- Topological manifold
In
mathematics , a topological manifold is a Hausdorfftopological space which looks locally likeEuclidean space in a sense defined below. Topological manifolds form an important class of topological spaces with applications throughout mathematics.A "
manifold " can mean a topological manifold, or more frequently, a topological manifold together with some additional structure.Differentiable manifold s, for example, are topological manifolds equipped with adifferential structure . Every manifold has an underlying topological manifold, obtained simply by forgetting the additional structure. An overview of the manifold concept is given in that article. This article focuses purely on the topological aspects of manifolds.Formal definition
A
topological space "X" is called locally Euclidean if there is a non-negative integer "n" such that every point in "X" has a neighborhood which ishomeomorphic toEuclidean space R"n".A topological manifold is a locally Euclidean
Hausdorff space . It is common to place additional requirements on topological manifolds. In particular, many authors define them to beparacompact orsecond-countable . The reasons, and some equivalent conditions, are discussed below.In the remainder of this article a "manifold" will mean a topological manifold. An "n-manifold" will mean a topological manifold such that every point has a neighborhood homeomorphic to R"n". A non-trivial theorem states that for every manifold "X" there is a unique integer "n" such that "X" is an "n"-manifold. This integer is called the "dimension" of X.
Examples
*
Euclidean space R"n" is the prototypical "n"-manifold.
* Anydiscrete space is a 0-dimensional manifold.
* Acircle is a 1-manifold.
* Atorus is a 2-manifold (orsurface ) as is theKlein bottle .
* The "n"-dimensional sphere "S""n" is a compact "n"-manifold.
* The "n"-dimensional torus T"n" (the product of "n"circle s) is a compact "n"-manifold.
*Projective space s over the reals, complexes, orquaternion s are compact manifolds.
**Real projective space RP"n" is a "n"-dimensional manifold.
**Complex projective space CP"n" is a 2"n"-dimensional manifold.
**Quaternionic projective space HP"n" is a 4"n"-dimensional manifold.
* Manifolds related to projective space includeGrassmannian s,flag manifold s, andStiefel manifold s.
*Lens space s are a class of manifolds that are quotients of odd-dimensional spheres.
*Lie group s provide more interesting examples of manifolds.
* Any open subset of an "n"-manifold is a "n"-manifold with thesubspace topology .
* If "M" is an "m"-manifold and "N" is an "n"-manifold, the product "M" × "N" is a ("m"+"n")-manifold.
* The disjoint union of a family of "n"-manifolds is a "n"-manifold (the pieces must all have the same dimension).
* Theconnected sum of two "n"-manifolds results in another "n"-manifold."See also":
List of manifolds Properties
The property of being locally Euclidean is preserved by
local homeomorphism s. That is, if "X" is locally Euclidean of dimension "n" and "f" : "X" → "Y" is a local homeomorphism, then "Y" is locally Euclidean of dimension "n". In particular, being locally Euclidean is atopological property .Manifolds inherit many of the local properties of Euclidean space. In particular, they are locally compact, locally connected, first countable, locally contractible, and locally metrizable. Being locally compact Hausdorff spaces manifolds are necessarily
Tychonoff space s.A manifold need not be connected, but every manifold "M" is a disjoint union of connected manifolds (all of the same dimension). These are just the connected components of "M", which are
open set s since manifolds are locally-connected. Being locally path connected, a manifold is path-connectedif and only if it is connected. It follows that the path-components are the same as the components.The Hausdorff axiom
The Hausdorff property is not a local one; so even though Euclidean space is Hausdorff, a locally Euclidean space need not be. It is true, however, that every locally Euclidean space is T1.
An example of a non-Hausdorff locally Euclidean space is the "line with two origins". This space is created by replacing the origin of the real line with "two" points, an open neighborhood of either of which includes all nonzero numbers in some open interval centered at zero. This space is not Hausdorff because the two origins cannot be separated.
Compactness and countability axioms
A manifold is metrizable if and only if it is
paracompact . Since metrizability is such a desirable property for a topological space, it is common to add paracompactness to the definition of a manifold. In any case, non-paracompact manifolds are generally regarded as pathological. An example of a non-paracompact manifold is given by the long line. Paracompact manifolds have all the topological properties of metric spaces. In particular, they areperfectly normal Hausdorff space s.Manifolds are also commonly required to be second-countable. This is precisely the condition required to ensure that the manifold embeds in some finite-dimensional Euclidean space (see the
Whitney embedding theorem ). For any manifold the properties of being second-countable, Lindelöf, and σ-compact are all equivalent.Every second-countable manifold is paracompact, but not vice-versa. However, the converse is nearly true: a paracompact manifold is second-countable if and only if it has a countable number of connected components. In particular, a connected manifold is paracompact if and only if it is second-countable. Every second-countable manifold is separable and paracompact. Moreover, if a manifold is separable and paracompact then it is also second-countable.
Every compact manifold is second-countable and paracompact.
