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Show, that every continious function $f:\mathbb{R}P^2\to S^1$ is a homotopy to a constant function.

(Hint: Has $f$ a lift $\tilde{f}:\mathbb{R}P^2\to\mathbb{R}$)

Hello,

I want to solve this problem, but I am kinda stuck and the given hint just confuses me even more... I would appreciate, if someone could clarify this a bit.

Thanks in advance.

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Edit:

I want to solve this by a way Eduard Longa gave:

Let $p:\mathbb{R}→S^1$ be the standard covering map. Since $\mathbb{R}$ is contractible, the map $f$ is homotopic to a constant function via an homotopy $H$. Then, the composition $p\circ H$ provides an homotopy between $f$ and a constant function.

I want to go through this, step by step. First of all I want to show, that $\mathbb{R}$ is contractible.

Therefore I have to show, that $\mathbb{R}$ is homotopic to a set $\{x_0\}$.

$f_1:\mathbb{R}\to\{x_0\}$, $f_1(x)=x_0$

$f_2:\{x_0\}\to\mathbb{R}$, $f_2(x)=x$

I have to show, that $f_1\circ f_2\sim id_{\{x_0\}}$ and $f_2\circ f_1\sim id_{\mathbb{R}}$

$(f_1\circ f_2)(x_0)=x_0$

$(f_2\circ f_1)(x)=x_0$

To show, that $f_1\circ f_2\sim id_{\{x_0\}}$ I give the homotopy $H_1:\{x_0\}\times[0,1]\to\{x_0\}$ simply by $H_1(x,t)=x_0$ and for $f_2\circ f_1\sim id_\mathbb{R}$ similar $H_2:\mathbb{R}\times [0,1]\to\mathbb{R}$, with $H_2(x,t)=(1-t)x+tx_0$.

Hence $\mathbb{R}$ is contractible. (It is completly trivial) Am I right?

The next step is to show, that $f$ is homotopic to a constant function via an homotopy $H$. Is here $\tilde{f}$ meant? Since $f:\mathbb{R}P^2\to S^1$ I do not know, why $\mathbb{R}$ contractible, has the consequence, that $f$ is homotopic to a constant function. Respectively how this observation about $\mathbb{R}$ helps.

Jyrki Lahtonen
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    Do you understand why $f$ has a lift? – Eduardo Longa Jun 19 '16 at 01:23
  • Actually I never asked myself that question. So no, I do not think so. :( – Mr.Topology Jun 19 '16 at 01:24
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    You can have a look at the section "Lifting properties" at this page of wiki https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covering_space . Since the fundamental group of the projective plane has order 2, the homomorphism induced by $f$ in fundamental group is the trivial one. Hence, by the lifting property in that article of wiki guarantees the existence of a lifting to $\mathbb{R}$, the universal cover of $S^1$. – Eduardo Longa Jun 19 '16 at 01:28
  • Is there an easy way to see, that the fundamental group of the projective plane has order 2? We have not showed that yet. – Mr.Topology Jun 19 '16 at 01:37
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    Easy, I'm not sure...There is a properly discontinuous action of $Z_2$ in the sphere $S^2$ by means of the antipodal map $p \mapsto -p$. The quotient space of this action is the projective space. Then, by a theorem, the fundamental group of the quotient space is isomorphic to the group acting on the space (sphere, in this case), since the sphere is simply connected. – Eduardo Longa Jun 19 '16 at 01:43
  • Could you quote the necessary theorem? – Mr.Topology Jun 19 '16 at 01:53
  • It appears in the second paragraph of the section "Continuous group action" in this page https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_action#Transitive – Eduardo Longa Jun 19 '16 at 01:57
  • I searched in my script, but we should not have proved this yet. Is there any other way to prove this statement? And how does it help to know, that the lift $\tilde{f}$ exists? – Mr.Topology Jun 19 '16 at 02:05
  • Let $p : R \to S^1$ be the standard covering map. Since $R$ is contractible, the map $f$ is homotopic to a constant function via an homotopy $H$. Then, the composition $p \circ H$ provides an homotopy between $f$ and a constant function. – Eduardo Longa Jun 19 '16 at 02:09
  • Thank you. This looks good, even so we have not proved these statements, but I would like to do this and I hope you can help me with that. First of all I want to show, that $\mathbb{R}$ is contractible. Therefore homotopic to a set ${x_0}$. Hence I have to give continuous functions $f,g$ with $X\leftrightarrows Y$, such that $id_X\sim g\circ f$ and $id_Y\sim f\circ g$. – Mr.Topology Jun 19 '16 at 02:28
  • @MrTopology the fact that the real line is contractible is easy, you should try to do it yourself. Really, (one of) the most easy homotopy works here. For an intuitive reason why the fundamental group of the projective plane is $\mathbb{Z}/2$ have a look at this question: http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/383537/an-intuitive-idea-about-fundamental-group-of-mathbbrp2

