$\require{physics}\newcommand{\cbrt}[1]{\sqrt[3]{#1}}\newcommand{\sgn}{\text{sgn}}\newcommand{\ii}[1]{\textit{#1}}\newcommand{\eps}{\varepsilon}\newcommand{\EE}{\mathbb E}\newcommand{\PP}{\mathbb P}\newcommand{\Var}{\mathrm{Var}}\newcommand{\Cov}{\mathrm{Cov}}\newcommand{\pperp}{\perp\kern-6pt\perp}\newcommand{\LL}{\mathcal{L}}\newcommand{\pa}{\partial}\newcommand{\AAA}{\mathscr{A}}\newcommand{\BBB}{\mathscr{B}}\newcommand{\CCC}{\mathscr{C}}\newcommand{\DDD}{\mathscr{D}}\newcommand{\EEE}{\mathscr{E}}\newcommand{\FFF}{\mathscr{F}}\newcommand{\WFF}{\widetilde{\FFF}}\newcommand{\GGG}{\mathscr{G}}\newcommand{\HHH}{\mathscr{H}}\newcommand{\PPP}{\mathscr{P}}\newcommand{\Ff}{\mathcal{F}}\newcommand{\Gg}{\mathcal{G}}\newcommand{\Hh}{\mathbb{H}}\DeclareMathOperator{\ess}{ess}\newcommand{\CC}{\mathbb C}\newcommand{\FF}{\mathbb F}\newcommand{\NN}{\mathbb N}\newcommand{\QQ}{\mathbb Q}\newcommand{\RR}{\mathbb R}\newcommand{\ZZ}{\mathbb Z}\newcommand{\KK}{\mathbb K}\newcommand{\SSS}{\mathbb S}\newcommand{\II}{\mathbb I}\newcommand{\conj}[1]{\overline{#1}}\DeclareMathOperator{\cis}{cis}\newcommand{\abs}[1]{\left\lvert #1 \right\rvert}\newcommand{\norm}[1]{\left\lVert #1 \right\rVert}\newcommand{\floor}[1]{\left\lfloor #1 \right\rfloor}\newcommand{\ceil}[1]{\left\lceil #1 \right\rceil}\DeclareMathOperator*{\range}{range}\DeclareMathOperator*{\nul}{null}\DeclareMathOperator*{\Tr}{Tr}\DeclareMathOperator*{\tr}{Tr}\newcommand{\id}{1\!\!1}\newcommand{\Id}{1\!\!1}\newcommand{\der}{\ \mathrm {d}}\newcommand{\Zc}[1]{\ZZ / #1 \ZZ}\newcommand{\Zm}[1]{\left(\ZZ / #1 \ZZ\right)^\times}\DeclareMathOperator{\Hom}{Hom}\DeclareMathOperator{\End}{End}\newcommand{\GL}{\mathbb{GL}}\newcommand{\SL}{\mathbb{SL}}\newcommand{\SO}{\mathbb{SO}}\newcommand{\OO}{\mathbb{O}}\newcommand{\SU}{\mathbb{SU}}\newcommand{\U}{\mathbb{U}}\newcommand{\Spin}{\mathrm{Spin}}\newcommand{\Cl}{\mathrm{Cl}}\newcommand{\gr}{\mathrm{gr}}\newcommand{\gl}{\mathfrak{gl}}\newcommand{\sl}{\mathfrak{sl}}\newcommand{\so}{\mathfrak{so}}\newcommand{\su}{\mathfrak{su}}\newcommand{\sp}{\mathfrak{sp}}\newcommand{\uu}{\mathfrak{u}}\newcommand{\fg}{\mathfrak{g}}\newcommand{\hh}{\mathfrak{h}}\DeclareMathOperator{\Ad}{Ad}\DeclareMathOperator{\ad}{ad}\DeclareMathOperator{\Rad}{Rad}\DeclareMathOperator{\im}{im}\renewcommand{\BB}{\mathcal{B}}\newcommand{\HH}{\mathcal{H}}\DeclareMathOperator{\Lie}{Lie}\DeclareMathOperator{\Mat}{Mat}\DeclareMathOperator{\span}{span}\DeclareMathOperator{\proj}{proj}$ >[!definition] Manifold >An ==**$n$-dimensional topological manifold**== $X$ is: >1. Hausdorff and has countable base. >2. is [[locally homeomorphic]] to $\RR^n$. If $X = \emptyset$, we declare $X$ to be of any integer dimension; else the dimension is uniquely specified. >[!idea] Complex manifolds >$\CC\cong \RR^2$ topologically, so if $n = 2m$ is even such a manifold can be thought of as a complex manifold, with local charts pointing into $\CC^m$. >[!example] Trivial >$X = \RR^n$ is a manifold of dimension $n$; in general an open subset of an $n$-manifold is an $n$-manifold. >[!example] Concrete >$S^n\subset \RR^{n+1}$ is a $n$-manifold (stereographic projection), even though it is not *globally* homeomorphic to any open subset of $\RR^n$. > >An $\infty$-sign is not a manifold, because the intersection point is not locally homeomorphic to $\RR$. See [[Manifold Pathologies]] for non-examples, or the reasons the axioms are important. >[!idea] > Being a manifold of a certain dimension is clearly a **local** property. Also, Hausdorffness and second countability are sanity checks which are inherited by subspaces, so in nearly all cases we only care about local homemorphism. # Sequence 1. [[locally homeomorphic|Local chart]] 2. [[Atlas]] 3. [[Analytic Manifolds]] 5. [[Basic Manifold Exercises]] 6. [[Regular Functions]] 7. [[Germ]]