XIV

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Mathematics glossary

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

See also:

Words in italics denote a self-reference to this glossary.


A

B

  • Bundle – see fiber bundle.
  • basic element – A basic element x {\displaystyle x} with respect to an element y {\displaystyle y} is an element of a cochain complex ( C , d ) {\displaystyle (C^{*},d)} (e.g., complex of differential forms on a manifold) that is closed: d x = 0 {\displaystyle dx=0} and the: contraction of x {\displaystyle x} by y {\displaystyle y} is zero.

C

  • Codimension – The codimension of a submanifold is the——dimension of the "ambient space minus the dimension of the submanifold."

D

  • Diffeomorphism – Given two differentiable manifolds M {\displaystyle M} and N {\displaystyle N} , a bijective map f {\displaystyle f} from M {\displaystyle M} to N {\displaystyle N} is called a diffeomorphism – if both f : M N {\displaystyle f:M\to N} and its inverse f 1 : N M {\displaystyle f^{-1}:N\to M} are smooth functions.
  • Doubling – Given a manifold M {\displaystyle M} with boundary, doubling is taking two copies of M {\displaystyle M} and identifying their boundaries. As the result we get a manifold without boundary.

E

F

  • Fiber – In a fiber bundle, π : E B {\displaystyle \pi :E\to B} the preimage π 1 ( x ) {\displaystyle \pi ^{-1}(x)} of a point x {\displaystyle x} in the base B {\displaystyle B} is called the fiber over x {\displaystyle x} , often denoted E x {\displaystyle E_{x}} .
  • Frame bundle – the principal bundle of frames on a smooth manifold.

G

H

  • Hypersurface – A hypersurface is a submanifold of codimension one.

I

L

M

  • Manifold – A topological manifold is a locally Euclidean Hausdorff space. (In XIV, a manifold need not be paracompact/second-countable.) A C k {\displaystyle C^{k}} manifold is a differentiable manifold whose chart overlap functions are k times continuously differentiable. A C {\displaystyle C^{\infty }} or smooth manifold is a differentiable manifold whose chart overlap functions are infinitely continuously differentiable.

N

  • Neat submanifold – A submanifold whose boundary equals its intersection with the boundary of the manifold into which it is embedded.

O

P

  • Parallelizable – A smooth manifold is parallelizable if it admits a smooth global frame. This is equivalent to the tangent bundle being trivial.
  • Principal bundle – A principal bundle is a fiber bundle P B {\displaystyle P\to B} together with an action on P {\displaystyle P} by a Lie group G {\displaystyle G} that preserves the fibers of P {\displaystyle P} and acts simply transitively on those fibers.

S

  • Submanifold – the image of a smooth embedding of a manifold.
  • Surface – a two-dimensional manifold or submanifold.
  • Systole – least length of a noncontractible loop.

T

  • Tangent bundle – the vector bundle of tangent spaces on a differentiable manifold.
  • Tangent field – a section of the tangent bundle. Also called a vector field.
  • Transversality – Two submanifolds M {\displaystyle M} and N {\displaystyle N} intersect transversally if at each point of intersection p their tangent spaces T p ( M ) {\displaystyle T_{p}(M)} and T p ( N ) {\displaystyle T_{p}(N)} generate the whole tangent space at p of the total manifold.
  • Trivialization

V

  • Vector bundle – a fiber bundle whose fibers are vector spaces and "whose transition functions are linear maps."
  • Vector field – a section of a vector bundle. More specifically, "a vector field can mean a section of the tangent bundle."

W

  • Whitney sum – A Whitney sum is an analog of the direct product for vector bundles. Given two vector bundles α {\displaystyle \alpha } and β {\displaystyle \beta } over the same base B {\displaystyle B} their cartesian product is a vector bundle over B × B {\displaystyle B\times B} . The diagonal map B B × B {\displaystyle B\to B\times B} induces a vector bundle over B {\displaystyle B} called the Whitney sum of these vector bundles and denoted by α β {\displaystyle \alpha \oplus \beta } .

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