Čech cohomology
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Čech cohomology is a particular type of cohomology in mathematics. It is named for the mathematician Eduard Čech.
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[edit] Construction
Let X be a topological space, and let be a presheaf of abelian groups on X. For concreteness, one can take
to be the constant sheaf on X with values in a fixed abelian group A.
[edit] Cochains
Let be an open cover of X where I is an ordered set. We define the cochain groups on
with values in
as follows. The 0-cochains are functions assigning an element of
to every open set Uα. Using the properties of products, we may write
The 1-cochains are defined to be elements of
and so on, so that
The set of all q-cochains forms an abelian group.
[edit] Differential
The cochain groups can be made into a cochain complex by defining a differential (or coboundary) operator
We will simplify notation by writing intersections as , and so on for higher intersections. For every intersection
there are q + 1 inclusions defined as follows:
That is, skips the ith open set. Applying
to
we get q + 1 restriction homomorphisms. The differential δ is defined as the alternating sum of the
:
Explicitly, for we have
One shows that δ2 = 0, as required, so that does indeed form a cochain complex.
[edit] Cohomology
The Čech cohomology of U with values in the presheaf F is defined as the the cohomology of the above cochain complex. That is the qth Čech cohomology is given by
The Čech cohomology of X is defined by considering refinement of open covers. If V is a refinement of U then there is a well-defined map in cohomology
The open covers of X form a directed set under refinement, so the above map leads to a direct system of abelian groups. The Čech cohomology of X with values in F is defined as the direct limit of this system:
The Čech cohomology of X with coefficients in a fixed abelian group A, denoted H(X; A), is defined as H(X, FA) where FA is the constant sheaf on X determined by A.
A variant of Čech cohomology, called numerable Čech cohomology, is defined as above, except that all open covers considered are required to be numerable: that is, there is a partition of unity {ρi} such that each support {x | ρi(x) > 0} is contained in some element of the cover. If X is paracompact and Hausdorff, then numerable Čech cohomology agrees with the usual Čech cohomology.
[edit] Relation to other cohomology theories
If X is homotopy equivalent to a CW complex, then the Čech cohomology is naturally isomorphic to the singular cohomology H * (X;A). If X is a differentiable manifold, then
is also naturally isomorphic to the de Rham cohomology; the article on de Rham cohomology provides a brief review of this isomorphism. For less well-behaved spaces, Čech cohomology differs from singular cohomology. For example if X is the closed topologist's sine curve, then
whereas
If X is a differentiable manifold, the cover U of X is a "good cover" (i.e. all the sets Uα are contractible to a point, and all finite intersections of sets in U are either empty or contractible to a point), then H∗(U, R) is isomorphic to the de Rham cohomology.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Bott, Raoul; Loring Tu (1982). Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology. New York: Springer. ISBN 0-387-90613-4.
- Hatcher, Allen (2002). Algebraic Topology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-79540-0. For further discussion of Moore spaces, see Chapter 2, Example 2.40.