Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality
Understand functoriality of π₁, its link to covering spaces and homology, and how to compute it using van Kampen, fibrations, and related algebraic tools.
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How does a continuous map $f:(X,x0)\to (Y,y0)$ act on a loop $\alpha$ in $X$?
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Summary
Functoriality and the Fundamental Group
Introduction
The fundamental group is not just an interesting invariant of topological spaces—it's also functorial. This means that continuous maps between spaces induce group homomorphisms between their fundamental groups in a way that respects the algebraic structure. Functoriality is what allows us to use algebraic methods to solve topological problems, and it's the bridge between topology and group theory.
In this section, we'll explore how the fundamental group functor works, what tools we have for computing fundamental groups of complex spaces, and how covering spaces reveal the deeper structure of the fundamental group.
Induced Homomorphisms
The Basic Idea
Suppose we have a continuous map $f:(X,x0)\to(Y,y0)$ that respects basepoints. This map doesn't just send points to points—it also sends loops to loops in a coherent way.
If $\alpha$ is a loop in $X$ based at $x0$, then $f\circ\alpha$ is a loop in $Y$ based at $y0$ (since $f(x0)=y0$). More importantly, if two loops $\alpha$ and $\beta$ are homotopic in $X$, then $f\circ\alpha$ and $f\circ\beta$ are homotopic in $Y$. This is because homotopy respects continuous maps—if $H:\alpha\simeq\beta$ is a homotopy in $X$, then $f\circ H$ is a homotopy from $f\circ\alpha$ to $f\circ\beta$ in $Y$.
Key point: This composition operation respects the group structure. If $\alpha$ and $\beta$ are loops, then the concatenation $\alpha\cdot\beta$ gets sent to $f\circ(\alpha\cdot\beta)=(f\circ\alpha)\cdot(f\circ\beta)$. This means $f$ induces a group homomorphism:
$$f:\pi1(X,x0)\to\pi1(Y,y0)$$
defined by $f([\alpha])=[f\circ\alpha]$.
Why This Matters
The induced homomorphism $f$ is our tool for translating topological information into algebraic information. If two spaces have different fundamental groups, they cannot be homeomorphic (or even homotopy equivalent). Conversely, if $f$ is a particularly nice type of map, the properties of $f$ tell us something about $f$ itself.
Homotopy Invariance
The Fundamental Property
Here's a remarkable fact: if two basepoint-preserving continuous maps $f$ and $g:(X,x0)\to(Y,y0)$ are homotopic (as basepoint-preserving maps), then they induce the same homomorphism on the fundamental group:
$$f=g:\pi1(X,x0)\to\pi1(Y,y0)$$
Why? If $H:f\simeq g$ is a basepoint-preserving homotopy, and $[\alpha]\in\pi1(X,x0)$, then we can "slide" the loop $f\circ\alpha$ continuously into $g\circ\alpha$ using the homotopy. The homotopy class remains the same.
The Consequence
This property means that the fundamental group is homotopy invariant: two spaces that are homotopy equivalent have isomorphic fundamental groups. In particular, any space that is contractible (homotopy equivalent to a point) has trivial fundamental group.
Products and Coproducts
Products of Spaces
For path-connected spaces $X$ and $Y$, the fundamental group of their product is the direct product of fundamental groups:
$$\pi1(X\times Y, (x0,y0))\cong\pi1(X,x0)\times\pi1(Y,y0)$$
Intuition: A loop in a product space is a pair of loops, one in each coordinate. Homotopy in the product respects this structure, so loops in $X\times Y$ correspond exactly to pairs of loops in $X$ and $Y$.
Example: The torus $S^1\times S^1$ has fundamental group $\mathbb{Z}\times\mathbb{Z}$, reflecting the two independent circular directions.
Wedge Sums
The wedge sum $X\vee Y$ is obtained by gluing two spaces at a single point. Its fundamental group is the free product of the individual fundamental groups:
$$\pi1(X\vee Y)\cong\pi1(X)\pi1(Y)$$
Key difference from products: The free product is not commutative or abelian (in general), and it's strictly larger than the direct product. Intuitively, when you glue spaces at a point, you can form loops that weave between the two spaces without any constraint—they don't have to commute.
Example: The wedge $S^1\vee S^1$ (two circles glued at a point) has fundamental group $\mathbb{Z}\mathbb{Z}$, the free group on two generators, which is non-abelian.
