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Diffeomorphism

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differentiable homeomorphism, smooth homeomorphism

A one-to-one continuously-differentiable mapping of a differentiable manifold (e.g. of a domain in a Euclidean space) into a differentiable manifold for which the inverse mapping is also continuously differentiable. If , one says that and are diffeomorphic. From the point of view of differential topology, diffeomorphic manifolds have the same properties, and one is interested in a classification of manifolds up to a diffeomorphism (this classification is not identical with the coarser classification up to a homeomorphism, except for cases involving small dimensions).

Even though the term "diffeomorphism" was introduced comparatively recently, in practice numerous transformations and changes of variables which have been used in mathematics for long periods of time are diffeomorphisms, while many families of transformations are groups of diffeomorphisms. This applies, in particular, to diffeomorphisms which preserve a supplementary structure on the manifold (e.g. a contact, symplectic, conformal, or complex structure). In the past such diffeomorphisms had special appellations (in the above examples, contact transformations, canonical mappings, conformal mappings, and biholomorphic mappings), and these are often replaced at the time of writing (1970s) by the term "diffeomorphism" with an adjective characterizing the preserved structure (e.g. "symplectic diffeomorphismsymplectic diffeomorphism" rather than "canonical transformation" ).

Topological (more exactly, homotopic) properties of the group of all diffeomorphisms of a manifold onto itself, in which a topology has been introduced in a suitable manner, have also been studied. They may be unexpectedly complicated (see, e.g., [1], [4], [5], which also contain reviews and references). This problem is connected with a number of important problems in homotopic topology (e.g. with the homotopy groups of spheres). In principle, knowledge of the properties of would be of assistance in solving these problems, but at the time of writing (1987) the situation seems to be almost the opposite: Advances in the study of involve the use of the already known features of the problems or, at best, are realized in parallel with the solutions of these problems and by the same methods. As regards the algebraic properties of the group of diffeomorphisms of class (including the case ) of a closed -dimensional manifold, it has been proved that if , then its connected component of the unit is a simple group, i.e. has no non-trivial normal subgroups (see Normal subgroup; cf. [2], ; the situation is not clear for ). As regards a non-closed -dimensional manifold , it has been proved that the group of all diffeomorphisms of class () which may be connected with the identity mapping by way of a continuous family of diffeomorphisms (, ; ) which does not displace points outside a certain compact set (depending on the family), is simple.

References

[1] P.L. Antonelli, D. Burghelea, P.J. Kahn, "The non-finite homotopy type of some diffeomorphism groups" Topology , 11 : 1 (1972) pp. 1–49
[2] W. Thurston, "Foliations and groups of diffeomorphisms" Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. , 80 : 2 (1974) pp. 304–307
[3a] J.N. Mather, "Commutators of diffeomorphisms" Comm. Math. Helv. , 49 : 4 (1974) pp. 512–528
[3b] J.N. Mather, "Commutators of diffeomorphisms II" Comm. Math. Helv. , 50 : 1 (1975) pp. 33–40
[4] F.T. Farrell, W.C. Hsiang, "On the rational homotopy groups of the diffeomorphism groups of disks, spheres and aspherical manifolds" R.J. Milgram (ed.) , Algebraic and geometric topology , Proc. Symp. Pure Math. , 32.1 , Amer. Math. Soc. (1978) pp. 325–328
[5] D. Burghelea, R. Lashof, "Geometric transfer and the homotopy type of the automorphism groups of a manifold" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 269 : 1 (1982) pp. 1–38


Comments

The diffeomorphism classification of compact two-dimensional manifolds is presented in [a1]. For manifolds of dimensions three or fewer the classification by diffeomorphism, homeomorphism and combinatorial equivalence coincide; see [a5], [a6]. For compact simply-connected manifolds of dimension one of the most useful tools for obtaining a diffeomorphism is the -cobordism theorem of Smale [a7], see also [a4]: and are diffeomorphic provided there is a compact manifold of dimension whose boundary is the disjoint union , and both and are deformation retracts of (cf. Deformation retract; -cobordism). In fact, in this case is diffeomorphic to the Cartesian product of (or ) and the closed unit interval.

Many further results have been obtained by combining the -cobordism theorem with other tools from algebraic and differential topology; see [a1], [a3].

References

[a1] W.B. Browder, "Surgery on simply-connected manifolds" , Springer (1972)
[a2] M.W. Hirsch, "Differential topology" , Springer (1976) pp. Chapt. 6
[a3] R.C. Kirby, L.C. Siebenmann, "Foundational essays on topological manifolds, smoothings, and triangulations" , Princeton Univ. Press (1977) pp. 155–213
[a4] J. Milnor, "Lecture notes on the -cobordism theorem" , Princeton Univ. Press (1965)
[a5] E.E. Moise, "Geometric topology in dimensions 2 and 3" , Springer (1977)
[a6] J. Munkres, "Obstructions to smoothing of piecewise-differentiable homeomorphisms" Ann. of Math. , 72 (1960) pp. 521–554
[a7] S. Smale, "On the structure of manifolds" Amer. J. Math. , 84 (1962) pp. 387–399
How to Cite This Entry:
Diffeomorphism. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Diffeomorphism&oldid=24410
This article was adapted from an original article by D.V. Anosov (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article