Microbundle

Last updated

In mathematics, a microbundle is a generalization of the concept of vector bundle, introduced by the American mathematician John Milnor in 1964. [1] It allows the creation of bundle-like objects in situations where they would not ordinarily be thought to exist. For example, the tangent bundle is defined for a smooth manifold but not a topological manifold; use of microbundles allows the definition of a topological tangent bundle.

Contents

Definition

A (topological) -microbundle over a topological space (the "base space") consists of a triple , where is a topological space (the "total space"), and are continuous maps (respectively, the "zero section" and the "projection map") such that:

  1. the composition is the identity of ;
  2. for every , there are a neighborhood of and a neighbourhood of such that , , is homeomorphic to and the maps and commute with and .

In analogy with vector bundles, the integer is also called the rank or the fibre dimension of the microbundle. Similarly, note that the first condition suggests should be thought of as the zero section of a vector bundle, while the second mimics the local triviality condition on a bundle. An important distinction here is that "local triviality" for microbundles only holds near a neighborhood of the zero section. The space could look very wild away from that neighborhood. Also, the maps gluing together locally trivial patches of the microbundle may only overlap the fibers.

The definition of microbundle can be adapted to other categories more general than the smooth one, such as that of piecewise linear manifolds, by replacing topological spaces and continuous maps by suitable objects and morphisms.

Examples

Morphisms

Two -microbundles and over the same space are isomorphic (or equivalent) if there exist a neighborhood of and a neighborhood of , together with a homeomorphism commuting with the projections and the zero sections.

More generally, a morphism between microbundles consists of a germ of continuous maps between neighbourhoods of the zero sections as above.

An -microbundle is called trivial if it is isomorphic to the standard trivial microbundle of rank . The local triviality condition in the definition of microbundle can therefore be restated as follows: for every there is a neighbourhood such that the restriction is trivial.

Analogously to parallelisable smooth manifolds, a topological manifold is called topologically parallelisable if its tangent microbundle is trivial.

Properties

A theorem of James Kister and Barry Mazur states that there is a neighborhood of the zero section which is actually a fiber bundle with fiber and structure group , the group of homeomorphisms of fixing the origin. This neighborhood is unique up to isotopy. Thus every microbundle can be refined to an actual fiber bundle in an essentially unique way. [2]

Taking the fiber bundle contained in the tangent microbundle gives the topological tangent bundle. Intuitively, this bundle is obtained by taking a system of small charts for , letting each chart have a fiber over each point in the chart, and gluing these trivial bundles together by overlapping the fibers according to the transition maps.

Microbundle theory is an integral part of the work of Robion Kirby and Laurent C. Siebenmann on smooth structures and PL structures on higher dimensional manifolds. [3]

Related Research Articles

In mathematics, a diffeology on a set generalizes the concept of smooth charts in a differentiable manifold, declaring what the "smooth parametrizations" in the set are.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tangent bundle</span> Tangent spaces of a manifold

In differential geometry, the tangent bundle of a differentiable manifold is a manifold which assembles all the tangent vectors in . As a set, it is given by the disjoint union of the tangent spaces of . That is,

In mathematics, especially differential geometry, the cotangent bundle of a smooth manifold is the vector bundle of all the cotangent spaces at every point in the manifold. It may be described also as the dual bundle to the tangent bundle. This may be generalized to categories with more structure than smooth manifolds, such as complex manifolds, or algebraic varieties or schemes. In the smooth case, any Riemannian metric or symplectic form gives an isomorphism between the cotangent bundle and the tangent bundle, but they are not in general isomorphic in other categories.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vector bundle</span> Mathematical parametrization of vector spaces by another space

In mathematics, a vector bundle is a topological construction that makes precise the idea of a family of vector spaces parameterized by another space : to every point of the space we associate a vector space in such a way that these vector spaces fit together to form another space of the same kind as , which is then called a vector bundle over .

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fiber bundle</span> Continuous surjection satisfying a local triviality condition

In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle is a space that is locally a product space, but globally may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space and a product space is defined using a continuous surjective map, that in small regions of behaves just like a projection from corresponding regions of to The map called the projection or submersion of the bundle, is regarded as part of the structure of the bundle. The space is known as the total space of the fiber bundle, as the base space, and the fiber.

In mathematics, in particular in algebraic topology, differential geometry and algebraic geometry, the Chern classes are characteristic classes associated with complex vector bundles. They have since become fundamental concepts in many branches of mathematics and physics, such as string theory, Chern–Simons theory, knot theory, Gromov-Witten invariants.

