Differential Topology

Differential Topology

Differential Topology: Homework Set # 3. 1) Basic on tangent bundles. Recall that the tangent bundle TM to an extrinsicly defined manifold M k ⊂ Rn is defined to be: n n k n ∼ n TM := {(p, v) ∈ R × R | p ∈ M , v ∈ TpM ⊂ TpR = R } This exercise is designed to give you some practice working with tangent bundles. (i) Show that for a manifold M, the tangent bundle TM is well-defined, i.e. does not depend on the embedding M k ⊂ Rn. (ii) If M, N are a pair of smooth manifolds, show that T (M × N) is diffeomorphic to TM × TN. (iii) If f : M → R is a smooth, positive function, show that the corresponding scaling map φ : TM → TM defined by φ(p, v) = (p, f(p) · v) is a diffeomorphism. (iv) Show that the tangent bundle to S1 (the unit sphere) is diffeomorphic to the cylinder S1 × R. (v) Show that if Sn is an arbitrary sphere, then there exists a diffeomorphism between (TSn) × R and Sn × Rn+1. 2) Relatives of the tangent bundle. Closely associated to the tangent bundle are some other manifolds: (i) For an extrinsicly defined manifold M k ⊂ Rn, define the normal bundle as follows: n n k ⊥ n ∼ n N(M) := {(p, v) ∈ R × R | p ∈ M , v ∈ TpM ⊂ TpR = R } Show that N(M) is an n-dimensional manifold. (ii) Show that for the standard n-sphere Sn ⊂ Rn+1, the normal bundle N(Sn) is diffeomorphic to Sn × R. (iii) Consider the subset T 1M of TM consisting of pairs (p, v) ∈ TM with ||v|| = 1 (where || · || denotes the standard norm on Rn). Show that T 1M is a (2k − 1)-dimensional manifold, called the sphere bundle of M (or the unit tangent bundle of M). [Hint: construct a suitable submersion from TM → R.] (iv) Recall that a vector field on M was defined to be a smooth map v : M → TM satisfying π ◦ v = IdM . Let ρ : Rn × Rn → Rn be the projection onto the second factor, and say that a vector field v has a zero at p if (ρ ◦ v)(p) = 0 ∈ Rn. Show that if Sn is an odd dimensional sphere, then there exists a non-vanishing vector field v on Sn (i.e. v has no zeros). (v) Show that if Sn supports a non-vanishing vector field v, then its antipodal map (i.e. p 7→ −p) is smoothly homotopic to the identity map. [Hint: normalize the v so that the image lies in T 1Sn, and rotate p to −p along the direction given by v(p).] 3) Intrinsic Whitney embedding. In class, I outlined an argument for showing the intrinsic version of Whit- ney embedding, using some notions from differential geometry. This exercise outlines an alternate, “bare hands” construction of an embedding of the compact manifold M k into some RN (with large N). (i) Show that the function f : R → R defined below is smooth: ( 2 e−1/x x > 0 f(x) = 0 x ≤ 0. (ii) Given a < b, show that the associated function g(x) = f(x − a)f(b − x) is smooth, positive on the interval (a, b) ⊂ R and identically zero elsewhere. Show that the corresponding function h : R → R defined by: R t −∞ g dx h(t) = R ∞ −∞ g dx is a smooth function satisfying (1) h(x) = 0 for x < a, (2) h(x) = 1 for b < x, and (3) 0 < h(x) < 1 for a < x < b. k (iii) Now given positive real numbers a < b, construct a smooth function ψa,b on R which is (1) identically one on the ball of radius a, (2) identically zero outside the ball of radius b, and (3) is strictly between 0 and 1 at intermediate points. (iv) For r > 0, let B(r) denote the open ball of radius r centered at the origin in Rk. Show that there exists a ˆ k finite open cover {Ui} (1 ≤ i ≤ m) of M by coordinate charts, with maps φi : Ui → Ui ⊂ R , chosen to have the following two properties: ˆ k • Ui ⊃ B(2), i.e. each Ui contains an open ball of radius 2 centered at the origin in R , −1 • the open subsets {φi (B(1))} cover M. k (v) Let ψ be the map ψ1,2 constructed in (iii). Verify that for each index i, the map fi : M → R defined below is smooth: ( ψ(φi(x)) · φi(x) x ∈ Ui fi = 0 x∈ / Ui. k (vi) Define the maps gi : M → R × R by gi(p) = (fi(p), ψi(p)), and show that the associated map G : M → k+1 m (R ) defined by p 7→ (g1(p), . , gm(p)) yields an injective immersion (and hence an embedding) of the manifold M into m(k + 1)-dimensional Euclidean space. 4) Projective spaces. Define the n-dimensional real projective space, denoted RP n, to be the quotient of Sn by the antipodal map p 7→ −p. (i) Show that RP n is a compact n-dimensional manifold (use either the intrinsic or extrinsic definition, see exercise (4) below). (ii) Viewing S1 ⊂ S2 as the equator, we have a natural embedding RP 1 ⊂ RP 2. Show that this submanifold cannot be realized as the pre-image f −1(r) of a regular value r of a smooth function f : RP 2 → R. [Hint: consider connected neighborhoods of RP 1 inside RP 2.] (iii) Show that the sphere bundle of the 2-sphere T 1S2 is in fact diffeomorphic to RP 3. (iv) Show that RP 2 embeds in R4, via the following steps: • show that RP 2 is diffeomorphic to the union of a Moebius band M and a 2-dimensional disk D2 along their common boundary. • show that there exists a 3-dimensional smooth curve γ ⊂ R3 which simultaneously arises as the boundary of an embedded D2, and as the boundary of an embedded M [Hint: find a convenient embedding of M first, then think of “flattening out” the boundary curve.] • the two embeddings of M and D2 into R3 might intersect each other; show that this can be fixed in R4..

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    2 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us