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We define and develop a homotopy invariant notion for the topological complexity of a map $f:X to Y$, denoted TC($f$), that interacts with TC($X$) and TC($Y$) in the same way cat($f$) interacts with cat($X$) and cat($Y$). Furthermore, TC($f$) and cat($f$) satisfy the same inequalities as TC($X$) and cat($X$). We compare it to other invariants defined in the papers [15,16,17,18,20]. We apply TC($f$) to studying group homomorphisms $f:Hto G$.
Let $mathrm{TC}_r(X)$ denote the $r$-th topological complexity of a space $X$. In many cases, the generating function $sum_{rge 1}mathrm{TC}_{r+1}(X)x^r$ is a rational function $frac{P(x)}{(1-x)^2}$ where $P(x)$ is a polynomial with $P(1)=mathrm{cat}
We prove the formula $TC(Gast H)=max{TC(G), TC(H), cd(Gtimes H)}$ for the topological complexity of the free product of discrete groups with cohomological dimension >2.
The Lusternik-Schnirelmann category and topological complexity are important invariants of manifolds (and more generally, topological spaces). We study the behavior of these invariants under the operation of taking the connected sum of manifolds. We
In arXiv:1711.10132 a new approximating invariant ${mathsf{TC}}^{mathcal{D}}$ for topological complexity was introduced called $mathcal{D}$-topological complexity. In this paper, we explore more fully the properties of ${mathsf{TC}}^{mathcal{D}}$ and
Multiparameter persistence is a natural extension of the well-known persistent homology, which has attracted a lot of interest. However, there are major theoretical obstacles preventing the full development of this promising theory. In this paper w