Fundamental group
Perhaps the simplest object of study in algebraic topology is the fundamental group.
Let be a based, topological space (that is,
is a topological space, and
is some point in
). Note that some authors will require
to be path-connected. Now consider all possible "loops" on
that start and end at
, i.e. all continuous functions
with
. Call this collection
(the loop space of
). Now define an equivalence relation
on
by saying that
if there is a (based) homotopy between
and
(that is, if there is a continuous function
with
,
, and
). Now let
be the set of equivalence classes of
under
.
Now define a binary operation (called concatenation) on
by
One can check that if
and
then
, and so
induces a well-defined binary operation on
.
One can now check that the operation makes
into a group. The identity element is just the constant loop
, and the inverse of a loop
is just the loop
traversed in the opposite direction (i.e. the loop
). We call
the fundamental group of
.
Note that the fundamental group is not in general abelian. For example, the fundamental group of a figure eight is the free group on two generators, which is not abelian. However, the fundamental group of a circle is , which is abelian.
More generally, if is an h-space, then
is abelian,
for there is a second multiplication on
given by
, which is "compatible" with the concatenation in the following respect:
We say that two binary operations on a
set
are compatible if, for every
,
If share the same unit
(such that
) then
and both are abelian.
Independence from base point
At this point, one might wonder how significant the choice of base point, , was. As it turns out, as long as
is path-connected, the choice of base point is irrelevant to the final group
.
Indeed, pick consider any other base point . As
is path connected, we can find a path
from
to
. Let
be the reverse path from
to
. For any
, define
by
One can now easily check that
is in fact a well-defined map
, and furthermore, that it is a homomorphism. Now we may similarly define the map
by
. One can now easily verify that
is the inverse of
. Thus
is an isomorphism, so
.
Therefore (up to isomorphism), the group is independent of the choice of
. For this reason, we often just write
for the fundamental of
.
Functoriality
Given a (based) continuous map (that is,
is continuous and
), one may define a group homomorphism
by sending each loop
to
. It is easy to see that
sends homotopic loops to homotopic loops (indeed if
is a homotopy from
to
, then
is a homotopy from
to
), and thus
is a well-defined map. Also
clearly preserves concatenations, so
is indeed a homomorphism.
Furthermore, it is easy to see that if and
are maps
and
, then:
and if
is the identity map on
and
is the identity map on
, then
Thus we may in fact regard
as a (covariant) functor from the category of based topological spaces to the category of groups.
One can also show that the induced map depends only on the homotopy type of
, that is if
are (based) homotopic maps that
. Indeed, for any loop
, if
is a based homotopy from
to
, then
is a based homotopy from
to
, and thus
in
.
Homotopy invariance
In order for the fundamental group to be a useful topological concept, any two spaces that are topologically "the same" must have the same fundamental group. Specifically, if and
are homeomorphic then
and
are isomorphic.
We will in fact show that and
are isomorphic if
and
satisfy the weaker notion of equivalence: homotopy equivalence.
Say that and
are based homotopy equivalent (
) with homotopy equivalences
and
. (By definition, this means that
and
.) Now consider the induced maps
and
. From the previous section we get that:
and
Therefore
is the inverse of
, so in particular
must be an isomorphism. Hence
.
This gives us a very useful method for distinguishing topological spaces: if and
are topological spaces whose fundamental groups are not not isomorphic then
and
cannot be homeomorphic (and in fact, they cannot be homotopy equivalent). For instance, one can show that
and
(where
is the n-sphere), and hence a circle is not homeomorphic to a sphere.