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Category of manifolds

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Category theory

In mathematics, the category of manifolds, often denoted Man, is the category whose objects are manifolds of smoothness class C and whose morphisms are p-times continuously differentiable maps. This forms a category because the composition of two C maps is again continuous and of class C.

One is often interested only in C-manifolds modeled on spaces in a fixed category A, and the category of such manifolds is denoted Man(A). Similarly, the category of C-manifolds modeled on a fixed space E is denoted Man(E).

One may also speak of the category of smooth manifolds, Man, or the category of analytic manifolds, Man.

Man is a concrete category

Like many categories, the category Man is a concrete category, meaning its objects are sets with additional structure (i.e. a topology and an equivalence class of atlases of charts defining a C-differentiable structure) and its morphisms are functions preserving this structure. There is a natural forgetful functor

U : ManTop

to the category of topological spaces which assigns to each manifold the underlying topological space and to each p-times continuously differentiable function the underlying continuous function of topological spaces. Similarly, there is a natural forgetful functor

U′ : ManSet

to the category of sets which assigns to each manifold the underlying set and to each p-times continuously differentiable function the underlying function. Finally, for all 0 < p < q < ∞ there are natural inclusion functors

ManManManManMan

In other words, one can always see the category of smoother manifolds as a subcategory of less smooth manifolds all the way down to Man, the category of topological manifolds with continuous maps between them.

Obviously these inclusions are not full (continuous maps may not be q-differentiable, q-differentiable maps may not be p-differentiable, p-differentiable maps may not be smooth and smooth maps may not be analytic) nor replete (similarly as said with maps, homeomorphisms are not in general diffeomorphisms and so on) nor wide (not all topological manifolds are differentiable and so on), so they can be viewed as "strict" subcategories.

Pointed manifolds and the tangent space functor

It is often convenient or necessary to work with the category of manifolds along with a distinguished point: Man analogous to Top - the category of pointed spaces. The objects of Man are pairs ( M , p 0 ) , {\displaystyle (M,p_{0}),} where M {\displaystyle M} is a C p {\displaystyle C^{p}} manifold along with a basepoint p 0 M , {\displaystyle p_{0}\in M,} and its morphisms are basepoint-preserving p-times continuously differentiable maps: e.g. F : ( M , p 0 ) ( N , q 0 ) , {\displaystyle F:(M,p_{0})\to (N,q_{0}),} such that F ( p 0 ) = q 0 . {\displaystyle F(p_{0})=q_{0}.} The category of pointed manifolds is an example of a comma category - Man is exactly ( { } M a n p ) , {\displaystyle \scriptstyle {(\{\bullet \}\downarrow \mathbf {Man^{p}} )},} where { } {\displaystyle \{\bullet \}} represents an arbitrary singleton set, and the {\displaystyle \downarrow } represents a map from that singleton to an element of Man, picking out a basepoint.

The tangent space construction can be viewed as a functor from Man to VectR as follows: given pointed manifolds ( M , p 0 ) {\displaystyle (M,p_{0})} and ( N , F ( p 0 ) ) , {\displaystyle (N,F(p_{0})),} with a C p {\displaystyle C^{p}} map F : ( M , p 0 ) ( N , F ( p 0 ) ) {\displaystyle F:(M,p_{0})\to (N,F(p_{0}))} between them, we can assign the vector spaces T p 0 M {\displaystyle T_{p_{0}}M} and T F ( p 0 ) N , {\displaystyle T_{F(p_{0})}N,} with a linear map between them given by the pushforward (differential): F , p : T p 0 M T F ( p 0 ) N . {\displaystyle F_{*,p}:T_{p_{0}}M\to T_{F(p_{0})}N.} This construction is a genuine functor because the pushforward of the identity map 1 M : M M {\displaystyle \mathbb {1} _{M}:M\to M} is the vector space isomorphism ( 1 M ) , p 0 : T p 0 M T p 0 M , {\displaystyle (\mathbb {1} _{M})_{*,p_{0}}:T_{p_{0}}M\to T_{p_{0}}M,} and the chain rule ensures that ( f g ) , p 0 = f , g ( p 0 ) g , p 0 . {\displaystyle (f\circ g)_{*,p_{0}}=f_{*,g(p_{0})}\circ g_{*,p_{0}}.}

References

  1. ^ Tu 2011, pp. 89, 111, 112


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