 Add your name / see who's in!
|
#
|
Week of...
|
Links
|
Fall Semester
|
1
|
Sep 10
|
About, Tue, Thu
|
2
|
Sep 17
|
Tue, HW1, Thu
|
3
|
Sep 24
|
Tue, Photo, Thu
|
4
|
Oct 1
|
Questionnaire, Tue, HW2, Thu
|
5
|
Oct 8
|
Thanksgiving, Tue, Thu
|
6
|
Oct 15
|
Tue, HW3, Thu
|
7
|
Oct 22
|
Tue, Thu
|
8
|
Oct 29
|
Tue, HW4, Thu, Hilbert sphere
|
9
|
Nov 5
|
Tue,Thu, TE1
|
10
|
Nov 12
|
Tue, Thu
|
11
|
Nov 19
|
Tue, Thu, HW5
|
12
|
Nov 26
|
Tue, Thu
|
13
|
Dec 3
|
Tue, Thu, HW6
|
Spring Semester
|
14
|
Jan 7
|
Tue, Thu, HW7
|
15
|
Jan 14
|
Tue, Thu
|
16
|
Jan 21
|
Tue, Thu, HW8
|
17
|
Jan 28
|
Tue, Thu
|
18
|
Feb 4
|
Tue
|
19
|
Feb 11
|
TE2, Tue, HW9, Thu, Feb 17: last chance to drop class
|
R
|
Feb 18
|
Reading week
|
20
|
Feb 25
|
Tue, Thu, HW10
|
21
|
Mar 3
|
Tue, Thu
|
22
|
Mar 10
|
Tue, Thu, HW11
|
23
|
Mar 17
|
Tue, Thu
|
24
|
Mar 24
|
Tue, HW12, Thu
|
25
|
Mar 31
|
Referendum,Tue, Thu
|
26
|
Apr 7
|
Tue, Thu
|
R
|
Apr 14
|
Office hours
|
R
|
Apr 21
|
Office hours
|
F
|
Apr 28
|
Office hours, Final (Fri, May 2)
|
Register of Good Deeds
|
Errata to Bredon's Book
|
|
Announcements go here
Class Notes
The notes below are by the students and for the students. Hopefully they are useful, but they come with no guarantee of any kind.
Outline
Today we stated the Whitney Embedding Theorem and began to discuss its proof. Along the way, we also encountered some related notions that will serve us well in the future. We begin by stating the theorem:
Theorem (Whitney Embedding)
Let
be a smooth
-manifold. Then there exists an embedding
.
Proof
Outline
We will break the proof of the theorem into three parts:
- Find an embedding of a compact
into
for some
.
- Use Sard's Theorem to reduce
to
.
- Use the "Zebra Trick" to prove the theorem for non-compact
.
Parts two and three shall be left to the next lecture.
Part 1
Suppose that
is compact. Let
be an atlas for
, and note that
is an open cover of
. Hence it possesses a finite subcover
, and the corresponding collection
of charts is an atlas.
Choose smooth functions
with the following properties:
-
-
-
for
where
for
is the support of
, ie. the closure of
The existence of such functions follows from the existence of smooth partitions of unity for manifolds---a concept that will be discussed later on.
Now define
by
, where
is defined by
and
.
We claim that
is an embedding. That
is smooth follows immediately from its construction (the
s have been used to smear out the
to smooth functions on all of
). That
is injective is also clear. It takes a bit of work to show that
is an immersion, but this is left as an exercise. It remains to see that
is a homeomorphism, but this fact follows from the following topological lemma. 
Lemma
Let
and
be topological spaces. Suppose that
is compact,
is Hausdorff, and that
is continuous and injective. Then
is a homeomorphism.
Proof
Since
is an injection onto its image, it is a bijection. Since
is continuous, it remains to show that
is continuous. Thus, it suffices to see that
takes closed sets to closed sets. Let
be closed. Since
is compact, so is
. Hence
is compact since
is continuous. But
is Hausdorff, and every compact subset of a Hausdorff space is closed. Hence
is closed. 
The smearing functions we used in Part 1 of the proof of the Whitney Embedding Theorem are very similar to partitions of unity---collections of functions that break the constant function
into a bunch of bump functions. We will now formalize this notion and show that such collections of functions exist for smooth manifolds.
Definition
Let
be an open cover of a topological space (manifold)
. A partition of unity subordinate to
is a collection
of continuous (smooth) functions such that
- For every
there is an
such that
-
is locally finite, ie. for every
, there exists a neighbourhood
of
such that
intersects
for only finitely many
.
-
A local refinement of
is an open cover
of
such that for every
,
for some
.
is called paracompact if every open cover of
has a locally finite refinement.
For further information on paracompactness, we refer the reader to the corresponding Wikipedia entry. Note, in particular, that locally compact, second-countable topological spaces---such as manifolds---are paracompact, and that paracompact spaces are shrinking spaces. The following result (which follows immediately from these facts) will be useful for constructing partitions of unity on manifolds:
Theorem
Manifolds are paracompact. In particular, if
is locally finite then there is an open cover
such that
for every
.