Difference between revisions of "Manifold"

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{{WotWAnnounce|week=March 28-April 5}}
 
{{WotWAnnounce|week=March 28-April 5}}
A '''manifold''' is a [[topological space]] locally [[homeomorphic]] to an [[open set | open]] [[ball]] in some [[Euclidean space]].  Informally, this says that if one were living on a point in a manifold, the region surrounding any point would look just like "normal" Euclidean space, i.e. <math>\mathbb{R}^n</math> for some <math>n</math>.  For example, the interior of a Mobius strip (that is, excluding its edge) or the surface of an infinite cylinder is a two-dimensional manifold because from each point on either surface the immediate neighborhood is indistinguishable from the usual [[Euclidean plane]], even though ''globally'' neither of these surfaces looks much like the plane.
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A '''manifold''' is a [[topological space]] locally [[homeomorphic]] to an [[open set | open]] [[ball]] in some [[Euclidean space]].  Informally, this says that if one were living on a point in a manifold, the region surrounding any point would look just like "normal" Euclidean space, i.e. <math>\mathbb{R}^n</math> for some <math>n</math>.  For example, the interior of a Mobius strip (that is, excluding its edge) or the surface of an infinite cylinder is a two-dimensional manifold because from each point on either surface the immediate neighborhood is topologically the same as the usual [[Euclidean plane]], even though ''globally'' neither of these surfaces looks much like the plane.
  
 
The [[Whitney Embedding Theorem]] allows us to visualise manifolds as being [[embedding | embedded]] in some Euclidean space.  
 
The [[Whitney Embedding Theorem]] allows us to visualise manifolds as being [[embedding | embedded]] in some Euclidean space.  
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Note that the above describes a manifold in the topological category; in the smooth (analytic, holomorphic, etc) category, one would require the patching homeomorphisms to in fact be <math>C^{\infty}</math> (analytic, holomorphic, etc).
  
 
==Definition==
 
==Definition==

Revision as of 22:19, 7 April 2008

This is an AoPSWiki Word of the Week for March 28-April 5

A manifold is a topological space locally homeomorphic to an open ball in some Euclidean space. Informally, this says that if one were living on a point in a manifold, the region surrounding any point would look just like "normal" Euclidean space, i.e. $\mathbb{R}^n$ for some $n$. For example, the interior of a Mobius strip (that is, excluding its edge) or the surface of an infinite cylinder is a two-dimensional manifold because from each point on either surface the immediate neighborhood is topologically the same as the usual Euclidean plane, even though globally neither of these surfaces looks much like the plane.

The Whitney Embedding Theorem allows us to visualise manifolds as being embedded in some Euclidean space.

Note that the above describes a manifold in the topological category; in the smooth (analytic, holomorphic, etc) category, one would require the patching homeomorphisms to in fact be $C^{\infty}$ (analytic, holomorphic, etc).

Definition

A topological space $X$ is said to be a manifold if and only if

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