Motivation
On the one hand, it is sometimes useful to forget about superfluous information of topological spaces: The replacement of the original spaces with simplicial complexes may help to recognize crucial properties and to gain a better understanding of the considered object. On the other hand, simplicial complexes are objects of combinatorial character and therefore one can assign them quantities arising from their combinatorial pattern, for instance, theSimplicial complexes
Abstract simplicial complexes
An abstract simplicial complex above a set is a system of non-empty subsets such that: * for each ; * if and then . The elements of are called ''simplices,'' the elements of are called ''vertices.'' A simplex with vertices has ''dimension'' by definition. The dimension of an abstract simplicial complex is defined as . Abstract simplicial complexes can be realized as geometrical objects by associating each abstract simplex with a geometric simplex, defined below.Geometric simplices
Let be affinely independent points in ; i.e. the vectors areGeometric simplicial complexes
A geometric simplicial complex is a collection of geometric simplices such that * If is a simplex in , then all its faces are in . * If are two distinct simplices in , their interiors are disjoint. The union of all the simplices in gives the set of points of , denoted This set is endowed with a topology by choosing theSimplicial maps
The maps considered in this category are simplicial maps: Let , be abstract simplicial complexes above sets , . A simplicial map is a function which maps each simplex in onto a simplex in . By affine-linear extension on the simplices, induces a map between the geometric realizations of the complexes.Examples
* Let and let . The associated geometric complex is a star with center . * Let and let . Its geometric realization is aDefinition
A triangulation of a topological space is aExamples
* Simplicial complexes can be triangulated by identity. * Let be as in the examples seen above. The closed unit ball is homeomorphic to a tetrahedron so it admits a triangulation, namely the homeomorphism . Restricting to yields a homeomorphism .Invariants
Triangulations of spaces allow assigning combinatorial invariants rising from their dedicated simplicial complexes to spaces. These are characteristics that equal for complexes that are isomorphic via a simplicial map and thus have the same combinatorial pattern. This data might be useful to classify topological spaces up to homeomorphism but only given that the characteristics are also topological invariants, meaning, they do not depend on the chosen triangulation. For the data listed here, this is the case. For details and the link to singular homology, see topological invariance.Homology
Via triangulation, one can assign a chain complex to topological spaces that arise from its simplicial complex and compute its '' simplicial homology''.Betti-numbers and Euler-characteristics
Let be a finite simplicial complex. The -th Betti-number is defined to be the rank of the -th simplicial homology group of the spaces. These numbers encode geometric properties of the spaces: The Betti-number for instance represents the number of connected components. For a triangulated, closed orientable surfaces , holds where denotes theTopological invariance
To use these invariants for the classification of topological spaces up to homeomorphism one needs invariance of the characteristics regarding homeomorphism. A famous approach to the question was at the beginning of the 20th century the attempt to show that any two triangulations of the same topological space admit a common ''subdivision''. This assumption is known as ''Hauptvermutung ('' German: Main assumption). Let be a simplicial complex. A complex is said to be a subdivision of iff: * every simplex of is contained in a simplex of and * every simplex of is a finite union of simplices in . Those conditions ensure that subdivisions does not change the simplicial complex as a set or as a topological space. A map between simplicial complexes is said to be piecewise linear if there is a refinement of such that is piecewise linear on each simplex of . Two complexes that correspond to another via piecewise linear bijection are said to be combinatorial isomorphic. In particular, two complexes that have a common refinement are combinatorially equivalent. Homology groups are invariant to combinatorial equivalence and therefore the Hauptvermutung would give the topological invariance of simplicial homology groups. In 1918, Alexander introduced the concept of singular homology. Henceforth, most of the invariants arising from triangulation were replaced by invariants arising from singular homology. For those new invariants, it can be shown that they were invariant regarding homeomorphism and even regarding homotopy equivalence. Furthermore it was shown that singular and simplicial homology groups coincide. This workaround has shown the invariance of the data to homeomorphism. Hauptvermutung lost in importance but it was initial for a new branch in topology: The ''piecewise linear topology'' (short PL-topology).Hauptvermutung
The Hauptvermutung (''German for main conjecture'') states that two triangulations always admit a common subdivision. Originally, its purpose was to prove invariance of combinatorial invariants regarding homeomorphisms. The assumption that such subdivisions exist in general is intuitive, as subdivision are easy to construct for simple spaces, for instance for low dimensional manifolds. Indeed the assumption was proven for manifolds of dimension and for differentiable manifolds but it was disproved in general: An important tool to show that triangulations do not admit a common subdivision, that is, their underlying complexes are not combinatorially isomorphic is the combinatorial invariant of Reidemeister torsion.Reidemeister torsion
To disprove the Hauptvermutung it is helpful to use combinatorial invariants which are not topological invariants. A famous example is Reidemeister torsion. It can be assigned to a tuple of CW-complexes: If this characteristic will be a topological invariant but if in general not. An approach to Hauptvermutung was to find homeomorphic spaces with different values of Reidemeister torsion. This invariant was used initially to classify lens-spaces and first counterexamples to the Hauptvermutung were built based on lens-spaces:Classification of lens spaces
