In mathematics, in particular in nonlinear analysis, a Fréchet manifold is a topological space modeled on a Fréchet space in much the same way as a manifold is modeled on a Euclidean space.

More precisely, a Fréchet manifold consists of a Hausdorff space with an atlas of coordinate charts over Fréchet spaces whose transitions are smooth mappings. Thus has an open cover and a collection of homeomorphisms onto their images, where are Fréchet spaces, such that

is smooth for all pairs of indices

Classification up to homeomorphism edit

It is by no means true that a finite-dimensional manifold of dimension   is globally homeomorphic to   or even an open subset of   However, in an infinite-dimensional setting, it is possible to classify "well-behaved" Fréchet manifolds up to homeomorphism quite nicely. A 1969 theorem of David Henderson states that every infinite-dimensional, separable, metric Fréchet manifold   can be embedded as an open subset of the infinite-dimensional, separable Hilbert space,   (up to linear isomorphism, there is only one such space).

The embedding homeomorphism can be used as a global chart for   Thus, in the infinite-dimensional, separable, metric case, up to homeomorphism, the "only" topological Fréchet manifolds are the open subsets of the separable infinite-dimensional Hilbert space. But in the case of differentiable or smooth Fréchet manifolds (up to the appropriate notion of diffeomorphism) this fails[citation needed].

See also edit

References edit

  • Hamilton, Richard S. (1982). "The inverse function theorem of Nash and Moser". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.). 7 (1): 65–222. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1982-15004-2. ISSN 0273-0979. MR656198
  • Henderson, David W. (1969). "Infinite-dimensional manifolds are open subsets of Hilbert space". Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 75 (4): 759–762. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1969-12276-7. MR0247634