. In particular, any such product U V is a union of subsets of the
form B0 1 (x) B0 2 (y) which shows that these products of balls form a basis for the product
topology. As in part (b), the inclusions (1.2) imply that every open ball B0 ((x, y)) is a union
of product of balls, and that every product of balls is a union of balls. By part (a) this
implies that the topologies they generate agree.
3
Proof. If U1 is an open subset of Y1 then p11 (U1 ) = U1 Y2 is an open subset of the Cartesian
product Y1 Y2 and hence p1 is continuous; similarly for p2 .
Now assume that f : X Y1 Y2 is continuous. Then the i-th component map fi = pi f
is continuous as a composition of the continuous maps pi and f .
Conversely, let us assume that the component maps f1 and f2 are continuous. To show
that f is continuous, it suffices to show that f 1 (B) is open for an open subset B Y1 Y2
belonging to the basis B for the product topology consisting S of products B = U1 U2 of
open sets SUi Yi (since any open set is of the form U = Bi for Bi B and hence
f 1 (U ) = f 1 (Bi ) which is an open subset of X, provided the subsets f 1 (Bi ) are open).
Now
f 1 (U V ) = f11 (U ) f21 (V )
is the intersection of open subsets of X (since fi is continuous and Ui is an open subset of
Yi ) and hence open.
2
4. Show that the map f : GLn (R) GLn (R), A 7 A1 is continuous (here GLn (R) Rn
is equipped with the metric topology).
Proof. We recall from a lemma in class that f is continuous if and only if the composition
f i 2
GLn (R) GLn (R) , Rn
is continuous, where i is the inclusion map. Moreover, this composition is continuous if and
2
only if all component maps pij i f are continuous (thinking of Rn as the space of all
2
n n-matrices, pij for 1 i, j n is the projection map that takes a matrix M Rn to
its component Mij R). We conclude that it suffices to show that for 1 i, j n the map
GLn (R) R, A 7 (A1 )ij is continuous.
We recall from linear algebra that the inverse of A can be calculated by the formula
Ct
A1 = ,
det(A)
where det(A) is the determinant of A, and C t is the transpose of the n n matrix C whose
entry Cij is (1)i+j times the (i, j)-minor of A (the determinant of the (n 1) (n 1)
matrix that results from deleting row i and column j of A).
This shows that each matrix entry (A1 )ij is of the form p(A)
q(A)
, where p(A) and q(A) are
polynomial functions of the matrix entries of A. In particular the functions p, q : GLn (R) R
are continuous. Since q(A) = det(A) in non-zero for all A GLn (R), we conclude with a
lemma from class that the function p(A)
q(A)
is continous.
The quotient space T3 := ([1, 1] [1, 1])/ equipped with the quotient topology,
where the equivalence relation is generated by (s, 1) (s, 1) and (1, t) (1, t).
4
These three spaces are homeomorphic, but we dont yet have the tools to prove this in an
efficient way. For this homework problem construct two continuous bijections between pairs
of these spaces. Hint: An important part of this problem is to figure out which of these
three spaces should be the (co)domains of the two maps you are looking for. Of course,
any bijection has an inverse, but determining continuity is a different matter. Think about
which type of topological space (subspace, product space, quotient space) you would prefer
to have as domain (resp. codomain) for a map whose continuity you want to prove.
Proof. We recall from class that checking continuity of a map f : X Y is easy if the domain
X is a quotient space and the range Y is a subspace or a product space. This suggests to
construct continuous bijections
f : T3 T1 and g : T3 T2 .
To argue that this is a well-defined bijection, we note that the map [1, 1] S 1 , s 7
(cos s, sin s) is surjective, and its only failure to be injective is due to the fact that it maps
s = 1 and s = +1 to the same point in S 1 . The map above when precomposed with the
projection map [1, 1] [1, 1] T3 is the product of two copies of this map. Hence it is
surjective, and its only failure of injectivity comes from points (s, t) with s = 1 or t = 1.
This shows that g is in fact a bijection. To prove continuity of g it suffices to prove continuity
of the composition
pr g
[1, 1] [1, 1] / [1, 1] [1, 1]/{1} / S1 S1
i / R2 R2 = R4 ,
where pr is the projection map, the i is the inclusion map. This map is continuous, since all
its component functions, given explicitely in equation (1.3) are continuous.
Now we define the map f , first describing it geometrically. From this point of view, it
will be obvious that f is bijective. Then we will derive an explicit formula for f , which will
make it easy to argue that f is continuous.
We note that there is a surjective map p : T1 S which sends a point v R3 to the
unique point (x, y, 0) S which is closest to v. Similarly, there is a surjective map
We want to construct the map f such that it fits into a commutative diagram
f
T3 = ([1, 1] [1, 1])/ / T1 ,
q p
f0
[1, 1]/{1} / S
where f0 is the homeomorphism we discussed in class that sends [s] to (cos s, sin s, 0)
S R3 . We note that the fiber q 1 ([s]) for any fixed [s] [1, 1]/{1} is a circle. Similarly,
for any point (x, y, 0) of the circle S R3 , the fiber p1 (x, y, 0) T1 is a circle of radius r
5
in the plane spanned by the unit vectors (x, y, 0) and (0, 0, 1) with center (x, y, 0). We note
that the map
[1, 1]/{1} R3
[t] 7(x, y, 0) + r cos t(x, y, 0) + r sin t(0, 0, 1)
= ((1 + r cos t)x, (1 + r cos t)y, r sin t)
is a bijection onto the circle p1 (x, y, 0). In particular, defining f on each fiber q 1 ([s]) to
be this map, we obtain a bijection between T3 and T1 .
To argue that f is continuous, we write down f : T3 T1 explicitly: f0 sends a point
[s] [1, 1]/{1} to (x, y, 0) = (cos s, sin s, 0) and hence
f ([s, t]) =((1 + r cos t)x, (1 + r cos t)y, r sin t)
(1.4)
=((1 + r cos t) cos s, (1 + r cos t) sin s, r sin t).
Then f is continuous if and only if the composition
pr f
[1, 1] [1, 1] / [1, 1] [1, 1]/{1} / T1 i / R3
is continuous. This is continuous since its component functions are, which can be read off
from equation (1.4).
2 Homework assignment #2
1. Show that the quotient space Dn /S n1 is homeomorphic to the sphere S n .
Proof. Generalizing the case n = 1 which we did in class, we define a map
sin ||v||
f : Dn R Rn = Rn+1 by f (v) := (cos ||v||, v )
||v||
We recall from Calculus that t sintt is a continuous function on R \ {0} which extends to
a continuous function on all of R (by defining its value at t = 0 to be ). It follows that f
is a continuous function since all its components are continuous.
Its easy to check that f (v) belongs to S n Rn+1 : f (0) = (0, 1) S n , and for v 6= 0 we
have
||f (v)||2 = cos2 ||v|| + sin2 ||v||2 = 1
We conclude that the map Dn S n , v 7 f (v) is continuous w.r.t. the subspace topology
on S n since its composition with the inclusion map i : S n Rn+1 is the map f . Abusing
notation, we write again f : Dn S n .
We note that f maps any unit vector v Dn to the point (1, 0) Rn R. Hence f
induces a well-defined map
f: Dn /S n1 S n [v] 7 f (v)
This map is continuous since its composition with the projection map p : Dn Dn /S n1 is
the map f which is continuous. We wont present the details that f is bijective (if you can
come up with a map which in fact is a bijection, I believe that you could prove that it is).
6
So f: Dn /S n1 S n is a continuous bijection, and hence it is a homeomorphism, since
its range is Hausdorff (since S n is a metric space), and its domain is compact (Dn Rn is
closed and bouneded and hence compact by the Heine-Borel Theorem; it follows that the
quotient space Dn /S n1 is compact).
2. Use the Heine-Borel Theorem to decide which of the topological groups GLn (R), O(n),
SO(n) are compact. Provide proofs for your statements. Hint: A strategy often useful
for proving that a subset C of Rn is closed is to show that C is of the form f 1 (C 0 ) for
some closed subset C 0 Rk (often C 0 consists of just one point) and some continuous map
f : Rn Rk .
2
Proof. The general linear group GLn (R) Mnn (R) = Rn is not compact, since it is not
bounded. To see this, consider the sequence of diagonal matrices
i
1
Ai = .
. .
.
1
2
Considered as a vector in Rn , the norm squared of Ai is given by
||Ai ||2 = i2 + 12 + + 12 = i2 + n 1
2
which shows that GLn (R) is an unbounded subset of Rn .
We claim that O(n) and SO(n) are compact. We begin by showing that they are bounded
2
subspaces of Rn . So let A O(n) be a matrix with column vectors v1 , . . . , vn Rn . The
assumption that A belongs to O(n) means that the vi s form an orthogonal basis of Rn .
Hence
||A||2 = ||v1 ||2 + + ||vn ||2 = n,
2
which shows that O(n) and hence also SO(n) O(n) are bounded subsets of Rn .
2
To show that O(n) is a closed subset of Rn we note that a matrix A with column vectors
vi Rn belongs to O(n) if and only if the vi s are orthogonal, i.e., if
hvi , vj i = i,j for all 1 i, j n,
where hv, wi denotes the scalar product of vectors v, w, and the delta symbol i,j is defined
by declaring i,i = 1, and i,j = 0 for i 6= j. More elegantly, this can be rephrased by saying
A O(n) if and only if At A = I, where At is the transpose of A, and I is the identity
matrix. In particular, if we define
f : Mnn Mnn by A 7 At A,
then O(n) = f 1 (I). Since f is continuous (since each component is), and the one-element
2 2
subset {I} Mnn = Rn is closed, it follows that O(n) is a closed subset of Rn .
To show that SO(n) is a closed subset, we note that SO(n) = O(n) SLn (R), where
SLn (R) is the special linear group consisting of all n n matrices with determinant 1. In
other words, SLn (R) = det1 (1), where det : Mnn R is the map that sends a matrix to
its determinant. Since the determinant is a polynomial function of the entries of the matrix,
2
this is a continuous function, and hence SLn (R) = det1 (1) is a closed subset of Rn . This
implies that the intersection SO(n) = O(n) SLn (R) is closed as well.
