COVERING SPACE

In mathematics, a 'covering space' is a topological space ''C'' which "covers" another space ''X'' by a surjective local homeomorphism ''p'' : ''C'' → ''X'' called a 'covering map'. The precise definition is given below. Covering spaces are studied in algebraic topology, but they have important applications in many other branches of mathematics including differential topology, the theory of topological groups, and the theory of Riemann surfaces.
They are an important example of a .
The theory of covering spaces is deeply intertwined with the study of fundamental groups. It is nearly impossible to take up a study of one without encountering the other.

Contents
Formal definition
Examples
Properties
Universal covers
Deck transformation group, regular covers
Monodromy action
Group structure redux
Generalizations
See also
References

Formal definition


Let ''X'' be a topological space. A 'covering space' of ''X'' is a space ''C'' together with a continuous surjective map
:p : C o X,
such that for every ''x'' ∈ ''X'' there exists an open neighborhood ''U'' of ''x'' such that ''p''−1(''U'') (the inverse image of ''U'' under ''p'') is a disjoint union of open sets in ''C'' each of which is mapped homeomorphically onto ''U'' by ''p''.
The map ''p'' is called the 'covering map' and the space ''X'' is often called the 'base' of the covering. For any point ''x'' in the base the inverse image of ''x'' in ''C'' is a discrete space called the fiber over ''x''.
The special open neighborhoods ''U'' of ''x'' given in the definition are called 'evenly-covered neighborhoods'. The evenly-covered neighborhoods form an open cover of the space ''X''. The homeomorphic copies in ''C'' of an evenly-covered neighborhood ''U'' are called the 'sheets' over ''U''. One generally pictures ''C'' as "hovering above" ''X'', with ''p'' mapping "downwards", the sheets over ''U'' being horizontally stacked above each other and above ''U'', and the fiber over ''x'' consisting of those points of ''C'' that lie "vertically above" ''x''.
''Warning'': Many authors impose some connectivity conditions on the spaces ''X'' and ''C'' in the definition of a covering map. In particular, many authors require both spaces to be path-connected and locally path-connected. When studying results about covering spaces, one should always be careful to check the connectivity assumptions the author is making. Also some authors do not require covering maps to be surjective. However, if ''X'' is connected and ''C'' is nonempty then surjectivity of the covering map actually follows from the other axioms.

Examples


Consider the unit circle 'S'1 in 'R'2. Then the map ''p'' : 'R' → 'S'1 with
:''p''(''t'') = (cos(''t''),sin(''t''))
is a cover where each point of 'S'1 is covered infinitely often.
Consider the complex plane with the origin removed, denoted by 'C'×, and pick a non-zero integer ''n''. Then ''p'' : 'C'× → 'C'× given by
:''p''(''z'') = ''z''''n''
is a cover. Here every fiber has ''n'' elements.

Properties


'Common local properties': Every cover ''p'' : ''C'' → ''X'' is a local homeomorphism (i.e. to every cin C there exists an open set ''A'' in ''C'' containing ''c'' and an open set ''B'' in ''X'' such that the restriction of ''p'' to ''A'' yields a homeomorphism between ''A'' and ''B''). This implies that ''C'' and ''X'' share all local properties. If ''X'' is simply connected and ''C'' is connected, then this holds globally as well, and the covering ''p'' is a homeomorphism.
'Cardinality': For every ''x'' in ''X'', the fiber over ''x'' is a discrete subset of ''C''. On every connected component of ''X'', the cardinality of the fibers is the same (possibly infinite). If every fiber has 2 elements, we speak of a 'double cover'.
The 'lifting property': If ''p'' : ''C'' → ''X'' is a cover and γ is a path in ''X'' (i.e. a continuous map from the unit interval [0,1] into ''X'') and cin C is a point "lying over" γ(0) (i.e. ''p''(''c'') = γ(0)), then there exists a unique path ρ in ''C'' lying over γ (i.e. ''p'' o ρ = γ) and with ρ(0) = ''c''. The curve ρ is called the 'lift' of γ. If ''x'' and ''y'' are two points in ''X'' connected by a path, then that path furnishes a bijection between the fiber over ''x'' and the fiber over ''y'' via the lifting property.
'Equivalence': Let p_1:C_1
ightarrow X and p_2:C_2
ightarrow X be two coverings. One then says that the two coverings (p_1,C_1) and (p_2,C_2) are 'equivalent' if there exists a homeomorphism p_{21}:C_2
ightarrow C_1 and p_2 = p_1 circ p_{21}. Equivalence classes of coverings correspond to conjugacy classes, as discussed below. If p_{21} is a covering rather than a homeomorphism, then one says that (p_2,C_2) 'dominates' (p_1,C_1) (given that
p_2 = p_1 circ p_{21}).

