Skip to main content
Search type Search syntax
Tags [tag]
Exact "words here"
Author user:1234
user:me (yours)
Score score:3 (3+)
score:0 (none)
Answers answers:3 (3+)
answers:0 (none)
isaccepted:yes
hasaccepted:no
inquestion:1234
Views views:250
Code code:"if (foo != bar)"
Sections title:apples
body:"apples oranges"
URL url:"*.example.com"
Saves in:saves
Status closed:yes
duplicate:no
migrated:no
wiki:no
Types is:question
is:answer
Exclude -[tag]
-apples
For more details on advanced search visit our help page
Results tagged with
Search options answers only not deleted user 6666

Homotopy theory is an important sub-field of algebraic topology. It is mainly concerned with the properties and structures of spaces which are invariant under homotopy. Chief among these are the homotopy groups of spaces, specifically those of spheres. Homotopy theory includes a broad set of ideas and techniques, such as cohomology theories, spectra and stable homotopy theory, model categories, spectral sequences, and classifying spaces.

5 votes
Accepted

Equivalence of cosimplicial models for homotopy pullbacks

The first one has codegeneracies as well as cofaces, yes? And when you say that it computes the htpy pullback basically by definition I suppose you mean that its Tot is homeomorphic to the space whose …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
26 votes

What is the algebraic geometry version of the spheres?

To expand on Will Sawin's comment in a vague sort of way (which is the best I can do): The cofiber of the pair $(\mathbb P^n,\mathbb P^{n-1})$ (which doesn't exist as a scheme but does exist if you w …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
8 votes
Accepted

Bousfield-Kan spectral sequence with local coefficients

Let LOC be the category in which an object is a space plus a local system on it, and a morphism is a map of spaces covered by a map of coefficient systems in the obvious sense. There's an obvious func …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
6 votes

the hopf invariant of the hopf construction

This can be seen as follows in terms of the older geometric definitions of degree and Hopf invariant. The degree of a smooth map $S^{n-1}\to S^{n-1}$ is the number of points mapping to a given point. …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
8 votes
Accepted

The homotopy cofiber of the smash product of two maps of spectra

By factoring $g\wedge f$ as $X\wedge f$ followed by $g\wedge Y$ you see that it's in the middle of a cofiber sequence $Z\wedge C_f\to \ ?\to C_g\wedge Y$. Similarly it's in the middle of a cofiber seq …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
4 votes

What is the "universal problem" that motivates the definition of homotopy limits/colimits (a...

This could have been a comment to Peter's answer, except that it's going to be long. (Maybe I should be making it a new question.) Suppose that $Ho(\mathcal C)$ is obtained from $\mathcal C$ by (univ …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
11 votes

Does Thom's J-equivalence imply Whitehead's simple homotopy?

This "J-equivalence" is usually called h-cobordism. The results on it are not scattered! They are quite complete, except in low dimensions. Given any $M_1$, and given an element $\tau$ of the Whiteh …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
16 votes

Computing homotopies

Harry, the expression "an explicit representative of the natural homotopy between the identity map and the constant map on a contractible based space" doesn't mean anything to me. Homotopies don't hav …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
7 votes
Accepted

Eilenberg-Mac Lane spaces for groups that can't see $p$-groups

Yes. Your hypothesis on $G$ means that $G$ is torsion and prime to $p$: every element of $G$ has finite order prime to $p$. This in turn implies that the integral homology group $H_mK(G,n)$ is torsion …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
7 votes

Singular complex = cohomology ring + Steenrod operations?

This is answering a slightly different question, but here goes: If the question is "does knowing the singular (co)chains up to quasi-isomorphism determine the space up to weak equivalence?" then of c …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
6 votes
Accepted

Lifting relative homotopies between maps $X\to Y/B$ when $B$ is contractible

Sure. The fact that $A$ is a subcomplex of $X$ implies that the restriction maps $$Map(X,Y)\to Map(A,Y)$$ and $$Map(X,Y/B)\to Map(A,Y/B)$$ are Serre fibrations. The fact that $B$ is a subcomplex of $Y …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
13 votes

Classifying space for S1-bundle?

$Homeo(S^1)$ is homotopy equivalent to $O(2)$. This follows from the fact that the space of all homeomorphisms $S^1\to S^1$ having degree one and fixing a given point is contractible. In fact, the lat …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
4 votes
Accepted

Suspension of an excisive pair

No. Suppose that $X$ is an $n$-sphere, $A$ is a closed hemisphere, and $U$ is a point in the interior of $A$. Then $SX$ is an $(n+1)$-sphere, $SA$ is a closed hemisphere, and $SU$ is a closed arc in $ …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
5 votes

mapping spaces of diagrams

(I deleted my first attempt at an answer, as I had right and left reversed and anyway I wanted to try to say it better.) I would advocate the following broad and comparatively low-tech view of the ma …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar
4 votes

The most general context of Mather's Cube Theorems

Here's a sketch proof of 2, sort of in the same spirit as Jeff Strom's answer: These statements have equivalent formulations involving strictly commutative squares. Denote a typical square by $\mat …
Tom Goodwillie's user avatar

1
2 3 4 5 6
15 30 50 per page