7
4. Let X be a topological space which is the union of two subspaces X1 and X2 . Let f : X
Y be a (not necessarily continuous) map whose restriction to X1 and X2 is continuous.
Remark. This result is needed to verify that various constructions (e.g., concatenations of
paths) in fact lead to continuous maps. In a typical situation, we have continuous maps
f1 : X1 Y and f2 : X2 Y which agree on X1 X2 and hence there is a well-defined map
(
f1 (x) x X1
f : X Y given by f (x) =
f2 (x) x X2
The above result then helps to show that this map is continuous.
Proof. To prove part (a) let U Y be open. Then Ui := fi1 (U ) is an open subset of Xi ,
i.e., it is of the form Ui = Vi Xi , where Vi X is open. If follows that Ui is an open subset
of X, and hence f 1 (U ) = f11 (U ) f21 (U ) = U1 U2 is an open subset of X, proving the
continuity of f .
To prove part (b) we note that f : X Y is continuous if and only if f 1 (U ) is a closed
subset of X for every closed subset U Y . Then repeating the previous sentences with open
replaced by closed provides a proof of part (b).
For part (c) consider the map f : X = R Y = R given by f (t) = 0 if t (, 0), and
f (t) = 1 if t [0, ). The restrictions of f to (, 0) resp. [0, ) are constant and hence
continuous, but f is not.
5. Which of the topological groups GLn (R), O(n), SO(n) are connected? Hint: Use without
proof the fact that every element in SO(n) is represented by a matrix of block diagonal form
whose diagonal blocks are the 1 1 matrix with entry +1 and/or 2 2 rotational matrices
cos sin
R= .
sin cos
Here block diagonal means that all other entries are zero.
Proof. The determinant function det : Mnn R is a continuous function. Since the de-
terminant for matrices in GLn (R) or O(n) is non-zero, its restriction to G = GLn (R), O(n)
provides a continuous map
f : G R \ {0}.
It follows that G = f 1 ((, 0)) f 1 ((0, )) is a decomposition of G into a disjoint union
of open subsets. Both of these are not empty, since the determinant of the identity matrix
is 1, and the determinant of the diagonal matrix with diagonal entries (1, 1, . . . , 1) is 1.
This shows that the spaces GLn (R) and O(n) are both not connected.
To prove that SO(n) is connected it suffices to show that SO(n) is path connected,
i.e., any two elements A, B SO(n) can be connected by a path. We will show this by
8
constructing for every A SO(n) a path A : [0, 1] SO(n) with A (0) = I (the identity
matrix) and A (1) = A. This implies that any two points A, B SO(n) can be connected by
a path AB , obtained by first taking a path from A to I, by running the path A backwards,
and then taking the path B from I to B. In formulas, the path AB is given by
(
A (1 2t) for t [0, 21 ]
AB (t) =
B (2t 1) for t [ 12 , 1]
3 Homework Assignment # 3
1. Show that the connected sum RP2 #RP2 of two copies of the real projective plane is
homeomorphic to the Klein bottle K.
Proof. Consider the topological spaces given by identifying egdes with the same label for the
disjoint union of polygons given by the following pictures.
b b c
c c c
a a a a a a b c
c
b b b b b
The left picture is our standard construction of the Klein bottle K. The second and third
picture shows the quotient obtained from two disjoint triangles by identifying edges with the
same label. The second space is homeomorphic to the first since identifying the two edges
labeled c in the second picture, we obtain the first. The third space is homeomorphic to
the second, since the top right triangle of picture 2 is just redrawn as the left triangle of
9
picture 3 (flipped over such that the a-edge of that triangle lines up with the a-edge of the
second triangle). The fourth space is homeomorphic to the third since it is obtained from
the third space by identifying the two edges labeled a in the third picture.
Reading off the word bbcc by starting at the top left corner the last picture and going
around counterclockwise, the topological space given by that picture is (bbcc). From class
we know the homeomorphisms
Composing all the homeomorphisms mentioned above we obtain the desired homeomorphism
between the Klein bottle K and the connected sum RP2 #RP2 .
g = T # . . . #T
| {z }
g
This implies
g = T # . . . #T (a1 b1 a1 1 1 1
1 b1 )# . . . #(ag bg ag bg )
(3.1)
(a1 b1 a1 1 1 1
1 b1 . . . ag bg ag bg )
and
RP2 # . . . #RP2 (a1 a1 )# . . . #(ak ak ) (a1 a1 . . . ak ak ). (3.2)
Part (b). The homeomorphism 3.1 implies that g is the quotient space of a polygon with
4g edges (the length of the word a1 b1 a1 1 1 1
1 b1 . . . ag bg ag bg ) and edge identification encoded
by this word. After gluing, this polygon will provide a pattern of polygons on g with
one face and 2g edges (of the original 4g edges of the polygon, the pairs of edges with the
same label are glued, resulting in 2g edges after gluing). Each of the original 4g vertices is
indentified with any other by gluing, resulting in one vertex in the quotient space (this is
easy to check for the first four vertices corresponding to the first torus, and then arguing
inductively). It follows that
(g ) = #V #E + #F = 1 2g + 1 = 2 2g.
10
The argument for RP2 # . . . #RP2 is completely analogous. The homeomorphism 3.2 implies
that this surface is the quotient space of a 2k-gon with edge identifications encoded in the
word a1 a1 . . . ak ak . Using the resulting pattern of polygons on RP2 # . . . #RP2 to calculate
its Euler characteristic, we obtain
(RP2 # . . . #RP2 ) = #V #E + #F = 1 k + 1 = 2 k.
| {z }
k
3. Important examples of quotient spaces are orbit spaces of a group G acting on a topological
space X. We recall that a (left) of a group G on a set X is given by a map
(a) Consider the action Z2 R2 R2 , (m, n), (x, y) 7 (x + m, y + n). Show that the
quotient space R2 /Z2 is homeomorphic to the torus, described as the quotient space
a a
Use without proof the fact that this orbit space is Hausdorff (this will come up later this
semester).
(b) Consider the action G R2 R2 where G is the subgroup of the group of isometries of
the metric space R2 generated by the isometries g, h : R2 R2 defined by
11
Show that the quotient space R2 /G is homeomorphic to the Klein bottle, described as
the quotient space of the square [0, 1] [0, 1] with edge identifications
a a
Again, use without proof the fact that this orbit space is Hausdorff. Hint: Show that
every orbit can be represented by a point (x, y) [0, 1] [0, 1]. To do this, it might be
helpful to argue that the composition ghgh1 is the identity and to use this to show that
every element of G can be uniquely written in the form g m hn with m, n Z.
Proof. Part (a). We recall that the torus T is the quotient (I I)/ where I = [0, 1] and
the equivalence relation is generated by (x, 0) (x, 1) and (0, y) (1, y). Consider the map
f : T = (I I)/ R2 /Z2 [(x, y)] 7 Z2 (x, y),
where we write Z2 (x, y) for the orbit of the Z2 -action through (x, y).
Next we will argue that f is well-defined, surjective, injective and continuous. This
implies that f is a homeomorphism since its domain is compact (as the image of the closed
bounded subset I I R2 under the projection map I I (I I)/ , and we use the
fact that R2 /Z2 is Hausdorff.
The map f is well-defined since the points (x, 0), (x, 1) I I belong to the same orbit
of the Z2 -action on R2 , since (0, 1)(x, 0) = (x, 1). Similarly, (0, y) and (1, y) belong to
the same Z2 -orbit.
For every (x, y) R2 the element (x [x], y [y]) belongs to I I, where [x] Z is the
largest integer smaller or equal to x R. Since ([x], [y]) Z2 applied to (x[x], y [y])
gives (x, y), this shows that (x [x], y [y]) and (x, y) belong to the same orbit and
hence the map f is surjective.
Two elements (x, y), (x0 , y 0 ) R2 belong to the same Z2 -orbit if and only if x x0 Z
and y y 0 Z. Hence the only points (x, y) I I mapping to the same orbit are of
the form (0, y), (1, y) or (x, 0), (x, 1). Since these points are identified in I I/ , the
map f is injective.
To prove continuity of f consider the commutative diagram
I I i / R2 .
p q
f
(I I)/ / R2 /Z2
The inclusion map i and the projection maps p, q are continuous, and so the composi-
tion q i is continuous. By commutativity of the diagram it follows that f p = q i
is continuous, and hence f is continuous.
12
Part (b). The proof is analogous to that of part (a). Explicitly the Klein bottle K is the
quotient (I I)/ where the equivalence relation is generated by (x, 0) (1 x, 1) and
(0, y) (1, y). Consider the map
f : T = (I I)/ R2 /Z2 [(x, y)] 7 G(x, y),
where we write G(x, y) for the orbit of the G-action through (x, y). We will prove this in
the same steps as in (a), but first we prove the following result.
Lemma 3.3. The G-orbit G(x, y) of a point (x, y) R2 is given explicitly by
G(x, y) = {(m + (1)n x, n + y) | m, n Z}.
To prove this result we first verify that the relation ghgh1 = 1 holds in G:
h1 g h g
(x, y) 7 (x, 1 + y) 7 (1 x, 1 + y) 7 ((1 x), 1 + (1 + y)) = (1 + x, y) 7 (x, y)
A general element of G is a word made from the letters g, g 1 , h, h1 . The relation just
proved implies hgh1 = g 1 which implies
h1 g 1 = g 1 h1 .
In particular, we can move all factors g 1 to the left of the factors h1 , which shows that
every element of G can be written in the form g m hn for m, n Z. Since
g m hn (x, y) = g m ((1)n x, n + y) = (m + (1)n x, n + y),
this proves the lemma.
The map f is well-defined since by the lemma the points (x, 0), (x, 1) I I (resp.
the points (0, y) and (1, y)) belong to the same G-orbit.
The map f is surjective since by the lemma for the orbit through any point (x, y) R2 ,
there is a unique point (x0 , y 0 ) [0, 1) [0, 1) in the same orbit as (x, y).
For every (x, y) R2 the element (x [x], y [y]) belongs to I I, where [x] Z is the
largest integer smaller or equal to x R. Since ([x], [y]) Z2 applied to (x[x], y [y])
gives (x, y), this shows that (x [x], y [y]) and (x, y) belong to the same orbit and
hence the map f is surjective.
