Skip to main content

Questions tagged [fundamental-group]

Filter by
Sorted by
Tagged with
3 votes
0 answers
96 views

Descent obstruction of an open curve in an elliptic curve

Let $E$ be an elliptic curve over a number field $k$, and for an extension $K/k$ we denote by $E_K$ the base change $E \times_k K$. By fixing an embedding $k \hookrightarrow \mathbb{C}$, the etale ...
oleout's user avatar
  • 895
27 votes
3 answers
7k views

Why are we interested in the Fundamental Groupoid of a Space?

The classical version of the van Kampen theorem is concerned about the fundamental group of a based space. In fact, it says that the functor $\pi_1$ preserves certain types of pushouts in $Top_*$. ...
Jorge António's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
184 views

The fundamental group of quotient space of 3-folds

Let $S$ be a K3 surface with an involution $\iota_S$, $E$ an elliptic curve with an involution $\iota_E$. Assume the fixed locus of $S$ under $\iota_S$ contains $N>0$ disjoint curves. Note the ...
Joseph's user avatar
  • 199
3 votes
2 answers
509 views

Can the loops in the definition of the fundamental group be considered injective?

Let $\mathrm{С}$ be some class of topological spaces that includes at least all subspaces of $\mathbb{R}^n $. Further we are in the category $\mathrm{С}_{*}$ (the category of point spaces; all ...
Arshak Aivazian's user avatar
16 votes
6 answers
3k views

Fundamental groups of surfaces

What are some properties that hold for the fundamental group of a surface and do not necessarily hold for the fundamental groups of manifolds of higher dimensions?
unkown's user avatar
  • 311
2 votes
0 answers
93 views

Unramified section associated to a rational point

This is a question for those familiar with the section conjecture, so I'll do away with the definition of a ramification map in this case. Here is the definition of a ramification map from an etale ...
oleout's user avatar
  • 895
24 votes
4 answers
4k views

Fundamental group of 3-manifold with boundary

Is it true that any finitely presented group can be realized as fundamental group of compact 3-manifold with boundary?
Anton Petrunin's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
207 views

Is $\pi_2 (X_i)$ a free $\mathbb{Z}\pi_1 (X_i)$-module for $i=1,2$?

Let ‎$‎‎X_1$ ‎‎be ‎the suspension of ‎$‎‎‎\mathbb{R}P^2‎$ and $X_2=\bigvee_{1\leq i\leq n} (\vee_{r_i} \mathbb{S}^i)$. Is $\pi_2 (X_i)$ a projective (or a free) $\mathbb{Z}\pi_1 (X_i)$-module for $i=1,...
M.Ramana's user avatar
  • 1,182
4 votes
1 answer
387 views

Surface bundles associated to a short exact sequence of groups

Suppose $S$ is a closed, connected, oriented surface of genus at least two and $G$ is any group. Suppose further that $\Gamma$ is any group that fits into the following short exact sequence: $$ 1 \to \...
luthien's user avatar
  • 421
29 votes
4 answers
3k views

Geometric interpretation of the lower central series for the fundamental group?

For any group $G$ we can form the lower central series of normal subgroups by taking $G_0 = G$, $G_1 = [G,G]$, $G_{i+1} = [G,G_i]$. We can check this gives a normal chain $$G_0 \ge G_1 \ge ... \ge G_i ...
Anthony Bak's user avatar
17 votes
2 answers
4k views

Is there a relationship between a quotient group of the fundamental group of X and the fundamental group of a quotient topology of X?

Let ($X$, $x_0$) be a topological space with a base point, and denote the fundamental group of $X$ as $\pi_1(X)$. Let $N$ be a normal subgroup of $\pi_1(X)$. Does there necessarily exist an ...
Malachi Holden's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
2k views

Action of fundamental group on homotopy fiber

For a Serre fibration of pointed topological spaces $f:X \to B$, there is an action of $\pi_1\left(B,b_0\right)$ on the fiber $F$. The construction of this action I'm familiar with uses a lift $F\...
E. KOW's user avatar
  • 834
0 votes
0 answers
340 views

Can someone explain this proof on aspherical manifolds?

