module Homotopy.Space.Sphere whereThe -1 and 0 spheresš
In classical topology, the topological space is typically defined as the subspace of consisting of all points at unit distance from the origin. We see from this definition that the is the discrete two point space and that the sphere is the empty subspace We will recycle existing types and define:
Sā»Ā¹ : Type
Sā»Ā¹ = ā„
Sā° : Type
Sā° = BoolWe note that Sā° may be identified with
Susp Sā»Ā¹. Since the pattern matching checker can prove that
merid x i is impossible when x : ā„, the case
for this constructor does not need to be written, this makes the proof
look rather tautologous.
open is-iso
SuspSā»Ā¹āSā° : Susp Sā»Ā¹ ā” Sā°
SuspSā»Ā¹āSā° = ua (SuspSā»Ā¹āSā° , is-isoāis-equiv iso-pf) where
SuspSā»Ā¹āSā° : Susp Sā»Ā¹ ā Sā°
SuspSā»Ā¹āSā° N = true
SuspSā»Ā¹āSā° S = false
Sā°āSuspSā»Ā¹ : Sā° ā Susp Sā»Ā¹
Sā°āSuspSā»Ā¹ true = N
Sā°āSuspSā»Ā¹ false = S
iso-pf : is-iso SuspSā»Ā¹āSā°
iso-pf .from = Sā°āSuspSā»Ā¹
iso-pf .rinv false = refl
iso-pf .rinv true = refl
iso-pf .linv N = refl
iso-pf .linv S = refln-Spheresš
The spheres of higher dimension can be defined inductively: that is, suspending the constructs the
The spheres are essentially indexed by the natural numbers, except that we want to start at instead of To remind ourselves of this, we name our spheres with a superscript
Sāæā»Ā¹ : Nat ā Type
Sāæā»Ā¹ zero = Sā»Ā¹
Sāæā»Ā¹ (suc n) = Susp (Sāæā»Ā¹ n)A slightly less trivial example of definitions lining up is the
verification that Sāæā»Ā¹ 2 is equivalent to our previous
definition of S¹:
SuspSā°ā”S¹ : Sāæā»Ā¹ 2 ā” S¹
SuspSā°ā”S¹ = ua (SuspSā°āS¹ , is-isoāis-equiv iso-pf) whereIn Sāæā»Ā¹ 2, we have two point constructors joined by two
paths, while in S¹ we have a single point constructor and a
loop. Geometrically, we can picture morphing Sāæā»Ā¹ 2 into
S¹ by squashing one of the meridians down to a point, thus
bringing N and S together. This intuition
leads to a definition:
SuspSā°āS¹ : Sāæā»Ā¹ 2 ā S¹
SuspSā°āS¹ N = base
SuspSā°āS¹ S = base
SuspSā°āS¹ (merid N i) = base
SuspSā°āS¹ (merid S i) = loop iIn the other direction, we send base to N,
and then need to send loop to some path N ā” N.
Since this map should define an equivalence, we make it such that loop
wraps around the space Sāæ 2 by way of traversing both
meridians.
S¹āSuspSā° : S¹ ā Sāæā»Ā¹ 2
S¹āSuspSā° base = N
S¹āSuspSā° (loop i) = (merid S ā sym (merid N)) i
We then verify that these maps are inverse equivalences. One of the
steps involves a slightly tricky hcomp, although this can
be avoided by working with transports instead of dependent paths, and
then by using lemmas on transport in pathspaces.
iso-pf : is-iso SuspSā°āS¹
iso-pf .from = S¹āSuspSā°
iso-pf .rinv base = refl
iso-pf .rinv (loop i) =
ap (Ī» p ā p i)
(ap SuspSā°āS¹ (merid S ā sym (merid N)) ā”⨠ap-ā SuspSā°āS¹ (merid S) (sym (merid N))ā©
loop ā refl ā”⨠ā-idr _ ā©
loop ā)
iso-pf .linv N = refl
iso-pf .linv S = merid N
iso-pf .linv (merid N i) j = merid N (i ā§ j)
iso-pf .linv (merid S i) j = hcomp (ā i ⨠ā j) Ī» where
k (k = i0) ā merid S i
k (i = i0) ā N
k (i = i1) ā merid N (j ⨠~ k)
k (j = i0) ā ā-filler (merid S) (sym (merid N)) k i
k (j = i1) ā merid S iSāæ : Nat ā Typeā lzero
Sāæ n = Sāæā»Ā¹ (suc n) , N