Two elements (x, y), (x0 , y 0 ) R2 belong to the same Z2 -orbit if and only if x x0 Z
and y y 0 Z. Hence the only points (x, y) I I mapping to the same orbit are of
the form (0, y), (1, y) or (x, 0), (x, 1). Since these points are identified in I I/ , the
map f is injective.
To prove continuity of f consider the commutative diagram
I I
i / R2 .
p q
f
(I I)/ / R2 /Z2
The inclusion map i and the projection maps p, q are continuous, and so the composi-
tion q i is continuous. By commutativity of the diagram it follows that f p = q i
is continuous, and hence f is continuous.
13
4. a) Show that a subspace of a Hausdorff space is Hausdorff and that a product of Hausdorff
spaces is Hausdorff.
b) Show that a subspace of a second countable space is second countable and that a product
of second countable spaces is second countable.
Proof. Part (a). Suppose A X is a subspace of a Hausdorff space X. To show that
A is Hausdorff, let x, y A be distinct points. Since X is Hausdorff, there are disjoint
open subsets U, V X with x U and y V . Then U A and V A are disjoint open
neighborhoods of x resp. y in A, proving that A is Hausdorff.
Suppose X, Y are Hausdorff spaces. To show that X Y is Hausdorff, let (x, y), (x0 , y 0 )
X Y be distinct points. Without loss of generality we may assume x 6= x0 . This allows
us to find disjoint open neighborhoods U, V X of x resp. x0 . Then U Y and V Y are
disjoint open neighborhoods of (x, y) resp. (x0 , y 0 ), which proves that X Y is Hausdorff.
Part (b). Let A be a subspace of a second countable space X. Let {Ui }iI be a countable
basis for X. We claim that the countable collection {Ui A}iI is a basis for A, thus proving
that A is second countable. To prove the claim, we recall that every open subset of A is of
the form U A for some open subset U . Now U can be expressed as a union of Ui s for i
belonging to some subset J I. It follows that
[ [
U A = ( Ui ) A = (Ui A),
iJ iJ
(x, y) Ui Vj U V W
4 Homework Assignment # 4
1. Let n : (I, I) (S 1 , 1) be the based loop defined by n (s) = e2ins . Show that the map
: Z 1 (S 1 , 1) given by n 7 [n ] is a group homomorphism.
Proof. We note that
14
and so we need to construct a homotopy relative endpoints between m+n and the concate-
nation m n (note that they are not the same path unless m = n: both wind around the
circle m + n times, but m+n goes around the circle at a constant speed, while m n winds
around the circle n times on the interval [0, 1/2], while its winds around m times on [1/2, 1]).
To produce the desired homotopy we note that m+n = p 1 and m n = p 2 , where
p : R S 1 is defined by p(s) = e2is , and the paths i : [0, 1] R are given by
(
2ns 0 s 1/2
1 (s) = (m + n)s 2 (s) =
2ms m + n 1/2 s 1
We note that paths 1 and 2 have the same start/end point and hence they are homotopic
via the linear homotopy Ht connecting them. Then p Ht is the desired homotopy between
the paths m+n = p 1 and m n = p 2 .
(b) Use the homotopies (1) to finish our proof that 1 (X, x0 ) is a group. In other words,
show that the constant map cx0 gives an identity element for 1 (X, x0 ), and that [] is
the inverse for [] 1 (X, x0 ).
: 1 (X, x0 ) 1 (X, x1 ) [] 7 [ ]
is an isomorphism of groups.
Proof. Part (a). The strategy of constructing these homotopies is analoguous to the strategy
used in problem 1. We note that
= 1 and c(0) = 2 ,
Let Ht be the linear homotopy between 1 and 2 . This is a homotopy of paths since the
initial and terminal points of the paths 1 and 2 agree. This implies that Ht is the
desired homotopy between 1 = and 1 = c(0) .
Similarly,
c(0) = 1 and c(0) = 2 ,
15
where 1 , 2 : [0, 1] [0, 1] are the paths given by
(
0 0 s 12
1 (s) =
2(s 1) 12 s 1
and 2 (s) = 0. As before, the linear homotopy Gt between these maps is a path homotopy
since 1 (0) = 2 (0) and 1 (1) = 2 (1). It follows that Gt is a homotopy between c(0)
and as desired.
Part (b). Let be a loop in X, based at x0 X. Then the third and fourth homotopy in
part (a) implies the equalities in 1 (X, x0 )
This shows that [cx0 ] is the identity element for the multiplication in 1 (X, x0 ).
Similarly, the first and second homotopy from part (a) imply the equalities
in 1 (X, x0 ). These equalities imply that [] is the inverse of []. In particular, 1 (X, x0 ) is
a group.
Part (c). First we show that : 1 (X, x0 ) 1 (X, x1 ) is a homomorphism. So let ,
be loops in X based at x0 . Then
([][]) = ([ ]) = [ ] = [ ]
= [ ][ ] = ([]) ([])
Here we avoid using parantheses for the concatenation operation; this is OK by the fact
that the paths resulting from different ways of putting in parantheses leads to homotopic
paths. The first and second equality is just the definition of multiplication in 1 (X, x0 )
resp. the definition of . The third equation holds due to the homotopy ' cx0 (an
application of the second homotopy of part (a)), and the fact that we can insert at any point
an appropriate constant path into an iterated concatenation without changing the homotopy
class of the path (follows from either the third or the fourth homotopy of part (a)). The last
two equations again hold by construction of multiplication in the fundamental group resp.
the map .
It remains to show that is an isomorphism. We claim that its inverse is given by
: 1 (X, x1 ) 1 (X, x0 ).
() = ([ ]) = [ ] = [cx1 cx0 ] = []
Here the first two equations is just by construction of resp. , the third equation holds
thanks to the first two homotopies of part (a), and the last equation holds due to the last
two homotopies of part (a).
16
(a) Show that S 1 is not a retract of D2 . Hint: Show that the assumption that there is a
continuous map r : D2 S 1 which restricts to the identity on S 1 leads to a contradiction
by contemplating the induced map r of fundamental groups.
(b) Brouwers Fixed Point Theorem states that every continuous map f : Dn Dn has a
fixed point, i.e., a point x with f (x) = x. Prove this for n = 2. Hint: show that if f has
no fixed point, then a retraction map r : D2 S 1 can be constructed out of f .
S1
Choosing a basepoint x0 S 1 and applying the fundamental group functor gives the com-
mutative diagram
i /
1 (S 1 , x0 ) 1 (D2 , x0 )
NNN
NNN
NN
id =id NNN'
r
1 (S 1 , x0 )
This gives the desired contradiction since according to the diagram the identity map on
1 (S 1 , x0 )
= Z factors through the trivial group 1 (D2 , x0 ).
To prove part (b) we assume that f : Dn Dn does not have a fixed point, i.e., that for
all x Dn , f (x) 6= x. Then the line through the points f (x) and x intersects the sphere
S n1 in two points. Let r(x) S n1 be the intersection point closer to x. It is clear from the
construction that r : Dn S n1 has the property r(x) = x for x S n1 , and so it remains
to show the continuity of r to derive the desired contradiction from part (a).
To show that r is continuous, we note that r(x) can be written in the form
(the solutions of this equation correspond to the two intersections of the line through x
and f (x) with S n1 ; hence it is clear geometrically, that there are two solution for every
x, and that exactly one solution is non-negative). Writing out the quadratic equation (4.1)
explicitly as
||x f (x)||2 2 (x) + 2hx, x f (x)i(x) + ||x||2 1 = 0
shows that its coefficients are continuous functions of x, and hence the quadratic formula
shows that its non-negative solution (x) is continuous function of x. We conclude that r(x)
is a continuous function of x since its components are linear combinations of products of
continuos functions.
17
4. We recall that the torus T and the Klein bottle K can both be described as quotient
spaces of the square by identifying edges with the same label as shown in the following
pictures.
b b
T = a a K= a a
b b
Each edge of the square can be interpreted as a path in the square, which projects to a based
loop in the quotient space T resp. K. Here the base point x0 of the quotient space is the
projection of each of the four vertices of the square. Abusing language, let us denote by a
resp. b the elements in the fundamental group of T (resp. K) represented by these loops.
Prove the following identities:
aba1 b1 = 1 1 (T, x0 ) abab1 = 1 1 (K, x0 ).
Proof. We begin with the torus T = ([0, 1] [0, 1])/ with equivalence relation generated
by (0, y) (1, y) and (x, 0) (x, 1). For i = 1, 2, let i , i : I [0, 1] [0, 1] be the paths
in the square [0, 1] [0, 1] given by its edges, with the direction provided by the arrow on
each edge, as shown in the picture
x
e0 1
[0, 1] [0, 1] = 1 2
It should be emphasized that this is a precise description by adopting the convention that
all of these paths are the linear paths connecting their endpoints. Going counterclockwise
around the boundary of the square, we obtain the loop
:= 1 1 2 2 ,
based at the top left corner point x0 (strictly speaking we should put parentheses here, since
we are talking about paths, but we dont want to burden the notation). Let p : I I T be
the projection map. We note that the projection p i of the paths i is a loop in T based
at the point x0 := p(x0 ). In fact, p 1 and p 2 are the same loop in T which we denote
by , and [] 1 (T, x0 ) is the generator called a. Similarly, projecting the paths i we
obtain a loop in T based at x0 with [] = b 1 (T, x0 ). Hence
aba1 b1 = [][][][] = [ ] = [p (1 1 2 2 )] = [p ].
e0 in the convex subset [0, 1]2 R2 , the linear homotopy Ht
Since is a loop based at x
between this concatenation and the constant loop cxe0 is a homotopy relative endpoints (we
18
want to emphasize that the fact that is a loop is essential here; by contrast, the linear
homotopy between the path 1 and cxe0 is not a homotopy relative endpoints). It follows
that p Ht : I T is a homotopy between p and the constant loop cx0 , which by (??)
implies the relation aba1 b1 = 1 in the fundamental group of the torus.
The argument in the case of the Klein bottle K is completely analogous. As before we
have paths i , i for i = 1, 2 in [0, 1]2 which project to loops , based at x0 = p(e
x0 ) K
under the projection map p : [0, 1]2 ([0, 1]2 / ) = K. Here is the picture:
x
e0 1
[0, 1] [0, 1] = 1 2
The only difference to the previous situation is that we have the loop
:= 1 1 2 2
in [0, 1]2 , which is homotopic to the constant loop cxe0 . The image of the loop under p is
the loop which represents the element abab1 in the fundemental group of the
Klein bottle. This proves the relation abab1 = 1.
