Title: The%20Topology%20of%20Graph%20Configuration%20Spaces
1The Topology of Graph Configuration Spaces
- David G.C. Handron
- Carnegie Mellon University
- handron_at_andrew.cmu.edu
2The Topology of Graph Configuration Spaces
1. Configuration Spaces 2. Graphs 3. Topology 4.
Morse Theory 5. Results
3Configuration Spaces
- Term configuration space is commonly used to
refer to the space of configurations of k
distinct points in a manifold M - This is a subspace of
4Other Configuration Spaces
- Cyclic Configuration Spaces
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5Other Configuration Spaces
- Cyclic Configuration Spaces
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- Not all points must be distinct, only those whose
indices differ by one (mod k). -
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6Other Configuration Spaces
- Cyclic Configuration Spaces
-
- Not all points must be distinct, only those whose
indices differ by one (mod k). - Used (e.g. by Farber and Tabachnikov) to study
periodic billiard paths. -
-
7Other Configuration Spaces
- Cyclic Configuration Spaces
-
- Not all points must be distinct, only those whose
indices differ by one (mod k). - Used (e.g. by Farber and Tabachnikov) to study
periodic billiard paths. - Path Configuration Spaces
-
8Other Configuration Spaces
- Cyclic Configuration Spaces
-
- Not all points must be distinct, only those whose
indices differ by one (mod k). - Used (e.g. by Farber and Tabachnikov) to study
periodic billiard paths. - Path Configuration Spaces
- Used by myself to study non-cyclic billiard
paths.
9Graph Configuration Spaces
- Configuration of points in a manifold
- One point for each vertex of a graph
- Points corresponding to adjacent vertices must be
distinct
10 - Cyclic configuration spaces correspond to graphs
that form a loop - Path configuration spaces correspond to graphs
that form a continuous path
11Graph Theory
- A graph G consists of
- (1) a finite set V(G) of vertices, and
- (2) a set E(G) of unordered pairs of vertices.
- The elements of E(G) are the edges of the graph.
12 - V(G)v1, v2, v3, v4, v5, v6
- E(G)v1, v3, v2, v3,...
13 - V(G)v1, v2, v3, v4, v5, v6
- E(G)v1, v3, v2, v3,... e13, e23, e34,
...
14Subgraphs
- A subgraph of a graph G is a graph H
- such that
- (1) Every vertex of H is a vertex of G.
- (2) Every edge of H is an edge of G.
- If V' is a subset of V(G), the induced graph
GV' includes all the edges of G joining
vertices in V'.
15Contractions
We can contract a graph with respect to an edge
... ...by identifying the vertices joined by
that edge
16Contractions, cont.
We can contract with respect to a set of
edges. Simply identify each pair of vertices.
17Partitions
- The vertices of a graph G can be partitioned into
a collection of disjoint subsets. - This partition determines a subgraph of G.
- is the induced subgraph of the partition P.
18Partitions and Induced Graphs
- For each partition P of a graph G, there is a
corresponding contraction - contract all the edges in GP.
19Examples
- Two partitions v1,v2,v4,v3 and
v1,v2,v3,v4 may induce the same edge
set... - ...and produce the same quotient.
- A partition is connected if each is a
connected graph. It can be shown that connected
partitions induce the same subgraphs and
partitions.
20Topology
- The goal of this work is to describe topological
invarients of a graph-configuration space. This
description will involve properties of the graph,
and topological properties of the underlying
manifold. - Today, we'll be concerned with the Euler
characteristic of these configuration spaces.
21Euler Characteristic
- The Euler characteristic of a polyhedron is
commonly describes as v-ef.
22Euler Characteristic
- The Euler characteristic of a polyhedron is
commonly describes as v-ef. - Cube 8-1262
23Euler Characteristic
- The Euler characteristic of a polyhedron is
commonly describes as v-ef. - Cube 8-1262
- Tetrahedron 4-642
24Euler Characteristic
- The Euler characteristic of a polyhedron is
commonly describes as v-ef. - Cube 8-1262
- Tetrahedron 4-642
- Both topologically equivalent (homeomorphic) to a
sphere.
25Euler Characteristic of a CW-complex
- A CW-complex is similar to a polyhedron. It is
constructed out of cells (vertices, edges, faces,
etc.) of varying dimension. - Each cell is attached along its edge to cells of
one lower dimension. - If n(i) is the number of cells with dimension i,
then
26Morse Theory
- A Morse function is a smooth function from a
manifold M to R - which has non-degenerate critical points.
27Non-Degenerate Critical Points
- A point p in M is a critical point if df0. In
coordinates this means
- A critical point is non-degenerate if the Hessian
matrix of second partial derivatives has nonzero
determinate.
28Index of a Non-Degenerate Critical Point
- The index of a non-degenerate critical point is
the number of negative eigenvalues of the Hessian
matrix. - I'll switch to the whiteboard to explain what
this is all about...
29Morse Theory Results
- (1) If f is a Morse function on M, then M is
homotopy equivalent to a CW-complex with one cell
of dimension i for each critical point of f with
index i. - (2) A similar result holds for a stratified Morse
function on a stratified space.