I am trying to understand this proof that the fundamental group of an aspherical manifold is torsion free. The proof is lemma 4.1 from Aspherical manifolds at the Manifold Atlas Project. The proof is: ...
user3308874's user avatar
18 votes
2 answers
1k views

Fundamental group of punctured simply connected subset of $\mathbb{R}^2$

(This question is originally from Math.SE where it was suggested that I ask the question here) Let $S$ be a simply connected subset of $\mathbb{R}^2$ and let $x$ be an interior point of $S$, meaning ...
Thomas Browning's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
321 views

A complex variety with a finite non-abelian simple fundamental group

Does there exist a complex smooth proper variety whose fundamental group is finite non-abelian simple?
user avatar
11 votes
2 answers
287 views

Fundamental group under Gelfand duality

Gelfand duality states that the functor of continuous functions $C(-)$ from compact Hausdorff topological to commutative $C^*$-algebras is an equivalence of categories. In other words, all topological ...
Igor Khavkine's user avatar
23 votes
3 answers
2k views

How bad can $\pi_1$ of a linear group orbit be?

Let $G$ be a simply connected Lie group and $\mathcal O= G(v)=G/G_v$ a $G$-orbit in some finite-dimensional $G$-module $V$. By the homotopy exact sequence, its fundamental group $\Gamma$ is the ...
Francois Ziegler's user avatar
19 votes
2 answers
3k views

What are the different theories that the motivic fundamental group attempts to unify?

I must preface by confessing complete ignorance in the subject. I've read introductory texts about the theory of motives, but I am certainly no expert. In http://www.math.ias.edu/files/deligne/...
James D. Taylor's user avatar
5 votes
0 answers
87 views

Fundamental groups and cellular walks

Suppose $M$ is a smooth manifold (compact if desired) with a cell structure or other nice stratification. Call a path $\gamma : [0,1] \to M$ transverse to the stratification if there is a finite ...
Jake Levinson's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
172 views

What is the minimal length of a “Diagonal” in a Torus?

Given a Riemannian torus $(T,d)$ with fundamental group $\pi_1(T)=\langle a,b \mid ab=ba \rangle$. Denote for any $\gamma \in \pi_1(T)$ the infimum length of all representatives of $\gamma$ by $L(\...
Sebastian's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
311 views

Fundamental group of twisted loop space

I'm interested in computing the fundamental group of the twisted loop space $$\Omega_f(M)=\{ \gamma \in C^{\infty}(\Bbb R,M) \mid \gamma(s+1)=f\gamma(s)\}$$ where $f \in \text{Aut}(M,x_0)$, for ...
Luigi M's user avatar
  • 503
19 votes
2 answers
1k views

Can one compute the fundamental group of a complex variety? Other topological invariants? [duplicate]

Given a system of polynomial equations with rational coefficients, is there an algorithm to compute the geometric fundamental group of the variety defined by these equations? I'm interested in both ...
David Corwin's user avatar
  • 15.4k
5 votes
1 answer
417 views

triviality of homology with local coefficients

Let $X$ be a manifold or a CW-complex. Let $\pi: \tilde X\longrightarrow X$ be a covering map. Let $\pi_1(X)$ be the fundamental group of $X$ and let $\rho: \pi_1(X)\longrightarrow O(n)$ be an ...
Shiquan Ren's user avatar
  • 1,990
2 votes
1 answer
275 views

can the actions of fundamental groups annihilate homology?

Let $X$ be a path-connected manifold (or a CW complex). Let $\pi_1(X)$ be the fundamental group of $X$. Let $\pi: \tilde X\longrightarrow X$ be a covering map. For each $m\geq 0$, let $C_m(\tilde X)$ ...
Shiquan Ren's user avatar
  • 1,990
34 votes
1 answer
2k views

Is every ''group-completion'' map an acyclic map?

