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Allen Hatcher, Algebraic Topology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2002. ISBN 0-521-79540-0. A modern, geometrically flavored introduction to algebraic topology. The book is available free in PDF and PostScript formats on the author's homepage. Kainen, P. C. (1971). "Weak Adjoint Functors". Mathematische Zeitschrift. 122: 1– 9.
Differential graded algebra: the algebraic structure arising on the cochain level for the cup product; Poincaré duality: swaps some of these; Intersection theory: for a similar theory in algebraic geometry
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In mathematics, especially in algebraic topology, the homotopy limit and colimit [1] pg 52 are variants of the notions of limit and colimit extended to the homotopy category (). The main idea is this: if we have a diagram:
Singular cohomology is a powerful invariant in topology, associating a graded-commutative ring with any topological space. Every continuous map: determines a homomorphism from the cohomology ring of to that of ; this puts strong restrictions on the possible maps from to .
Let be a Grothendieck topology and a scheme.Moreover let be a group scheme over , a -torsor (or principal -bundle) over for the topology (or simply a -torsor when the topology is clear from the context) is the data of a scheme and a morphism : with a -invariant (right) action on that is locally trivial in i.e. there exists a covering {} such that the base change over is isomorphic to the ...
In analogy with the interpretation of the cup product in terms of the Künneth formula, we can explain the existence of the cap product in the following way.Using CW approximation we may assume that is a CW-complex and () (and ()) is the complex of its cellular chains (or cochains, respectively).
The barycentric subdivision is an operation on simplicial complexes. In algebraic topology it is sometimes useful to replace the original spaces with simplicial complexes via triangulations: This substitution allows one to assign combinatorial invariants such as the Euler characteristic to the spaces.