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Given a path-connected space $X$ and $Hleqpi_1(X,x_0)$, there is essentially only one construction of a map $p_H:(widetilde{X}_H,widetilde{x}_0)rightarrow(X,x_0)$ with connected and locally path-connected domain that can possibly have the following two properties: $(p_{H})_{#}pi_1(widetilde{X}_H,widetilde{x}_0)=H$ and $p_H$ has the unique lifting property. $widetilde{X}_H$ consists of equivalence classes of paths starting at $x_0$, appropriately topologized, and $p_H$ is the endpoint projection. For $p_H$ to have these two properties, $T_1$ fibers are necessary and unique path lifting is sufficient. However, $p_H$ always admits the standard lifts of paths. We show that $p_H$ has unique path lifting if it has continuous (standard) monodromies toward a $T_1$ fiber over $x_0$. Assuming, in addition, that $H$ is locally quasinormal (e.g., if $H$ is normal) we show that $X$ is homotopically path Hausdorff relative to $H$. We show that $p_H$ is a fibration if $X$ is locally path connected, $H$ is locally quasinormal, and all (standard) monodromies are continuous.
We show that in a fibration the coformality of the base space implies the coformality of the total space under reasonable conditions, and these conditions can not be weakened. The result is partially dual to the classical work of Lupton cite{Lup} on
A fibration of ${mathbb R}^n$ by oriented copies of ${mathbb R}^p$ is called skew if no two fibers intersect nor contain parallel directions. Conditions on $p$ and $n$ for the existence of such a fibration were given by Ovsienko and Tabachnikov. A cl
We prove that the sectional category of the universal fibration with fibre X, for X any space that satisfies a well-known conjecture of Halperin, equals one after rationalization.
Let G be a profinite group, {X_alpha}_alpha a cofiltered diagram of discrete G-spectra, and Z a spectrum with trivial G-action. We show how to define the homotopy fixed point spectrum F(Z, holim_alpha X_alpha)^{hG} and that when G has finite virtual
We discuss the history of the monodromy theorem, starting from Weierstrass, and the concept of monodromy group. From this viewpoint we compare then the Weierstrass , the Legendre and other normal forms for elliptic curves, explaining their geometric