I start with a longer discussion which will result in a precise version of the question. I am puzzled about an issue with the Quillen plus construction. I have seen outstanding experts being confused ...
Johannes Ebert's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
327 views

Fundamental group of the complement of cell subcomplexes

Given a regular CW complex stucture on a manifold $C$ of dimension $n$ and a subcomplex $D$ of dimension $n-2$, I want to compute the fundamental group of the complement $\pi_1(C\setminus D)$. A ...
Roberto Pagaria's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
256 views

Representation of fundamental groupoid as $2$-sheaf

By https://arxiv.org/abs/1406.4419 (The fundamental groupoid as a terminal costack, Ilia Pirashvili), we know that for a topological space $X$, the $2$-functor $$\text{Top}(X)\rightarrow \text{Gpd}, \...
curious math guy's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
206 views

Does the Hawaiian Earring Group embed into the permutation group of $\mathbb N$?

Recall that the Hawaiian earring group, $\mathbb G$, is the fundamental group of the Hawaiian Earing using the point at the origin. It can be understood more combinatorially as a subgroup of the ...
Corey Bacal Switzer's user avatar
12 votes
1 answer
832 views

Space with semi-locally simply connected open subsets

A topological space $X$ is semi-locally simply connected if, for any $x\in X$, there exists an open neighbourhood $U$ of $x$ such that any loop in $U$ is homotopically equivalent to a constant one in $...
mfox's user avatar
  • 303
8 votes
1 answer
575 views

Understanding fundamental group of Poincare homology sphere

I'm currently reading Knots, Links, Braids, and 3-Manifolds by V. V. Prasolov and A. B. Sossinsky. I have trouble understanding the following picture. The dashed line denotes a trefoil whose tubular ...
user152346's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
582 views

Can we define fundamental groups functorially for non-pointed path connected topological spaces?

Let $\text{ppTop}$ denote the category of pointed and path connected topological spaces with morphisms base-preserve continuous maps. The fundamental group gives a functor $FG: \text{ppTop}\to \text{...
Zhaoting Wei's user avatar
  • 9,019
5 votes
3 answers
401 views

Generalize $H^1_{dR}(X)=\mathrm{Hom} (\pi_1(X),\mathbb R)$ to fundamental Groupoid

Let $X$ be a path-connected smooth manifold, it is known that: $$H^1(X):=H^1_{dR}(X)=\mathrm{Hom} (\pi_1(X),\mathbb R).$$ Explicitly, a closed one-form $\alpha$ gives a function on $\pi_1(X)$ by $[\...
Hang's user avatar
  • 2,789
0 votes
0 answers
286 views

Is $\operatorname{Aut}(\mathcal{M})$ a fundamental group in Grothendieck's sense?

This question is a follow-up to Are there infinitely many L-rigs? and to Is an automorphic form of $\operatorname{GL}_{n}(\mathbb{A}_{\mathbb{Q}})$ determined by its L-function?. I copy paste a deepl ...
Sylvain JULIEN's user avatar
4 votes
0 answers
131 views

Fundamental group of hyperbolic 2-orbifold

Suppose $\Gamma$ is a cocompact lattice of $PSL_2(\mathbb{R})$. Then $\mathbb{H}^2/\Gamma$ has a natural structure of orbifold. My questions are: What is $\pi_1(\mathbb{H}^2/\Gamma)$? What is $\pi_1^{...
Jacques's user avatar
  • 563
28 votes
2 answers
6k views

What group is $\langle a,b \,| \, a^2=b^2 \rangle$?

In teaching my algebraic topology class, this group showed up as part of an easy fundamental group computation: $\langle a,b\mid a^2=b^2\rangle$. My first instinct was that this must be $\mathbb{Z}*\...
Greg Friedman's user avatar
16 votes
6 answers
6k views

Fundamental group of the line with the double origin.