5. Let Z2 act on R2 by translation (as in problem # 3 of the last set). Show that the
projection p : R2 R2 /Z2 is a covering map.
Proof. We note that for (x, y) R2 the subset p1 (p(x, y)) R2 is the orbit through (x, y)
(this is true in general for the projection map p : X X/G to the orbit space for a G-action
on a topological space X). More explicitly:
is an open subset of R2 , since it is the union of the open subsets (m, n) + U given by the
image of U under the homeomorphism R2 R2 , (x, y) 7 (x + m, y + n). It follows that
p(U ) is an open subset of R2 /Z2 . In other words, p is an open map, which means that p
takes open subsets of its domain to open subsets of its range.
We claim that the open subset p(U ) R2 /Z2 is evenly covered, provided the intersection
((m, n) + U ) U is empty for (m, n) 6= (0, 0). To prove the claim, assume that ((m, n) + U )
U = for (m, n) 6= (0, 0). This implies that the the sets (m, n) + U in the decomposition
(4.2) of p1 (p(U )) are pairwise disjoint, since if (x, y) ((m, n) + U ) ((m0 , n0 ) + U ) for
(m, n) 6= (m0 , n0 ), then (x m0 , y n0 ) ((m m0 , n n0 ) + U ) U , contradicting our
assumption that this intersection is empty. This implies that the restriction of p to (m, n)+U
19
is a continuous bijection between (m, n) + U and p(U ). Moreover, this map is open (as the
restriction of the open map p), and hence it is a homeomorphism. This finishes the proof of
the claim above.
To finish the proof we note that for any (x, y) R2 the open ball U = B1/2 (x, y) of radius
1/2 around (x, y) does not intersect any translated ball (m, n) + U . In particular p(U ) is an
evenly covered open subset. Since every point of R2 /Z2 is contained in an open subset of
this form, this proves that p : R2 R2 /Z2 is a covering map.
5 Homework Assignment # 5
1. Let f : S 1 S 1 be defined by f (z) = z n for some n Z. Calculate the induced
homomorphism
f : 1 (S 1 , 1) 1 (S 1 , 1).
Clarification: Weve proved that the fundamental group 1 (S 1 , 1) is isomorphic to Z. In
particular, any endomorphism of 1 (S 1 , 1) is given by multiplication by some integer k Z.
Calculating f means determining that integer k for the endomorphism f End(1 (S 1 , 1)).
Proof. We recall that the homotopy class [1 ] 1 (S 1 , 1) of the based loop 1 : I S 1 ,
defined by 1 (s) = e2is , is a generator of 1 (S 1 , 1). So it suffices to calculate f [1 ] =
[f 1 ] 1 (S 1 , 1):
Hence f ([1 ]) = [n ] = n[1 ] 1 (S 1 , 1), where the second equation was proved in problem
#1 of assignment # 4. This shows that the endomorphism f is given by multiplication by
n Z.
e X be a covering space such that for each x X the fiber p1 (x) is countable.
2. Let p : X
(b) If X is compact manifold of dimension 2 and p is a d-fold covering map, what is the
Euler characteristic of X
e in terms of the Euler characteristic of X? Here a d-fold covering
means that each fiber p1 (x) consists of d N points.
e X is a d-fold covering, d N where X is a surface of genus g
(c) Suppose that p : X
and X
e is a surface of genus ge. Give a formula expressing ge in terms of g and d.
Proof. Part(a). Given a point x e X,e let x = p(ex) X, and let U X be an open
neighborhood of x and : U V be a homeomorphisms between U and an open subset
V Rn . Replacing U by a smaller neighborhood of x if necessary, we may assume that U is
20
evenly covered. Then p1 (U ) is the disjoint union of open subsets U such that p|U : U U
is a homeomorphism. Then x e is contained in some U , and the composition
p|U
U / U / V Rn
subsets of X,
e such that the restriction of p to each of these subsets is a homeomorphism. In
particular, each of these subsets contains exactly one of the points xe p1 (xU ), allowing us
to index these sets by the elements of p1 (xU ): we will write Uexe for the subset containing
1 U
the point xe p (x ). With this notation, we have
a
p1 (U ) = U
exe,
ep1 (xU )
x
B exe | U B, x
e := {U e p1 (xU )}.
This is a countable collection, since B is countable, and each fiber p1 (xU ) is countable.
We claim that B e To show this, it suffices to prove that for every ye X
e is a basis for X. e
and open neighborhood Ve X e there is some U exe B
e with ye U exe and U exe Ve . Let
y := p(ey ), let U B an open set containing y, and let Uxe B e be the subset of p1 (U ) that
contains the point ye. The open neighborhood Uxe of ye might not yet be what we are looking
for; it might be too big in the sense that it might not be a subset of Ve . In order to fix this,
consider Uxe Ve , a smaller open neighborhood of ye that via p maps homeomorphically to an
open neighborhood of y. Then there is smaller open neighborhood U 0 of y belonging to the
0
basis B, and hence for some x e0 p1 (xU ) the open subset Uexe0 is an open subset belonging
to B,
e which contains the point ye and is contained in Ve . This shows that B e is indeed a basis
for the topology of X. e
21
Part (b). Let P be a pattern of polygons on X. By passing to a refinement of P is necessary
we can assume that each face is contained in an evenly covered open subset of X. Then the
preimages of vertices, edges and faces of P will form a pattern of polygons Pe on X. e Since
the preimage of each vertex (resp. edge resp. face) of P consists of d vertices (resp. edges
resp. faces) of Pe. In particular, if we denote by V (resp. E resp. F ) the number of vertices
(resp. edges resp. faces) of P and by Ve (resp. E e resp. Fe) the corresponding number for Pe,
we have
e = Ve E
(X) e + Fe = dV dE + dF = d().
Part (c). We recall that the Euler characteristic of a surface g of genus g is given by
(g ) = 2 2g. This implies
1
g = (2 (g )).
2
It follows that
1 e = 1 (2 d(X)) = 1 (2 d(2 2g)) = g d + 1.
ge = (2 (X))
2 2 2
3. Show that assigning to a pointed space (X, x0 ) its fundamental group 1 (X, x0 ), and
to each basepoint preserving map f : (X, x0 ) (Y, y0 ) the induced map f : 1 (X, x0 )
1 (Y, y0 ) defines a functor
1 : Top Gp
from the category Top of pointed topological spaces to the category Gp of groups.
Proof. To prove that is a functor, we need to show that it is compatible with compositions
and that it maps identity morphisms in Top to identity morphisms of Gp. To show that it
is compatible with compositions, suppose
f : (X, x0 ) (Y, y0 ) and g : (Y, y0 ) (Z, z0 )
are morphisms in Top . We need to show that
(g f ) = g f
as group homomorphisms from 1 (X, x0 ) to 1 (Z, z0 ). So let : I X be a based loop in
(X, x0 ) representing the element [] 1 (X, x0 ). Then
(g f )([]) = g (f ([])) = g ([f ]) = [g (f )]
(g f ) ([]) = [(g f ) ].
The associativity of maps implies that the based loops g (f ) and (g f ) in (Z, z0 )
agree and proves compatibility with composition.
To show that identity morphisms are preserved, let idX be the identity morphism of the
pointed space (X, x0 ). Then
(idX ) ([] = [idX ] = [],
which shows that the induced homomorphism (idX ) : 1 (X, x0 ) 1 (X, x0 ) is the identity
as required.
22
4. Given a set S, let F [S] be the free group generated by S. The elements of F [S] are equiva-
lence classes of words whose letters consist of the symbols s and s1 for s S (including the
empty word). If a word contains letters s and s1 adjacent to each other, the word obtained
by deleting those two letters is declared equivalent to the original word, and the equivalence
relation is generated by these relations. The multiplication is given by concatenation of
words, and the identity element is provided by the empty word.
(a) Show that there is a functor F : Set Gp which on objects sends a set S to the free
group F [S].
Proof. Part (a). We need to construct the functor F on morphisms, and show that our
construction is compatible with composition and identity morphisms.
To construct F on morphisms, we need to associate to each map of sets
Every element of F (S) is given by a word s11 . . . skk with si S and i {1}. We define
F (f ) by
F (f )(s11 . . . skk ) := f (s1 )1 . . . f (sk )k . (5.1)
We note that this is well defined. If si+1 = si and i+1 = i , the word s11 . . . skk is equivalent
i+1
to the shorter word obtained by removing the segment si i si+1 from it. Their images under
F (f ) are again equivalent, since the shorter one is obtained by removing the segment
23
Part (b). To show that the map : Gp(F [S], G) Set(S, G) is a bijection, we consider
the map
: Set(S, G) Gp(F [S], G)
that sends a map g : S G to the group homomorphism (g) : F [S] G defined by
By the same arguments as in part (a) this map is well-defined, and a group homomorphism.
Applying the homomorphism (g) : F [S] G to one the one-letter word s S F [S],
we have (g)(s) = g(s), which shows = id. Conversely, given a group homomorphism
f : F [S] G, then ( )(f ) is another group homomorphism F [S] G which agrees with
f on the generators s S F [S] of the group F [S], and hence ( )(f ) = f .
be the set of all formal linear combinations of elements in A such that the coefficient v of
A belongs to V . This is a k-vector space with addition (resp. scalar multiplication)
given by adding coefficients (resp. multiplying all coefficients by a fixed element of k).
(a) Show that A V is a product of the objects V , A in the category Vectk .
Q
(b) Let M Y
V V
A A
P
be the subspace consisting of those linear combinations
L A v such that only finitely
many coefficients v are non-zero. Show that A V is a coproduct of the objects V
in Vectk .
Q
Proof. Part (a). To show that A V is a product of the V s, define linear map
Y X
p : V V by v 7 v .
A A
In particular, f (w) is determined by the collection f (w) V , which shows that the map
(5.2) is injective. Conversely, given a collection of linear maps f Vect(W, V ), the formula
24
(5.3) defines a homomorphism f : Vect(W, A V ), thus showing that the map (5.2) is
Q
surjective.
