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Let $P_1 ,...,P_5$ be mutually distinct planes in $\Bbb{R}^3$ such that:

  • the intersection of any distinct 2 is a line.
  • the intersection of any distinct 3 is a point.
  • the intersection of any distinct 4 is an empty set.

Let $X=\bigcup_{i=1} ^5 P_i$ with the topology as a subspace of $\Bbb{R}^3$

Given that $\chi (X)=5$ and that $X$ is simply connected, how do you compute its homology with integral coefficients?

1 Answers1

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The space is a CW-complex of dimension $2$, so there are only $H_0$, $H_1$ and $H_2$ to care for. Since it is connected, $H_0\cong\mathbb Z$ and since you say it is simply connected, $H_1=0$. It follows that $H_2$ must be an abelian group of rank $4$ if the Euler characteristic is to be $5$, as you claim it is.

So you are left with finding the possible torsion in $H_2$.


Consider the plane $P_1$ and the four lines $P_1\cap P_i$ with $2\leq i\leq 5$. They intersect in pairs and no three are concurrent. They divide the plane in 10 components, 7 of which are unbounded. Of course, the same picture shows up in each of the five planes.

Let $Z$ be the subspace of $X$ which is the union of all the bounded pieces in the five planes, and let $Y$ be the subspace of $X$ which is the union of $Z$ and the ten lines which appear as pairwise intersections of the $5$ planes. Then $X$ deformation-retracts onto $Y$ (one can deform each of the unbounded $2$-dimensional cells onto their boundaries) and $Y$ deformation-retracts onto $Z$ (one can contract each outgoing half-ray to its vertex. (Of course, one should draw pictures of all this to make sense of it :-) )

Now view $\mathbb R^3$ as a subset of $S^3$ (one-point compactification). Then $Z$ is a subspace of $S^3$. Alexander duality tells us that $\tilde H_2(Z)\cong\tilde H^0(S^3\setminus Z)$ (here the tildes mean reduced (co)homology) Since $\tilde H^0(S^3\setminus Z)$ is a free group, this implies $H_2(X)=H_2(Z)=\tilde H_2(Z)$ is free.

The previous observations, then, imply that $H_2(X)\cong\mathbb Z^4$.


Notice that the $4$ is one less than the number of components of $S^3\setminus Z$. One can compute this directly, without the hypothesis that $\chi(X)=5$. Indeed, there is a well-known formula for the number of bounded components in the complement of a arrangement of hyperplanes due to Zavlasky, which gives this number in terms of the intersection poset of the arrangement, and here it is completely given. This is explained, for example, in this very nice notes by Richard Stanley on arrangements of hyperplanes.

Also, Alexander duality also gives $H_1(X)\cong H^1(S^3\setminus Z)$. Now $S^3\setminus Z$ is the disjoint union of the «big component», that is, the unbounded component of $Z$, and the bounded components in the arrangement of hyperplanes: all these are contractible, so $H^1(S^3\setminus Z)$ is zero. This means we can also dispense with the hypothesis that $X$ is simply connected.


All this will work for a general arrangement of hyperplanes in $\mathbb R^n$, of course. The conclusion will be that the union of the hyperplanes has the homology of a wedge of spheres, as many as there are bounded components in the complement of the arrangement. In fact,I suspect the space is actually homotopically equivalent to such a wedge of spheres. This should be well-known by the people who know such things —I'd look in the book by Orlik and Terao.

  • I get the first two, but why is it that Euler characteristic 5 implies $H2$ is an abelian group of rank 4? – user61974 Feb 13 '13 at 08:38
  • Because $\chi$ is the alternating sum of the ranks of $H_0$, which is $1$, of $H_1$, which is $0$, and of $H_2$, which we don't know so we may call it $r$: then $5=1-0+r$, and $r$ must be $4$. – Mariano Suárez-Álvarez Feb 13 '13 at 08:45
  • I didn't actually know that, thank you for your answer. One last thing, do you know what they mean with the part "with integral coefficients"? Would it have changed anything of it just said "compute the homology"? – user61974 Feb 13 '13 at 08:51
  • What was your definition for the Euler characteristic, then? – Mariano Suárez-Álvarez Feb 13 '13 at 09:02
  • «The homology» is the same, usually, as «the homology with integer coefficients». If the coefficients were a field, then all the second part I just wrote is not needed. Your comments make me think that you should probably review what the integral homology is a bit... – Mariano Suárez-Álvarez Feb 13 '13 at 09:03
  • My definition was from the formula for polyhedra, and I actually found it was 5 through the exclusion principle. You're right, I should review it, I actually didn't expect to find any question about homologies in this exercise and it threw me off quite a bit. – user61974 Feb 13 '13 at 09:13
  • since the space is not compact, it cannot be triangulated with finitely many simplices, and then your definition does not work on it. – Mariano Suárez-Álvarez Feb 13 '13 at 09:17
  • Which is why I was getting nowhere I guess... – user61974 Feb 13 '13 at 09:21