Method in algebraic topology
In algebraic topology the cap product is a method of adjoining a chain of degree p with a cochain of degree q, such that q ≤ p, to form a composite chain of degree p − q. It was introduced by Eduard Čech in 1936, and independently by Hassler Whitney in 1938.
Let X be a topological space and R a coefficient ring. The cap product is a bilinear map on singular homology and cohomology
![{\displaystyle \frown \;:H_{p}(X;R)\times H^{q}(X;R)\rightarrow H_{p-q}(X;R).}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/ae05f962b47151860a22b5adfcb3d62b21120631)
defined by contracting a singular chain
with a singular cochain
by the formula:
![{\displaystyle \sigma \frown \psi =\psi (\sigma |_{[v_{0},\ldots ,v_{q}]})\sigma |_{[v_{q},\ldots ,v_{p}]}.}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/f6882b875de7b66d6b3cf4bbb8de999fe132c21f)
Here, the notation
indicates the restriction of the simplicial map
to its face spanned by the vectors of the base, see Simplex.
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). Consider then the composition
where we are taking tensor products of chain complexes,
is the diagonal map which induces the map
on the chain complex, and
is the evaluation map (always 0 except for
).
This composition then passes to the quotient to define the cap product
, and looking carefully at the above composition shows that it indeed takes the form of maps
, which is always zero for
.
For any point
in
, we have the long-exact sequence in homology (with coefficients in
) of the pair (M, M - {x}) (See Relative homology)
![{\displaystyle \cdots \to H_{n}(M-{x};R){\stackrel {i_{*}}{\to }}H_{n}(M;R){\stackrel {j_{*}}{\to }}H_{n}(M,M-{x};R){\stackrel {\partial }{\to }}H_{n-1}(M-{x};R)\to \cdots .}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/19917c042852e1a7359693f9f3720c59fe4ac366)
An element
of
is called the fundamental class for
if
is a generator of
. A fundamental class of
exists if
is closed and R-orientable. In fact, if
is a closed, connected and
-orientable manifold, the map
is an isomorphism for all
in
and hence, we can choose any generator of
as the fundamental class.
Relation with Poincaré duality
[edit]
For a closed
-orientable n-manifold
with fundamental class
in
(which we can choose to be any generator of
), the cap product map
is an isomorphism for all
. This result is famously called Poincaré duality.
If in the above discussion one replaces
by
, the construction can be (partially) replicated starting from the mappings
and
to get, respectively, slant products
:
and
In case X = Y, the first one is related to the cap product by the diagonal map:
.
These ‘products’ are in some ways more like division than multiplication, which is reflected in their notation.
The boundary of a cap product is given by :
![{\displaystyle \partial (\sigma \frown \psi )=(-1)^{q}(\partial \sigma \frown \psi -\sigma \frown \delta \psi ).}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/8b0feecf0d951a1d1dbbc77b76f7349ef1526032)
Given a map f the induced maps satisfy :
![{\displaystyle f_{*}(\sigma )\frown \psi =f_{*}(\sigma \frown f^{*}(\psi )).}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/ac43892fb9e49906a54931f36067d82b83e900b0)
The cap and cup product are related by :
![{\displaystyle \psi (\sigma \frown \varphi )=(\varphi \smile \psi )(\sigma )}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/4a2d6db65c89a7323bb15a4084848661ca8cdae9)
where
,
and ![{\displaystyle \varphi \in C^{p}(X;R).}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/4ae261bff88d951ef9f54b912a46e311ba437275)
If
is allowed to be of higher degree than
, the last identity takes a more general form
![{\displaystyle (\sigma \frown \varphi )\frown \psi =\sigma \frown (\varphi \smile \psi )}](https://wikimedia.riteme.site/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/63bf01c5c45e37b1e7e68ed47e34efe868012907)
which makes
into a right
-module.