Whitney embedding theorem |
In differential topology, the Whitney
embedding theorem states that
Any smooth second countable m-dimensional manifold can be embedded in Euclidean 2m-space.
The result is sharp, in particular the projective
m-space can not be embeded into Euclidean (2m − 1)-space
A little about the proof
Cases m = 1 and 2 can be done by hand. For a general position argument show that there is an immersion
R2m with transversal
self-intersections. Then apply the Whitney trick, i.e. the following procedure which removes self-inersections
one by one.
Whitney trick
Suppose R2m is a
point of self-intersection and such that
f(x) = f(y) = p. Connect x
and y by a smooth curve
-
so that is a simple closed curve in R2m. Construct an embedding of a 2-disc R2m with boundary .
By a general position argument it can be constructed with no self-intersections and with no intersections with f(M) (here we use that ). Then one can deform f in a little neighborhood of h(D2) so that the self-intersecton disappears. (The last statement is very easy to see
once you visualize this picture properly)
Other things coming from Whitney trick
...
History
The occasion of the proof by Hassler Whitney of the embedding
theorem for smooth manifolds is said (rather surprisingly) to have been the first complete exposition of the manifold
concept (which had been implicit in Riemann's work, Lie group theory, and
general relativity for many years); building on Hermann Weyl's book The Idea of a Riemann surface.
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