text/obsolete/explicit.tex
author Scott Morrison <scott@tqft.net>
Sat, 26 Jun 2010 16:31:28 -0700
changeset 400 a02a6158f3bd
parent 281 630ceb40a07b
child 774 b88c4c4af945
permissions -rw-r--r--
Breaking up 'properties' in the intro into smaller subsections, converting many properties back to theorems, and numbering according to where they occur in the text. Not completely done, e.g. the action map which needs statements made consistent.

%!TEX root = ../../blob1.tex

Here's an alternative proof of the special case in which $P$, the parameter space for the family of diffeomorphisms, is a cube. It is much more explicit, for better or worse.

\begin{proof}[Alternative, more explicit proof of Lemma \ref{extension_lemma}]


Fix a finite open cover of $X$, say $(U_l)_{l=1}^L$, along with an
associated partition of unity $(r_l)$.

We'll define the homotopy $H:I \times P \times X \to X$ via a function
$u:I \times P \times X \to P$, with
\begin{equation*}
H(t,p,x) = F(u(t,p,x),x).
\end{equation*}

To begin, we'll define a function $u'' : I \times P \times X \to P$, and
a corresponding homotopy $H''$. This homotopy will just be a homotopy of
$F$ through families of maps, not through families of diffeomorphisms. On
the other hand, it will be quite simple to describe, and we'll later
explain how to build the desired function $u$ out of it.

For each $l = 1, \ldots, L$, pick some $C^\infty$ function $f_l : I \to
I$ which is identically $0$ on a neighborhood of the closed interval $[0,\frac{l-1}{L}]$
and identically $1$ on a neighborhood of the closed interval $[\frac{l}{L},1]$. (Monotonic?
Fix a bound for the derivative?) We'll extend it to a function on
$k$-tuples $f_l : I^k \to I^k$ pointwise.

Define $$u''(t,p,x) = \sum_{l=1}^L r_l(x) u_l(t,p),$$ with
$$u_l(t,p) = t f_l(p) + (1-t)p.$$ Notice that the $i$-th component of $u''(t,p,x)$ depends only on the $i$-th component of $p$.

Let's now establish some properties of $u''$ and $H''$. First,
\begin{align*}
H''(0,p,x) & = F(u''(0,p,x),x) \\
           & = F(\sum_{l=1}^L r_l(x) p, x) \\
           & = F(p,x).
\end{align*}
Next, calculate the derivatives
\begin{align*}
\partial_{p_i} H''(1,p,x) & = \partial_{p_i}u''(1,p,x) \partial_1 F(u(1,p,x),x) \\
\intertext{and}
\partial_{p_i}u''(1,p,x) & = \sum_{l=1}^L r_l(x) \partial_{p_i} f_l(p).
\end{align*}
Now $\partial_{p_i} f_l(p) = 0$ unless $\frac{l-1}{L} < p_i < \frac{l}{L}$, and $r_l(x) = 0$ unless $x \in U_l$,
so we conclude that for a fixed $p$, $\partial_p H''(1,p,x) = 0$ for all $x$ outside the union of $k$ open sets from the open cover, namely
$\bigcup_{i=1}^k U_{l_i}$ where for each $i$, we choose $l_i$ so $\frac{l_i -1}{L} \leq p_i \leq \frac{l_i}{L}$. It may be helpful to refer to Figure \ref{fig:supports}.

\begin{figure}[!ht]
\begin{equation*}
\mathfig{0.5}{explicit/supports}
\end{equation*}
\caption{The supports of the derivatives {\color{green}$\partial_p f_1$}, {\color{blue}$\partial_p f_2$} and {\color{red}$\partial_p f_3$}, illustrating the case $k=2$, $L=3$. Notice that any
point $p$ lies in the intersection of at most $k$ supports. The support of $\partial_p u''(1,p,x)$ is contained in the union of these supports.}
\label{fig:supports}
\end{figure}

Unfortunately, $H''$ does not have the desired property that it's a homotopy through diffeomorphisms. To achieve this, we'll paste together several copies
of the map $u''$. First, glue together $2^k$ copies, defining $u':I \times P \times X$ by
\begin{align*}
u'(t,p,x)_i & =
\begin{cases}
\frac{1}{2} u''(t, 2p_i, x)_i & \text{if $0 \leq p_i \leq \frac{1}{2}$} \\
1-\frac{1}{2} u''(t, 2-2p_i, x)_i & \text{if $\frac{1}{2} \leq p_i \leq 1$}.
\end{cases}
\end{align*}
(Note that we're abusing notation somewhat, using the fact that $u''(t,p,x)_i$ depends on $p$ only through $p_i$.)
To see what's going on here, it may be helpful to look at Figure \ref{fig:supports_4}, which shows the support of $\partial_p u'(1,p,x)$.
\begin{figure}[!ht]
\begin{equation*}
\mathfig{0.4}{explicit/supports_4} \qquad \qquad \mathfig{0.4}{explicit/supports_36}
\end{equation*}
\caption{The supports of $\partial_p u'(1,p,x)$ and of $\partial_p u(1,p,x)$ (with $K=3$) are subsets of the indicated region.}
\label{fig:supports_4}
\end{figure}

Second, pick some $K$, and define
\begin{align*}
u(t,p,x) & = \frac{\floor{K p}}{K} + \frac{1}{K} u'\left(t, K \left(p - \frac{\floor{K p}}{K}\right), x\right).
\end{align*}

\todo{Explain that the localisation property survives for $u'$ and $u$.}

We now check that by making $K$ large enough, $H$ becomes a homotopy through diffeomorphisms. We start with
$$\partial_x H(t,p,x) = \partial_x u(t,p,x) \partial_1 F(u(t,p,x), x) + \partial_2 F(u(t,p,x), x)$$
and observe that since $F(p, -)$ is a diffeomorphism, the second term $\partial_2 F(u(t,p,x), x)$ is bounded away from $0$. Thus if we can control the
size of the first term $\partial_x u(t,p,x) \partial_1 F(u(t,p,x), x)$ we're done. The factor $\partial_1 F(u(t,p,x), x)$ is bounded, and we
calculate \todo{err... this is a mess, and probably wrong.}
\begin{align*}
\partial_x u(t,p,x)_i & = \partial_x \frac{1}{K} u'\left(t, K\left(p - \frac{\floor{K p}}{K}\right), x\right)_i \\
                      & = \pm \frac{1}{2 K} \partial_x u''\left(t, (1\mp1)\pm 2K\left(p_i-\frac{\floor{K p}}{K}\right), x\right)_i \\
                      & = \pm \frac{1}{2 K} \sum_{l=1}^L (\partial_x r_l(x)) u_l\left(t, (1\mp1)\pm 2K\left(p_i-\frac{\floor{K p}}{K}\right)\right)_i. \\
\intertext{Since the target of $u_l$ is just the unit cube $I^k$, we can make the estimate}
\norm{\partial_x u(t,p,x)_i} & \leq \frac{1}{2 K} \sum_{l=1}^L \norm{\partial_x r_l(x)}.
\end{align*}
The sum here is bounded, so for large enough $K$ this is small enough that $\partial_x H(t,p,x)$ is never zero.

\end{proof}