Geometric topology | Fiber bundles | Differential geometry | Homotopy theory | Algebraic topology

Hopf fibration

In the mathematical field of differential topology, the Hopf fibration (also known as the Hopf bundle or Hopf map) describes a 3-sphere (a hypersphere in four-dimensional space) in terms of circles and an ordinary sphere. Discovered by Heinz Hopf in 1931, it is an influential early example of a fiber bundle. Technically, Hopf found a many-to-one continuous function (or "map") from the 3-sphere onto the 2-sphere such that each distinct point of the 2-sphere is mapped from a distinct great circle of the 3-sphere. Thus the 3-sphere is composed of fibers, where each fiber is a circle — one for each point of the 2-sphere. This fiber bundle structure is denoted meaning that the fiber space S1 (a circle) is embedded in the total space S3 (the 3-sphere), and p : S3 → S2 (Hopf's map) projects S3 onto the base space S2 (the ordinary 2-sphere). The Hopf fibration, like any fiber bundle, has the important property that it is locally a product space. However it is not a trivial fiber bundle, i.e., S3 is not globally a product of S2 and S1 although locally it is indistinguishable from it. This has many implications: for example the existence of this bundle shows that the higher homotopy groups of spheres are not trivial in general. It also provides a basic example of a principal bundle, by identifying the fiber with the circle group. Stereographic projection of the Hopf fibration induces a remarkable structure on R3, in which all of 3-dimensional space, except for the z-axis, is filled with nested tori made of linking Villarceau circles. Here each fiber projects to a circle in space (one of which is a line, thought of as a "circle through infinity"). Each torus is the stereographic projection of the inverse image of a circle of latitude of the 2-sphere. (Topologically, a torus is the product of two circles.) These tori are illustrated in the images at right. When R3 is compressed to the boundary of a ball, some geometric structure is lost although the topological structure is retained (see Topology and geometry). The loops are homeomorphic to circles, although they are not geometric circles. There are numerous generalizations of the Hopf fibration. The unit sphere in complex coordinate space Cn+1 fibers naturally over the complex projective space CPn with circles as fibers, and there are also real, quaternionic, and octonionic versions of these fibrations. In particular, the Hopf fibration belongs to a family of four fiber bundles in which the total space, base space, and fiber space are all spheres: By Adams's theorem such fibrations can occur only in these dimensions. The Hopf fibration is important in twistor theory. (Wikipedia).

Hopf fibration
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What is the Hopf Fibration?

In this video I shed some light on a heavily alluded to and poorly explained object, the Hopf Fibration. The Hopf Fibration commonly shows up in discussions surrounding gauge theories and fundamental physics, though its construction is not so mysterious.

From playlist Summer of Math Exposition Youtube Videos

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Hopf Fibration 1

This shows a 3d print of a mathematical sculpture I produced using shapeways.com. This model is available at http://shpws.me/1mUo

From playlist 3D printing

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Hopf Fibration (grid)

This shows a 3d print of a mathematical sculpture I produced using shapeways.com. This model is available at http://shpws.me/3bz5

From playlist 3D printing

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Dimensions Chapter 7

Chapter 7 of the Dimensions series. See http://www.dimensions-math.org for more information. Press the 'CC' button for subtitles.

From playlist Dimensions

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Hopf link bagel

A bagel cut into a Hopf link.

From playlist Algebraic Topology

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Hopf Fibration and Homotopy

We visualize Hopf fibration in an alternative way: by showing it as a self-homotopy of the 0 map of S^2 to S^2. This is an outcome work of the workshop http://illustratingmath-pcmi.org/ .

From playlist Summer of Math Exposition Youtube Videos

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Ralph Kaufmann: Graph Hopf algebras and their framework

The lecture was held within the framework of the Hausdorff Trimester Program: Periods in Number Theory, Algebraic Geometry and Physics. Abstract: I will discuss recent results linking the Hopf algebras of Goncharov for multiple zetas, the Hopf algebra of Connes and Kreimer for renormalis

From playlist Workshop: "Amplitudes and Periods"

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The Hopf Fibration via Higher Inductive Types - Peter Lumsdaine

Peter Lumsdaine Dalhousie University; Member, School of Mathematics February 13, 2013 For more videos, visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

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Physics experiments Measure Laplace force (science demonstrations)

Physics (la physique).Measure Laplace force on a wire with electronic scale.

From playlist ELECTROMAGNETISM

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Homotopy Group - (1)Dan Licata, (2)Guillaume Brunerie, (3)Peter Lumsdaine

(1)Carnegie Mellon Univ.; Member, School of Math, (2)School of Math., IAS, (3)Dalhousie Univ.; Member, School of Math April 11, 2013 In this general survey talk, we will describe an approach to doing homotopy theory within Univalent Foundations. Whereas classical homotopy theory may be des

From playlist Mathematics

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Dimensions Chapter 8

Chapter 8 of the Dimensions series. See http://www.dimensions-math.org for more information. Press the 'CC' button for subtitles.

From playlist Dimensions

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Cylindrical contact homology as a well-defined homology? - Joanna Nelson

Joanna Nelson University of Wisconsin-Madison September 30, 2013 For more videos, visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

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Twisted Earth

This shows a 3d print of a mathematical sculpture I produced using shapeways.com. http://shpws.me/plAX.

From playlist 3D printing

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AWESOME Electromagnetic force oscillation!!!

In this video i show electromagnetic force oscillation on a ruler. Also i demonstrate the standing wave on a ruler!

From playlist ELECTROMAGNETISM

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Euler angles | Qubit | 3-sphere | Principal bundle | Heinz Hopf | Fiber bundle | Homeomorphism | Homotopy group | Special unitary group | Hopf invariant | Continuous function | Origin (mathematics) | Homotopy groups of spheres | Twistor theory | Riemann sphere | Quaternion | Projective space | Quotient space (topology) | Spin group | Point at infinity | Soliton | Torus | Cayley plane | Disjoint union | Great circle | Real projective space | Complex coordinate space | Natural number | Cartesian coordinate system | Octonion | Real number | Sphere | Embedding | Isometry | Euclidean space | Hopf link | Circle group | N-sphere | Stereographic projection | Versor | Subset | Differential topology | 3-torus | Real projective line | Complex conjugate | Orthogonal matrix | Equivalence relation | Exotic sphere | Navier–Stokes equations | Complex number | Symplectic group | Division algebra | Villarceau circles | Geometry | Quaternionic projective space | Complex projective space | Bloch sphere | Circle | Four-dimensional space | Antipodal point