Could someone provide details on how to compute fundamental groups of real and complex Grassmann and Stiefel manifolds?
1 Answers
Grassmanians are homogeneous spaces.
In the real case, you have the oriented Grassmanian $G^0(k,\mathbb{R}^n)$ of oriented $k$-planes in $\mathbb{R}^n$ is diffeomorphic to $SO(n)/\left(SO(k)\times SO(n-k)\right)$ where $SO(n)$ is the collection of $n\times n$ special orthogonal matrices.
Likewise, the nonoriented Grassmanian $G(k,\mathbb{R}^n)$ of nonoriented $k$-planes in $\mathbb{R}^n$ is diffeomorphic to $SO(n)/S(O(k)\times O(n-k))$.
Finally, the complex Grassmanian, $G(k,\mathbb{C}^n)$, is diffeomorphic to $SU(n)/(SU(k)\times SU(n-k))$ where $SU(n)$ denotes the $n\times n$ special unitary matrices.
(Some slight modifications may be necessary when $k=0$ or $k=n$).
Once you have written them like this, you have a general theorem that given compact Lie groups $G$ and $H$, then $H\rightarrow G\rightarrow G/H$ is a fiber bundle. In particular, we can use the long exact homotopy sequence.
It follows immediately that the complex Grassmanian is simply connected because $SU(n)$ is both connected and simply connected.
In the real case, a bit more work needs to be done. For the oriented Grassmanian, it's enough to note that the canonical map $SO(k)\rightarrow SO(n)$ is a surjection on $\pi_1$ as soon as both $n$ and $k$ are bigger than 1, (isomorphism when $n,k>2$) and is always an isomorphism on $\pi_0$. Thus, the real oriented Grassmanian is simply connected.
This also gives the answer for the unoriented real Grassmanian because there is a natural double covering $G^0(k,\mathbb{R}^n)\rightarrow G(k,\mathbb{R}^n)$ given by forgetting the orientation. Hence, the real unoriented Grassmanian has $\pi_1=\mathbb{Z}/2\mathbb{Z}$.
Alternatively, note that the induced map from $S(O(k)\rightarrow O(n-k))$ to $SO(n)$ is an isomorphism on $\pi_1$, but that $S(O(k)\times O(n-k))$ has more than one component.
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Thanks for the detailed answer. I hope one can compute fundamental group of Stiefel manifolds in a similar way. – google Oct 03 '11 at 15:05
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@google, Stiefel manifolds are also homogeneous spaces—look in the corresponding Wikipedia page. The same argument will deal with them. – Mariano Suárez-Álvarez Oct 03 '11 at 15:51
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@google: I forgot about the Stiefel Manifolds bit - sorry! But Mariano is exactly correct. – Jason DeVito - on hiatus Oct 03 '11 at 16:56
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Re: Isomorphism at $\pi_1$ level of a map $SO(k)\rightarrow SO(n)$: My question: $SO(2)=S^1$ and $SO(3)=\mathbb RP^3$. So, I don't see how any map $SO(2)\hookrightarrow SO(3)$ induces an isomorphism at $\pi_1$ level! Is there more to be said about $k,n$ for such a map be a $\pi_1$-isomorphism? – Karthik C Jul 29 '13 at 05:21
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1@Aneesh: That should read "bigger than 2" instead of "bigger than 1.". When $k=2$, it's a surjection, which is still good enough for the rest of the argument. – Jason DeVito - on hiatus Jul 29 '13 at 19:19
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1@JasonDeVito Regarding real unoriented Grassmannians, for $k=1$ and $n=2$, $Gr(1,2)$ is the real projective line homeomorphic to circle with fundamental group $\mathbb{Z}.$ So I wonder if the assumption $n>1, k>1$ is continued for the paragraph below it? – テレビ スクリーン May 29 '23 at 17:31
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I suppose all of it is detailed in the answer here: https://math.stackexchange.com/a/1323094/801156 – テレビ スクリーン May 29 '23 at 17:37