Toda bracket

In mathematics, the Toda bracket is an operation on homotopy classes of maps, in particular on homotopy groups of spheres, named after Hiroshi Toda, who defined them and used them to compute homotopy groups of spheres in (Toda 1962).

Definition

See (Kochman 1990) or (Toda 1962) for more information. Suppose that

is a sequence of maps between spaces, such that the compositions and are both nullhomotopic. Given a space , let denote the cone of . Then we get a (non-unique) map

induced by a homotopy from to a trivial map, which when post-composed with gives a map

.

Similarly we get a non-unique map induced by a homotopy from to a trivial map, which when composed with , the cone of the map , gives another map,

.

By joining together these two cones on and the maps from them to , we get a map

representing an element in the group of homotopy classes of maps from the suspension to , called the Toda bracket of , , and . The map is not uniquely defined up to homotopy, because there was some choice in choosing the maps from the cones. Changing these maps changes the Toda bracket by adding elements of and .

There are also higher Toda brackets of several elements, defined when suitable lower Toda brackets vanish. This parallels the theory of Massey products in cohomology.

The Toda bracket for stable homotopy groups of spheres

The direct sum

of the stable homotopy groups of spheres is a supercommutative graded ring, where multiplication (called composition product) is given by composition of representing maps, and any element of non-zero degree is nilpotent (Nishida 1973).

If f and g and h are elements of with and , there is a Toda bracket of these elements. The Toda bracket is not quite an element of a stable homotopy group, because it is only defined up to addition of composition products of certain other elements. Hiroshi Toda used the composition product and Toda brackets to label many of the elements of homotopy groups. Cohen (1968) showed that every element of the stable homotopy groups of spheres can be expressed using composition products and higher Toda brackets in terms of certain well known elements, called Hopf elements.

The Toda bracket for general triangulated categories

In the case of a general triangulated category the Toda bracket can be defined as follows. Again, suppose that

is a sequence of morphism in a triangulated category such that and . Let denote the cone of f so we obtain an exact triangle

The relation implies that g factors (non-uniquely) through as

for some . Then, the relation implies that factors (non-uniquely) through W[1] as

for some b. This b is (a choice of) the Toda bracket in the group .

gollark: Can they do division? It's obviously a 250GB drive.
gollark: This is why we need my 6D political hypercube model.
gollark: Listen dude, I don't think you get it. It's almost like what you're saying is implying that here's the thing. What are you talking about?
gollark: To be fair,
gollark: I actually have a centrist political compass somewhere. I'll try and find it later.

References

  • Cohen, Joel M. (1968), "The decomposition of stable homotopy.", Annals of Mathematics, Second Series, 87 (2): 305–320, doi:10.2307/1970586, JSTOR 1970586, MR 0231377, PMC 224450.
  • Kochman, Stanley O. (1990), "Toda brackets", Stable homotopy groups of spheres. A computer-assisted approach, Lecture Notes in Mathematics, 1423, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, pp. 12–34, doi:10.1007/BFb0083797, ISBN 978-3-540-52468-7, MR 1052407.
  • Nishida, Goro (1973), "The nilpotency of elements of the stable homotopy groups of spheres", Journal of the Mathematical Society of Japan, 25 (4): 707–732, doi:10.2969/jmsj/02540707, ISSN 0025-5645, MR 0341485.
  • Toda, Hiroshi (1962), Composition methods in homotopy groups of spheres, Annals of Mathematics Studies, 49, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-09586-8, MR 0143217.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.