In its original formulation, lens spaces are 3-manifolds, constructed as quotient spaces of the 3-sphere: Let be natural numbers, such that are coprime. The lens space is defined to be the orbit space of the free group action : :. For different tuples , lens spaces will be homotopy equivalent but not homeomorphic. Therefore they can't be distinguished with the help of classical invariants as the fundamental group but by the use of Reidemeister torsion. Two lens spaces are homeomorphic, if and only if . This is the case if and only if two lens spaces are ''simple homotopy equivalent''. The fact can be used to construct counterexamples for the Hauptvermutung as follows. Suppose there are spaces derived from non-homeomorphic lens spaces having different Reidemeister torsion. Suppose further that the modification into does not affect Reidemeister torsion but such that after modification and are homeomorphic. The resulting spaces will disprove the Hauptvermutung.Existence of triangulation
Besides the question of concrete triangulations for computational issues, there are statements about spaces that are easier to prove given that they are simplicial complexes. Especially manifolds are of interest. Topological manifolds of dimension are always triangulable but there are non-triangulable manifolds for dimension , for arbitrary but greater than three. Further, differentiable manifolds always admit triangulations.Piecewise linear structures
Manifolds are an important class of spaces. It is natural to require them not only to be triangulable but moreover to admit a piecewise linear atlas, a PL-structure: Let be a simplicial complex such that every point admits an open neighborhood such that there is a triangulation of and a piecewise linear homeomorphism . Then is said to be a ''piecewise linear (PL) manifold of dimension'' and the triangulation together with the PL-atlas is said to be a ''PL-structure on'' . An important lemma is the following: Let be a topological space. Then the following statements are equivalent: # is an -dimensional manifold and admits a PL-structure. # There is a triangulation of such that the link of each vertex is an sphere. # For each triangulation of the link of each vertex is an sphere. The equivalence of the second and the third statement is because that the link of a vertex is independent of the chosen triangulation up to combinatorial isomorphism. One can show that differentiable manifolds admit a PL-structure as well as manifolds of dimension . Counterexamples for the triangulation conjecture are counterexamples for the conjecture of the existence of PL-structure of course. Moreover, there are examples for triangulated spaces which do not admit a PL-structure. Consider an -dimensional PL-homology-sphere . The double suspension is a topological -sphere. Choosing a triangulation obtained via the suspension operation on triangulations the resulting simplicial complex is not a PL-manifold, because there is a vertex such that is not a sphere. A question arising with the definition is if PL-structures are always unique: Given two PL-structures for the same space , is there a there a homeomorphism which is piecewise linear with respect to both PL-structures? The assumption is similar to the Hauptvermutung and indeed there are spaces which have different PL-structures which are not equivalent. Triangulation of PL-equivalent spaces can be transformed into one another via Pachner moves:Pachner Moves
Cellular complexes
Other applications
Classification of manifolds
By triangulating 1-dimensional manifolds, one can show that they are always homeomorphic to disjoint copies of the real line and the unit sphere . The classification of closed surfaces, i.e. compact 2-manifolds, can also be proven by using triangulations. This is done by showing any such surface can be triangulated and then using the triangulation to construct a fundamental polygon for the surface.Maps on simplicial complexes
Giving spaces simplicial structures can help to understand continuous maps defined on the spaces. The maps can often be assumed to be simplicial maps via the simplicial approximation theorem:Simplicial approximation
Let , be abstract simplicial complexes above sets , . A simplicial map is a function which maps each simplex in onto a simplex in . By affin-linear extension on the simplices, induces a map between the geometric realizations of the complexes. Each point in a geometric complex lies in the inner of exactly one simplex, its ''support.'' Consider now a ''continuous'' map ''.'' A simplicial map is said to be a ''simplicial approximation'' of if and only if each is mapped by onto the support of in . If such an approximation exists, one can construct a homotopy transforming into by defining it on each simplex; there it always exists, because simplices are contractible. The simplicial approximation theorem guarantees for every continuous function the existence of a simplicial approximation at least after refinement of , for instance by replacing by its iterated barycentric subdivision. The theorem plays an important role for certain statements in algebraic topology in order to reduce the behavior of continuous maps on those of simplicial maps, for instance in ''Lefschetz's fixed-point theorem.''Lefschetz's fixed-point theorem
The ''Lefschetz number'' is a useful tool to find out whether a continuous function admits fixed-points. This data is computed as follows: Suppose that and are topological spaces that admit finite triangulations. A continuous map induces homomorphisms between its simplicial homology groups with coefficients in a field . These are linear maps between -vector spaces, so their trace can be determined and their alternating sum is called the ''Lefschetz number'' of . If , this number is the Euler characteristic of . The fixpoint theorem states that whenever , has a fixed-point. In the proof this is first shown only for simplicial maps and then generalized for any continuous functions via the approximation theorem. Brouwer's fixpoint theorem treats the case where is an endomorphism of the unit-ball. For all its homology groups vanishes, and is always the identity, so , so has a fixpoint.Formula of Riemann-Hurwitz
The Riemann-Hurwitz formula allows to determine the genus of a compact, connected Riemann surface without using explicit triangulation. The proof needs the existence of triangulations for surfaces in an abstract sense: Let be a non-constant holomorphic function on a surface with known genus. The relation between the genus of the surfaces and is where denotes the degree of the map. The sum is well defined as it counts only the ramifying points of the function. The background of this formula is that holomorphic functions on Riemann surfaces are ramified coverings. The formula can be found by examining the image of the simplicial structure near to ramifiying points.Citations
{{reflistSee also
*Literature
*Allen Hatcher: ''Algebraic Topology'', Cambridge University Press, Cambridge/New York/Melbourne 2006, ISBN 0-521-79160-X *James R. Munkres: . Band 1984. Addison Wesley, Menlo Park, California 1984, ISBN 0-201-04586-9 *Marshall M. Cohen: ''A course in Simple-Homotopy Theory'' . In: ''Graduate Texts in Mathematics''. 1973,