Whitney immersion theorem

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Template:Short description In differential topology, the Whitney immersion theorem (named after Hassler Whitney) states that for m>1, any smooth m-dimensional manifold (required also to be Hausdorff and second-countable) has a one-to-one immersion in Euclidean 2m-space, and a (not necessarily one-to-one) immersion in (2m1)-space. Similarly, every smooth m-dimensional manifold can be immersed in the 2m1-dimensional sphere (this removes the m>1 constraint).

The weak version, for 2m+1, is due to transversality (general position, dimension counting): two m-dimensional manifolds in 𝐑2m intersect generically in a 0-dimensional space.

Further results

William S. Massey Script error: No such module "Footnotes". went on to prove that every n-dimensional manifold is cobordant to a manifold that immerses in S2na(n) where a(n) is the number of 1's that appear in the binary expansion of n. (The corresponding dimensions are listed in OEISA005187). In the same paper, Massey proved that for every n there is manifold (which happens to be a product of real projective spaces) that does not immerse in S2n1a(n).

The conjecture that every n-manifold immerses in S2na(n) became known as the immersion conjecture. This conjecture was eventually solved in the affirmative by Ralph Cohen (1985).

See also

References

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External links

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