Universal covers


A connected covering space is a 'universal cover' if it is simply connected. The name "universal cover" comes from the following important property: if ''q'' : ''D'' → ''X'' is a universal cover of ''X'' and ''p'' : ''C'' → ''X'' is any cover of ''X'' with ''C'' connected, then there exists a covering map ''f'' : ''D'' → ''C'' such that ''p'' o ''f'' = ''q''. This can be phrased as "The universal cover of ''X'' covers all connected covers of ''X''."
The map ''f'' is unique in the following sense: if we fix ''x'' in ''X'' and ''d'' in ''D'' with ''q''(''d'') = ''x'' and ''c'' in ''C'' with ''p''(''c'') = ''x'', then there exists a unique covering map ''f'' : ''D'' → ''C'' such that ''p'' o ''f'' = ''q'' and ''f''(''d'') = ''c''.
If ''X'' has a universal cover, then that universal cover is essentially unique: if ''q''1 : ''D''1 → ''X'' and ''q''2 : ''D''2 → ''X'' are two universal covers of ''X'', then there exists a homeomorphism ''f'' : ''D''1 → ''D''2 such that ''q''2 o ''f'' = ''q''1.
The space ''X'' has a universal cover if and only if it is connected, locally path-connected and semi-locally simply connected. The universal cover of ''X'' can be constructed as a certain space of paths in ''X''.
The example 'R' → 'S'1 given above is a universal cover. The map 'S'3 → SO(3) from unit quaternions to rotations of 3D space described in quaternions and spatial rotation is also a universal cover.
If the space ''X'' carries some additional structure, then its universal cover normally inherits that structure:

★ if ''X'' is a manifold, then so is its universal cover ''D''

★ if ''X'' is a Riemann surface, then so is its universal cover ''D'', and ''p'' is a holomorphic map

★ if ''X'' is a Lorentzian manifold, then so is its universal cover. Furthermore, suppose ''p''−1(''U'') is a disjoint union of open sets each of which is diffeomorphic with ''U'' by ''p''. If ''X'' contains a closed timelike curve, then ''X'' is timelike multiply connected (no CTC can be timelike homotopic to a point, as that point would not be causally well-behaved), its universal (diffeomorphic) cover is timelike simply connected (it does not contain a CTC).

★ if ''X'' is a Lie group (as in the two examples above), then so is its universal cover ''D'', and ''p'' is a homomorphism of Lie groups. In this case the universal cover is also called ''universal covering group''. This has particular application to representation theory and quantum mechanics, since ordinary representations of the universal covering group (''D'') are projective representations of the original (classical) group (''X'').
The universal cover first arose in the theory of analytic functions as the natural domain of an analytic continuation.

Deck transformation group, regular covers


A 'deck transformation' or 'automorphism' of a cover ''p'' : ''C'' → ''X'' is a homeomorphism ''f'' : ''C'' → ''C'' such that ''p'' o ''f'' = ''p''. The set of all deck transformations of ''p'' forms a group under composition, the 'deck transformation group' Aut(''p''). Every deck transformation permutes the elements of each fiber. This defines a group action of the deck transformation group on each fiber. Note that by the unique lifting property, if ''f'' is not the identity and ''C'' is path connected, then ''f'' has no fixed points.
Now suppose ''p'' : ''C'' → ''X'' is a covering map and ''C'' (and therefore also ''X'') is connected and locally path connected. The action of Aut(''p'') on each fiber is free. If this action is transitive on some fiber, then it is transitive on all fibers, and we call the cover 'regular'. Every such regular cover is a principal ''G''-bundle, where ''G'' = Aut(''p'') is considered as a discrete topological group.
Every universal cover ''p'' : ''D'' → ''X'' is regular, with deck transformation group being isomorphic to the fundamental group π(''X'').
The example ''p'' : 'C'× → 'C'× with ''p''(''z'') = ''z''''n'' from above is a regular cover. The deck transformations are multiplications with ''n''-th roots of unity and the deck transformation group is therefore isomorphic to the cyclic group ''C''''n''.

