called the Hurewicz homomorphism, from the n-th homotopy group to the n-th homology group (with integer coefficients). It is given in the following way: choose a canonical generator , then a homotopy class of maps is taken to .
The Hurewicz theorem states cases in which the Hurewicz homomorphism is an isomorphism.
For , if X is -connected (that is: for all ), then for all , and the Hurewicz map is an isomorphism.[1]: 366, Thm.4.32 This implies, in particular, that the homological connectivity equals the homotopical connectivity when the latter is at least 1. In addition, the Hurewicz map is an epimorphism in this case.[1]: 390, ?
For any pair of spaces and integer there exists a homomorphism
from relative homotopy groups to relative homology groups. The Relative Hurewicz Theorem states that if both and are connected and the pair is -connected then for and is obtained from by factoring out the action of . This is proved in, for example, Whitehead (1978) by induction, proving in turn the absolute version and the Homotopy Addition Lemma.
This relative Hurewicz theorem is reformulated by Brown & Higgins (1981) as a statement about the morphism
where denotes the cone of . This statement is a special case of a homotopical excision theorem, involving induced modules for (crossed modules if ), which itself is deduced from a higher homotopy van Kampen theorem for relative homotopy groups, whose proof requires development of techniques of a cubical higher homotopy groupoid of a filtered space.
Triadic version
For any triad of spaces (i.e., a space X and subspaces A, B) and integer there exists a homomorphism
from triad homotopy groups to triad homology groups. Note that
The Triadic Hurewicz Theorem states that if X, A, B, and are connected, the pairs and are -connected and -connected, respectively, and the triad is -connected, then for and is obtained from by factoring out the action of and the generalised Whitehead products. The proof of this theorem uses a higher homotopy van Kampen type theorem for triadic homotopy groups, which requires a notion of the fundamental -group of an n-cube of spaces.
Simplicial set version
The Hurewicz theorem for topological spaces can also be stated for n-connected simplicial sets satisfying the Kan condition.[2]
Rational Hurewicz theorem
Rational Hurewicz theorem:[3][4] Let X be a simply connected topological space with for . Then the Hurewicz map
Brown, Ronald (1989), "Triadic Van Kampen theorems and Hurewicz theorems", Algebraic topology (Evanston, IL, 1988), Contemporary Mathematics, vol. 96, Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society, pp. 39–57, doi:10.1090/conm/096/1022673, ISBN9780821851029, MR1022673
Brown, Ronald; Higgins, P. J. (1981), "Colimit theorems for relative homotopy groups", Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra, 22: 11–41, doi:10.1016/0022-4049(81)90080-3, ISSN0022-4049