From: H8401689@SUBMATHS.hku.hk Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 21:47:01 GMT+8 Subject: degree of a mapping S^3->GL(n,H) Dear Professor Davis, I would like to express my sincere gratitude to helps and advice from some topology experts in that I can settle my problem: to calculate the degree of a mapping $S^3\to GL(n,H)$. The following is the whole proof which is written in Amslatex 1.2. I would be grateful if you post it for further comments and modification. Thank you. Best regards, Lok-Shun. \documentclass[12pt,oneside,a4paper,openany,reqno]{article} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsthm} \usepackage{g:/pctex/amslatex/inputs/verbatim} \newcommand{\Abs}[1]{\left\vert #1 \right\vert} \newcommand{\Norm}[1]{\left\Vert #1 \right\Vert} \newcommand{\ur}[1]{\textrm{\textup{#1}}} \newenvironment{thmitem} { \begin{enumerate} \newcommand{\itemtemp}{\theenumi} \renewcommand{\theenumi}{\textrm{\textup{(\roman{enumi})}}} \renewcommand{\labelenumi}{\theenumi} } { \renewcommand{\theenumi}{\itemtemp} \end{enumerate} } %\renewcommand{\labelnumsect}{\Roman{section}} \renewcommand{\baselinestretch}{1.1} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-0.2in} \setlength{\textwidth}{6.8in} %Declaration Section \theoremstyle{plain} \newtheorem{mainthm}{Main Theorem} \renewcommand{\themainthm}{} %\newtheorem{thm}{Theorem}[section] \newtheorem{thm}{Theorem} %\newtheorem{rst}{Result}[section] \newtheorem{prop}[thm]{Proposition} \newtheorem{cor}[thm]{Corollary} \newtheorem{lem}[thm]{Lemma} \theoremstyle{definition} \newtheorem{df}[thm]{Definition} %\newtheorem{df}{Definition}[section] \newtheorem{rem}[thm]{Remark} \newtheorem{eg}[thm]{Example} \renewcommand{\theequation}{\thesection.\arabic{equation}} \makeatletter \@addtoreset{equation}{section} \makeatother \DeclareMathOperator{\gl}{GL} \DeclareMathOperator{\co}{Co} \DeclareMathOperator{\diag}{diag} \DeclareMathOperator{\re}{Re} \DeclareMathOperator{\im}{Im} \begin{document} \title{ Degree of a Mapping in $\pi_3(\gl_n(\mathbb{H}))$ } \author{Siu Lok--Shun} \maketitle \begin{abstract} In this note, first we show that the third homotopy group of the general linear group over quaternions is cyclic infinity and then show that the degree of the mapping $f:S^3\to\gl_n(\mathbb{H})$, defined by $f(q)=q^m I_n$, equals $mn$. \end{abstract} \begin{prop}[{\cite[\S 12.6]{fibrebundlebk}}] The natural inclusion induces an isomorphism between $\pi_3(Sp_1)$ and $\pi_3(Sp_k)$ for any $k\geq1$. \end{prop} \begin{prop}[{\cite[Theorem 2.6]{intro}}] For any $k\geq1$, $\pi_k(S^k)\approx\mathbb{Z}$ with the identity as a generator. \end{prop} Since $Sp_1$ is homeomorphic to $S^3$, in view of the two propositions above, the following result follows readily. \begin{cor} \label{cor:spnz} For any $k\geq1$, $\pi_3(Sp_n)\approx\mathbb{Z}$ with $q\mapsto\diag(q,1,\ldots)$ as a generator. \end{cor} \begin{prop} Let $Y$, $Y'$ be two arcwisely connected Hausdorff spaces with a single common point. Then $$ \pi_k(Y\times Y')\approx\pi_k(Y)+\pi_k(Y'). $$ \end{prop} \begin{proof} The group isomorphism is induced from the projections $\mu,\mu'$ of spaces $Y\times Y'$ onto $Y$ and $Y'$, that is, $\eta(\alpha)=\mu(\alpha)+\mu'(\alpha)$ for any $\alpha:S^k\to Y\times Y'$. For the detail, see \cite[Theorem 6.1 p. 42]{intro}. \end{proof} \begin{prop}[Iwasawa 1945 \cite{iwasawa}, M. Mimura 1995 \cite{mimurapaper}] Any connected Lie Group $G$ is homeomorphic to the Cartesian product of a maximal compact subgroup $K$ and a subset which is homeomorphic with a Euclidean space $\mathbb{R}^m$: $$ G\approx K\times\mathbb{R}^m. $$ Moreover all maximal compact subgroups are conjugate. \end{prop} Notice that the symplectic group $Sp_n$ is a maximal compact subgroup of $\gl_n(\mathbb{H})$ and a Euclidean space is contractible, that is, homotopic to a constant mapping, hence $\pi_k(\mathbb R^m)=\mathbf{0}$ \cite[\S 1.14]{top&geo}. Accordingly, follows from the two propositions above and Corollary \ref{cor:spnz}, we have: \begin{cor} \label{cor:glnqz} $\pi_k(\gl_n(\mathbb{H}))\approx\mathbb{Z}$ with $q\mapsto\diag(q,1,\ldots)$ as a generator. \end{cor} Let $\alpha_i$ be a mapping sending $q\in S^3$ to the diagonal matrix $\diag(d_i)$, where $d_j=q$ if $j=i$; 1, otherwise. \begin{lem} $\alpha_1$ are homotopic to $\alpha_2$ in $\gl_2(\mathbb{H})$. \end{lem} \begin{proof} The homotopy $[0,1]\times S^3\to\gl_n(\mathbb{H})$ is defined by $$ \begin{bmatrix} \cos t\pi/2&-\sin t\pi/2\\ \sin t\pi/2&\cos t\pi/2 \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} q&0\\0&1 \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} \cos t\pi/2&\sin t\pi/2\\ -\sin t\pi/2&\cos t\pi/2 \end{bmatrix}. $$ \end{proof} This result can be easily generalized. \begin{lem} \label{lem:1isoi} For any $i=2,\ldots,n$, $\alpha_i$ are homotopic to $\alpha_1$ in $\gl_n(\mathbb{H})$. \end{lem} \begin{lem}[{\cite[Chapter V Lemma 3.17]{intro}}] \label{lem:hspace} Let $\circ$ be the multiplication of the topological group $G$. Given two continuous mappings $f_1$, $f_2:$ $S^k\to G$ with the homotopy classes denoted by $[f_1]$, $[f_2]$. If $f_1\circ f_2:$ $S^k\to G$ is defined by $(f_1\circ f_2)(t)=f_1(t)\circ f_2(t)$, then $[f_1\circ f_2]=[f_1]+[f_2]$. \end{lem} \begin{proof} Let $f_0:S^k\to G$ defined by $f_0(x)=1$ for any $x$. Then $$ f_1+f_2\sim(f_1\circ f_0)+(f_0\circ f_2) =(f_1+f_0)\circ(f_0+f_2)\sim f_1\circ f_2. $$ \end{proof} \begin{cor} \label{cor:qmInmn} The mapping $f:S^3\to\gl_n(\mathbb H)$ defined by $f(q)=q^m I_n$ corresponds the integer $mn$ in the homotopy group. \end{cor} \begin{proof} Since $f(q)=q^m I_n=(\alpha_1(q))^m\cdots(\alpha_n(q))^m$, the result follows from Corollary \ref{cor:glnqz}, Lemma \ref{lem:1isoi} and Proposition \ref{lem:hspace}. \end{proof} \begin{thebibliography}{99} \bibitem{top&geo} G. E. Bredon, Topology and Geometry, 1993, Springer. \bibitem{intro} W. V. D. Hodge, An Introduction to Homotopy Theory, 1953, Cambridge at the Univ. Press. \bibitem{fibrebundlebk} D. Husemoller, Fibre Bundles, 1993, Springer. \bibitem{iwasawa} K. Iwasawa, {\it On some types of Topological Groups}, Annals of Math. \textbf{50} (1949) 507--558. \bibitem{mimurapaper} M. Mimura, {\it Homotopy Theory of Lie Groups}, in handbook of Algebraic Topology, 1995, 951--991, Elsevier. \end{thebibliography} \end{document}