In algebraic topology, the path space fibration over a pointed space
[1] is a fibration of the form[2]
![{\displaystyle \Omega X\hookrightarrow PX{\overset {\chi \mapsto \chi (1)}{\to }}X}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/570c118b5e2299a3ddb0e4689af20680440a7c24)
where
is the based path space of the pointed space
; that is,
equipped with the compact-open topology.
is the fiber of
over the base point of
; thus it is the loop space of
.
The free path space of X, that is,
, consists of all maps from I to X that do not necessarily begin at a base point, and the fibration
given by, say,
, is called the free path space fibration.
The path space fibration can be understood to be dual to the mapping cone.[clarification needed] The fiber of the based fibration is called the mapping fiber or, equivalently, the homotopy fiber.
Mapping path space
If
is any map, then the mapping path space
of
is the pullback of the fibration
along
. (A mapping path space satisfies the universal property that is dual to that of a mapping cylinder, which is a push-out. Because of this, a mapping path space is also called a mapping cocylinder.[3])
Since a fibration pulls back to a fibration, if Y is based, one has the fibration
![{\displaystyle F_{f}\hookrightarrow P_{f}{\overset {p}{\to }}Y}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/56c6c6814d7e921626c3cea4e43789507348127d)
where
and
is the homotopy fiber, the pullback of the fibration
along
.
Note also
is the composition
![{\displaystyle X{\overset {\phi }{\to }}P_{f}{\overset {p}{\to }}Y}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/fc7734cea1fc5cacc261602b3a617c2bab79c018)
where the first map
sends x to
; here
denotes the constant path with value
. Clearly,
is a homotopy equivalence; thus, the above decomposition says that any map is a fibration up to homotopy equivalence.
If
is a fibration to begin with, then the map
is a fiber-homotopy equivalence and, consequently,[4] the fibers of
over the path-component of the base point are homotopy equivalent to the homotopy fiber
of
.
Moore's path space
By definition, a path in a space X is a map from the unit interval I to X. Again by definition, the product of two paths
such that
is the path
given by:
.
This product, in general, fails to be associative on the nose:
, as seen directly. One solution to this failure is to pass to homotopy classes: one has
. Another solution is to work with paths of arbitrary lengths, leading to the notions of Moore's path space and Moore's path space fibration, described below.[5] (A more sophisticated solution is to rethink composition: work with an arbitrary family of compositions; see the introduction of Lurie's paper,[6] leading to the notion of an operad.)
Given a based space
, we let
![{\displaystyle P'X=\{f\colon [0,r]\to X\mid r\geq 0,f(0)=*\}.}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/3824e1b4b78f7275f1df2b5a37b7d5833c777080)
An element f of this set has a unique extension
to the interval
such that
. Thus, the set can be identified as a subspace of
. The resulting space is called the Moore path space of X, after John Coleman Moore, who introduced the concept. Then, just as before, there is a fibration, Moore's path space fibration:
![{\displaystyle \Omega 'X\hookrightarrow P'X{\overset {p}{\to }}X}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/c939ba82539da1c1437cf5ae01ce94ae96e4c206)
where p sends each
to
and
is the fiber. It turns out that
and
are homotopy equivalent.
Now, we define the product map
![{\displaystyle \mu :P'X\times \Omega 'X\to P'X}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/3e0b835732fc5c1f8ea32313e2369f22732d3bfb)
by: for
and
,
.
This product is manifestly associative. In particular, with μ restricted to Ω'X × Ω'X, we have that Ω'X is a topological monoid (in the category of all spaces). Moreover, this monoid Ω'X acts on P'X through the original μ. In fact,
is an Ω'X-fibration.[7]
Notes
- ^ Throughout the article, spaces are objects of the category of "reasonable" spaces; e.g., the category of compactly generated weak Hausdorff spaces.
- ^ Davis & Kirk 2001, Theorem 6.15. 2.
- ^ Davis & Kirk 2001, § 6.8.
- ^ using the change of fiber
- ^ Whitehead 1978, Ch. III, § 2.
- ^ Lurie, Jacob (October 30, 2009). "Derived Algebraic Geometry VI: E[k]-Algebras" (PDF).
- ^ Let G = Ω'X and P = P'X. That G preserves the fibers is clear. To see, for each γ in P, the map
is a weak equivalence, we can use the following lemma:
Lemma — Let p: D → B, q: E → B be fibrations over an unbased space B, f: D → E a map over B. If B is path-connected, then the following are equivalent:
- f is a weak equivalence.
is a weak equivalence for some b in B.
is a weak equivalence for every b in B.
We apply the lemma with
where α is a path in P and I → X is t → the end-point of α(t). Since
if γ is the constant path, the claim follows from the lemma. (In a nutshell, the lemma follows from the long exact homotopy sequence and the five lemma.)
References