Infinite-dimensional sphere

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In algebraic topology, the infinite-dimensional sphere is the inductive limit of all spheres. Although no sphere is contractible, the infinite-dimensional sphere is contractible [1] [2] and hence appears as the total space of multiple universal principal bundles.

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Definition

With the usual definition of the sphere with the 2-norm, the canonical inclusion restricts to a canonical inclusion . Hence the spheres form an inductive system, whose inductive limit: [3] [4]

is the infinite-dimensional sphere.

Properties

The most important property of the infinite-dimensional sphere is, that it is contractible. [1] [2] Since the infinite-dimensional sphere inherits a CW structure from the spheres, [3] [5] Whitehead's theorem claims that it is sufficient to show that it is weakly contractible. Intuitively, the homotopy groups of the spheres disappear one by one, hence all do for the infinite-dimensional sphere. Concretely, any map , due to the compactness of the former sphere, factors over a canonical inclusion with without loss of generality. Since is trivial, is also trivial.

Application

Literature

References

  1. 1 2 Hatcher 2002, p. 19, Exercise 16
  2. 1 2 tom Dieck 2008, (8.4.5) Example
  3. 1 2 Hatcher 2002, p. 7
  4. tom Dieck 2008, p. 222
  5. tom Dieck 2008, p. 306