latentcorpse
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I can't see a difference between a rel{0,1} homotopy and a normal homotopy between maps.
my notes say:
What does a rel{0,1} homotopy mean? Keeping the endpoints \alpha(0), \alpha(1) \in X of a path \alpha : I \rightarrow X fixed during a homotopy.
we do this anyway don't we?
and then more precisely they say:
A homotopy rel {0,1} of two paths \alpha_0 , \alpha_1 : I \rightarrow X with the same endpoints \alpha_0(0) = \alpha_1(0) , \alpha_0 (1) = \alpha_1(1) \in X
is a collection of paths h_t : I \rightarrow X ( t \in [0,1]) witht he same endpoints h_t(0)=\alpha_0(0)=\alpha_1(0) , h_t(1) = \alpha_0(1) = \alpha_1(1)
such that h_0 = \alpha_0 , h_1 = \alpha_1 and such that the function
h : I \times I \rightarrow X ; (s,t) \mapsto h_t(s) is continuous.
I can't see much difference between this and the standard homotopy definition other than the fact that such a homotopy could only be defined for maps whose endpoints are the same to begin with.
also how does h_0 = \alpha_0 , h_1 = \alpha_1?
thanks.
my notes say:
What does a rel{0,1} homotopy mean? Keeping the endpoints \alpha(0), \alpha(1) \in X of a path \alpha : I \rightarrow X fixed during a homotopy.
we do this anyway don't we?
and then more precisely they say:
A homotopy rel {0,1} of two paths \alpha_0 , \alpha_1 : I \rightarrow X with the same endpoints \alpha_0(0) = \alpha_1(0) , \alpha_0 (1) = \alpha_1(1) \in X
is a collection of paths h_t : I \rightarrow X ( t \in [0,1]) witht he same endpoints h_t(0)=\alpha_0(0)=\alpha_1(0) , h_t(1) = \alpha_0(1) = \alpha_1(1)
such that h_0 = \alpha_0 , h_1 = \alpha_1 and such that the function
h : I \times I \rightarrow X ; (s,t) \mapsto h_t(s) is continuous.
I can't see much difference between this and the standard homotopy definition other than the fact that such a homotopy could only be defined for maps whose endpoints are the same to begin with.
also how does h_0 = \alpha_0 , h_1 = \alpha_1?
thanks.