The Seifert–van Kampen Theorem
Statement and Intuition
The Seifert–van Kampen Theorem is the fundamental tool for computing fundamental groups of spaces built from simpler pieces. Here's the basic setup:
Suppose a space $X$ is the union of two open subsets $U$ and $V$ that are path-connected and overlap in a path-connected subset $U\cap V$. Then:
$$\pi1(X)\cong\pi1(U){\pi1(U\cap V)}\pi1(V)$$
The right side is the free product with amalgamation, meaning we take the free product $\pi1(U)\pi1(V)$ but identify elements that come from the overlap.
Why this works: A loop in $X$ can be decomposed into pieces that lie alternately in $U$ and $V$. The intersection $U\cap V$ is where these pieces must "connect," and this is captured algebraically by the free product with amalgamation.
Special Case: Disjoint Union in the Intersection
The most important special case occurs when $U\cap V$ is path-connected but has trivial fundamental group. Then:
$$\pi1(X)\cong\pi1(U)\pi1(V)$$
This is a free product without amalgamation.
Application: Fundamental Group of $S^2$
Let's see Seifert–van Kampen in action. We'll show that the 2-sphere $S^2$ has trivial fundamental group.
Strategy: Decompose $S^2$ into two hemispheres, each contractible (and thus simply connected).
Take $U$ and $V$ to be the two open hemispheres (with a slight overlap near the equator). Both $U$ and $V$ are contractible, so $\pi1(U)=\pi1(V)=\{e\}$. The intersection $U\cap V$ is a band around the equator, which is homotopy equivalent to $S^1$, but this doesn't matter for Seifert–van Kampen.
By the theorem: $$\pi1(S^2)\cong\{e\}\{e\}=\{e\}$$
So $S^2$ is simply connected.
Abelianization and First Homology
The Connection
There's a profound relationship between the fundamental group and homology. The abelianization of $\pi1(X)$—obtained by quotienting out the commutator subgroup $[\pi1(X),\pi1(X)]$—is naturally isomorphic to the first singular homology group:
$$\pi1(X)^{\text{ab}} \cong H1(X;\mathbb{Z})$$
Why this is true: Homology is an abelian invariant (it's built from abelian groups), while the fundamental group is nonabelian in general. The first homology group captures the "abelian part" of the fundamental group—it forgets about how loops fail to commute, but remembers their 1-dimensional structure.
Practical Consequence
If you know $H1(X)$, you immediately know the abelianization of $\pi1(X)$. This often gives strong constraints on what $\pi1(X)$ can be.
Covering Spaces
Definition and Basic Properties
A covering map is a continuous surjection $p:\tilde{X}\to X$ such that every point in $X$ has a neighborhood $U$ that is evenly covered by $p$: the preimage $p^{-1}(U)$ is a disjoint union of open sets, each mapping homeomorphically onto $U$.
Intuition: A covering space is like a "multi-sheeted" copy of $X$, where $p$ folds the sheets down onto $X$.
Simple example: The map $p:\mathbb{R}\to S^1$ given by $p(t)=e^{2\pi it}$ is a covering map. The real line "wraps around" the circle infinitely many times.
Why Covering Spaces Matter
Covering spaces are incredibly useful because:
Properties that are hard to study on $X$ may be easier on the covering space $\tilde{X}$
The structure of covering spaces is completely encoded in the fundamental group (we'll see this next)
Universal Covering Spaces
Definition
A universal covering space of $X$ is a covering map $p:\tilde{X}\to X$ where $\tilde{X}$ is simply connected (i.e., $\pi1(\tilde{X})=\{e\}$).
Key fact: Every path-connected, locally path-connected space has a universal covering space, and it's unique up to homeomorphism.
Example: The universal covering of $S^1$ is $\mathbb{R}$, with $p(t)=e^{2\pi it}$.
The Fundamental Group from Covering Spaces
Here's the bridge between covering spaces and the fundamental group:
Theorem: If $p:\tilde{X}\to X$ is a universal covering, then the group of deck transformations (homeomorphisms $\phi:\tilde{X}\to\tilde{X}$ satisfying $p\circ\phi=p$) is isomorphic to $\pi1(X)$:
$$\text{Deck}(\tilde{X}/X)\cong\pi1(X)$$
Intuition: Deck transformations permute the "sheets" of the covering space. For the universal cover, there's exactly one deck transformation for each homotopy class of loops in $X$.
