If $A\subset X$ is a deformation retract of $X$. Are $X$ and $A$ homotopy equivalent?
2026-05-15 18:08:44.1778868524
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Deformation retract and homotopy equivalence
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If yours is the standard definition, the answer is "yes".
Namely, $A \subset X$ is a deformation retract of $X$ if there is a continuous map $r: X \longrightarrow A$ such that $r\circ i = \mathrm{id}_A$, where $i: A \longrightarrow X$ is the inclusion, and $i\circ r \simeq \mathrm{id}_X$.
Since $=$ implies $\simeq$ and being of the same homotopy type means just that there are maps $f: A \longrightarrow X$ and $g: X \longrightarrow A$ such that $f \circ g \simeq \mathrm{id}_X$ and $g\circ f \simeq \mathrm{id}_A$, obviously being a deformation retract implies being homotopy equivalent, or having the same homotopy type.
Let's simply say that there are many different kind of deformation retraction, one stronger than the other.
The weaker form states that $A \subseteq X$ is a (weak)deformation retract of $X$ iff there's a map $r \colon X \to A$ such that $r$ is both a left and right homotopy inverse to the inclusion map $i \colon A \to X$ (so $A$ must be homotopy equivalent to $X$).
The stronger form states that $A$ is a deformation retract of $X$ iff exists a map $D \colon X \times I \to X$ such that $D(a,t)=a$ for every $a \in A$, $D(x,0)=x$ and $D(x,1) \in A$ for all $x \in X$ (i.e. $D$ is an homotopy relative to the subspace $A$ between the identity and a map of the form $i\circ r$ for some $r \colon X \to A$). Since $D$ is relative to $A$ you get that the $r(a)=a$ for all $a \in A$, so $r \circ i = 1_A$, while $D$ is an homotopy between $1_X$ and $i \circ r$, so $r$ and $i$ are homotopy equivalences.