Branched manifold


In mathematics, a branched manifold is a generalization of a differentiable manifold which may have singularities of very restricted type and admits a well-defined tangent space at each point. A branched n-manifold is covered by n-dimensional "coordinate charts", each of which involves one or several "branches" homeomorphically projecting into the same differentiable n-disk in Rn. Branched manifolds first appeared in the dynamical systems theory, in connection with one-dimensional hyperbolic attractors constructed by Smale and were formalized by R. F. Williams in a series of papers on expanding attractors. Special cases of low dimensions are known as train tracks and branched surfaces and play prominent role in the geometry of three-manifolds after Thurston.

Definition

Let K be a metrizable space, together with:
  1. a collection of closed subsets of K;
  2. for each Ui, a finite collection of closed subsets of Ui;
  3. for each i, a map πi: UiDin to a closed n-disk of class Ck in Rn.
These data must satisfy the following requirements:
  1. j Dij = Ui and ∪i Int Ui = K;
  2. the restriction of πi to Dij is a homeomorphism onto its image πi which is a closed class Ck n-disk relative to the boundary of Din;
  3. there is a cocycle of diffeomorphisms of class Ck such that πl = αlm · πm when defined. The domain of αlm is πm.
Then the space K is a branched n-manifold of class Ck.
The standard machinery of differential topology can be adapted to the case of branched manifolds. This leads to the definition of the tangent space TpK to a branched n-manifold K at a given point p, which is an n-dimensional real vector space; a natural notion of a Ck differentiable map f: KL between branched manifolds, its differential df: TpKTfL, the germ of f at p, jet spaces, and other related notions.

Examples

Extrinsically, branched n-manifolds are n-dimensional complexes embedded into some Euclidean space such that each point has a well-defined n-dimensional tangent space.