0708-1300/Errata to Bredon's Book

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Errata to Bredn's Book

There is a counterexample to the inverse implication in Problem 1, p. 71.

Let Failed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle X=\mathbb} R be endowed with the ordinary topology (thus, it is Hausdorff and second countable). Let be an arbitrary connected open set in (that is, an interval). Let consists of all functions identically equal to constant. If is an arbitrary open set, then by theorem on structure of open sets in it is a union of countably many open intervals. We define to be the set of all real-valued functions which are constant on open intervals forming . The family forms a functional structure, as one can check. Furthermore, it satisfies the hypothesis of the theorem: every point has a neighborhood (we take an open interval containing ) such that there exists a function (we define it to be identically equal to ) such that a function is in (it is identically equal to a constant by our definition) if and only if there exists a smooth function such that (if is given, then we define for all , if is given, then we take arbitrary smooth , since is identically equal to constant and, thus, is in ). Clearly, is not a smooth manifold.