- Transport of structure
In
mathematics , transport of structure is the definition of a new structure on an object by reference to another object on which a similar structure already exists. Definitions by transport of structure are regarded as canonical.Since mathematically structures are often defined in reference to an underlying spaces, many examples of transport of structure involve spaces and mappings between them. For example, if "V" and "W" are
vector space s, and if is anisomorphism , and if is aninner product on , then we can define an inner product on "V" by:.Although the equation makes sense even when is not an isomorphism, it only defines an inner product on "V" when is, since otherwise it will cause to be degenerate. The idea is that allows us to consider "V" and "W" as "the same" vector space, and if we follow this analogy, we can transport an inner product from one to the other.A more involved example comes from
differential topology , in which we have the notion of asmooth manifold . If "M" is such a manifold, and if "X" is any topological space which ishomeomorphic to "M", we can consider "X" as a smooth manifold as well. That is, let be a homeomorphism; we must define coordinate charts on "X", which we will do by "pulling back" coordinate charts on "M" through . Recall that a coordinate chart on is an open set "U" together with aninjective map :for some "n"; to get such a chart on "X", we let: and .Furthermore, it is required that the charts cover "M", we must check that the transported charts cover "X", which follows immediately from the fact that is abijection . Finally, since "M" is a "smooth" manifold, we have that if "U" and "V", with their maps: and ,are two charts on "M", then the composition, the "transition map": (a self-map of )is smooth. We must check this for our transported charts on "X". We have:,and therefore:, and:.Therefore the transition map for and is the same as that for "U" and "V", hence smooth. Therefore "X" is a smooth manifold via transport of structure.Although the second example involved considerably more checking, the principle was the same, and any experienced mathematician would have no difficulty performing the necessary verifications. Therefore when such an operation is indicated, it is invoked merely as "transport of structure" and the details left to the reader, if desired.
The second example also illustrates why "transport of structure" is not always desirable. Namely, we can take "M" to be the plane, and we can take "X" to be an infinite one-sided cone. By "flattening" the cone we achieve a homeomorphism of "X" and "M", and therefore the structure of a smooth manifold on "X", but the cone is not "naturally" a smooth manifold. That is, we can consider "X" as a subspace of 3-space, in which context it is not smooth at the cone point. A more surprising example is that of
exotic sphere s, discovered byMilnor , which states that there are exactly 28 smooth manifolds which are homeomorphic (but by definition "not" diffeomorphic) to , the 7-dimensional sphere in 8-space. Thus, transport of structure is most productive when there exists acanonical isomorphism between the two objects.
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