Lefschetz duality

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In mathematics, Lefschetz duality is a version of Poincaré duality in geometric topology, applying to a manifold with boundary. Such a formulation was introduced by Solomon Lefschetz (1926), at the same time introducing relative homology, for application to the Lefschetz fixed-point theorem.[1] There are now numerous formulations of Lefschetz duality or Poincaré–Lefschetz duality, or Alexander–Lefschetz duality.

Formulations

Let M be an orientable compact manifold of dimension n, with boundary (M), and let zHn(M,(M);) be the fundamental class of the manifold M. Then cap product with z (or its dual class in cohomology) induces a pairing of the (co)homology groups of M and the relative (co)homology of the pair (M,(M)). Furthermore, this gives rise to isomorphisms of Hk(M,(M);) with Hnk(M;), and of Hk(M,(M);) with Hnk(M;) for all k.[2]

Here (M) can in fact be empty, so Poincaré duality appears as a special case of Lefschetz duality.

There is a version for triples. Let (M) decompose into subspaces A and B, themselves compact orientable manifolds with common boundary Z, which is the intersection of A and B. Then, for each k, there is an isomorphism[3]

DM:Hk(M,A;)Hnk(M,B;).

Notes

  1. Biographical Memoirs By National Research Council Staff (1992), p. 297.
  2. Vick, James W. (1994). Homology Theory: An Introduction to Algebraic Topology. p. 171. 
  3. Hatcher, Allen (2002). Algebraic topology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 254. ISBN 0-521-79160-X. https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~hatcher/AT/ATpage.html. 

References