Monodromy action


Again suppose ''p'' : ''C'' → ''X'' is a covering map and ''C'' (and therefore also ''X'') is connected and locally path connected. If ''x'' in ''X'' and ''c'' belongs to the fiber over ''x'' (i.e. ''p''(''c'') = ''x''), and γ:[0,1]→''X'' is a path with γ(0)=γ(1)=''x'', then this path lifts to a unique path in ''C'' with starting point ''c''. The end point of this lifted path need not be ''c'', but it must lie in the fiber over ''x''. It turns out that this end point only depends on the class of γ in the fundamental group π(''X'',''x''), and in this fashion we obtain a right group action of π(''X'',''x'') on the fiber over ''x''. This is known as the 'monodromy action'.
So there are two actions on the fiber over ''x'': Aut(''p'') acts on the left and π(''X'',''x'') acts on the right. These two actions are compatible in the following sense:
:''f''.(''c''.γ) = (''f''.''c'').γ
for all ''f'' in Aut(''p''), ''c'' in ''p'' -1(''x'') and γ in π(''X'',''x'').
If ''p'' is a universal cover, then the monodromy action is regular; if we identify Aut(''p'') with the opposite group of π(''X'',''x''), then the monodromy action coincides with the action of Aut(''p'') on the fiber over ''x''.

Group structure redux


The 'deck transformation group' and the 'monodromy action' can be understood to relate the normal subgroups of the fundamental group pi_1(X) of ''X'' and the fundamental group pi_1(C) of the cover. Furthermore, these equate the conjugacy classes of subgroups of pi_1(X) and equivalence classes of coverings.
As a result, one can conclude that ''X''=''C''/Aut(''p''), that is, the manifold ''X'' is given as the quotient of the covering manifold under the action of the deck transformation group. These inter-relationships are explored below.
Let γ be a curve in ''X''. Denote by gamma_C the
lift of γ to ''C''. Consider the set
:Gamma_p(c) = { gamma : gamma_C mbox{ is a closed curve in } C
mbox { passing through } cin C }
Note that Gamma_p(c) is a group, and that it is a subgroup of pi_1(X,p(c)). Note also that it depends on ''c'', and that different values of ''c'' in the same fiber yield different subgroups. Each such subgroups is conjugate to another by the monodromy action. To see this, pick two points c_1, c_2 in the same fiber: p(c_1)=p(c_2)=x and let ''g'' be a curve in ''C'' connecting c_1 to c_2. Then p(g) is a closed curve in ''X''. If gamma_C is a closed curve in ''C'' passing through c_1, then ggamma_C g^{-1} is a closed curve in ''C'' passing through c_2. Thus, we have shown
:Gamma_p(c_2) = g Gamma_p(c_1) g^{-1}
and so we have the result that Gamma_p(c_1) and Gamma_p(c_2) are conjugate subgroups of pi_1(X,x). All of the conjugate subgroups may be obtained in this way.
It should be clear that two equivalent coverings lead to the same conjugacy class of subgroups of pi_1(X,x); there is a bijective correspondence between equivalence classes of coverings and conjugacy classes of subgroups of pi_1 (X).
Note that this implies that the fundamental group pi_1(C) is isomorphic to Gamma_p. Let N(Gamma_p) be the normalizer of Gamma_p in pi_1(X). The deck transformation group Aut(''p'') is isomorphic to N(Gamma_p)/Gamma_p. If ''p'' is a universal covering, then Gamma_p is the trivial group, and Aut(''p'') is isomorphic to pi_1(X).
As a corollary, let us reverse this argument. Let Γ be a normal subgroup of pi_1(X,x). By the above arguments, this defines a (regular) covering p:C
ightarrow X. Let c_1 in ''C'' be in the fiber of ''x''. Then for every other c_2 in the fiber of ''x'', there is precisely one deck transformation that takes c_1 to c_2. This deck transformation corresponds to a curve ''g'' in ''C'' connecting c_1 to c_2.
Note that Aut(''p'') operates properly discontinuously on ''C'', and so we have that ''X''=''C''/Aut(''p''), that is, ''X'' is the manifold given by the quotient of the covering manifold by the deck transformation group.

Generalizations


As a homotopy theory, the notion of covering spaces works well when the deck transformation group is discrete, or, equivalently, when the space is locally path-connected. However, when the deck transformation group is a topological group whose topology is not discrete, difficulties arise. Some progress has been made for more complex spaces, such as the Hawaiian earring; see the references there for further information.

See also



Covering group

Galois connection

References



Riemann Surfaces, , Hershel M., Farkas, Springer, 1980, ISBN 0-387-90465-4 See chapter 1 for a simple review.

Algebraic Topology, , Allen, Hatcher, Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-521-79540-0

Compact Riemann Surfaces, , Jurgen, Jost, Springer, 2002, ISBN 3-540-43299-X See section 1.3

A Basic Course in Algebraic Topology, , William, Massey, Springer, 1991, ISBN 0-387-97430-X See chapter 5.

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