In this section we will state the aim of rational homotopy theory. Moreover we will recall classical theorems from algebraic topology and deduce rational versions of them.
In the following definition \emph{space} is to be understood as a topological space or a simplicial set. We will restrict to simply connected spaces.
\Definition{rational-space}{
A space $X$ is a \emph{rational space} if
$$\pi_i(X)\text{ is a $\Q$-vectorspace }\quad\forall i > 0. $$
}
\Definition{rational-homotopy-groups}{
We define the \emph{rational homotopy groups} of a space $X$ as:
$$\pi_i(X)\tensor\Q\quad\forall i > 0.$$
}
Note that for a rational space $X$, the homotopy groups are isomorphic to the rational homotopy groups, i.e. $\pi_i(X)\tensor\Q\iso\pi_i(X)$.
\Definition{rational-homotopy-equivalence}{
A map $f: X \to Y$ is a \emph{rational homotopy equivalence} if $\pi_i(f)\tensor\Q$ is a linear isomorphism for all $i > 0$.
}
\Definition{rationalization}{
A map $f: X \to X_0$ is a \emph{rationalization} if $X_0$ is rational and $f$ is a rational homotopy equivalence.
}
Note that a weak equivalence (and hence also a homotopy equivalence) is always a rational homotopy theory. Furthermore if $f: X \to Y$ is a map between rational spaces, then $f$ is a rational homotopy equivalence iff $f$ is a weak equivalence.
We will later see that any space admits a rationalization. The theory of rational homotopy theory is then the study of the homotopy category $\Ho_\Q(\Top)\iso\Ho(\Top_\Q)$, which is on its own turn equivalent to $\Ho(\sSet_\Q)\iso\Ho_\Q(\sSet)$.
\subsection{Classical results from algebraic topology}
We will now recall known results from algebraic topology, without proof. One can find many of these results in basic text books, such as \cite{may, dold}. Note that all spaces are assumed to be $1$-connected.
where $H(X; A)$ and $H(X; A)$ are considered as graded modules and their tensor product and torsion groups are graded. \todo{Add algebraic version for (co)chain complexes}
\subsection{Immediate results for rational homotopy theory}
The latter two theorems have a direct consequence for rational homotopy theory. By taking $A =\Q$ we see that the torsion groups vanish. We have the immediate corollary.