L
Part (b). To show that A V is a coproduct of the V s, define for A the linear
map (
M X v =
i : V V by i (v) := v , v =
A A
0 6=
We claim that for any vector space W the map
M Y
: Vect( V , W ) Vect(V , W ) f 7 (f i )A
A A
L
is a bijection, which implies that A V is a coproduct of the V s. To prove this claim
we consider the map
Y M
: Vect(V , W ) Vect( V , W )
A A
defined by
X X
(f )A 7 ( v 7 f (v )).
A A
P
We note that the sum A f (v ) gives a well defined vector in W since it is a finite sum,
since all but finitely many of the L
v s vanish. It is straightforward to check that the formula
above defines a linear map from V to W , and that is the inverse of .
6 Homework Assignment # 6
1. Show that the following five topological spaces are all homotopy equivalent:
1. the circle S 1 ,
Hint: show that each of the spaces (2)-(5) contains a subspace S homeomorphic to the circle
S 1 which is a deformation retract of the bigger space it is contained in.
Proof. As suggested by the hint, for each of the spaces X in cases (2)-(5) we construct a
continuous injection i : S 1 X. This gives a continuous bijection from S 1 to the subspace
S := i(S 1 ) X. Since S 1 is compact and the spaces X under consideration are all Hausdorff,
25
the subspace S is homeomorphic to S 1 . To show that S is a deformation retract of X we
need to construct a continuous map
H : X I X
with the properties
(a) H(x, 1) = x for all x X;
(b) H(x, 0) S for all x X;
(c) H(x, t) = x for x S.
This map is the homotopy between the identity of X and the retraction r : X S X
given by r(x) := H(x, 0), showing that S is a deformation retract.
Here are the maps i : S 1 X and H : X I X for each of the cases (2)-(5). It
is straightforward to show that the maps i, H are continuous, since we describe them by
explicit formulas, to prove the injectivity of i, and to show that H has properties (a), (b)
and (c).
For the cylinder S 1 R we define
i : S 1 X = S 1 R H : S 1 R I S 1 R
z 7 (z, 0) (z, s, t) 7 (z, st)
For the annulus A = {(x, y) R2 | 1 x2 + y 2 2} = {z C | 1 |z|2 2} we define
i : S 1 A H : A I A
z
z 7 z (z, t) 7 (1 t) + tz
|z|
For the solid torus S 1 D2 we define
i : S 1 S 1 D2 H : S 1 D2 I S 1 D2
z 7 (z, 0) (z, w, t) 7 (z, tw)
For the Mobius strip M = (I [1, 1])/ with the equivalence relation (0, s) (1, s)
it will be convenient to replace S 1 by the homeomorphic space R/Z. We define
i : R/Z M H : M I M
[r] 7 [r, 0] ([r, s], t) 7 [r, ts]
26
Proof. Let us recall the definition of G1 G2 and G1 H G2 . The elements of the free product
G1 G2 are equivalence classes of words a1 . . . am whose letters ai are elements of G1 or G2 .
The amalgamented product G1 H G2 is the quotient of G1 G2 by the normal subgroup N
generated by the words of the form f1 (h)(f2 (h))1 .
Let Gi G1 G2 for i = 1, 2 be the homomorphism that sends an element g Gi to the
element of G1 G2 given by the one letter word g G1 G2 , and let gi : Gi G1 H G2 be
the composition of that homomorphism and the projection map G1 G2 G1 H G2 . This
makes the diagram (6.1) commutative, since g1 f1 sends an element h to [f1 (h)] G1 H G2
(the element of the quotient G1 H G2 represented by the one letter word f1 (h)), while g2 f2
sends an element h to [f2 (h)]. These are different elements in G1 G2 , but the quotient
G1 H G2 is taylor made for these elements to agree in.
To show that the diagram (6.1) is a pushout diagram we need to check the universal
property of the pushout, that is, we need to show that for any group K the map
that is an inverse to . Given (k1 , k2 ) Gp(G1 ) Gp(H,K) Gp(G2 , K), we define (k1 , k2 )
Gp(G1 H G2 , K) by
(
k1 (a) if a G1
(k1 , k2 )([a1 . . . am ]) := k(a1 ) . . . k(am ) where k(a) := .
k2 (a) if a G2
(k1 , k2 )(f1 (h)f2 (h1 )) = k(f1 (h))k(f2 (h1 )) = k1 (f1 (h))k2 (f2 (h1 ))
= k2 (f2 (h))k2 (f2 (h1 )) = 1 K.
Proof. Let U, V be the open subsets of S n obtained by removing the northpole N = (0, . . . , 0, 1)
resp. the south pole S = (0, . . . , 0, 1). Via the stereographic projection U and V are home-
omorphic to Rn , and hence their fundamental group is trivial. We claim that U V is path
connected, provided n > 1. This allows us to apply the Van Kampen Theorem which implies
1 (S n )
= 1 (U ) 1 (U V ) 1 (V ) = {1} 1 (U V ) {1} = {1}.
27
To prove that U V = S n \ {N, S} is pathconnected, suppose that x, y U V . We try
to construct a path connecting x and y by taking the linear path : I Rn+1 between x
and y, given by (s) = (1 s)x + sy, and then dividing by the norm to obtain a path in S n .
In other words,
(s)
: I U V is given by (s) = .
|(s)|
We note that there are two potential issues with this construction: the denominator could
become 0 for some s I and (s) could be equal to N or S for some s I. The first
problem doesnt occur if doesnt pass through 0 Rn+1 , and the second problem doesnt
occur if (s) doesnt belong to the subspace spanned by N for any s I. In particular, if y
doesnt belong to the 2-dimensional subspace of Rn+1 spanned by x and N , then the curve
constructed above is a path in U V connecting x and y.
If n > 1 and x, y U V we can choose some z S n such that z neither belongs to
the plane spanned by x and N nor the plane spanned by y and N . Then the construction
above gives paths connecting x and z resp. y and z, and hence their concatenation gives a
path between x and y.
4. We recall that if G X X is the action of a group G on a set X, then the subgroup
Gx := {g G | gx = x} G is the isotropy subgroup of the point x X. The action is
called free if the isotropy subgroup Gx is the trivial group for all x X.
(a) Show that if G is a finite group which acts freely and continuously on a Hausdorff space
X, then the projection map p : X X/G to the orbit space X/G is a covering map.
Hint: Use the assumptions that the action is free and X is Hausdorff to show that for
every x X there is an open neighborhood U such that the subsets gU X for g G
are mutually disjoint.
(b) Show that if X is a manifold of dimension n, then also the orbit space X/G is a manifold
of dimension n (dont forget to argue that X/G is Hausdorff and second countable).
is a continuous free action of the cyclic group Z/k on the sphere S 2n1 Cn . By part
(b) the orbit space S 2n1 /Z/k is then a manifold of dimension 2n 1, known as a lens
space.
Proof. Part (a). For any point x X the points gx for g G are all distinct, since the action
is free (if gx = hx for g 6= h, then h1 gx = x and hence h1 g Gx , contradicting the freeness
assumption). This implies that there are open neighborhoods Ugx of gx X which are
mutually disjoint, since X is Hausdorff. We note that g 1 Ugx is another open neighborhood
of x (it is open, since it is the image of the open set Ugx under the homeomorphism given
by the action of the group element g 1 ). Hence the finite intersection
\
U := g 1 Ugx
gG
28
is again an open neighborhood of x.
We claim that the subsets gU for g G are mutually disjoint. To prove this, assume
that y gU hU for g 6= h. Then in particular y belongs to g(g 1 Ugx ) = Ugx and to
h(h1 Uhx ) = Uhx contradicting Ugx Uhx = .
Given the point [x] X/G
S the subset V = p(U ) X/G is an open neighborhood of [x];
1
it is open since p (V ) = gG gU is open. This open set is evenly covered, since for any
g G the restriction
p|gU : gU V
is a homeomorphism, since it is a continuous bijection and an open map. To argue that p
S that U X is an open subset. Then p(U ) is an open subset of X/G since
is open, suppose
p1 (p(U )) = gG gU is an open subset of X.
Part (b). To show that X/G is locally homeomorphic to Rn , let y X/G and let V X/G
be an evenly covered open neighborhood of y. Then p1 (V ) is the disjoint of open subsets
V X such that p|V : V V is a homeomorphism. Let x be the unique point in V
with p(x) = y. Since X is a manifold of dimension n a possibly smaller neighborhood of
x is homeomorphic to an open subset of Rn . Via the restriction of p|V to this smaller
neighborhood we conclude that a neighborhood of y is homeomorphic to an open subset of
Rn .
To show that X/G is second countable, let B be a basis for X. We claim that the
countable collection of subsets of X/G given by p(U ) for U B is a basis for X/G. To see
this, let y X/G, and let V X/G be an open neighborhood of y. Since B is a basis for the
topology of X for x p1 (y) p1 (V ), there is some U B which is an open neighborhood
of x contained in p1 (V ). It follows that p(U ) V is an open neighborhood of y, proving
that {p(U ) | U B} is in fact a basis for the topology of X/G.
To show that X/G is Hausdorff, let y, y 0 X/G with y 6= y 0 , and pick points x p1 (y),
x0 p1 (y 0 ). Proceeding like in part (a) the points gx, g 0 x0 for g, g 0 G are distinct points
of X. Hence there are mutually disjoint open neighborhoods Ugx , Ug0 x0 of these points. It
follows that \ \
U := g 1 Ugx U 0 := (g 0 )1 Ug0 x0
gG g 0 G
are open neighborhoods of x resp. x0 . Moreover their image under p are disjoint open
neighborhoods of y resp. y 0 since p1 (p(U ) and p1 (p(U 0 )) are disjoint. This proves that
X/G is Hausdorff.
Part (c). To show that the Z/k action on S 2n1 is free, assume [m] Z/k belongs to the
isotropy subgroup of some v = (v1 , . . . , vn ) S 2n1 , that is, e2im/k v = v. Since v is a unit
vector, it has a non-zero component vi C. Then e2im/k vi = vi which implies e2im/k = 1,
which in turn implies that m Z must be a multiple of k. In particular, [m] is the identity
element in Z/k, proving that the action is free.
29
(b) Show that the map
e: I X
is a well-defined surjection. Here e is the lift of with
e(0) = x
e0 .
