HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In mathematics, especially in
differential topology In mathematics, differential topology is the field dealing with the topological properties and smooth properties of smooth manifolds. In this sense differential topology is distinct from the closely related field of differential geometry, which ...
, Thom's first isotopy lemma states: given a smooth map f : M \to N between smooth manifolds and S \subset M a closed Whitney stratified subset, if f, _S is proper and f, _A is a submersion for each stratum A of S, then f, _S is a locally trivial
fibration The notion of a fibration generalizes the notion of a fiber bundle and plays an important role in algebraic topology, a branch of mathematics. Fibrations are used, for example, in postnikov-systems or obstruction theory. In this article, all map ...
. The lemma was originally introduced by
René Thom René Frédéric Thom (; 2 September 1923 – 25 October 2002) was a French mathematician, who received the Fields Medal in 1958. He made his reputation as a topologist, moving on to aspects of what would be called singularity theory; he became ...
who considered the case when N = \mathbb. In that case, the lemma constructs an isotopy from the fiber f^(a) to f^(b); whence the name "isotopy lemma". The local trivializations that the lemma provide preserve the strata. However, they are generally not smooth (not even C^1). On the other hand, it is possible that local trivializations are semialgebraic if the input data is semialgebraic. The lemma is also valid for a more general stratified space such as a stratified space in the sense of Mather but still with the Whitney conditions (or some other conditions). The lemma is also valid for the stratification that satisfies Bekka's condition (C), which is weaker than Whitney's condition (B). (The significance of this is that the consequences of the first isotopy lemma cannot imply Whitney’s condition (B).) Thom's second isotopy lemma is a family version of the first isotopy lemma.


Proof

The proof is based on the notion of a controlled vector field. Let \ be a system of
tubular neighborhood In mathematics, a tubular neighborhood of a submanifold of a smooth manifold is an open set around it resembling the normal bundle. The idea behind a tubular neighborhood can be explained in a simple example. Consider a smooth curve in the ...
s T_A in M of strata A in S where \pi_A : T_A \to A is the associated projection and \rho_A : T_A \to [0, \infty) given by the square norm on each fiber of \pi_A. (The construction of such a system relies on the Whitney conditions or something weaker.) By definition, a controlled vector field is a family of vector fields (smooth of some class) \eta_A on the strata A such that: for each stratum ''A'', there exists a neighborhood T'_A of A in T_A such that for any B > A, :\eta_B \circ \rho_A = 0, :(\pi_A)_* \eta_B = \eta_A \circ \pi_A on T_A' \cap B. Assume the system T_A is compatible with the map f : M \to N (such a system exists). Then there are two key results due to Thom: # Given a vector field \zeta on ''N'', there exists a controlled vector field \eta on ''S'' that is a lift of it: f_* (\eta) = \zeta \circ f. # A controlled vector field has a ''continuous'' flow (despite the fact that a controlled vector field is discontinuous). The lemma now follows in a straightforward fashion. Since the statement is local, assume N = \mathbb^n and \partial_i the coordinate vector fields on \mathbb^n. Then, by the lifting result, we find controlled vector fields \widetilde on S such that f_*(\widetilde) = \partial_i \circ f. Let \varphi_i : \mathbb \times S \to S be the flows associated to them. Then define :H : f, _S^(0) \times \mathbb^n \to S by :H(y, t) = \varphi_n(t_n, \phi_(t_, \cdots, \varphi_1(t_1, y) \cdots)). It is a map over \mathbb^n and is a homeomorphism since G(x) = (\varphi_1(-t_1, \cdots, \varphi_n(-t_n, x) \cdots), t), t = f(x) is the inverse. Since the flows \varphi_i preserve the strata, H also preserves the strata. \square


See also

*Ehresmann's fibration theorem *Thom–Mather stratified space *Tame topology


Note


References

* *


External links

* https://mathoverflow.net/questions/23259/thom-first-isotopy-lemma-in-o-minimal-structures Differential topology Lemmas Stratifications {{topology-stub