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Continuum theory, point-set topology, spaces with algebraic structure, foundations, dimension theory, local and global properties.

86 votes
Accepted

Why do finite homotopy groups imply finite homology groups?

(This answer has been edited to give more details.) Finitely generated homotopy groups do not imply finitely generated homology groups. Stallings gave an example of a finitely presented group $G$ suc …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
82 votes

Learning Topology

Since the discussion has broadened from the original question to include a wider range of topology books, let me add one more. This is an algebraic topology book by Tammo tom Dieck published just a ye …
20 votes
Accepted

The Wedge Sum of path connected topological spaces

A counterexample is shown on the cover of the paperback edition of the classic textbook Homology Theory by Hilton and Wylie. This can be viewed on the amazon webpage for the book. The example consis …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
14 votes
Accepted

Homotopically trivial vs isotopically trivial diffeomorphisms

The quotient group $Diff_1(M)/Diff_0(M)$ is a discrete group since $ Diff_0(M)$ is a path component of $Diff(M)$, hence also a connected component since $Diff(M)$ is locally path-cconnected, and $Diff …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
14 votes
Accepted

How to prove the isotopy relative to a point exist?

The quick argument is to use the fibration $Diff(M,x)\to Diff(M) \to M$ whose total space is the diffeomorphism group of $M$ and whose fiber is the subgroup fixing the point $x$. The projection $Diff …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
12 votes
Accepted

Does there exist a Haken manifold where all its incompressible surfaces are non-separating?

There exist closed orientable hyperbolic 3-manifolds that are surface bundles such that the fiber is the only incompressible surface in the manifold (up to isotopy). Such manifolds can be obtained by …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
8 votes
Accepted

Cup product of cohomology in a Serre spectral sequence

Maybe the simplest example is the following. There are two fiber bundles with base and fiber both $S^2$. One is the product $S^2\times S^2$ and the other consists of two copies of the mapping cylinder …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
8 votes

Cohomology version of Moore space

One needs to distinguish between the direct sum and the direct product of a collection of groups. For a countably infinite collection of copies of $\mathbb Z$ the direct sum of these groups is a free …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
6 votes

Could there be any homotopy group without "Lebesgue Number Lemma"?

Lebesgue numbers are certainly not needed to compute $\pi_1(S^1)$ using lifting properties of covering spaces. I checked eleven books that compute $\pi_1(S^1)$ using the covering space ${\mathbb R}\t …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar
4 votes
Accepted

Relationship between quotient CW-complexes after attaching cells

If I understand the question correctly, you have a CW complex $Y'$ which is the union of two subcomplexes $Y$ and $X'$ whose intersection is the subcomplex $X$. We can first collapse $X$ to a point t …
Allen Hatcher's user avatar