Informal examples edit

Informally, the homology of a topological space   is a set of topological invariants of   represented by its homology groups

 

where the   homology group   describes the  -dimensional holes in . A 0-dimensional hole is simply a gap between two components, consequently   describes the path-connected components of  .[1]

 
The circle or 1-sphere  

A one-dimensional sphere   is a circle. It has a single connected component and a one-dimensional hole, but no higher dimensional holes. The corresponding homology groups are given as

 

where   is the group of integers and   is the trivial group. The group   represents a kind of one-dimensional vector space, with integer coefficients, that represents the single one-dimensional hole contained in a circle. [2]

 
The 2-sphere  

A two-dimensional sphere   has a single connected component, no one-dimensional holes, a two-dimensional hole, and no higher dimensional holes. The corresponding homology groups are[2]

 

In general for an  -dimensional sphere  , the homology groups are

 
 
The solid disc or 1-ball  

A one-dimensional ball   is a solid disc. It has a single connected component, but in contrast to the circle, has no one-dimensional or higher-dimensional holes. The corresponding homology groups are all trivial except for  . In general, for an  -dimensional ball  ,[2]

 
 
The torus  

The torus is defined as a Cartesian product of two circles  . The torus has a single connected component, two independent one-dimensional holes (indicated by circles in red and blue) and one two-dimensional hole as the interior of the torus. The corresponding homology groups are[3]

 

The two independent 1D holes form a two-dimensional vector space with integer coefficients, producing the Cartesian product group  .

References edit

  1. ^ Spanier, Edwin H. (1966). Algebraic Topology. Springer. p. 155. ISBN 0-387-90646-0.
  2. ^ a b c Timothy Gowers, June Barrow-Green, Imre Leader (2010). The Princeton Companion to Mathematics. Princeton University Press. pp. 390–391. ISBN 9781400830398.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Hatcher, Allen (2002). Algebraic Topology. Cambridge University Press. p. 106. ISBN 9780521795401.