jk22 said:
I surely don't masterize homotopy so i'll learn some stuff with you if you don't mind.
You wrote "of course" it isn't true if the manifold is a boundary so I thought you might know of an example.
First i think the second homotopy group is the shrinking of eventually deformed 2-sphere in the manifold. If there is no cavity in 3d then this group is 0 ? For the torus it is impossible to put a sphere on this surface so there is no second homotopy whereas for a sphere it is the sphere it self and it is not shrinkable ?
- Not sure what you mean by "no cavity in 3d".
- A torus is covered by Euclidean space, so its higher homotopy groups are all zero.
The proof that I know uses the long exact homotopy sequence of a fibration. This stuff is pretty advanced algebraic topology but worth learning.
- The homotopy groups of spheres are complicated. They are all zero in dimensions less than,n, and all equal to Z in dimension,n but in higher dimensions it gets complicated. Look at the table in the Wikipedia article.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homotopy_groups_of_spheres#Table
- In homotopy theory, one studies spaces know as Eilenberg-Maclane spaces. These have the property that all of their homotopy groups are zero except in a single dimension. One can have an Eilenberg Maclane space with non-zero homotopy in any dimension.
Manifolds that are covered by Euclidean space are Eilenberg-Maclane spaces with non-zero homotopy group in dimension,1.
Another example other than the torus is the Klein bottle. A good exercise is to describe the covering of the Klein bottle.