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Homotopy theory, homological algebra, algebraic treatments of manifolds.
3
votes
Cubical vs. simplicial singular homology
I don't know for sure, but it would appear he means that it's easier to construct a cubic chain on a product $X \times Y$ given cubic chains on $X$ and $Y$ compared to the simplex chain given two simp …
1
vote
(infinity,1)-categories directly from model categories
There is a followup article, first in the 5-article series Derived Algebraic Geometry:
Stable Infinity Categories, arXiv:math/0608228
In particular,
The theory of stable ∞-categories is not re …
3
votes
A specific branched cover of S^2 as a subgroup of Pi_1
In standard topological terms, the exact sequence that relates homotopy groups of the base $B$, fiber $F$ and total space $E$ of topological fibration gives
$$\pi_1(F) \to \pi_1(E) \to \pi_1(B) \to \ …
1
vote
The Jouanolou trick
I might be missing something about question 3. Here's a simple construction:
Consider a projective space $P$ of dimension $\text{dim}\\, P_1 + \text{dim}\\, P_2$ that contains both $P_1$ and $P_2$ in …
1
vote
de Rham Cohomology of surfaces
I don't remember exactly, but I think your question and in general your approach to topology should be along the lines of Bott-Tu book.
0
votes
Whitehead for maps
I think the proper Whitehead for maps says that if the cone of the map has trivial homotopy groups, then the map is a homotopy equivalence.
Edit: see also the discussion of Whitehead theorem in the c …
3
votes
Degree 2 branched map from the torus to the sphere
You can do a reverse construction: start with a sphere without 4 points; now add two points over each one in such a way that every time you go around one hole the two points get interchanged.
The sam …
3
votes
1
answer
852
views
Any reason why K_23(Z) has order 65520?
I'm rereading my notes and they mention that $K_{23}(\mathbb Z) = \mathbb Z/(65520)$
This looks like a good point to stop and ask whether there is any explanation for this $K$-group of integers (23 i …
7
votes
5
answers
978
views
Killing the torsion in homotopy
Origin
This question was asked by John Baez in This Week's Finds in Mathematical Physics (Week 286). Therefore, please don't upvote this question (unless you really want to), but do upvote the answer …
20
votes
How do you show that $S^{\infty}$ is contractible?
Kind of late to the party, but the (weak) contractibility follows from $\pi_i(S^\infty) = 0$ for $i>0$.
4
votes
3
answers
2k
views
Homotopy groups of smooth manifolds?
For a fixed $d$, is there a relationship between the homotopy groups of smooth $d$-manifolds?
The $d=1$ case is trivial, but I already don't know how to approach $d=3$ (I should have said that th …
3
votes
What is the Cayley projective plane?
See, e.g., Baez: http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/octonions/node8.html or even better http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/week173.html
11
votes
2
answers
1k
views
Elliptic curve over spectra?
Filling the gaps in my knowledge to understand the tmf question.
So, what is the analogue of elliptic curve over the category of spectra?
21
votes
2
answers
2k
views
Topologically contractible algebraic varieties
From a post to The Jouanolou trick:
Are all topologically trivial (contractible) complex algebraic varieties necessarily affine? Are there examples of those not birationally equivalent to an affin …
18
votes
8
answers
3k
views
How to get product on cohomology using the K(G, n)?
This came up in the question about Eilenberg-MacLane spaces. Given the definition of K(G, n), it's easy to prove that there is a map K(G,n) x K(G,n) --> K(G,n) that endows cohomology with an additive …