module Homotopy.Space.Circle where
Spaces: The circle🔗
The first example of nontrivial space one typically encounters when studying synthetic homotopy theory is the circle: it is, in a sense, the perfect space to start with, having exactly one nontrivial path space, which is a free group, and the simplest nontrivial free group at that: the integers.
data S¹ : Type where
: S¹
base : base ≡ base loop
Diagramatically, we can picture the circle as being the -groupoid generated by the following diagram:
In type theory with K, the circle is exactly the same type as ⊤
. However, with univalence
, it can be
shown that the circle has two different paths:
: S¹ → Type
möbius = Bool
möbius base (loop i) = ua (not , not-is-equiv) i möbius
When pattern matching on the circle, we are asked to provide a
basepoint b
and a path l : b ≡ b
, as can be
seen in the definition above. To make it clearer, we can also define a
recursion principle:
: ∀ {ℓ} {A : Type ℓ} (b : A) (l : b ≡ b) → S¹ → A
S¹-rec = b
S¹-rec b l base (loop i) = l i S¹-rec b l
We call the map möbius
a
double cover of the circle, since the fibre at each point is a
discrete space with two elements. It has an action by the fundamental
group of the circle, which has the effect of negating the “parity” of
the path. In fact, we can use möbius
to show that loop
is not refl
:
: base ≡ base → Bool
parity = subst möbius l true
parity l
_ : parity refl ≡ true
_ = refl
_ : parity loop ≡ false
_ = refl
: ¬ refl ≡ loop
refl≠loop = true≠false (ap parity path) refl≠loop path
Fundamental group🔗
We now calculate the loop space of the circle, relative to an arbitrary implementation of the integers: any type that satisfies their type-theoretic universal property. We call this a HoTT take: the integers are the homotopy-initial space with a point and an automorphism. What we’d like to do is prove that the loop space of the circle is also an implementation of the integers, but it’s non-trivial to show that it is a set directly.
module S¹Path {ℤ} (univ : Integers ℤ) where
open Integers univ
We start by defining a type family that we’ll later find out is the universal cover of the circle. For now, it serves a humbler purpose: A value in gives a concrete representation to a path in the circle. We want to show that , so we set the fibre over the basepoint to be the integers:
: S¹ → Type
Cover = ℤ
Cover base (loop i) = ua rotate i Cover
We can define a function from paths to integers — or, more precisely, a function from to . Note that the path induces a path , and since is equipped with a choice of point, then is .
: ∀ x → base ≡ x → Cover x
encode = subst Cover p point encode x p
Let us now define the inverse function: one from integer to paths. By the mapping-out property of the integers, we must give an equivalence from to itself. Since is a group, any element induces such an equivalence, by postcomposition . We take to be the generating non-trivial path, .
: (base ≡ base) ≃ (base ≡ base)
post-loop = Iso→Equiv $
post-loop (_∙ loop) , iso (_∙ sym loop)
(λ p → sym (∙-assoc p _ _) ·· ap (p ∙_) (∙-invl loop) ·· ∙-idr p)
(λ p → sym (∙-assoc p _ _) ·· ap (p ∙_) (∙-invr loop) ·· ∙-idr p)
: ℤ → base ≡ base
loopⁿ = map-out refl post-loop n loopⁿ n
To prove that the map is an equivalence, we shall need to extend it to a map defined fibrewise on the cover. We shall do so cubically, i.e., by directly pattern-matching on the argument .
When we’re at the base point, we already know what we want to do: we have a function already, so we can use that. For the other case, we must provide a path laying over the loop, which we can picture as the boundary of a square. Namely,
: ∀ x → Cover x → base ≡ x
decode = loopⁿ decode base
We can provide such a square as sketching out an open cube whose missing face has the boundary above. Here’s such a cube: the missing face has a dotted boundary.
(loop i) code j = hcomp (∂ i ∨ ∂ j) λ where
decode (k = i0) → square-loopⁿ (unglue (∂ i) code) i j
k (i = i0) → loopⁿ (Equiv.η rotate code k) j
k (i = i1) → loopⁿ code j
k (j = i0) → base
k (j = i1) → loop i k
We understand this as a particularly annoying commutative diagram. For example, the front face expresses the equation . The proof is now straightforward to wrap up:
: ∀ x (p : base ≡ x) → decode x (encode x p) ≡ p
encode-decode _ = J (λ x p → decode x (encode x p) ≡ p) $
encode-decode (transport-refl point) ∙ map-out-point _ _
ap loopⁿ
: (n : ℤ) → encode base (loopⁿ n) ≡ n
encode-loopⁿ = p ∙ sym (map-out-unique id refl (λ _ → refl) n) where
encode-loopⁿ n : encode base (loopⁿ n) ≡ map-out point rotate n
p = map-out-unique (encode base ∘ loopⁿ)
p (ap (encode base) (map-out-point _ _) ∙ transport-refl point)
(λ x → ap (encode base) {y = loopⁿ x ∙ loop} (map-out-rotate _ _ _)
(loopⁿ x) loop point
·· subst-∙ Cover (subst Cover (loopⁿ x) point))
·· uaβ rotate
n
: (base ≡ base) ≃ ℤ
ΩS¹≃integers = Iso→Equiv $
ΩS¹≃integers (encode-decode base)
encode base , iso loopⁿ encode-loopⁿ
open S¹Path Int-integers public