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Encyclopedia > Differentiable structure

In topology, an atlas describes how a complicated space is glued together from simpler pieces. Each piece is given by a chart (also known as coordinate chart or local coordinate system).


More precisely, an atlas for a complicated space is constructed out of the following pieces of information:

  • A list of spaces that are considered simple.
  • For each point in the complicated space, a neighborhood of that point that is homeomorphic to a simple space. The homeomorphism is called a chart.
  • We require the different charts to be compatible. At the minimum, we require that the composite of one chart with the inverse of another be a homeomorphism (known as a change of coordinates), but we usually impose stronger requirements, such as smoothness.

This definition of atlas is exactly analogous to the non-mathematical meaning of atlas. Each individual map in an atlas of the world gives a neighborhood of each point on the globe that is homeomorphic to the plane. While each individual map does not exactly line up with other maps that it overlaps with (because of the Earth's curvature), the overlap of two maps can still be compared (by using latitude and longitude lines, for example).


Different choices for simple spaces and compatibility conditions give different objects. For example, if we choose for our simple spaces Rn, we get topological manifolds. If we also require the coordinate changes to be diffeomorphisms, we get differentiable manifolds.


The choice of atlas for a space is not unique, but we can always choose a unique maximal atlas: an atlas of charts refines another one if it adds charts (in such a way that the overlap functions remain compatible). The existence of maximal atlases, that cannot further be refined, follows from Zorn's lemma.


By definition, a smooth differentiable structure (or differential structure) on a manifold M is such a maximal atlas of charts, all related by smooth coordinate changes on the overlaps.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Differentiable manifold - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1993 words)
The global differentiable structure is induced when it can be shown that the natural composition of the homeomorphisms between the cooresponding open Euclidean spaces are differentiable on overlaps of charts in the atlas.
An alternate definition of a differentiable manifold is a topological space with a sheaf of functions, which is locally isomorphic to Euclidean space with the sheaf of differentiable functions.
The differentiable structure of the manifolds ensures that the differential (which is a linear transformation on the respective tangent spaces) is independent of the choice of coordinates.
Unitary representation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (474 words)
Note that if G is a Lie group, this representation is necessarily smooth (respectively real analytic) with respect to the differentiable structure (respectively real analytic structure) of the Lie group.
A unitary representation is completely reducible, in the sense that for any closed invariant subspace, the orthogonal complement is again a closed invariant subspace.
For example, it implies that finite dimensional unitary representations are always a direct sum of irreducible representations, in the algebraic sense.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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