Complex projective space
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In mathematics, complex projective space, or CPn, is the projective space of (complex) lines in Cn+1. The case n = 1 gives the Riemann sphere (also called the complex projective line), and the case n = 2 the complex projective plane.
Complex projective space is a complex manifold that may be described by n+1 complex coordinates as
- [(z_1,z_2,\ldots,z_) \in \mathbb^,\qquad (z_1,z_2,\ldots,z_)\neq (0,0,\ldots,0)]
- [(z_1,z_2,\ldots,z_) \equiv (\lambda z_1,\lambda z_2, \ldots,\lambda z_);\quad \lambda\in \mathbb,\qquad \lambda \neq 0.]
CPn is a complex manifold of complex dimension n, so is has real dimension 2n. It is a special case of a Grassmannian, and is a homogeneous space for various Lie groups. It is a Kähler manifold carrying the Fubini-Study metric, which is essentially determined by symmetry properties.
One may also regard CPn as a quotient of the unit 2n+1 sphere in Cn+1 under the action of U(1):
- CPn = S2n+1/U(1)
In general, the algebraic topology of CPn is based on the rank of the homology groups being zero in odd dimensions; also H2i(CPn, Z) is infinite cyclic for i = 0 to n. Therefore the Betti numbers run
- 1, 0, 1, 0, ..., 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, ...
- Z[T]/(Tn+1),
There is a space CP∞ which, in a sense, is the limit of CPn as n → ∞. It is BU(1), the classifying space of U(1), in the sense of homotopy theory, and so classifies complex line bundles; equivalently it accounts for the first Chern class. CP∞ is also the same as the infinite-dimensional projective unitary group; see that article for additional properties and discussion.
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