Concrete Example: The Circle
For $p:\mathbb{R}\to S^1$ with $p(t)=e^{2\pi it}$:
The deck transformations are translations $t\mapsto t+n$ for $n\in\mathbb{Z}$
These form a group isomorphic to $\mathbb{Z}$
We recover $\pi1(S^1)\cong\mathbb{Z}$
Classification of Covering Spaces
The Main Result
Universal covering spaces don't just exist for aesthetic reasons—they reveal the structure of $X$. Here's the fundamental classification theorem:
For a path-connected, locally path-connected space $X$ with basepoint $x0$: there is a one-to-one correspondence between:
Connected covering spaces of $X$ (up to isomorphism), and
Subgroups of $\pi1(X,x0)$
Moreover, if $p:\tilde{X}\to X$ is a connected covering space and $\tilde{x}0\in p^{-1}(x0)$, then: $$\pi1(\tilde{X},\tilde{x}0)\cong H\subset\pi1(X,x0)$$
where $H$ is the subgroup corresponding to the covering.
What This Means
The fundamental group completely determines all covering spaces (at least the connected ones). If you know $\pi1(X)$, you know all possible coverings of $X$.
Fibrations and the Long Exact Sequence
What is a Fibration?
A fibration is a map $p:E\to B$ satisfying a homotopy lifting property: given a homotopy in the base space $B$, you can always "lift" it to a homotopy in the total space $E$ (subject to consistency). Fibrations are more general than covering spaces and more flexible to work with.
The Long Exact Sequence
A fibration $p:E\to B$ with fiber $F$ (the typical preimage $p^{-1}(b0)$) induces a long exact sequence of homotopy groups:
$$\cdots\to\pi2(B)\to\pi1(F)\to\pi1(E)\to\pi1(B)\to\pi0(F)\to\cdots$$
What this tells you: There's a precise algebraic relationship between the fundamental groups of $F$, $E$, and $B$. Given information about two of them, you can constrain the third.
Example: Sphere Bundles
One important application is computing the fundamental group of rotation groups. Using the fibration $SO(n)\to SO(n+1)\to S^n$, we can show that:
$$\pi1(SO(n))\cong\mathbb{Z}2\quad\text{for }n\geq 3$$
This is a classical result: rotations in three or higher dimensions have only one non-trivial covering (the spinor group), reflecting the fact that rotating by $4\pi$ (not $2\pi$) gets you back to where you started.
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Lie Groups and Universal Covers
For connected, simply connected compact Lie groups $G$, any finite subgroup $\Gamma\subset G$ gives a quotient $G/\Gamma$ with $\pi1(G/\Gamma)\cong\Gamma$. This is how quotients of simply-connected Lie groups produce spaces with finite fundamental groups.
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What Groups Can Be Fundamental Groups?
Graphs and Free Groups
Not every group can be the fundamental group of some space. There are significant restrictions.
Key fact: The fundamental group of any graph (1-dimensional CW complex) is a free group. Moreover, every free group arises this way: if $Fn$ is the free group on $n$ generators, it equals $\pi1$ of a graph with $n$ independent loops.
Conversely, only free groups can be realized as the fundamental group of a graph. This is because you can build any loop in a graph by traversing edges, and you can go backwards on any edge (unlike in a manifold), so there are no relations—everything is free.
General Realizability
The question of which groups can be realized as $\pi1(X)$ for some space $X$ is more subtle:
Every group can be realized as the fundamental group of some space (we can build it explicitly)
But realizing a group as the fundamental group of a "nice" space (like a smooth manifold) is highly restrictive
For example, the fundamental group of a smooth manifold must be a group that satisfies certain finiteness properties. Not every group satisfies these.
Key Computational Strategies
Building Spaces from Simpler Pieces
When faced with a complex space, look for ways to decompose it:
Products: If $X=A\times B$ and both are path-connected, then $\pi1(X)\cong\pi1(A)\times\pi1(B)$
Wedge sums: If $X=A\vee B$, then $\pi1(X)\cong\pi1(A)\pi1(B)$ (more generally, a free product with amalgamation)
Seifert–van Kampen: For arbitrary unions of path-connected open sets with path-connected intersection
Using Covering Spaces
If a space has a known covering space:
Use the long exact sequence of the fibration
Use the correspondence between subgroups and coverings
Sometimes it's easier to compute $\pi1$ of the covering and work backwards
Abelianization
If you only need to know the abelian quotient, compute $H1$ using homology tools—it's often much faster than computing $\pi1$ directly.
