Universal bundle; bundle. The
In mathematics, the universal bundle in the theory of fiber bundles with structure group a given topological group G, is a specific bundle over a classifying space BG, such that every bundle with the given structure group G over M is a pullback by means of a continuous map
- M → BG.
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Existence of a universal bundle
In the CW complex category
When the definition of the classifying space takes place within the homotopy category of CW complexes, existence theorems for universal bundles arise from Brown’s representability theorem.
For compact Lie groups
We will first prove:
Proposition
Let <math>G</math> be a compact Lie group.
There exists a contractible space <math>EG</math> on which <math>G</math> acts freely. The projection <math>EG\longrightarrow BG</math> is a
<math>G</math>-principal fibre bundle.
Proof
There exists an injection of <math>G</math> into a unitary group <math>U(n)</math> for <math>n</math> big enoughJ.~J.~Duistermaat and J.~A.~Kolk,
– Lie Groups, Universitext, Springer. Corollary 4.6.5.
If we find <math>EU(n)</math> then we can take <math>EG</math> to be <math>EU(n)</math>.
The construction of EU(n) is given in classifying space for U(n).
<math>\Box</math>
The following Theorem is a corollary of the above Proposition.
Theorem
If <math>M</math> is a paracompact manifold and <math>P\longrightarrow M</math> is a principal <math>G</math>-bundle, then there exists a map
<math>f:M\longrightarrow BG</math>, well defined up to homotopy, such that <math>P</math> is isomorphic to <math>f^*(EG)</math>, the pull-back
of the <math>G</math>-bundle <math>EG\longrightarrow BG</math> by <math>f</math>.
Proof
On one hand, the pull-back of the bundle <math>\pi:EG\longrightarrow BG</math> by the natural projection <math>P\times_G EG\longrightarrow BG</math> is the bundle <math>P\times EG</math>. On the other hand, the pull-back of the principal <math>G</math>-bundle <math>P\longrightarrow M</math> by the projection
<math>p:P\times_G EG\longrightarrow M</math> is also <math>P\times EG</math>
<math>\begin{align}
P & \longleftarrow & P\times EG& \longrightarrow & EG \\
\downarrow & & \downarrow & & \downarrow\pi\\
M & \longleftarrow^{\!\!\!\!\!\!\!p} & P\times_G EG & \longrightarrow & BG.
\end{align}</math>
Since <math>p</math> is a fibration with contractible fibre <math>EG</math>,
sections of <math>p</math> existA.~Dold
– Partitions of Unity in the Theory of Fibrations,Annals of Math., vol. 78, No 2 (1963). To such a section <math>s</math>
we associate the composition with the projection <math>P\times_G EG\longrightarrow BG</math>. The map we get is the <math>f</math> we were
looking for.
For the uniqueness up to homotopy, notice that there exists a one to one correspondence between maps
<math>f:M\longrightarrow BG</math> such that <math>f^*EG\longrightarrow M</math> is isomorphic to <math>P\longrightarrow M</math> and sections of <math>p</math>. We have just seen
how to associate a <math>f</math> to a section. Inversely, assume that <math>f</math> is given. Let <math>\Phi</math> be an isomorphism
between <math>f^*EG</math> and <math>P</math>
<math>\Phi: \{(x,u)\in M\times EG\mid\,f(x)=\pi(u)\} \longrightarrow P</math>.
Now, simply define a section by
<math>\begin{align}
M & \longrightarrow & P\times_G EG \\
x & \longrightarrow & \lbrack \Phi(x,u),u\rbrack.
\end{align}</math>
Because all sections of <math>p</math> are homotopic, the homotopy class of <math>f</math> is unique.
<math>\Box</math>
Use in the study of group actions
The total space of a universal bundle is usually written EG. These spaces are of interest in their own right, despite typically being contractible. For example in defining the homotopy quotient or homotopy orbit space of a group action of G, in cases where the orbit space is pathological (in the sense of being a non-Hausdorff space, for example). The idea, if G acts on the space X, is to consider instead the action on
- Y = X×EG,
and corresponding quotient. See equivariant cohomology for more detailed discussion.
If EG is contractible then X and Y are homotopy equivalent spaces. But the diagonal action on Y, i.e. where G acts on both X and EG coordinates, may be well-behaved when the action on X is not.
Examples
- Classifying space for U(n)
See also
- Chern class
External link
- PlanetMath page of universal bundle examples