Concatenation of paths and loops (homotopy)

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Flesh out, link to other parts, make sure loop (topology) and path (topology) both link back here

Definition

Let p,q:[0,1]X be paths (possibly loops) in a topological space (X,J) such that p(1)=q(0) - the terminal point of p is the initial point of q[Note 1] - then we define their concatenation (AKA: composition, product)[1] as follows:

  • fg:[0,1]X given by fg:t{f(2t)if t[0,12]g(2t1)if t[12,1] - we claim this is a path.
    • in words this is the path that goes first around f (at double the speed of f) and then around g (again at double the speed of g)
    • Note that t=12 is in both parts of the piecewise function, this is to emphasise that (fg)(12) is the same in either case.

Note: that if f and g are loops based at x0 then so is fg, and also that if f(0)=g(1) (in addition to the f(1)=g(0) required for concatenation) then fg is a loop.

Caution

Don't be over-eager and think "I see the group structure!" the constant loop is the identity and for a path p it done backwards is the inverse!

Not quite. Mainly because if you do fbackwards(f) you do not end up with the constant loop based at f(0), you end up with a loop that goes around f then back again!

See the "see next" section below.

Proof of claims

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Elementary from pasting lemma

See next

Notes

  1. <cite_references_link_accessibility_label> Or, if they're both loops, we could just say "both loops have the same basepoint"

References

  1. <cite_references_link_accessibility_label> Introduction to Topological Manifolds - John M. Lee