Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter I INTRODUCTION
- Chapter II THE HOMOTOPY GROUPS
- Chapter III THE CLASSICAL THEOREMS OF HOMOTOPY THEORY
- Chapter IV THE EXACT HOMOTOPY SEQUENCE
- Chapter V FIBRE-SPACES
- Chapter VI THE HOPF INVARIANT AND SUSPENSION THEOREMS
- Chapter VII WHITEHEAD CELL-COMPLEXES
- Chapter VIII HOMOTOPY GROUPS OF COMPLEXES
- Bibliography
- Index and Glossary
Chapter VII - WHITEHEAD CELL-COMPLEXES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter I INTRODUCTION
- Chapter II THE HOMOTOPY GROUPS
- Chapter III THE CLASSICAL THEOREMS OF HOMOTOPY THEORY
- Chapter IV THE EXACT HOMOTOPY SEQUENCE
- Chapter V FIBRE-SPACES
- Chapter VI THE HOPF INVARIANT AND SUSPENSION THEOREMS
- Chapter VII WHITEHEAD CELL-COMPLEXES
- Chapter VIII HOMOTOPY GROUPS OF COMPLEXES
- Bibliography
- Index and Glossary
Summary
Definition of a cell-complex, and the basic properties of CW-complexes. For convenience, since simplicial subdivision is a tedious operation in many cases, and for greater generality, it is advisable to extend our notion of a simplicial complex to the more general notion of a cell-complex. This extension is due to J. H. C. Whitehead, who defined a cell-complex as follows.
A cell-complex, K, is a Hausdorff space which is the union of disjoint (open) cells, en. The closure, ēn, of the cell en, is the image of an n-element En under a map f:En, Sn−1→K, Kn−1 such that f │ En − Sn−1 is a homeomorphism on to en, where Kn−1 is the point-set union of the cells whose dimension does not exceed (n − 1). Thus, in the terminology of Chapter VI, en is attached to Kn−1 by the map f│Sn−1 and f is a characteristic map for en. It should be noted that this definition is certainly consistent with the topology of K. For, since En is compact and K is Hausdorff, ēn is certainly a closed set. Moreover, there can be no closed set F satisfying en ⊂ F ⊂ ēn, since there is no closed set f−1(F) satisfying En−Sn−1⊂f−1(F)⊂En, the inclusions being, of course, strict inclusions.
A subcomplex, L, of K is the union of certain cells of K, such that if en ⊂ L, then ēn ⊂ L.
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- Information
- An Introduction to Homotopy Theory , pp. 95 - 113Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1953