Covering Space - More On The Group Structure

More On The Group Structure

Let p : CX be a covering map where both X and C are path-connected. Let xX be a basepoint of X and let cC be one of its pre-images in C, that is p(c) = x. There is an induced homomorphism of fundamental groups p# : π1(C, c) → π1(X,x) which is injective by the lifting property of coverings. Specifically if γ is a closed loop at c such that p# = 1, that is p o γ is null-homotopic in X, then consider a null-homotopy of p o γ as a map f : D2 → X from the 2-disc D2 to X such that the restriction of f to the boundary S1 of D2 is equal to p o γ. By the lifting property the map f lifts to a continuous map g : D2 → C such that the restriction of f to the boundary S1 of D2 is equal to γ. Therefore γ is null-homotopic in C, so that the kernel of p# : π1(C,c) → π1(X,x) is trivial and thus p# : π1(C, c) → π1(X, x) is an injective homomorphism.

Therefore π1(C,c) is isomorphic to the subgroup p#1(C, c)) of π1(X, x). If c1C is another pre-image of x in C then the subgroups p#1(C, c)) and p#1(C,c1)) are conjugate in π1(X,x) by p-image of a curve in C connecting c to c1. Thus a covering map p : CX defines a conjugacy class of subgroups of π1(X,x) and one can show that equivalent covers of X define the same conjugacy class of subgroups of π1(X,x).

For a covering p : CX the group p#1(C,c)) can also be seen to be equal to

,

the set of homotopy classes of those closed curves γ based at x whose lifts γC in C, starting at c, are closed curves at c. If X and C are path-connected, the degree of the cover p (that is, the cardinality of any fiber of p) is equal to the index of the subgroup p#1(C,c)) in π1(X, x).

A key result of the covering space theory says that for a "sufficiently good" space X (namely, if X is path-connected, locally path-connected and semi-locally simply connected) there is in fact a bijection between equivalence classes of path-connected covers of X and the conjugacy classes of subgroups of the fundamental group π1(X, x). The main step in proving this result is establishing the existence of a universal cover, that is a cover corresponding to the trivial subgroup of π1(X, x). Once the existence of a universal cover C of X is established, if H ≤ π1(X, x) is an arbitrary subgroup, the space C/H is the covering of X corresponding to H. One also needs to check that two covers of C corresponding to the same (conjugacy class of) subgroup of π1(X, x) are equivalent. Connected cell complexes and connected manifolds are examples of "sufficiently good" spaces.

Let N(Γp) be the normalizer of Γp in π1(X,x). The deck transformation group Aut(p) is isomorphic to the quotient group N(Γp)/Γp. If p is a universal covering, then Γp is the trivial group, and Aut(p) is isomorphic to π1(X).

Let us reverse this argument. Let N be a normal subgroup of π1(X, x). By the above arguments, this defines a (regular) covering p : CX . Let c1 in C be in the fiber of x. Then for every other c2 in the fiber of x, there is precisely one deck transformation that takes c1 to c2. This deck transformation corresponds to a curve g in C connecting c1 to c2.

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