In mathematics, real projective space, denoted or is the topological space of lines passing through the origin 0 in the real space It is a compact, smooth manifold of dimension , and is a special case of a Grassmannian space.
Like all projective spaces, is formed by taking the quotient of under the equivalence relation for all real numbers . For all in one can always find a such that has norm 1. There are precisely two such differing by sign. Thus, has the topology that is obtained by identifying antipodal points of the unit -sphere, , in .
One can alternatively restrict to the upper hemisphere of and merely identify antipodal points on the bounding equator. This shows that is also topologically equivalent to the closed -dimensional disk, , with antipodal points on the boundary, , identified.
The antipodal map on the -sphere (the map sending to ) generates a Z<sub>2</sub> group action on . As mentioned above, the orbit space for this action is . This action is actually a covering space action giving as a double cover of . Since is simply connected for , it also serves as the universal cover in these cases. It follows that the fundamental group of is when . (When the fundamental group is due to the homeomorphism with ). A generator for the fundamental group is the closed curve obtained by projecting any curve connecting antipodal points in down to .
The projective -space is compact, connected, and has a fundamental group isomorphic to the cyclic group of order 2: its universal covering space is given by the antipody quotient map from the -sphere, a simply connected space. It is a double cover. The antipode map on has sign , so it is orientation-preserving if and only if is even. The orientation character is thus: the non-trivial loop in acts as on orientation, so is orientable if and only if is even, i.e., is odd.
The projective -space is in fact diffeomorphic to the submanifold of consisting of all symmetric matrices of trace 1 that are also idempotent linear transformations.
Real projective space admits a constant positive scalar curvature metric, coming from the double cover by the standard round sphere (the antipodal map is locally an isometry).
For the standard round metric, this has sectional curvature identically 1.
In the standard round metric, the measure of projective space is exactly half the measure of the sphere.
Real projective spaces are smooth manifolds. On S<sup>n</sup>, in homogeneous coordinates, (x<sub>1</sub>, ..., x<sub>n+1</sub>), consider the subset U<sub>i</sub> with x<sub>i</sub> â 0. Each U<sub>i</sub> is homeomorphic to the disjoint union of two open unit balls in R<sup>n</sup> that map to the same subset of RP<sup>n</sup> and the coordinate transition functions are smooth. This gives RP<sup>n</sup> a smooth structure.
Real projective space RP<sup>n</sup> admits the structure of a CW complex with 1 cell in every dimension.
In homogeneous coordinates (x<sub>1</sub> ... x<sub>n+1</sub>) on S<sup>n</sup>, the coordinate neighborhood U<sub>1</sub> = {(x<sub>1</sub> ... x<sub>n+1</sub>) | x<sub>1</sub> â 0} can be identified with the interior of n-disk D<sup>n</sup>. When x<sub>i</sub> = 0, one has RP<sup>nâÂÂ1</sup>. Therefore the nâÂÂ1 skeleton of RP<sup>n</sup> is RP<sup>nâÂÂ1</sup>, and the attaching map f : S<sup>nâÂÂ1</sup> â RP<sup>nâÂÂ1</sup> is the 2-to-1 covering map. One can put
Induction shows that RP<sup>n</sup> is a CW complex with 1 cell in every dimension up to n.
The cells are Schubert cells, as on the flag manifold. That is, take a complete flag (say the standard flag) 0 = V<sub>0</sub> < V<sub>1</sub> <...< V<sub>n</sub>; then the closed k-cell is lines that lie in V<sub>k</sub>. Also the open k-cell (the interior of the k-cell) is lines in (lines in V<sub>k</sub> but not V<sub>kâÂÂ1</sub>).
In homogeneous coordinates (with respect to the flag), the cells are
This is not a regular CW structure, as the attaching maps are 2-to-1. However, its cover is a regular CW structure on the sphere, with 2 cells in every dimension; indeed, the minimal regular CW structure on the sphere.
In light of the smooth structure, the existence of a Morse function would show RP<sup>n</sup> is a CW complex. One such function is given by, in homogeneous coordinates,
On each neighborhood U<sub>i</sub>, g has nondegenerate critical point (0,...,1,...,0) where 1 occurs in the i-th position with Morse index i. This shows RP<sup>n</sup> is a CW complex with 1 cell in every dimension.
Real projective space has a natural line bundle over it, called the tautological bundle. More precisely, this is called the tautological subbundle, and there is also a dual n-dimensional bundle called the tautological quotient bundle.
The higher homotopy groups of RP<sup>n</sup> are exactly the higher homotopy groups of S<sup>n</sup>, via the long exact sequence on homotopy associated to a fibration.
Explicitly, the fiber bundle is: You might also write this as or by analogy with complex projective space.
The homotopy groups are:
The cellular chain complex associated to the above CW structure has 1 cell in each dimension 0, ..., n. For each dimensional k, the boundary maps d<sub>k</sub> : ôD<sup>k</sup> â RP<sup>kâÂÂ1</sup>/RP<sup>kâÂÂ2</sup> is the map that collapses the equator on S<sup>kâÂÂ1</sup> and then identifies antipodal points. In odd (resp. even) dimensions, this has degree 0 (resp. 2):
Thus the integral homology is
RP<sup>n</sup> is orientable if and only if n is odd, as the above homology calculation shows.
The infinite real projective space is constructed as the direct limit or union of the finite projective spaces:
This space is classifying space of O(1), the first orthogonal group.
The double cover of this space is the infinite sphere , which is contractible. The infinite projective space is therefore the EilenbergâÂÂMacLane space K(Z<sub>2</sub>, 1).
For each nonnegative integer q, the modulo 2 homology group .
Its cohomology ring modulo 2 is
where is the first StiefelâÂÂWhitney class: it is the free -algebra on , which has degree 1.
Its cohomology ring with coefficients is
where has degree 2. It can be deduced from the chain map between cellular cochain complexes with and coefficients, which yield a ring homomorphism
injective in positive dimensions, with image the even dimensional part of . Alternatively, the result can also be obtained using the Universal coefficient theorem.