    (It's not that I don't want to help you, but you should put some efforts in these exercises, in order to get a good grasp on the basics of this subject)

    – Riccardo Jun 19 '16 at 09:15
  • Excuse me for the repost. I will not do it again. I thought it was best. The starting post was edited. How can I solve the second part from the hint of Eduard Longa? – Mr.Topology Jun 20 '16 at 19:18
  • $S^1$ is $K(\mathbb Z, 1)$, so $[\mathbb RP^2, S^1]=H^1(\mathbb RP^2,\mathbb Z)=0$. – Andrey Ryabichev Jun 21 '16 at 14:05
  • We have not had the homology group yet. – Mr.Topology Jun 21 '16 at 16:21
  • Could you please give me further help with this task? I am a little bit frustrated. I already gave a bounty for a solution, which uses the way Eduardo Longa suggested. – Mr.Topology Jun 21 '16 at 21:22
  • @EduardoLonga : I want to show, that the map $f$ is homotopic to a constant function via an homotopy $H$. How do you involve, that $\mathbb{R}$ is contractible? – Mr.Topology Jun 22 '16 at 10:38

2 Answers2

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Let me put the whole argument together; hopefully you can fill in the gaps.

Let $f:\mathbb{RP}^2 \to S^1$ be any continuous map. It induces a map on fundamental groups (after suitable choices of basepoint, which I omit) $f_\star:\pi_1(\mathbb{RP}^2) \to \pi_1(S^1)$. But the only such homomorhism is the zero map. (For this, you need to know what each fundamental group is.) By the lifting criterion (Proposition 1.33 in Hatcher), $f$ has a lift $\widetilde{f}: \mathbb{RP}^2 \to \mathbb{R}$ (that is, there exists an $\widetilde{f}$ such that $p \circ \widetilde{f}=f$ for $p:\mathbb{R}\to S^1$ the standard covering map). Now, as noted above, $\widetilde{f}$ must be homotopic to a constant map since $\mathbb{R}$ is contractible. Let $F$ be a homotopy from $\widetilde{f}$ to a constant map. Then $p \circ F$ is a homotopy from $f$ to a constant map.

Max
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In general if $X$ is contractible then every continuos map $f:X\rightarrow Y$ is contractible. A brief explication: if you have $f_1 :X\rightarrow pt$ be the constant map and $f_2 :pt\rightarrow X$ such that $f_1 \circ f_2 \sim Id_{pt}$ and $f_2 \circ f_1 \sim Id_{X}$ then clearly :

$f\sim f\circ Id_X\sim f\circ f_2 \circ f_1$ but $f_1$ is the constant map so $f\circ f_2 \circ f_1$ is constant too and you have realized your homotopy.

Now you have to prove the existence of the lifting $\tilde{f}$. As Eduardo Longa pointed out you can use the fact that the fundamental group of the projective plane has order 2. If you don't want to calculate it, I suggest the following alternative:

You have the quotient map $q:S^2\rightarrow \mathbb{RP}^2$ induced by the antipodal equivalence, so you have the map $g:=f\circ q$ from $S^2$ to $S^1$. Since $\pi_1(S^2)=0$ you can lift $g$ in the following way (as pointed out by Eduardo Longa) with $p$ the exponential map.

\begin{matrix} S^2&\stackrel{\tilde{g}}{\longrightarrow}&\mathbb{R}\\ &\stackrel{g}{\searrow}&\downarrow{p}\\ &&S^1 \end{matrix}

Now Let's prove that $\tilde{g}$ induces a lifting $\tilde{f}$: consider the map $\phi:S^2\rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ defined as $\phi(x)= \tilde{g}(x)-\tilde{g}(-x)$, then it is a continuous map with integer values (since $p(\tilde{g}(x))=g(x)=g(-x)=p(\tilde{g}(-x)))$ so the image is a set of points, but $S^2$ is connected so it's just a point. So we have for all $x$ $\phi(x)=\phi(-x)$ but we have also $\phi(x)=-\phi(-x)$ so we obtain that $\phi$ is the zero map.So $\tilde{g}(x)=\tilde{g}(-x)$ and we can descend it to a lifting $\tilde{f}$

You conclude using the fact that $p$ is contractible (since $\mathbb{R}$ is contractible).

user84976
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