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Differentiable Homomorphism 📂Geometry

Differentiable Homomorphism

Definition1

Let’s call M1,M2M_{1}, M_{2} a differential manifold. A function φ:M1M2\varphi : M_{1} \to M_{2} is called a diffeomorphism if it satisfies the following conditions:

  1. φ\varphi is differentiable.
  2. φ\varphi is a bijective function.
  3. φ1\varphi ^{-1} is differentiable.

If for the neighborhoods UU and VV of points pM1p \in M_{1} and φ(p)\varphi(p), the contraction mapping φU:UV\varphi|_{U} : U \to V is a diffeomorphism, then φ\varphi is called a local diffeomorphism.

Theorem

Let’s call M1n,M2nM_{1}^{n}, M_{2}^{n} an nn-dimensional differential manifold. Let ϕ:M1M2\phi : M_{1} \to M_{2} be a differentiable function, and suppose that for pM1p \in M_{1}, dϕp:TpM1Tϕ(p)M2d\phi_{p} : T_{p}M_{1} \to T_{\phi (p)}M_{2} is an isomorphism. Then ϕ\phi is a local diffeomorphism at pp.

Proof

This is established by the Inverse Function Theorem.


  1. Manfredo P. Do Carmo, Riemannian Geometry (Eng Edition, 1992), p10 ↩︎