0-dimensional CW complexes Every
discrete topological space is a 0-dimensional CW complex.
1-dimensional CW complexes Some examples of 1-dimensional CW complexes are: •
An interval. It can be constructed from two points (
x and
y), and the 1-dimensional ball
B (an interval), such that one endpoint of
B is glued to
x and the other is glued to
y. The two points
x and
y are the 0-cells; the interior of
B is the 1-cell. Alternatively, it can be constructed just from a single interval, with no 0-cells. •
A circle. It can be constructed from a single point
x and the 1-dimensional ball
B, such that
both endpoints of
B are glued to
x. Alternatively, it can be constructed from two points
x and
y and two 1-dimensional balls
A and
B, such that the endpoints of
A are glued to
x and
y, and the endpoints of
B are glued to
x and
y too. •
A graph. Given a
graph, a 1-dimensional CW complex can be constructed in which the 0-cells are the vertices and the 1-cells are the edges of the graph. The endpoints of each edge are identified with the incident vertices to it. This realization of a combinatorial graph as a topological space is sometimes called a
topological graph. •
3-regular graphs can be considered as
generic 1-dimensional CW complexes. Specifically, if
X is a 1-dimensional CW complex, the attaching map for a 1-cell is a map from a
two-point space to
X, f : \{0,1\} \to X. This map can be perturbed to be disjoint from the 0-skeleton of
X if and only if f(0) and f(1) are not 0-valence vertices of
X. • The
standard CW structure on the real numbers has as 0-skeleton the integers \mathbb Z and as 1-cells the intervals \{ [n,n+1] : n \in \mathbb Z\}. Similarly, the standard CW structure on \mathbb R^n has cubical cells that are products of the 0 and 1-cells from \mathbb R. This is the standard
cubic lattice cell structure on \mathbb R^n.
Finite-dimensional CW complexes Some examples of finite-dimensional CW complexes are: • A
polyhedron is naturally a CW complex. •
Grassmannian manifolds admit a CW structure called
Schubert cells. •
Differentiable manifolds, algebraic and projective
varieties have the
homotopy type of CW complexes. • The
one-point compactification of a cusped
hyperbolic manifold has a canonical CW decomposition with only one 0-cell (the compactification point) called the
Epstein–Penner Decomposition. Such cell decompositions are frequently called
ideal polyhedral decompositions and are used in popular computer software, such as
SnapPea.
Infinite-dimensional CW complexes • The
infinite-dimensional sphere S^\infty:=\mathrm{colim}_{n\to\infty}S^n. It admits a CW-structure with 2 cells in each dimension which are assembled in a way such that the n-skeleton is precisely given by the n-sphere. • The infinite-dimensional projective spaces \mathbb{RP}^\infty, \mathbb{CP}^\infty and \mathbb{HP}^\infty. \mathbb{RP}^\infty has one cell in every dimension, \mathbb{CP}^\infty, has one cell in every even dimension and \mathbb{HP}^\infty has one cell in every dimension divisible by 4. The respective skeletons are then given by \mathbb{RP}^n, \mathbb{CP}^n (2n-skeleton) and \mathbb{HP}^n (4n-skeleton).
Non CW-complexes • An infinite-dimensional
Hilbert space is not a CW complex: it is a
Baire space and therefore cannot be written as a countable union of
n-skeletons, each of them being a closed set with empty interior. This argument extends to many other infinite-dimensional spaces. • The
hedgehog space \{re^{2\pi i \theta} : 0 \leq r \leq 1, \theta \in \mathbb Q\} \subseteq \mathbb C is homotopy equivalent to a CW complex (the point) but it does not admit a CW decomposition, since it is not
locally contractible. • The
Hawaiian earring has no CW decomposition, because it is not locally contractible at origin. It is also not homotopy equivalent to a CW complex, because it has no good open cover. == Properties ==