Fiber-homotopy equivalence
In algebraic topology, a fiber-homotopy equivalence is a map over a space B that has homotopy inverse over B (that is we require a homotopy be a map over B for each time t.) It is a relative analog of a homotopy equivalence between spaces.
Given maps p:D→B, q:E→B, if ƒ:D→E is a fiber-homotopy equivalence, then for any b in B the restriction
is a homotopy equivalence. If p, q are fibrations, this is always the case for homotopy equivalences by the next proposition.
Proposition — Let be fibrations. Then a map over B is a homotopy equivalence if and only if it is a fiber-homotopy equivalence.
Proof of the proposition[]
The following proof is based on the proof of Proposition in Ch. 6, § 5 of (May) . We write for a homotopy over B.
We first note that it is enough to show that ƒ admits a left homotopy inverse over B. Indeed, if with g over B, then g is in particular a homotopy equivalence. Thus, g also admits a left homotopy inverse h over B and then formally we have ; that is, .
Now, since ƒ is a homotopy equivalence, it has a homotopy inverse g. Since , we have: . Since p is a fibration, the homotopy lifts to a homotopy from g to, say, g' that satisfies . Thus, we can assume g is over B. Then it suffices to show gƒ, which is now over B, has a left homotopy inverse over B since that would imply that ƒ has such a left inverse.
Therefore, the proof reduces to the situation where ƒ:D→D is over B via p and . Let be a homotopy from ƒ to . Then, since and since p is a fibration, the homotopy lifts to a homotopy ; explicitly, we have . Note also is over B.
We show is a left homotopy inverse of ƒ over B. Let be the homotopy given as the composition of homotopies . Then we can find a homotopy K from the homotopy pJ to the constant homotopy . Since p is a fibration, we can lift K to, say, L. We can finish by going around the edge corresponding to J:
References[]
- May, J.P. A Concise Course in Algebraic Topology, (1999) Chicago Lectures in Mathematics ISBN 0-226-51183-9 (See chapter 6.)
- Algebraic topology
- Homotopy theory