(c) Show that (g1 ) = (g2 ) for g1 , g2 G := 1 (X, x0 ) if and only if Hg1 = Hg2 , where
Hgi G are right cosets for the subgroup H = p (1 (X, e xe0 )) G.
We note that putting parts (b) and (c) together, we obtain a bijection between the set of
right cosets H\G and the fiber p1 (x0 ).
Proof. Part (a). Let e: I X e be a based loop in Xe representing an element in the kernel
of p . This means that the loop p
e is homotopic to the constant loop cx0 via a homotopy
H : I I X. Writing this out more explicitly we have
I {0}
e
/ X
e
p
I I
H / X
e X to obtain
commutes, and hence we can use the lifting property for the covering space X
a map H
e as shown in the diagram
I {0}
e
/X
;
e
xxx
x
H
xx
e
xx
p
xx
I I
H /X
e t) p1 (x0 ), since H
We note that for H(0, e is a lift of H and H has the property H(0, t) = x0 .
Since the map
I p1 (x0 ) Xe given by t
7 H(0,
e t)
is a continuous map from a connected space to a discrete space, it must be constant. Since
H(0,
e 0) = e(0) = xe0 we must in fact have H(0,
e t) = x e0 for all t I. Similarly, we can show
that H(1, t) = x
e e0 for all t I. Applying the same argument to the map
I p1 (x0 ) X
e given by s 7 H(s,
e 1)
30
Part (b). To show that is well-defined, let , 0 : I X be loops in X based at x0
representing the same element in 1 (X, x0 ). Then we can interpret a homotopy H : I I X
between these loops as a family of loops parametrized by the point s I, that is
Let H
e be the unique lift of this homotopy determined by the commutative diagram
cxe0
I {0} /X
w;
e
e ww
w
H w
www p
ww
H /
I I X,
e(t) := H(0,
e t) and e0 (t) := H(1,
e t) which are the unique lifts of the loops , 0 to paths in
Xe starting at xe0 .
Now consider the path I X e given by s 7 H(s,
e 1). Since H(s, 1) = x0 for all s, this is
1
a path in the discrete space p (x0 ), and hence as in part (a) we conclude that
e(1) = H(0,
e 1) = H(1, e0 (1)
e 1) =
1
p ([e e2 ]) = [(p e2 )] = [1 2 ] = g1 g21
e1 ) (p
e2 (1) = (e
(g2 ) = e1 )(1) =
e1 (1) = (g1 ).
31
7 Homework Assignment # 7
1. Let p : (E, e0 ) (B, b0 ) be a covering space, and let f : (X, x0 ) (B, b0 ) be a map with
X path-connected and locally path-connected. Show:
(a) A lift fe: (X, x0 ) (E, e0 ) of f exists if and only if f (1 (X, x0 )) p (1 (E, e0 )). Hint:
use the path lifting property for the covering space E B.
(b) There is at most one such lift.
Proof. Part (a). Suppose that a lift fe: (X, x0 ) (E, e0 ) of f exists. This means that we
have the following commutative diagram of pointed spaces and basepoint preserving maps:
(E, e0 )
t 9
fe ttt
t
tt
p
tt
(X, x0 ) / (B, b0 )
f
Applying the fundamental group functor results in the following commutative diagram in
the category of groups:
81 (E, e0 )
q
fe qqqq
qqq p
qqq
1 (X, x0 ) / 1 (B, b0 )
f
e E. It remains to show:
Then we define fe(x) := (1)
(i) the map fe: X E is well-defined and basepoint preserving.
(ii) fe is continuous.
For (i), let us assume that 0 is another path from the basepoint x0 to the given point x X,
let 0 := f 0 , and let e0 : I E be a lift of 0 with e0 (0) = e0 . Then the concatenation
0 is a based loop in (X, x0 ) and its image
f ( 0 ) = (f ) (f 0 ) = 0
32
is a based loop in (B, b0 ). By assumption, the element f ([ 0 ]) = [ 0 ] 1 (B, b0 ) is in
the image of p : 1 (E, e0 ) 1 (B, b0 ).
According to a proposition in class a based loop : I B represents an element in the
image of p : 1 (E, e0 ) 1 (B, b0 ) if and only if the unique lift
e : I E with e(0) = e0 is
a loop. Applying this to the loop = shows that the lifts and of , 0 have the
0 e e0
same endpoint: restricting the loop e to the two subintervals [0, 1/2] and [1/2, 1] we write e
as the concatenation of two paths, which will be lifts of the two paths , 0 that = 0 is
built from. Then uniqueness of pathlifting implies that these paths must be b and b0 . The
fact that e is a loop then implies that the two endpoints of the paths and 0 must agree.
e e
The map fe is basepoint preserving by construction (for x = x0 we choose to be the
constant path at x0 , and then , e will be the constant paths at b0 and e0 , respectively.
To prove continuity of fe, we note that continuity of a map is a local property, i.e., it
suffices to prove continuity of fe restricted to a sufficiently small open neighborhood V of
every point x X. Given x X we construct V as follows: the point f (x) B has a
neighborhood U such that p1 (U ) is a union of disjoint open subsets Ui E, i I, such
that the restriction p|Ui : Ui U is a homeomorphism for each i I (by the definition of
a covering map). By continuity of f the preimage f 1 (U ) is then an open neighborhood of
x X. The assumption that X is locally path-connected implies that there is a possibly
smaller open neighborhood V f 1 of x which is path connected.
We claim that if fe(x) belongs to Ui , then fe(y) Ui for every y V . To see this, suppose
as above that is a path in X from x0 to x, and e is a path in E starting at e0 which is a
lift of f . Then fe(x) = (1).
e To determine fe(x0 ) for a point x0 V we choose 0 = ,
where is a path in V starting at x and ending in x0 . Then by construction fe(x0 ) is the
endpoint of the lift of 0 := (f ) (f ) = (f ) . This is the concatenation of e
(which goes from e0 to fe(x)) and of a lift of the path (f ) with (0) = fe(x). The
homeomorphism p|Ui : Ui U restricts to a homeomorphisms between Vi := Ui p1 (V )
and V , which implies that Vi is path-connected, since V is. In particular, since (0) = fe(x)
belongs to Vi , so does the endpoint (1) = fe(x0 ). This proves the claim above.
We note that the composition
fe p
X /E /B
is the map f which is contininuous by assumption. This does not imply that the factor
f is continuous (think of a counterexample in the case where X is the unit interval I and
fe: I E is a path in E). However, upon restriction of fe to V the factorization takes the
following form:
fe|V p
V / Ui /7 U .
f|V
Since p : Ui U is a homeomorphism, the continuity of f|V does then indeed imply the
continuity of fe|V .
Part (b). If fe, : (X, x0 ) (E, e0 ) is a lift of f , the value fe(x) E can be described as in
part (a) as fe(x) = (1),
b where we chose a path from x0 to x and a lift e of the image path
f . The uniqueness of path-lifting then implies the uniqueness of the lift fe.
33
2. Show that if a path-connected, locally path-connected space X has finite fundamental
group, then every map X S 1 is homotopic to a constant map. Hint: Use the covering
space R S 1 and the previous homework problem.
Proof. Let f : 1 (X, x0 ) 1 (S 1 , y0 ), y0 := f (x0 ) be the homomorphism of fundamental
groups induced by the map f : X S 1 . We note that every element a 1 (X, x0 ) has
finite order and hence f (a) 1 (S 1 ) = Z has finite order which implies that f (a) = 0.
In particular f (1 (X, x0 )) is contained in the image of p : 1 (R) 1 (S 1 ) induced by the
covering map p : R S 1 . By a result proved in class, this implies that f factors in the form
f = p fe for some map fe: X R. The map fe is homotopic to the constant map sending
every point x X to ye0 := fe(x0 ) via the linear homotopy
e : X I R
H given by e t) = tfe(x) + (1 t)e
H(x, y0
3. Let U := S n \ {(1, 0, . . . , 0)}. We recall that the stereographic projection is the map
1
P : U Rn given by P (x0 , x1 , . . . , xn ) = 1x 0
(x1 , . . . , xn ).
(c) Show that the atlas above is smoothly compatible with the smooth atlas weve dis-
cussed in class, consisting of the charts (Ui , n
i ), where Ui S consists of the vectors
n
(x0 , . . . , xn ) S such that xi > 0 resp. xi < 0, and i (x0 , . . . , xn ) = (x0 , . . . , xbi , . . . , xn ).
Proof. Part (a). Let {1}. We need to show that the map P : U Rn is a homeo-
morphism. To do this, we calculate the inverse of P explicitly (we need the explicit form of
the inverse for later parts anyway). So, given y = (y1 , . . . , yn ) Rn we want to show that
there is a unique x = (x0 , x1 , . . . , xn ) U = S n \ (, 0, . . . , 0) satisfying the equation
1
(y1 , . . . , yn ) = P (x0 , . . . , xn ) = (x1 , . . . , xn ). (7.1)
1 x0
Taking the norm squared of both sides we obtain
34
and hence we have solutions
p
2||y||2 4||y||4 4(||y||2 + 1)(||y||2 1) 2||y||2 2 ||y||2 1
x0 = = = .
2(||y||2 + 1) 2(||y||2 + 1) ||y||2 + 1
2
We observe that we dont want the solution x0 = ||y|| +
||y||2 +1
= , since that implies xi = 0 for
1 i n, and hence forces x = (, 0, . . . , 0) which does not belong to U . This forces
(||y||2 1)
x0 = .
||y||2 + 1
(||y||2 1) ||y||2 1 2
xi = yi (1 x0 ) = yi (1 2
) = y i (1 2
) = yi
||y|| + 1 ||y|| + 1 ||y||2 + 1
Since all components of P1 are continuous functions, this is a continuous map and hence
P is a homeomorphism.
Part (b). We need to show that the transition map
P1 P
P (U U ) / U U / P (U U )
P (U U ) = Rn \ {0}.
This map is smooth, since all its components are smooth functions (the function 1/||y||2 is
smooth on Rn \ {0}, the domain of P P1 ).
Part (c). For = 1 the map i : Ui Dn is given by forgetting the i-th coordinate.
Hence the composition i P1 is a smooth function, since all components of P1 are smooth.
