Branch-decomposition

From formulasearchengine
Revision as of 11:49, 20 May 2013 by en>WereSpielChequers (planer planar)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Cleanup

Given a size pair (M,f) where M is a manifold of dimension n and f is an arbitrary real continuous function defined on it, the i-th size functor,[1] with i=0,,n, denoted by Fi, is the functor in Fun(Rord,Ab), where Rord is the category of ordered real numbers, and Ab is the category of Abelian groups, defined in the following way. For xy, setting Mx={pM:f(p)x}, My={pM:f(p)y}, jxy equal to the inclusion from Mx into My, and kxy equal to the morphism in Rord from x to y,

In other words, the size functor studies the process of the birth and death of homology classes as the lower level set changes. When M is smooth and compact and f is a Morse function, the functor F0 can be described by oriented trees, called H0 − trees.

The concept of size functor was introduced as an extension to homology theory and category theory of the idea of size function. The main motivation for introducing the size functor originated by the observation that the size function (M,f)(x,y) can be seen as the rank of the image of H0(jxy):H0(Mx)H0(My).

The concept of size functor is strictly related to the concept of persistent homology group ,[2] studied in persistent homology. It is worth to point out that the i-th persistent homology group coincides with the image of the homomorphism Fi(kxy)=Hi(jxy):Hi(Mx)Hi(My).

References

43 year old Petroleum Engineer Harry from Deep River, usually spends time with hobbies and interests like renting movies, property developers in singapore new condominium and vehicle racing. Constantly enjoys going to destinations like Camino Real de Tierra Adentro.

See also

  1. Francesca Cagliari, Massimo Ferri, Paola Pozzi, Size functions from a categorical viewpoint, Acta Applicandae Mathematicae, 67(3):225-235, 2001.
  2. Herbert Edelsbrunner, David Letscher, Afra Zomorodian, Topological Persistence and Simplification, Discrete and Computational Geometry, 28(4):511-533, 2002.