Flashcards
How does a continuous map $f:(X,x0)\to (Y,y0)$ act on a loop $\alpha$ in $X$?
It sends the loop $\alpha$ to the loop $f\circ\alpha$ in $Y$.
What group homomorphism is induced by a continuous map $f:(X,x0)\to (Y,y0)$ between fundamental groups?
$f:\pi1(X,x0)\to\pi1(Y,y0)$.
What is the result if two base-point-preserving maps are homotopic regarding their induced homomorphisms?
They induce the same homomorphism on fundamental groups.
What is the fundamental group of a product of path-connected spaces $X \times Y$?
The product of the individual groups, $\pi1(X) \times \pi1(Y)$.
What is the fundamental group of a wedge sum $X \vee Y$?
The free product $\pi1(X) \pi1(Y)$.
What group is naturally isomorphic to the abelianization of $\pi1(X)$?
The first singular homology group $H1(X)$.
Why is $\pi1(S^2)$ trivial according to the Seifert–van Kampen theorem?
Because $S^2$ can be decomposed into two overlapping contractible hemispheres.
What is the fundamental group of a space homotopy equivalent to a product of $n$ circles?
The abelian group $\mathbb{Z}^n$.
In categorical terms, how does the fundamental group functor treat pushouts (gluing along subspaces)?
It takes them to pushouts (free products with amalgamation) in the category of groups.
If a space is the union of path-connected subspaces $A$ and $B$ with a path-connected intersection, what is its fundamental group?
The free product of $\pi1(A)$ and $\pi1(B)$ amalgamated over $\pi1(A \cap B)$.
What is the definition of a covering map $p:\tilde X\to X$?
A continuous surjection where every point in $X$ has a neighborhood evenly covered by $p$.
To what does each connected covering space of a space $X$ correspond?
A subgroup of the fundamental group $\pi1(X, x0)$.
What property defines a universal covering $\tilde X$ of a space $X$?
It is a covering space that is simply connected.
What group is the group of deck transformations of a universal covering isomorphic to?
The fundamental group $\pi1(X)$.
What is the universal covering of the circle $S^1$ via the exponential map $p(t)=e^{2\pi i t}$?
The real line $\mathbb{R}$.
If $G$ is a connected, simply connected compact Lie group and $\Gamma$ is a finite subgroup, what is $\pi1(G/\Gamma)$?
The group $\Gamma$.
What is the fundamental group of $SO(n)$ for $n \ge 3$?
$\mathbb{Z}2$.
What structure is induced by a fibration $p:E\to B$ with fiber $F$ regarding homotopy groups?
A long exact sequence linking $\pi1(F)$, $\pi1(E)$, and $\pi1(B)$.
What type of groups are the only ones that can appear as fundamental groups of graphs?
Free groups.
On what does the rank of the free group (the fundamental group) of a graph depend?
The number of cycles in the graph.
Quiz
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 1: What is the fundamental group of the product of two path‑connected spaces $X$ and $Y$?
- π₁(X) × π₁(Y) (correct)
- π₁(X) * π₁(Y)
- π₁(X) ⊕ π₁(Y)
- π₁(X) ∪ π₁(Y)
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 2: The abelianization of \(\pi_1(X)\) is naturally isomorphic to which singular homology group of \(X\)?
- \(H_1(X)\) (correct)
- \(H_0(X)\)
- \(H_2(X)\)
- \(H_n(X)\) for the highest dimension \(n\) of \(X\)
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 3: If a space is homotopy equivalent to a product of \(n\) circles, what algebraic property does its fundamental group have?
- It is abelian (correct)
- It is finite
- It is a non‑abelian free group
- It is trivial
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 4: A connected graph that contains no cycles has which fundamental group?
- The trivial group (correct)
- The infinite cyclic group $\mathbb{Z}$
- The cyclic group of order 2, $\mathbb{Z}_{2}$
- A free group on one generator
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 5: What algebraic structure classifies the connected covering spaces of a path‑connected, locally path‑connected space $X$?
