Abstract
The cone length Cl(f) of a map f: X → Y is defined to be the least number of attaching maps possible in a conic (or iterated mapping cone) structure for f. Cone length is a homotopy invariant in the sense that if φ: X → X and ρ: Y → Y are homotopy equivalences then Cl (ρ°f°φ) = Cl(f). Furthermore Cl(f) depends only on the homotopy class of f. It was shown by Ganea [8] that the cone length of the map * → X coincides with the strong Lusternik-Schnirelmann category of X as a space (see Proposition 1.6 below). Recent work of Cornea ([3]–[6]) is much concerned with cone length and its role in critical point theory. For example, let f be a smooth real valued function on a manifold triad (M; V0, V1) with V0 ≠ θ. Under certain conditions, if f has only “reasonable” critical points then it must have at least Cl(V0↪M) of them (see [6]).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
4 articles.
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1. Composition properties of box brackets;Journal of the Mathematical Society of Japan;2009-02-01
2. The Cone Length and Category of Maps: Pushouts, Products and Fibrations;Bulletin of the Belgian Mathematical Society - Simon Stevin;2004-12-01
3. The sectional category of a map;Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Section A Mathematics;2004-08
4. The Whitehead products and powers in $W$-topology;Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society;2002-10-18