A metric Kan-Thurston theorem
Abstract
For every simplicial complex X, we construct a locally CAT(0) cubical complex TX, a cellular isometric involution i on TX and a map tX from TX to X with the following properties: tXi = tX; tX is a homology isomorphism; the induced map from the quotient of TX by the involution i to X is a homotopy equivalence; the induced map from the fixed point subspace for i in TX to X is a homology isomorphism. The construction is functorial in X. One corollary is an equivariant Kan-Thurston theorem: every connected proper G-CW-complex has the same equivariant homology as the classifying space for proper actions of some other group. From this we obtain an extension of Quillen's theorem on the spectrum of an equivariant cohomology ring and an extension of a result of Block concerning assembly conjectures. Another corollary of our main result is that there can be no algorithm to decide whether a CAT(0) cubical group is generated by torsion. In appendices we prove some foundational results concerning cubical complexes, including the infinite dimensional case. We characterize the cubical complexes for which the natural metric is complete; we establish Gromov's criterion for infinite-dimensional cubical complexes; we show that every CAT(0) cube complex is cubical; we deduce that the second cubical subdivision of any locally CAT(0) cube complex is cubical.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.