Dimensionality
The dimension of a manifold is a
topological property , meaning that any manifold homeomorphic to an "n"-manifold also has dimension "n". It follows frominvariance of domain that an "n"-manifold cannot be homeomorphic to an "m"-manifold for "n" ≠ "m".A 1-dimensional manifold is often called a
curve while a 2-dimensional manifold is called asurface . Higher dimensional manifolds are usually just called "n"-manifolds. For "n" = 3, 4, or 5 see3-manifold ,4-manifold , and5-manifold .Coordinate charts
By definition, every point of a locally Euclidean space has a neighborhood homeomorphic to an open subset of R"n". Such neighborhoods are called Euclidean neighborhoods. It follows from
invariance of domain that Euclidean neighborhoods are always open sets. One can always find Euclidean neighborhoods that are homeomorphic to "nice" open sets in R"n". Indeed, a space "M" is locally Euclidean if and only if either of the following equivalent conditions holds:
*every point of "M" has a neighborhood homeomorphic to anopen ball in R"n".
*every point of "M" has a neighborhood homeomorphic to R"n" itself.A Euclidean neighborhood homeomorphic to an open ball in R"n" is called a Euclidean ball. Euclidean balls form a basis for the topology of a locally Euclidean space.For any Euclidean neighborhood "U" a homeomorphism φ : "U" → φ("U") ⊂ R"n" is called a coordinate chart on "U" (although the word "chart" is frequently used to refer to the domain or range of such a map). A space "M" is locally Euclidean if and only if it can be covered by Euclidean neighborhoods. A set of Euclidean neighborhoods that cover "M", together with their coordinate charts, is called an atlas on "M". (The terminology comes from an analogy with
cartography whereby a sphericalglobe can be described by anatlas of flat maps or charts).Given two charts φ and ψ with overlapping domains "U" and "V" there is a transition function:ψφ−1 : φ("U" ∩ "V") → ψ("U" ∩ "V").Such a map is a homeomorphism between open subsets of R"n". That is, coordinate charts agree on overlaps up to homeomorphism. Different types on manifolds can be defined by placing restrictions on types of transition maps allowed. For example, for
differentiable manifolds the transition maps are required to bediffeomorphism s.Classification of manifolds
A 0-manifold is just a
discrete space . Such spaces are classified by theircardinality . Every discrete space is paracompact. A discrete space is second-countable if and only if it is countable.Every paracompact, connected 1-manifold is homeomorphic either to R or the
circle . The unconnected ones are justdisjoint union s of these.Every compact, connected, 2-manifold (or
surface ) is homeomorphic to thesphere , aconnected sum of tori, or a connected sum of projective planes. See theclassification theorem for surfaces for more details.The 3-dimensional case may be solved.
Thurston's geometrization conjecture , if true, together with current knowledge, would imply a classification of 3-manifolds.Grigori Perelman sketched a proof of this conjecture in 2003 which (as of 2006) appears to be essentially correct.The full classification of "n"-manifolds for "n" greater than three is known to be impossible; it is at least as hard as the word problem in
group theory , which is known to be algorithmically undecidable. In fact, there is noalgorithm for deciding whether a given manifold issimply connected . There is, however, a classification of simply connected manifolds of dimension ≥ 5.Manifolds with boundary
A slightly more general concept is sometimes useful. A topological manifold with boundary is a
Hausdorff space in which every point has a neighborhood homeomorphic to an open subset of Euclideanhalf-space (for a fixed "n")::The terminology is somewhat confusing: every topological manifold is a topological manifold with boundary, but not vice-versa.Let "M" be a manifold with boundary. The interior of "M", denoted Int "M", is the set of points in "M" which have neighborhoods homeomorphic to an open subset of R"n". The boundary of "M", denoted ∂"M", is the complement of Int "M" in "M". The boundary points can be characterized as those points which land on the boundary hyperplane ("x""n" = 0) of R"n"+ under some coordinate chart.
If "M" is a manifold with boundary of dimension "n", then Int "M" is a manifold (without boundary) of dimension "n" and ∂"M" is a manifold (without boundary) of dimension "n" − 1.
ee also
*
3-manifold
*4-manifold
*5-manifold References
*cite journal | last = Gauld | first = D. B. | year = 1974 | title = Topological Properties of Manifolds | journal = The American Mathematical Monthly | volume = 81 | issue = 6 | pages = 633–636 | doi = 10.2307/2319220
*cite book | last = Kirby | first = Robion C. | authorlink = Robion Kirby | coauthors = Siebenmann, Laurence C. | title = Foundational Essays on Topological Manifolds. Smoothings, and Triangulations | location = Princeton | publisher = Princeton University Press | year = 1977 | id = ISBN 0-691-08191-3 | url = http://www.maths.ed.ac.uk/~aar/haupt/ks76.pdf
*cite book | first = John M. | last = Lee | year = 2000 | title = Introduction to Topological Manifolds | series = Graduate Texts in Mathematics 202 | publisher = Springer | location = New York | id = ISBN 0-387-98759-2
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