Phantom map

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In homotopy theory, phantom maps are continuous maps [math]\displaystyle{ f: X \to Y }[/math] of CW-complexes for which the restriction of [math]\displaystyle{ f }[/math] to any finite subcomplex [math]\displaystyle{ Z \subset X }[/math] is inessential (i.e., nullhomotopic). J. Frank Adams and Grant Walker (1964) produced the first known nontrivial example of such a map with [math]\displaystyle{ Y }[/math] finite-dimensional (answering a question of Paul Olum). Shortly thereafter, the terminology of "phantom map" was coined by Brayton Gray (1966), who constructed a stably essential phantom map from infinite-dimensional complex projective space to [math]\displaystyle{ S^3 }[/math].[1] The subject was analysed in the thesis of Gray, much of which was elaborated and later published in (Gray & McGibbon 1993). Similar constructions are defined for maps of spectra.[2]

Definition

Let [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math] be a regular cardinal. A morphism [math]\displaystyle{ f: x \longrightarrow y }[/math] in the homotopy category of spectra is called an [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math]-phantom map if, for any spectrum s with fewer than [math]\displaystyle{ \alpha }[/math] cells, any composite [math]\displaystyle{ s \longrightarrow x \xrightarrow{f} y }[/math] vanishes.[3]

References

  1. Mathew, Akhil (2012-06-13). "An example of a phantom map" (in en). https://amathew.wordpress.com/2012/06/13/an-example-of-a-phantom-map/. 
  2. Lurie, Jacob (2010-04-27). "Phantom Maps (Lecture 17)". https://www.math.ias.edu/~lurie/252xnotes/Lecture17.pdf. 
  3. Neeman, Amnon (2010). Triangulated Categories. Princeton University Press.