35
To check smoothness of the composition P (i )1 we recall that (i )1 : Dn Ui is
given by p
(i )1 (y1 , . . . , yn ) = (y1 , . . . , yi1 , 1 ||y||2 , yi , . . . , yn ).
It follows that
1 (y1 , . . . , yn ) i=0
P (i )1 (y) = 1 1||y||2
p
1 (y2 , . . . , yi1 , 1 ||y||2 , yi , . . . , yn ) i 6= 0
1y1
We note that there are two potential problems with the smoothness of these maps:
The square root function is not differentiable at 0; so there is a potential issue when
1 ||y||2 , the argument of the square root, becomes zero. This doesnt happen since
y D2 , the interior of the 2-disk.
The function is undefined if the denominator becomes 0. We could discuss for which y
this happens in either case (i = 0 or i 6= 0) and show that those y are not in the domain
of the transition map. It is easier to say that by construction the transition map is
well-defined on its domain, and hence we dont need to worry about those points.
1
i (w1 , . . . , wn ) = [w1 , . . . , wi , 1, wi+1 , . . . , wn ] Ui for (w1 , . . . , wn ) Cn .
composed with the projection map p : Cn+1 \{0} ((Cn+1 \ {0})/ ) = CPn . The first map
is continuous since its components are, projection maps onto quotient spaces are continuous
by the construction of the quotient topology and hence the composition 1i is continuous.
This shows that i : Ui Cn is a homeomorphism. In other words, (Ui , i ) is a chart for
CPn .
Part (b). The Ui s form an open cover of CPn and so the collection (Ui , i ) is an atlas for
CPn . It remains to show that it is a smooth atlas, i.e., that the transition map
1 j
Cn i (Ui Uj )
i
/ Ui Uj / j (Ui Uj ) Cn
36
is smooth for all i, j = 0, . . . , n. For w = (w1 , . . . , wn ) i (Ui Uj ), i 6= j we compute
j (1
i (w) = j ([w1 , . . . , wi , 1, wi+1 , . . . , wn ]
w1 , . . . , wd j+1
, . . . , wi
, 1
, . . . , wn
0j<i
w wj+1 wj+1 wj+1 wj+1
= wj+1 wj
1 , . . . , wi , 1 , wi+1 , . . . , c , . . . , wwnj i<jn
wj wj wj wj wj
As in the previous homework problem this shows that the transition map is smooth since its
components are all smooth functions (since the transition function is well-defined those ws
for which the denominator is 0 cant be in the domain of the transition function).
The map i0 1 i is a transition map for a smooth atlas for M and hence a smooth map
between open subsets of Rm . Similarly the map j 0 j1 is a smooth map between open
subsets of Rn . It follows that the Cartesian products of these maps is a smooth map (between
open subsets of Rm Rn = Rm+n ) and hence the atlas constructed above is in fact smooth.
8 Homework Assignment # 8
1.
(a) Let M be a smooth manifold and let f : N M be a homeomorphism. Show that there
is a unique smooth structure on N such that f is a diffeomorphism.
(b) Give the space {x Rn+1 | max{|xi |} = 1} (the boundary of the (n + 1)-cube) the
structure of a smooth manifold.
(c) Applying part (a) to N = {(x, y) R2 | y 2 = x3 } and the homeomorphism f : N
M = R given by f (x, y) = y gives N the structure of a smooth manifold. Is the inclusion
map i : N R2 a smooth map?
37
Proof. Part (a). Let (h : U U0 )A be the maximal atlas giving the smooth structure
on M . For A, let V := f 1 (U ) (which is an open subset of N ), and let g be the
composition
f
V / U h / U 0
We claim that
Claims 1, 2 and 3 show that there exists a smooth structure on N such that f is smooth.
Claim 4 shows that any smooth structure on N such that f is a diffeomorphism is equal to
the smooth structure constructed above; in particular, there is a unique smooth structure
on N such that f is a diffeomorphism, proving part (a).
To prove that (g : V U0 )A is a smooth atlas we consider the transition map g g1
relating the charts g and g for , A. The following commutative diagram shows that
this transition map is equal to the transition map h h1 and hence is smooth:
h V V VVV
hhhhhhh VVVV g
VVVV
hhhh
g
VVVV
hhhh VVVV
s hhh
h V+
g (V V ) = h (U U ) f h (U U ) = g (V V )
kVVVV hhh4
VVVV hhhhhh
VVVV
VVVV hhh
VVVV hhhh h
h hhhh
U U
To prove that the smooth atlas (g )A is maximal we need to show that if g0 : V0 V00
is a chart for N such that all transition maps g g01 for charts (g )A are smooth, then
g0 is equal to the chart g for some A. To show this, let h0 be the composition
f 1
U0 := f (V0 ) / V0 g0 / U 0
0
1
Then the diagram above for = 0 shows that the transition maps h0 h1 and h h0 for
any A are smooth. It follows that the atlas (h )Aq{0} is a smooth atlas; by maximality,
the chart h0 must be equal to h0 for some 0 A. It follows that the chart g0 is equal to
g0 and hence the atlas (g )A is a maximal smooth atlas.
To prove claim 4 we note that the assumptions imply that h f g 1 = g g 1 and
g f 1 h = g g1 are smooth. In other words, the chart (V, g) is smoothly compatible
with any of the charts (V , g ), A. The maximality of the atlas (g )A then implies
g = g for some A.
38
Part (b). To prove part (b) we note that the map
f x
X = {x Rn+1 | max{|xi |} = 1} S n defined by f (x) =
||x||
i f 1 : R / R2 given by y 7 (y 2/3 , y)
is smooth. This shows that the inclusion map i is not smooth, since the first component of
the map i f 1 is not smooth (the derivative of y 2/3 is y 1/3 for y 6= 0, but does not exist
for y = 0).
2. Show that S n Rn+1 is a smooth manifold by proving that 1 is a regular value of the
smooth function f : Rn+1 R, x 7 ||x||2 .
Proof. We need to show that for every x S n = f 1 (1) the differential
(Df )x : Rn+1 R
f (x+sy)
is surjective. As in class we calculate (Df )x via (Df )x (y) = s
(0).
and hence
f (x + sy)
(Df )x (y) = (0) = 2hx, yi
s
Taking y = x we see that (Df )x is a surjective linear map for x f 1 (1).
3. Let Mnk (R) be the vector space of n k-matrices. For A Mnk (R) let At Mkn (R)
be the transpose of A, and let Sym(Rk ) = {B Mkk (R) | B t = B} be the vector space of
symmetric k k-matrices.
(b) Show that the identity matrix is a regular value of the map .
39
(c) Let Vk (Rn ) Mnk (R) be the subset consisting of those n k matrices whose column
vectors are unit length and pairwise perpendicular. Show that Vk (Rn ) is a smooth
manifold of dimension kn k(k + 1)/2. Hint: what is the relationship between Vk (Rn )
and the map ?
We remark that identifying Mnk (R) in the usual way with the vector space Hom(Rk , Rn )
of linear maps f : Rk Rn , a matrix belongs to Vk (Rn ) if and only if the corresponding
linear map f is an isometry, that is, if f preserves the length of vectors in the sense that
||f (v)|| = ||v||, or equivalently, if f preserves the scalar product in the sense that
The manifold Vk (Rn ) is called the Stiefel manifold. We observe that Vn (Rn ) is the orthogonal
group O(n) of isometries Rn Rn . In particular, this problem shows that O(n) is a manifold
of dimension n2 n(n + 1)/2 = n(n 1)/2.
Proof. The entries of the matrix At A are quadratic polynomials in the entries of A and hence
the map is smooth.
To prove part (b) we first calculate the differential (D)A (C), C Mnk (R) as in the
previous problem as the derivative of the function (A + sC) at s = 0.
and hence
(A + sC)
(0) = C t A + At C
s
1
To show that for A (I) (I Mkk (R) is the identity matrix) the differential
The first statement follows from the fact that a basis of Mnk (R) is provided by the matrices
{A(i, j)}, 1 i n, 1 j k, whose entries are all zero except the ij-th entry which is
1. There are nk matrices A(i, j) and hence dim Mnn (R) = nk. Similarly, a basis for the
40
symmetric k k matrices is given by the matrices {B(i, j)}, 1 i j k; here B(i, j) is
the matrix whose entries are zero except the ij-th entry and the ji-th entry which are both 1
(obviously, these are the same entries for i = j). For a fixed j between 1 and n, the number
of matrices B(i, j) with 1 k j is j. It follows that
1 f|U
Rm U 0 / U /V / V 0 Rn
open open
9 Homework Assignment #9
1. Let M1 , M2 be smooth manifolds, and let j : M1 M2 Mj be the projection onto the
j-th factor for j = 1, 2. Show that for any (p1 , p2 ) M1 M2 the map
defined by
(v) = (Tp1 1 (v), Tp2 2 (v))
is an isomorphism. Remark: Using this isomorphism, we will routinely identify Tpj Mj with
a subspace of T(p1 ,p2 ) (M1 M2 ).
Proof. For ` = 1, 2 let i` : M` M1 M2 be the inclusion map given by i1 (x1 ) = (x1 , p2 ),
i2 (x2 y) = (p1 , x2 ). Then for `, j = 1, 2 the composition
` i j
M` M1 M2 Mj
is the identity map for ` = j, and the constant map x` 7 pj otherwise. Differentiating it, it
follows that the composition
(i` ) (j )
Tp` M` T(p1 ,p2 ) (M1 M2 ) Tpj Mj
41
is the identity map for ` = j and the trivial map otherwise. It follows that the composition
(i` )
Tp` M` T(p1 ,p2 ) (M1 M2 ) Tp1 M1 Tp2 M2
sends a vector X` Tp` M` to (X, 0) for ` = 1 and (0, X) for ` = 2. Since every pair (X1 , X2 )
can be written as a sum of pairs of this type, the map is surjective. This implies that is
an isomorphism, since the dimension of domain and range is both dim M1 + dim M2 .
(b) Show that for x N = f 1 (w) the tangent space Tx N Tx M is the kernel of the
differential f : Tx M Tw W .
Proof. Part (a). Given a point x M := f 1 (p), we need to find a chart N U U 0
Rn such that (U M ) = U 0 Rnk . Let P W W 0 Rk be a chart with p W , and
let N V V 0 Rn be a chart with x V . Choosing a smaller open neighborhood V of
x if necessary, we can assume that the smooth map f restricts to a smooth map f : V W .
