Fréchet manifold

In mathematics, in particular in nonlinear analysis, a Fréchet manifold is a topological space modeled on a Fréchet space in much the same way as a manifold is modeled on a Euclidean space.

More precisely, a Fréchet manifold consists of a Hausdorff space X {\displaystyle X} with an atlas of coordinate charts over Fréchet spaces whose transitions are smooth mappings. Thus X {\displaystyle X} has an open cover { U α } α I , {\displaystyle \left\{U_{\alpha }\right\}_{\alpha \in I},} and a collection of homeomorphisms ϕ α : U α F α {\displaystyle \phi _{\alpha }:U_{\alpha }\to F_{\alpha }} onto their images, where F α {\displaystyle F_{\alpha }} are Fréchet spaces, such that

ϕ α β := ϕ α ϕ β 1 | ϕ β ( U β U α ) {\displaystyle \phi _{\alpha \beta }:=\phi _{\alpha }\circ \phi _{\beta }^{-1}|_{\phi _{\beta }\left(U_{\beta }\cap U_{\alpha }\right)}}
is smooth for all pairs of indices α , β . {\displaystyle \alpha ,\beta .}

Classification up to homeomorphism

It is by no means true that a finite-dimensional manifold of dimension n {\displaystyle n} is globally homeomorphic to R n {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}} or even an open subset of R n . {\displaystyle \mathbb {R} ^{n}.} However, in an infinite-dimensional setting, it is possible to classify "well-behaved" Fréchet manifolds up to homeomorphism quite nicely. A 1969 theorem of David Henderson states that every infinite-dimensional, separable, metric Fréchet manifold X {\displaystyle X} can be embedded as an open subset of the infinite-dimensional, separable Hilbert space, H {\displaystyle H} (up to linear isomorphism, there is only one such space).

The embedding homeomorphism can be used as a global chart for X . {\displaystyle X.} Thus, in the infinite-dimensional, separable, metric case, up to homeomorphism, the "only" topological Fréchet manifolds are the open subsets of the separable infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. But in the case of differentiable or smooth Fréchet manifolds (up to the appropriate notion of diffeomorphism) this fails[citation needed].

See also

  • Banach manifold – Manifold modeled on Banach spaces, of which a Fréchet manifold is a generalization
  • Manifolds of mappings – locally convex vector spaces satisfying a very mild completeness conditionPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback
  • Differentiation in Fréchet spaces
  • Hilbert manifold – Manifold modelled on Hilbert spaces

References

  • Hamilton, Richard S. (1982). "The inverse function theorem of Nash and Moser". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.). 7 (1): 65–222. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1982-15004-2. ISSN 0273-0979. MR656198
  • Henderson, David W. (1969). "Infinite-dimensional manifolds are open subsets of Hilbert space". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 75 (4): 759–762. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1969-12276-7. MR0247634
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