In the simplest cases, the fundamental group serves as a measure of the number of 2-dimensional "holes" in a space. It is interesting to know whether they capture the following type of "hole". This ...
Akela's user avatar
  • 3,699
2 votes
1 answer
282 views

Lifting of a proper map in the cover is a proper map

Let $M$ be an orientable surface without boundary$($I am not assuming $M$ is compact, it can be non-compact$)$. Let $\Phi: M\to M$ be a proper homotopy-equivalnce$($A proper homotopy-equivalence can ...
Someone's user avatar
  • 265
6 votes
1 answer
325 views

An extension of symplectomorphism group

$\DeclareMathOperator\GL{GL}\DeclareMathOperator\Sp{Sp}$Let $\omega=\sum dx_i\wedge dy_i$ be the standard symplectic structure of $\mathbb{R}^{2n}=\mathbb{R}^{n}\times \mathbb{R}^n$. We consider the ...
Ali Taghavi's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
109 views

Fundamental group to groupoid : bijection between homotopy classes?

I'm looking at the fundamental group $\pi_{1}(M)$ of the $n^{th}$ unordered configuration space $M$ of $\mathbb{R}^{d}$. In particular, it's well-known that $\pi_{1}(M)\cong S_{n}$ (symmetric group) ...
Meths's user avatar
  • 309
5 votes
2 answers
457 views

Finite etale covers of products of curves

Probably this question can be phrased in a much greater generality, but I will just state it in the generality I require. I work over $\mathbb{C}$. Let $C_1, C_2 \subset \mathbb{P}^1$ be non-empty ...
Daniel Loughran's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
471 views

Étale fundamental group of multiplicative group over an algebraically/separably closed field

This is a repost of my question here. Do we know the structure of the étale fundamental group $\pi^\text{et}_1(\mathbb{G}_{m,K^\text{sep}})$ of the multiplicative group, for a given field $K$? For ...
Pippo's user avatar
  • 311
4 votes
1 answer
1k views

Question about the fundamental group of rational homology 3-spheres

By a rational homology 3-sphere, I mean a compact oriented manifold three-manifold $Y$ with $H_1(Y)$ finite. My question is whether there exists a reasonable classification of such manifolds such that ...
Daniel Pomerleano's user avatar
32 votes
3 answers
4k views

Fundamental groups of topoi

Just yesterday I heard of the notion of a fundamental group of a topos, so I looked it up on the nLab, where the following nice definition is given: If $T$ is a Grothendieck topos arising as category ...
Lars's user avatar
  • 4,450
2 votes
0 answers
179 views

Isocrystals on simply connected varieties

Esnault and Shiho - Convergent isocrystals on simply connected varieties proves that there are no non-trivial convergent isocrystals on simply connected varieties. There is another similar result in ...
user127776's user avatar
  • 5,901
6 votes
0 answers
377 views

Fundamental group of a product in characteristic 0

It is proven in SGA1 that if $k$ is an algebraically closed field, if $X$ is a proper $k$-scheme and if $Y$ is a locally noetherian $k$-scheme (say, $X$ and $Y$ are non-empty and connected) then $\...
Antoine Ducros's user avatar
24 votes
5 answers
6k views

How should one understand orbifold fundamental groups?

I am studying orbifold fundamental group (or more generally orbifold homotopy groups). In a nutshell, my questions is: what are they intuitively? In what follows I give definitions and more precise ...
Michel's user avatar
  • 375
1 vote
0 answers
238 views

What is the étale fundamental group of projective spaces over finite fields?

Is there any convenient way to understand the étale fundamental group of projective spaces over finite fields, in particular, the étale fundamental group of $\mathbf{P}^2_{\mathbf{F}_q}$?
hennlu's user avatar
  • 333
6 votes
2 answers
1k views

Fundamental group of a topological group

It is well known that the fundamental group of a path-connected topological group is abelian. Suppose that $G$ is a connected topological group and let $Ab(G)$ the abelianization of the topological ...
lab's user avatar
  • 451
3 votes
1 answer
1k views

The (topological) fundamental group of (quasi)-projective algebraic varieties

I would like to know: What does the fundamental group of a quasi-projective algebraic variety look like? I remember that I have seen somewhere that for a connected, finite-type CW-complex $X$, ...
Longma's user avatar
  • 169
33 votes
1 answer
4k views

Is there a manifold with fundamental group $\mathbb{Q}$?

It is known that the fundamental group of a locally path connected, path connected compact metric space is finitely presented or uncountable. Furthermore the fundamental group of every manifold is ...
123...'s user avatar
  • 683