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A Mayer-Vietoris Sequence is a powerful tool used in finding Homology groups for spaces that can be expressed as the unions of simpler spaces from the perspective of Homology theory.
If X is a topological space covered by the interiors of two subspaces A and B, then
⋯
→
H
n
+
1
(
X
)
→
∂
∗
H
n
(
A
∩
B
)
→
(
i
∗
,
j
∗
)
H
n
(
A
)
⊕
H
n
(
B
)
→
k
∗
−
l
∗
H
n
(
X
)
→
∂
∗
H
n
−
1
(
A
∩
B
)
→
⋯
→
H
0
(
A
)
⊕
H
0
(
B
)
→
k
∗
−
l
∗
H
0
(
X
)
→
0.
{\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}\cdots \rightarrow H_{n+1}(X)\,&{\xrightarrow {\partial _{*}}}\,H_{n}(A\cap B)\,{\xrightarrow {(i_{*},j_{*})}}\,H_{n}(A)\oplus H_{n}(B)\,{\xrightarrow {k_{*}-l_{*}}}\,H_{n}(X){\xrightarrow {\partial _{*}}}\,H_{n-1}(A\cap B)\rightarrow \\&\quad \cdots \rightarrow H_{0}(A)\oplus H_{0}(B)\,{\xrightarrow {k_{*}-l_{*}}}\,H_{0}(X)\rightarrow \,0.\end{aligned}}}
is an exact sequence where
i
:
A
∩
B
↪
A
,
j
:
A
∩
B
↪
B
,
l
:
A
↪
X
,
k
:
B
↪
X
{\displaystyle i:A\cap B\hookrightarrow A,j:A\cap B\hookrightarrow B,l:A\hookrightarrow X,k:B\hookrightarrow X}
. There is a slight adaptation for the reduced homology where the sequence ends instead
⋯
→
H
~
0
(
A
∩
B
)
→
(
i
∗
,
j
∗
)
)
H
~
0
(
A
)
⊕
H
~
0
(
B
)
→
k
∗
−
l
∗
H
~
0
(
X
)
→
0.
{\displaystyle \cdots \rightarrow {\tilde {H}}_{0}(A\cap B){\xrightarrow {(i_{*},j_{*}))}}{\tilde {H}}_{0}(A)\oplus {\tilde {H}}_{0}(B)\,{\xrightarrow {k_{*}-l_{*}}}\,{\tilde {H}}_{0}(X)\rightarrow \,0.}
Consider the cover of
S
2
{\displaystyle S^{2}}
formed by 2-discs A and B in the figure.
S
2
{\displaystyle S^{2}}
covered by 2-discs A and B
The space
A
∩
B
{\displaystyle A\cap B}
is homotopy equivalent to the circle. We know that the homology groups are preserved by homotopy and so
H
n
(
A
∩
B
)
≅
0
{\displaystyle H_{n}(A\cap B)\cong 0}
for
n
≠
1
{\displaystyle n\neq 1}
and
H
1
(
A
∩
B
)
≅
Z
{\displaystyle H_{1}(A\cap B)\cong \mathbb {Z} }
. Also note how the homology groups of A and B are trivial since they are both contractable. So we know that
0
→
H
~
2
(
S
2
)
→
∂
∗
Z
→
0
{\displaystyle 0\rightarrow {\tilde {H}}_{2}(S^{2})\xrightarrow {\partial _{*}} \mathbb {Z} \rightarrow 0}
This means that
H
~
2
(
S
2
)
≅
Z
{\displaystyle {\tilde {H}}_{2}(S^{2})\cong \mathbb {Z} }
since
∂
∗
{\displaystyle \partial _{*}}
is an isomorphism by exactness.
Consider the cover of the torus by 2 open ended cylinders A and B.
How we choose A and B.
(under construction)