- #1
Silviu
- 624
- 11
Hello! In Nakahara's Geometry, Topology and Physics in chapter 6.4.5 second edition, he proves at a point that on a simply connected manifold, the first de Rham cohomology group is trivial. In the proof he defines ##\alpha : I=[0,1] \to M##, homotopic to a point. Now, by the rules of integration on a manifold, we have ##\int_{\alpha(I)} \omega = \int_I \alpha^* \omega##, where the * represents the pullback. However in the book he writes ##\int_{\alpha(I)} \omega = \int_{S^1} \alpha^* \omega##, and he mentions that ##I=[0,1]## in the LHS is compactified to ##S^1##. Can someone explain this to me? All the proof is based on the fact that ##S^1## has no boundary, so can someone explain to me how can you go from I to ##S^1##? Thank you!