Relative homology

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In algebraic topology, a branch of mathematics, the (singular) homology of a topological space relative to a subspace is a construction in singular homology, for pairs of spaces. The relative homology is useful and important in several ways. Intuitively, it helps determine what part of an absolute homology group comes from which subspace.

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[edit] Definition

Given a subspace A\subset X, one may form the short exact sequence

0\to C_\bullet(A) \to C_\bullet(X)\to 
C_\bullet(X) /C_\bullet(A)  \to 0

where C_\bullet(X) denotes the singular chains on the space X. The boundary map on C_\bullet(X) leaves C_\bullet(A) invariant and therefore descends to a boundary map on the quotient. The correponding homology is called relative homology:

H_n(X,A) = H_n (C_\bullet(X) /C_\bullet(A)).

One says that relative homology is given by the relative cycles, chains whose boundaries are chains on A, modulo the relative boundaries (chains that are homologous to a chain on A, i.e. chains that would be boundaries, modulo A again).

[edit] Properties

The above short exact sequences specifying the relative chain groups gives rise to a chain complex of short exact sequences. An application of the snake lemma then yields a long exact sequence

\cdots \to H_n(A) \to H_n(X) \to H_n (X,A) \stackrel{\delta}{\to} H_{n-1}(A)  \to \cdots .

The connecting map δ takes a relative cycle, representing a homology class in Hn(X, A), to its boundary (which is a chain in A).

It follows that Hn(X, x0), where x0 is a point in X, is the n-th reduced homology group of X.

The Excision theorem says that removing a sufficiently nice subset ZA leaves the relative homology groups Hn(X, A) unchanged. Using the long exact sequence of pairs and the excision theorem, one can show that Hn(X, A) is the same as the n-th reduced homology groups of the quotient space X/A.

The n-th local homology group of a space X at a point x0 is defined to be Hn(X, X - x0). Informally, this is the homology of a small sphere containing x0.

[edit] Functoriality

The map C_\bullet can be considered to be a functor

C_\bullet:\bold{Top}^2\to\bold{Comp}

where Top2 is the category of pairs of topological spaces and Comp is the category of chain complexes.

[edit] References

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