3.4 KiB
Math4202 Topology II (Lecture 4)
Manifolds
Imbedding of Manifolds
Definition of Manifold
An $m$-dimensional manifold is a topological space X that is
- Hausdorff
- With a countable basis
- Each point of
xofXhas a neighborhood that is homeomorphic to an open subset of\mathbb{R}^m. (local euclidean)
Note
Try to find some example that satisfies some of the properties above but not a manifold.
- Non-Hausdorff
- Non-countable basis
- Consider
\mathbb{R}^\deltawhere the set is\mathbb{R}with discrete topology. The basis must include all singleton sets in\mathbb{R}therefore\mathbb{R}^\deltais not second countable.
- Consider
- Non-local euclidean
- Consider the subspace topology over segment
[0,1]on real line, the subspace topology is not local euclidean since the open set containing the end point[0,a)is not homeomorphic to open sets in\mathbb{R}. (if we remove the end point, in the segment space we have(0,a)but in\mathbb{R}is(-a,0)\cup (0,a), which is not connected. Therefore cannot be homeomorphic to open sets in\mathbb{R}) - Any shape with intersection is not local euclidean.
- Consider the subspace topology over segment
Whitney's Embedding Theorem
If X is a compact $m$-manifold, then X can be imbedded in \mathbb{R}^N for some positive integer N.
In general, X is not required to be compact. And N is not too big. For non compact X, N\leq 2m+1 and for compact X, N\leq 2m.
Definition for partition of unity
Let \{U_i\}_{i=1}^n be a finite open cover of topological space X. An indexed family of continuous function \phi_i:X\to[0,1] for i=1,...,n is said to be a partition of unity dominated by \{U_i\}_{i=1}^n if
\operatorname{supp}(\phi_i)=\overline{\{x\in X: \phi_i(x)\neq 0\}}\subseteq U_i(the closure of points where\phi_i(x)\neq 0is inU_i) for alli=1,...,n\sum_{i=1}^n \phi_i(x)=1for allx\in X(partition of function to1)
Existence of finite partition of unity
Let \{U_i\}_{i=1}^n be a finite open cover of a normal space X (Every pair of closed sets in X can be separated by two open sets in X).
Then there exists a partition of unity dominated by \{U_i\}_{i=1}^n.
A more generalized version, If the space is paracompact, then there exists a partition of unity dominated by \{U_i\}_{i\in I} with locally finite. (Theorem 41.7)
Proof for Whithney's Embedding Theorem
Since X is a compact manifold, \forall x\in X, there is an open neighborhood U_x of x such that U_x is homeomorphic to \mathbb{R}^d. That means there exists \varphi_i:U_x\to \varphi(U_x)\subseteq \mathbb{R}^m.
Where \{U_x\}_{x\in X} is an open cover of X. Since X is compact, there is a finite subcover \bigcup_{i=1}^k U_{x_i}=X.
Apply the existsence of partition of unity, we can find a partition of unity dominated by \{U_{x_i}\}_{i=1}^k. With family of functions \phi_i:\mathbb{R}^d\to[0,1].
Define h_i:X\to \mathbb{R}^m by
h_i(x)=\begin{cases}
\phi_i(x)\varphi_i(x) & \text{if }x=x_i\\
0 & \text{otherwise}
\end{cases}
We claim that h_i is continuous using pasting lemma.
On U_i, h_i=\phi_i\varphi_i is product of two continuous functions therefore continuous.
On X-\operatorname{supp}(\phi_i), h_i=0 is continuous.
By pasting lemma, h_i is continuous.
Continue on next lecture.