Google
 
   
Login
Username:

Password:


Lost Password?

Register now!
Search
Main Menu
service
top books
Polls
What do you think about php-deluxe.net?
Excellent!
Cool
Hmm..not bad
What the hell is this?
encyclopedia
recommendation
Freenet DSL
Who's Online
11 user(s) are online (7 user(s) are browsing encyclopedia)

Members: 0
Guests: 11

more...
partner

Simplicial approximation theorem

In mathematics, the simplicial approximation theorem is a foundational result for algebraic topology, guaranteeing that continuous mappings can be (by a slight deformation) approximated by ones that are piecewise of the simplest kind. It applies to mappings between spaces that are built up from simplex — that is, finite simplicial complexes. The general continuous mapping between such spaces can be represented approximately by the type of mapping that is ( affine -) linear on each simplex into another simplex, at the cost (i) of sufficient barycentric subdivision of the simplices of both the domain and range, and (ii) replacement of the actual mapping by a homotopic one.

This theorem was first proved by L.E.J. Brouwer, by use of the Lebesgue covering theorem (a result based on compactness). It served to put the homology theory of the time — the first decade of the twentieth century — on a rigorous basis, since it showed that the topological effect (on homology groups) of continuous mappings could in a given case be expressed in a finitary way. This must be seen against the background of a realisation at the time that continuity was in general compatible with the pathological (mathematics), in some other areas. This initiated, one could say, the era of combinatorial topology.

There is a further simplicial approximation theorem for homotopies, stating that a Homotopy between continuous mappings can likewise be approximated by a combinatorial version.