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Chain (algebraic topology)

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Chain (algebraic topology)

In algebraic topology, a simplicial k-chain is a formal linear combination of k-simplices.

Contents

Integration on chains

Integration is defined on chains by taking the linear combination of integrals over the simplices in the chain with coefficients typically integers. The set of all k-chains forms a group and the sequence of these groups is called a chain complex.

Boundary operator on chains

The boundary of a chain is the linear combination of boundaries of the simplices in the chain. The boundary of a k-chain is a (k−1)-chain. Note that the boundary of a simplex is not a simplex, but a chain with coefficients 1 or −1 – thus chains are the closure of simplices under the boundary operator.

Example 1: The boundary of a path is the formal difference of its endpoints: it is a telescoping sum. To illustrate, if the 1-chain c = t 1 + t 2 + t 3 is a path from point v 1 to point v 4 , where t 1 = [ v 1 , v 2 ] , t 2 = [ v 2 , v 3 ] and t 3 = [ v 3 , v 4 ] are its constituent 1-simplices, then

1 c = 1 ( t 1 + t 2 + t 3 ) = 1 ( t 1 ) + 1 ( t 2 ) + 1 ( t 3 ) = 1 ( [ v 1 , v 2 ] ) + 1 ( [ v 2 , v 3 ] ) + 1 ( [ v 3 , v 4 ] ) = ( [ v 2 ] [ v 1 ] ) + ( [ v 3 ] [ v 2 ] ) + ( [ v 4 ] [ v 3 ] ) = [ v 4 ] [ v 1 ] .

Example 2: The boundary of the triangle is a formal sum of its edges with signs arranged to make the traversal of the boundary counterclockwise.

A chain is called a cycle when its boundary is zero. A chain that is the boundary of another chain is called a boundary. Boundaries are cycles, so chains form a chain complex, whose homology groups (cycles modulo boundaries) are called simplicial homology groups.

Example 3: A 0-cycle is a linear combination of points such that the sum of all the coefficients is 0. Thus, the 0-homology group measures the number of path connected components of the space.

Example 4: The plane punctured at the origin has nontrivial 1-homology group since the unit circle is a cycle, but not a boundary.

In differential geometry, the duality between the boundary operator on chains and the exterior derivative is expressed by the general Stokes' theorem.

References

Chain (algebraic topology) Wikipedia