Identifying V (resp. W ) with the open subsets V 0 (resp. W 0 ) of Euclidean space via the
diffeomorphisms (resp. ), we can apply our theorem from class according to which the
level set f 1 (p) V of the regular value p W is a submanifold of dimension n k, giving
us in particular the desired submanifold chart (U, ) at the point x V .
Part (b). To show that i is injective consider the following commutative diagram of smooth
maps
|U M
U M / U0 Rnk Rnk
i j
U / U 0 Rn
Here i0 : U M U N is the restriction of the inclusion map i : M , N to the open
subset U M ; since i and i0 agree in a neighborhood of x M , we have the equality i = i0
for their differentials. The map j is the inclusion of Rnk in Rn given by j(v1 , . . . , vnk ) =
(v1 , . . . , vnk , 0, . . . , 0). The horizontal maps are charts for M resp. N containing the point x.
In particular, these a local diffeomorphisms, whose differentials are therefore isomorphisms
of tangent spaces. Functoriality of the derivative then leads to the following commutative
diagram of linear maps
(U M )
Tx M / T(x) Rnk = Rnk
=
i j
Tx N / T(x) Rn = Rn
=
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This shows that the map i is injective, since it corresponds via the horizontal isomorphisms
of the above diagram to the injective map j = j (the derivative of the linear map j is again
j).
To show that the image of i : Tx M Tx N is equal to the kernel of f : Tx N Tp P , we
note that the composition
f
M i / N /P
is the constant map that sends every point of M = f 1 (p) to p. This implies that the
derivative of f i is zero. Since (f i) = f i , this implies that the image of i is
contained in the kernel of f . To prove im i = ker f , we will argue that these vector
spaces have the same dimension, and hence im i ker f implies their equality. Since i is
injective, dim im i = dim Tx M = dim M = n k. Since f : Tx N Tp P is surjective by the
assumption that p is a regular value of f , we have
3. Let O(n) be the orthogonal group (which is the submanifold of Mnn (R) consisting of
those n n matrices A with At A = e; here e denotes the n n identity matrix which is
the identity element of the group O(n)). Identify the tangent space Te O(n) as a subspace of
Te Mnn (R) = Mnn (R). Hint: Use part (b) of the previous problem.
Proof. Let : Mnn (R) Mnn (R) be the map given by A 7 At A. Then by definition the
orthogonal group O(n) is the level set 1 (11) where 11 Mnn (R) is the identity matrix. We
remark that 11 cant possibly be a regular value of the smooth map f : Mnn (R) Mnn (R),
since otherwise O(n) = f 1 (11) would be a submanifold of Mnn (R) whose dimension is the
difference of the dimensions of the vector spaces that are the domain resp. range of f , leading
to the obviously wrong conclusion that O(n) is a manifold of dimension 0!
To fix this problem, we note that At A is always a symmetric matrix, since (At A)t =
A (At )t = At A. This allows us to think of as a smooth map
t
and went on to argue that (D)A is surjective for A 1 (11) = O(n) which shows that
O(n) is a submanifold of Mnn (R).
By part (b) of problem 2 of this set, the tangent space of a level set 1 () of a regular
value at a point A 1 () is equal to the kernel of the differential (D)A . In the case
at hand, this means that the tangent space TI O(n) at the identity element e = I O(n) is
equal to the kernel of the differential
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which we computed to be (D)I (C) = C t + C. This shows that TI O(n) = ker(D)I consists
of the vector space of skew-symmetric matrices, that is, matrices C satisfying C t = C.
4. Show that the projection map p : S 2n+1 CPn is a submersion, i.e., the differential
p : Tz S 2n+1 Tp(z) CPn is surjective for every point z S 2n+1 . (In particular, by 2(a) each
fiber p1 (L), L CPn is a submanifold of dimension 1). Hint: The projection map p extends
to a projection map P : Cn+1 \ {0} CPn . Argue first that P is a submersion, using the
obvious identification of tangent spaces of the domain with Cn+1 , and using the differential
of our standard charts for CPn to identify the tangent spaces of the range with Cn .
Proof. Let z = (z0 , . . . , zn ) S 2n+1 Cn+1 , and let p(z) = [z0 , . . . , zn ] CPn be the image
of z under the projection map. We recall from class that the tangent space Tz S 2n+1 can be
identified with the vectors w = (w0 , . . . , wn ) Cn which are perpendicular to z, i.e., those
w for which the Hermitian inner product
hz, wi = z0 w0 + z1 w1 + + zn wn
vanishes. This suggests to extend the map p to all of Cn \ {0} by defining
P : Cn \ {0} CPn by P (z0 , . . . , zn ) := [z0 , . . . , zn ].
Then p is the restriction of P to Tx S 2n+1 Tx (Cn \ {0}) = Cn+1 .
To calculate P we use the standard charts
i
CPn Ui = {[z0 , . . . , zn ] CPn } Ui0 = Cn
z0 zbi zn
[z0 , . . . , zn ] 7 ( , . . . , , . . . , )
zi zi zi
to identify the tangent space Tp(z) CPn at a point p(z) Ui with Ti (p(z)) Ui0 = Cn via the
differential (i ) of the local diffeomorphism i .
To calculate (i ) P = (i P ) we first compute
z0 zbi zn
i P (z0 , . . . , zn ) = i ([z0 , . . . , zn ]) = ( , . . . , , . . . , ). (9.1)
zi zi zi
Then the differential of i P at z = (z0 , . . . , zn ) Cn+1 with zi 6= 0 can be calculated as
P (z + sw)
D(i P )z (w) = .
s |s=0
By equation (??) the k-th component of (i P )(z) Cn has the form zj /zi for j = k 1
for k < i and j = k for k i. Hence the k-th component of D(i P )z (w) is given by
zj + swj wj zi zj wi
= . (9.2)
s |s=0 zi + swi zi2
We claim that the differential D(i P )z : Tz (Cn+1 \ {0}) TP (z) Cn = Cn is surjective. To
show that a vector v = (v1 , . . . , vn ) Cn is in the image of D(i P )z , we need to find a
vector w = (w0 , . . . , wn ) Cn+1 such that for each k = 1, . . . , n we have
wj zi zj wi
= vk , (9.3)
zi2
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where as above j = k 1 for k < i and j = k for k i. This is easy to solve: choose wi = 0;
since zi 6= 0 by assumption, we can solve equation (9.3) uniquely for wj . This shows that the
differential of P : Cn \ {0} CPn is surjective. To show that the differential of p (which is
the restriction of P to S 2n+1 Cn \ {0}) is surjective, we need to argue that we can choose
the vector w Cn+1 to be perpendicular to z Cn+1 . We observe that if w = z for some
C, then the calculation (9.2) shows that w is in the kernel of DPz . In particular, DPz (w)
doesnt change if we replace w by its projection to z .
Proof. Part (a). To show that h is smooth it suffices to show that the composition
h 1 n
i : D R
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10 Homework Assignment # 10
1. Show that the bracket of vector fields satisfies the Jacobi identity, that is, if U, V, W are
vector fields on a smooth manifold M , then
In particular, the bracket of vector fields gives the vector space X(M ) of vector fields on M
the structure of a Lie algebra (the other two requirements for the bracket, its linearity in
each slot and its skew symmetry are evident).
Proof. We recall that [U, V ] = U V V U , where U V resp. V U are the compositions as
endomorphisms of the vector space C (M ). We compute:
[[U, V ], W ] = [U V V U, W ] = (U V V U )W W (U V V U ) = U V W V U W W U V +W V U.
Cyclically permuting the symbols U , V , W then leads to the following 12 term formula:
Inspection shows that each of the six possible permutations of U , V , W occurs twice with
opposite sign, thus proving the Jacobi identity for the Lie bracket of vector fields.
2. Let V x , V y , V z be the following vector fields in R3 which are the infinitesimal generators
of rotation around the x-axis (resp. y-axis resp. z-axis).
Vx =y z Vy =z x Vz =x y .
z y x z y x
Show that
[V x , V y ] = V z [V y , V z ] = V x [V z , V x ] = V y .
In particular, the span of these vector fields in the space X(R3 ) of vector fields on R3 is a
Lie algebra of dimension 3.
Proof. For f C (R3 ) we have
[Vx Vy ]f = Vx Vy f Vy Vx f.
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We note that there are five terms, since evaluating the vector field y z on the product
f
function z x necessitates the use of the product rule. The corresponding expression for
Vy Vx f is obtained by simply permuting the symbols x, y on the right hand side of the
previous equation. We see that for their difference Vx Vy f Vy Vx f most terms cancel, leaving
us only with
f f
Vx Vy f Vy Vx f = y x = Vz .
x y
The other two equations follow by cyclically permuting the symbols x, y, z.
(c) Let V X(M ), W X(N ) be vector fields on M resp. N . Show that the following two
conditions are equivalent.
If these conditions are met, then the vector fields V, W are called F -related.
(d) Show that the Lie bracket is natural in the following sense. Let Vi X(M ) be vector
fields that are F -related to vector fields Wi X(N ) for i = 1, 2. Show that [V1 , V2 ] is
F -related to [W1 , W2 ].
(F (f g))(x) = (f g)(F (x)) = f (F (x))g(F (x)) = ((F f )(x))((F g)(x)) = ((F f )(F g))(x).
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Part (b). For f, g C (M ) we have
[V1 , V2 ]F = V1 V2 F V2 V1 F = V1 F W2 V2 F W1 = F W1 W2 F W2 W1 = F [W1 , W2 ]
Here the second and third equation hold since Vi F = F Wi , the assumption that the vector
field Vi is F -related to Wi . This shows that [V1 , V2 ] is F -related to [W1 , W2 ].
Proof. Part (a). These conditions are equivalent by part (c) of the previous problem.
Part (b). Comparing the definition of left-invariance with the definition of F -related vector
fields of part (c) of the previous problem, we see that a vector field V on G is left invariant
if and only if V is Lg -related to itself for all g G. Part (d) of the previous problem shows
that if V and W are Lg -related to V (resp. W ), then [V, W ] is Lg -related to [V, W ] which
proves the statement.
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