of the product of X with the unit intervalI = [0, 1]. Intuitively we make X into a cylinder and collapse one end of the cylinder to a point.
If X sits inside Euclidean space, the cone on X is homeomorphic to the union of lines from X to another point. That is, the topological cone agrees with the geometric cone when defined. However, the topological cone construction is more general.
Examples
The cone over a point p of the real line is the interval {p} x [0,1].
The cone over two points {0,1} is a "V" shape with endpoints at {0} and {1}.
The cone over an interval I of the real line is a triangle.
The cone over a polygonP is a pyramid with base P.
The cone over a circle inspired the name; CS1 is homeomorphic to the geometric cone (technically only a half-cone):
All cones are path-connected since every point can be connected to the vertex point. Furthermore, every cone is contractible to the vertex point by the homotopy
ht(x,s) = (x, (1−t)s).
The cone is used in algebraic topology precisely because it embeds a space as a subspace of a contractible space.