Skip to main content
added 82 characters in body
Source Link
Sean Tilson
  • 3.7k
  • 1
  • 39
  • 40

You may not have toIt probably won't matter which concept you use due to the theorem of Ehresmann. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehresmann%27s_theorem

It states something like most surjective submersions are in fact fibre bundles (most meaning that this is the case if the surjective submersion is proper, and I am not sure how dense proper maps are). Is there an approximation theorem for proper maps?

So i think the answer is that you don't have to. Also, (smooth?) fibrant replacement can be done to any map so that you get a LES in homtopyhomotopy (although this map may no longer be a submersion.). hope

hope this helps, sean

You may not have to due to the theorem of Ehresmann. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehresmann%27s_theorem

It states something like most surjective submersions are in fact fibre bundles (most meaning that this is the case if the surjective submersion is proper, and I am not sure how dense proper maps are).

So i think the answer is that you don't have to. Also, (smooth?) fibrant replacement can be done to any map so that you get a LES in homtopy (although this map may no longer be a submersion.). hope this helps, sean

It probably won't matter which concept you use due to the theorem of Ehresmann. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehresmann%27s_theorem

It states something like most surjective submersions are in fact fibre bundles (most meaning that this is the case if the surjective submersion is proper, and I am not sure how dense proper maps are). Is there an approximation theorem for proper maps?

So i think the answer is that you don't have to. Also, (smooth?) fibrant replacement can be done to any map so that you get a LES in homotopy (although this map may no longer be a submersion.).

hope this helps, sean

Source Link
Sean Tilson
  • 3.7k
  • 1
  • 39
  • 40

You may not have to due to the theorem of Ehresmann. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehresmann%27s_theorem

It states something like most surjective submersions are in fact fibre bundles (most meaning that this is the case if the surjective submersion is proper, and I am not sure how dense proper maps are).

So i think the answer is that you don't have to. Also, (smooth?) fibrant replacement can be done to any map so that you get a LES in homtopy (although this map may no longer be a submersion.). hope this helps, sean