Homotopy characteristic classes of foliations (Q1263133): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
Created a new Item |
Added link to MaRDI item. |
||
links / mardi / name | links / mardi / name | ||
Revision as of 09:34, 31 January 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Homotopy characteristic classes of foliations |
scientific article |
Statements
Homotopy characteristic classes of foliations (English)
0 references
1990
0 references
The secondary classes of foliations are cohomology invariants used to distinguish foliations of manifolds up to concordance. The dual homotopy invariants of foliations are linear functionals on the homotopy groups of a foliated manifold, which again distinguish concordance classes of foliations. This paper addresses the question: Do there exist examples of foliations on a compact manifold which are distinct up to concordance, but have vanishing primary, secondary and dual homotopy invariants? Theorem 7 of the paper under review shows that the answer is yes, with the lowest dimensional examples constructed of codimension 2 on the 9- torus. This is proven by using rational homotopy theory to construct a theory of tertiary characteristic classes for foliations. The tertiary classes are cohomology invariants defined for (restricted sets of) homotopy classes of maps into foliation classifying spaces. Their construction is based on using algebraic Postnikov theory for the minimal model of the secondary algebras WO(q) and W(q). Many other applications are described of these new invariants, including results about the non- triviality of the universal Postnikov invariants for foliation classifying spaces.
0 references
Postnikov invariants of classifying spaces of foliations
0 references
secondary classes of foliations
0 references
dual homotopy invariants of foliations
0 references
rational homotopy theory
0 references
tertiary characteristic classes for foliations
0 references
homotopy classes of maps into foliation classifying spaces
0 references
minimal model of the secondary algebras
0 references