In mathematics, a principal bundle is a mathematical object that formalizes some of the essential features of the Cartesian product of a space with a group . In the same way as with the Cartesian product, a principal bundle is equipped with

  1. An action of on , analogous to for a product space.
  2. A projection onto . For a product space, this is just the projection onto the first factor, .
<span class="mw-page-title-main">Section (fiber bundle)</span>

In the mathematical field of topology, a section of a fiber bundle is a continuous right inverse of the projection function . In other words, if is a fiber bundle over a base space, :

This is a glossary of some terms used in Riemannian geometry and metric geometry — it doesn't cover the terminology of differential topology.

This is a glossary of terms specific to differential geometry and differential topology. The following three glossaries are closely related:

In mathematics, in particular in algebraic topology and differential geometry, the Stiefel–Whitney classes are a set of topological invariants of a real vector bundle that describe the obstructions to constructing everywhere independent sets of sections of the vector bundle. Stiefel–Whitney classes are indexed from 0 to n, where n is the rank of the vector bundle. If the Stiefel–Whitney class of index i is nonzero, then there cannot exist everywhere linearly independent sections of the vector bundle. A nonzero nth Stiefel–Whitney class indicates that every section of the bundle must vanish at some point. A nonzero first Stiefel–Whitney class indicates that the vector bundle is not orientable. For example, the first Stiefel–Whitney class of the Möbius strip, as a line bundle over the circle, is not zero, whereas the first Stiefel–Whitney class of the trivial line bundle over the circle, , is zero.

In mathematics, the Thom space,Thom complex, or Pontryagin–Thom construction of algebraic topology and differential topology is a topological space associated to a vector bundle, over any paracompact space.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pushforward (differential)</span> Linear approximation of smooth maps on tangent spaces

In differential geometry, pushforward is a linear approximation of smooth maps on tangent spaces. Suppose that is a smooth map between smooth manifolds; then the differential of at a point , denoted , is, in some sense, the best linear approximation of near . It can be viewed as a generalization of the total derivative of ordinary calculus. Explicitly, the differential is a linear map from the tangent space of at to the tangent space of at , . Hence it can be used to push tangent vectors on forward to tangent vectors on . The differential of a map is also called, by various authors, the derivative or total derivative of .

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Differentiable manifold</span> Manifold upon which it is possible to perform calculus

In mathematics, a differentiable manifold is a type of manifold that is locally similar enough to a vector space to allow one to apply calculus. Any manifold can be described by a collection of charts (atlas). One may then apply ideas from calculus while working within the individual charts, since each chart lies within a vector space to which the usual rules of calculus apply. If the charts are suitably compatible, then computations done in one chart are valid in any other differentiable chart.

In differential geometry, a field of mathematics, a normal bundle is a particular kind of vector bundle, complementary to the tangent bundle, and coming from an embedding.

In mathematics, specifically in algebraic topology, the Euler class is a characteristic class of oriented, real vector bundles. Like other characteristic classes, it measures how "twisted" the vector bundle is. In the case of the tangent bundle of a smooth manifold, it generalizes the classical notion of Euler characteristic. It is named after Leonhard Euler because of this.

In differential geometry, in the category of differentiable manifolds, a fibered manifold is a surjective submersion

In the field of mathematics known as differential geometry, a generalized complex structure is a property of a differential manifold that includes as special cases a complex structure and a symplectic structure. Generalized complex structures were introduced by Nigel Hitchin in 2002 and further developed by his students Marco Gualtieri and Gil Cavalcanti.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Immersion (mathematics)</span> Differentiable function whose derivative is everywhere injective

In mathematics, an immersion is a differentiable function between differentiable manifolds whose differential pushforward is everywhere injective. Explicitly, f : MN is an immersion if

In surgery theory, a branch of mathematics, the stable normal bundle of a differentiable manifold is an invariant which encodes the stable normal data. There are analogs for generalizations of manifold, notably PL-manifolds and topological manifolds. There is also an analogue in homotopy theory for Poincaré spaces, the Spivak spherical fibration, named after Michael Spivak.

References

  1. Milnor, John Willard (1964). "Microbundles. I". Topology . 3: 53–80. doi:10.1016/0040-9383(64)90005-9. MR   0161346.
  2. Kister, James M. (1964). "Microbundles are fibre bundles". Annals of Mathematics . 80 (1): 190–199. doi:10.2307/1970498. JSTOR   1970498. MR   0180986.
  3. Kirby, Robion C.; Siebenmann, Laurent C. (1977). Foundational essays on topological manifolds, smoothings, and triangulations (PDF). Annals of Mathematics Studies. Vol. 88. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN   0-691-08191-3. MR   0645390.