Classifying space for U(n)

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In mathematics, the classifying space for U(n) may be constructed as either

  1. the Grassmannian of n-planes in an infinite-dimensional complex Hilbert space; or,
  2. the direct limit, with the induced topology, of Grassmannians of n planes.

Both constructions are detailed here.

Construction 1

The total space   of the universal bundle is given by

 

Here, H is an infinite-dimensional complex Hilbert space, the   are vectors in H, and   is the Kronecker delta. The symbol   is the inner product on H. Thus, we have that EU(n) is the space of orthonormal n-frames in H.

The group action of U(n) on this space is the natural one. The base space is then

 

and is the set of Grassmannian n-dimensional subspaces (or n-planes) in H. That is,

 

so that V is an n-dimensional vector space.

Construction 2

Let   be the space of orthonormal families of   vectors in   and let   be the Grassmannian of  -dimensional subvector spaces of  . The total space of the universal bundle can be taken to be the direct limit of the   as   goes to infinity, while the base space is the direct limit of the   as   goes to infinity.

Validity of the second construction

In this section, we will define the topology on EU(n) and prove that EU(n) is indeed contractible.

Let   be the space of orthonormal families of   vectors in  . The group   acts freely on   and the quotient is the Grassmannian   of  -dimensional subvector spaces of  . The map

 

is a fibre bundle of fibre  . Thus because   is trivial and because of the long exact sequence of the fibration, we have

 

whenever  . By taking   big enough, precisely for  , we can repeat the process and get

 

This last group is trivial for  . Let

 

be the direct limit of all the   (with the induced topology). Let

 

be the direct limit of all the   (with the induced topology).

Lemma
The group   is trivial for all  .
Proof Let   be a map from the sphere   to EU(n). As   is compact, there exists   such that   is included in  . By taking   big enough, we see that   is homotopic, with respect to the base point, to the constant map.  

In addition,   acts freely on  . The spaces   and   are CW-complexes. One can find a decomposition of these spaces into CW-complexes such that the decomposition of  , resp.  , is induced by restriction of the one for  , resp.  . Thus   (and also  ) is a CW-complex. By Whitehead Theorem and the above Lemma,   is contractible.

Case of (first construction)

In the case of  , one has

 

which is a contractible space (see Contractibility of unit sphere in Hilbert space.)

The base space is then

 

the infinite-dimensional complex projective space. Thus, the set of isomorphism classes of circle bundles over a manifold   are in one-to-one correspondence with the homotopy classes of maps from   to  .

One also has the relation that

 

that is,   is the infinite-dimensional projective unitary group. See that article for additional discussion and properties.

For a torus T, which is abstractly isomorphic to  , but need not have a chosen identification, one writes  .

The topological K-theory   is given by numerical polynomials; more details below.

Cohomology of

Proposition
The cohomology of the classifying space   is a ring of polynomials in   variables   where   is of degree  .
Proof Let us first consider the case  . In this case,   is the circle   and the universal bundle is  . It is well known[1] that the cohomology of   is isomorphic to  , where   is the Euler class of the  -bundle  , and that the injections  , for  , are compatible with these presentations of the cohomology of the projective spaces. This proves the Proposition for  .

In the general case, let   be the subgroup of diagonal matrices. It is a maximal torus in  . Its classifying space is   and its cohomology is  , where   is the Euler class of the tautological bundle over the i-th  . The Weyl group acts on   by permuting the diagonal entries, hence it acts on   by permutation of the factors. The induced action on its cohomology is the permutation of the  's. We deduce
 
where the  's are the symmetric polynomials in the  's.  

K-theory of

The topological K-theory is known explicitly in terms of numerical symmetric polynomials.

The K-theory reduces to computing  , since K-theory is 2-periodic and   is a limit of complex manifolds, so it has a CW-structure with only cells in even dimensions, so odd K-theory vanishes.

Thus  , where  , where t is the Bott generator.

  is the ring of numerical polynomials in w, regarded as a subring of  , where w is element dual to tautological bundle.

For the n-torus,   is numerical polynomials in n variables. The map   is onto, via a splitting principle, as   is the maximal torus of  . The map is the symmetrization map

 

and the image can be identified as the symmetric polynomials satisfying the integrality condition that

 

where

 

is the multinomial coefficient and   contains r distinct integers, repeated   times, respectively.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ R. Bott, L. W. Tu -- Differential Forms in Algebraic Topology, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 82, Springer

References

  • S. Ochanine, L. Schwartz (1985), "Une remarque sur les générateurs du cobordisme complex", Math. Z., 190: 543–557, doi:10.1007/BF01214753 Contains a description of   as a  -comodule for any compact, connected Lie group.
  • L. Schwartz (1983), "K-théorie et homotopie stable", Thesis, Université de Paris–VII Explicit description of  
  • A. Baker, F. Clarke, N. Ray, L. Schwartz (1989), "On the Kummer congruences and the stable homotopy of BU", Trans. Amer. Math. Soc., 316 (2): 385–432, doi:10.2307/2001355{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)