- Subgroups of $\pi_{1}(X)$ (up to conjugacy) (correct)
- Quotient groups of $\pi_{1}(X)$
- First homology groups $H_{1}(X)$
- Elements of the second homotopy group $\pi_{2}(X)$
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 6: What does a basepoint‑preserving continuous map $f:(X,x_0)\to(Y,y_0)$ do to a loop $\alpha$ in $X$?
- It composes to the loop $f\circ\alpha$ in $Y$. (correct)
- It sends the loop to its homotopy class in $X$.
- It collapses the loop to a point.
- It produces a path in $Y$ that need not be closed.
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 7: What algebraic object is induced on fundamental groups by a basepoint‑preserving continuous map $f$?
- A group homomorphism $f_*:\pi_1(X,x_0)\to\pi_1(Y,y_0)$. (correct)
- A homeomorphism between the spaces $X$ and $Y$.
- An isomorphism of singular homology groups $H_1(X)\to H_1(Y)$.
- A covering map from $X$ onto $Y$.
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 8: If two basepoint‑preserving maps $f,g:(X,x_0)\to(Y,y_0)$ are homotopic, how do their induced homomorphisms on $\pi_1$ compare?
- They are equal: $f_* = g_*$. (correct)
- They are inverses of each other.
- They differ by conjugation in $\pi_1(Y)$.
- One is trivial while the other need not be.
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 9: Applying the Seifert–van Kampen theorem to the decomposition of $S^2$ into two overlapping contractible hemispheres yields which fundamental group?
- The trivial group. (correct)
- The infinite cyclic group $\mathbb{Z}$.
- The cyclic group of order $2$, $\mathbb{Z}_2$.
- The free group on one generator.
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 10: For a universal covering $p:\tilde X\to X$, the group of deck transformations is isomorphic to which group?
- The fundamental group $\pi_1(X)$. (correct)
- The first homology group $H_1(X)$.
- The group of path components $\pi_0(X)$.
- The automorphism group of $\pi_1(X)$.
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 11: For $n\ge 3$, what is the fundamental group $\pi_1(SO(n))$?
- The cyclic group of order $2$, $\mathbb{Z}_2$. (correct)
- The trivial group.
- The infinite cyclic group $\mathbb{Z}$.
- The direct product $\mathbb{Z}\times\mathbb{Z}$.
Fundamental group - Algebraic Structure and Functoriality Quiz Question 12: For the universal covering p : ℝ → S¹ defined by p(t)=e^{2πit}, the group of deck transformations is isomorphic to which group?
- ℤ (correct)
- ℝ
- S¹
- ℤ₂
What is the fundamental group of the product of two path‑connected spaces $X$ and $Y$?
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Key Concepts
Fundamental Group Concepts
Fundamental group
Functoriality of the fundamental group
Seifert–van Kampen theorem
Abelianization and first homology
Free product of groups
Covering Spaces and Transformations
Covering space
Universal covering space
Deck transformation group
Advanced Structures
Lie group
Fibration
Definitions
Fundamental group
The group of homotopy classes of loops based at a point in a topological space, denoted π₁(X,x₀).
Functoriality of the fundamental group
A continuous base‑point‑preserving map induces a homomorphism between fundamental groups, respecting homotopy classes.
Seifert–van Kampen theorem
Describes how the fundamental group of a space obtained by gluing subspaces is the pushout (free product with amalgamation) of the groups of the pieces.
Abelianization and first homology
The abelianization of π₁(X) is naturally isomorphic to the first singular homology group H₁(X).
Covering space
A continuous surjection p : \tilde X → X such that each point of X has a neighborhood evenly covered by p.
Universal covering space
A covering space that is simply connected; its group of deck transformations is isomorphic to π₁(X).
Deck transformation group
The group of homeomorphisms of a covering space that commute with the covering projection.
Lie group
A group that is also a smooth manifold where the group operations are smooth; compact, simply connected Lie groups have well‑understood universal covers.
Fibration
A map p : E → B with the homotopy lifting property, giving rise to a long exact sequence of homotopy groups linking the fiber, total space, and base.
Free product of groups
The group operation corresponding to the fundamental group of a wedge sum, denoted π₁(X) * π₁(Y).