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In mathematics, homology theory is the axiomatic study of the intuitive geometric idea of homology of cycles on topological spaces. It can be broadly defined as the study of homology theories on topological spaces.
At the intuitive level homology is taken to be an equivalence relation, such that chains C and D are homologous on the space X if the chain C − D is a boundary of a chain of one dimension higher. A k-chain is thought of as a formal combination
where the ai are integers and the di are k-dimensional simplices on X. The boundary concept here is that taken over from the boundary of a simplex. This explanation is in the style of 1900, and proved somewhat naive, technically speaking.
For example if X is a 2- torus T, a one-dimensional cycle on T is in intuitive terms a linear combination of curves drawn on T, which closes up on itself (cycle condition, equivalent to having no net boundary). If C and D are cycles each wrapping once round T in the same way, we can find explicitly an oriented area on T with boundary C − D. Topologists can prove that the homology classes of 1-cycles with integer coefficients form a free abelian group with two generators, one generator for each of the two different ways round the 'doughnut'.
This level of understanding was common property in the mathematics of the nineteenth century, starting with the idea of Riemann surface. At the end of the century, the work of Poincaré had provided a much more general, though still intuitively-based, setting.
For example, it is considered that the general Stokes' theoremStokes' theorem in differential geometry is a statement about the integration of differential forms which generalizes several theorems from vector calculus. It is named after Sir George Gabriel Stokes ( 1819- 1903). Let M be an oriented piecewise smooth m was first stated in 1899 by Poincaré: it involves necessarily both an integrand (we would now say, a differential formGentler (and longer) introduction We initially work in an open set in R n''. A 0-form is defined to be a smooth function f''. When we integrate a function f over an m dimensional subspace S of R n we write it as : Consider dx . dx for a moment as formal o), and a region of integration (a p-chain), with two kinds of boundary operators, one of which in modern terms is the exterior derivativeIn mathematics, the exterior derivative operator of differential topology, extends the concept of the differential of a function to differential forms of higher degree. It is important in the theory of integration on manifolds, and is the differential use, and the other a geometric boundary operator on chainsIn set theory, a chain is a total order subset of a poset. See also Ascending Chain Condition and Descending Chain Condition. Algebraic topology In algebraic topology, a simplicial k chain is a formal linear combination of k simplices. Integration on chai that includes orientation and can be used for homology theory. The two boundaries appear as adjoint operators, with respect to integration.