Relative homotopy In order to define the
fundamental group, one needs the notion of
homotopy relative to a subspace. These are homotopies which keep the elements of the subspace fixed. Formally: if
f and
g are continuous maps from
X to
Y and
K is a
subset of
X, then we say that
f and
g are homotopic relative to
K if there exists a homotopy between
f and
g such that for all and Also, if
g is a
retraction from
X to
K and
f is the identity map, this is known as a strong
deformation retract of
X to
K. When
K is a point, the term
pointed homotopy is used.
Isotopy When two given continuous functions
f and
g from the topological space
X to the topological space
Y are
embeddings, one can ask whether they can be connected 'through embeddings'. This gives rise to the concept of
isotopy, which is a homotopy,
H, in the notation used before, such that for each fixed
t,
H(
x,
t) gives an embedding. A related, but different, concept is that of
ambient isotopy. Requiring that two embeddings be isotopic is a stronger requirement than that they be homotopic. For example, the map from the interval [−1, 1] into the real numbers defined by
f(
x) = −
x is
not isotopic to the identity
g(
x) =
x. Any homotopy from
f to the identity would have to exchange the endpoints, which would mean that they would have to 'pass through' each other. Moreover,
f has changed the orientation of the interval and
g has not, which is impossible under an isotopy. However, the maps are homotopic; one homotopy from
f to the identity is
H: [−1, 1] × [0, 1] → [−1, 1] given by
H(
x,
y) = 2
yx −
x. Two homeomorphisms (which are special cases of embeddings) of the unit ball which agree on the boundary can be shown to be isotopic using
Alexander's trick. For this reason, the map of the
unit disc in \mathbb{R}^2 defined by
f(
x,
y) = (−
x, −
y) is isotopic to a 180-degree
rotation around the origin, and so the identity map and
f are isotopic because they can be connected by rotations. In
geometric topology—for example in
knot theory—the idea of isotopy is used to construct equivalence relations. For example, when should two knots be considered the same? We take two knots,
K1 and
K2, in three-
dimensional space. A knot is an
embedding of a one-dimensional space, the "loop of string" (or the circle), into this space, and this embedding gives a homeomorphism between the circle and its image in the embedding space. One may try to define knot equivalence based on isotopy instead of the more restricted property of
ambient isotopy. That is, two knots are isotopic when there exists a continuous function starting at
t = 0 giving the
K1 embedding, ending at
t = 1 giving the
K2 embedding, with all intermediate values corresponding to embeddings. However, this definition would make every knot equivalent to the unknot, as the knotted portions can be "contracted" down to a straight line. The problem is that, while continuous, this is not an injective function of the Euclidean space that the knot is embedded in. An
ambient isotopy, studied in this context, is an isotopy of the larger space, considered in light of its action on the embedded submanifold. Knots
K1 and
K2 are considered equivalent when there is a continuous [0, 1]-indexed family of maps which moves
K1 to
K2 via homeomorphisms of the Euclidean space. Similar language is used for the equivalent concept in contexts where one has a stronger notion of equivalence. For example, a path between two smooth embeddings is a
smooth isotopy.
Timelike homotopy On a
Lorentzian manifold, certain curves are distinguished as
timelike (representing something that only goes forwards, not backwards, in time, in every local frame). A
timelike homotopy between two
timelike curves is a homotopy such that the curve remains timelike during the continuous transformation from one curve to another. No
closed timelike curve (CTC) on a Lorentzian manifold is timelike homotopic to a point (that is, null timelike homotopic); such a manifold is therefore said to be
multiply connected by timelike curves. A manifold such as the
3-sphere can be
simply connected (by any type of curve), and yet be
timelike multiply connected. == Properties ==