The study of manifolds combines many important areas of mathematics: it generalizes concepts such as
curves and surfaces as well as ideas from
linear algebra and topology.
Early development Before the modern concept of a manifold there were several important results.
Non-Euclidean geometry considers spaces where
Euclid's
parallel postulate fails.
Saccheri first studied such geometries in 1733, but sought only to disprove them.
Gauss,
Bolyai and
Lobachevsky independently discovered them 100 years later. Their research uncovered two types of spaces whose geometric structures differ from that of classical Euclidean space; these gave rise to
hyperbolic geometry and
elliptic geometry. In the modern theory of manifolds, these notions correspond to Riemannian manifolds with constant negative and positive
curvature, respectively. Carl Friedrich Gauss may have been the first to consider abstract spaces as mathematical objects in their own right. His
theorema egregium gives a method for computing the curvature of a
surface without considering the
ambient space in which the surface lies. Such a surface would, in modern terminology, be called a manifold; and in modern terms, the theorem proved that the curvature of the surface is an
intrinsic property. Manifold theory has come to focus exclusively on these intrinsic properties (or invariants), while largely ignoring the extrinsic properties of the ambient space. Another, more topological example of an intrinsic
property of a manifold is its
Euler characteristic.
Leonhard Euler showed that for a convex
polytope in the three-dimensional Euclidean space with
V vertices (or corners),
E edges, and
F faces,V - E + F = 2.\ The same formula will hold if we project the vertices and edges of the polytope onto a sphere, creating a
topological map with
V vertices,
E edges, and
F faces, and in fact, will remain true for any spherical map, even if it does not arise from any convex polytope. Thus 2 is a topological invariant of the sphere, called its
Euler characteristic. On the other hand, a
torus can be sliced open by its 'parallel' and 'meridian' circles, creating a map with
V = 1 vertex,
E = 2 edges, and
F = 1 face. Thus the Euler characteristic of the torus is 1 − 2 + 1 = 0. The Euler characteristic of other surfaces is a useful
topological invariant, which can be extended to higher dimensions using
Betti numbers. In the mid nineteenth century, the
Gauss–Bonnet theorem linked the Euler characteristic to the
Gaussian curvature.
Synthesis Investigations of
Niels Henrik Abel and
Carl Gustav Jacobi on inversion of
elliptic integrals in the first half of 19th century led them to consider special types of complex manifolds, now known as
Jacobians.
Bernhard Riemann further contributed to their theory, clarifying the geometric meaning of the process of
analytic continuation of functions of complex variables. Another important source of manifolds in 19th century mathematics was
analytical mechanics, as developed by
Siméon Poisson, Jacobi, and
William Rowan Hamilton. The possible states of a mechanical system are thought to be points of an abstract space,
phase space in
Lagrangian and
Hamiltonian formalisms of classical mechanics. This space is, in fact, a high-dimensional manifold, whose dimension corresponds to the degrees of freedom of the system and where the points are specified by their
generalized coordinates. For an unconstrained movement of free particles the manifold is equivalent to the Euclidean space, but various
conservation laws constrain it to more complicated formations, e.g.
Liouville tori. The theory of a rotating solid body, developed in the 18th century by Leonhard Euler and
Joseph-Louis Lagrange, gives another example where the manifold is nontrivial. Geometrical and topological aspects of classical mechanics were emphasized by
Henri Poincaré, one of the founders of topology. Riemann was the first one to do extensive work generalizing the idea of a surface to higher dimensions. The name
manifold comes from Riemann's original
German term,
Mannigfaltigkeit, which
William Kingdon Clifford translated as "manifoldness". In his Göttingen inaugural lecture, Riemann described the set of all possible values of a variable with certain constraints as a
Mannigfaltigkeit, because the variable can have
many values. He distinguishes between
stetige Mannigfaltigkeit and
diskrete Mannigfaltigkeit (
continuous manifoldness and
discontinuous manifoldness), depending on whether the value changes continuously or not. As continuous examples, Riemann refers to not only colors and the locations of objects in space, but also the possible shapes of a spatial figure. Using
induction, Riemann constructs an
n-fach ausgedehnte Mannigfaltigkeit (
n times extended manifoldness or
n-dimensional manifoldness) as a continuous stack of (n−1) dimensional manifoldnesses. Riemann's intuitive notion of a
Mannigfaltigkeit evolved into what is today formalized as a manifold. Riemannian manifolds and
Riemann surfaces are named after Riemann.
Poincaré's definition In his very influential paper,
Analysis Situs, Henri Poincaré gave a definition of a differentiable manifold (
variété) which served as a precursor to the modern concept of a manifold. In the first section of Analysis Situs, Poincaré defines a manifold as the
level set of a
continuously differentiable function between Euclidean spaces that satisfies the nondegeneracy hypothesis of the
implicit function theorem. In the third section, he begins by remarking that the
graph of a continuously differentiable function is a manifold in the latter sense. He then proposes a new, more general, definition of manifold based on a 'chain of manifolds' (
une chaîne des variétés). Poincaré's notion of a
chain of manifolds is a precursor to the modern notion of atlas. In particular, he considers two manifolds defined respectively as graphs of functions \theta(y) and \theta'\left(y'\right) . If these manifolds overlap (
a une partie commune), then he requires that the coordinates y depend continuously differentiably on the coordinates y' and vice versa ('''...les y sont fonctions analytiques des y' et inversement'''). In this way he introduces a precursor to the notion of a
chart and of a
transition map. For example, the unit circle in the plane can be thought of as the graph of the function y = \sqrt{1 - x^2} or else the function y = -\sqrt{1 - x^2} in a neighborhood of every point except the points (1, 0) and (−1, 0); and in a neighborhood of those points, it can be thought of as the graph of, respectively, x = \sqrt{1 - y^2} and x = -\sqrt{1 - y^2}. The circle can be represented by a graph in the neighborhood of every point because the left hand side of its defining equation x^2 + y^2 - 1 = 0 has nonzero gradient at every point of the circle. By the
implicit function theorem, every
submanifold of Euclidean space is locally the graph of a function.
Hermann Weyl gave an intrinsic definition for differentiable manifolds in his lecture course on Riemann surfaces in 1911–1912, opening the road to the general concept of a
topological space that followed shortly. During the 1930s
Hassler Whitney and others clarified the
foundational aspects of the subject, and thus intuitions dating back to the latter half of the 19th century became precise, and developed through
differential geometry and
Lie group theory. Notably, the
Whitney embedding theorem showed that the intrinsic definition in terms of charts was equivalent to Poincaré's definition in terms of subsets of Euclidean space.
Topology of manifolds: highlights Two-dimensional manifolds, also known as a 2D
surfaces embedded in our common 3D space, were considered by Riemann under the guise of
Riemann surfaces, and rigorously classified in the beginning of the 20th century by
Poul Heegaard and
Max Dehn. Poincaré pioneered the study of three-dimensional manifolds and raised a fundamental question about them, today known as the
Poincaré conjecture. After nearly a century,
Grigori Perelman proved the Poincaré conjecture (see the
Solution of the Poincaré conjecture).
William Thurston's
geometrization program, formulated in the 1970s, provided a far-reaching extension of the Poincaré conjecture to the general three-dimensional manifolds. Four-dimensional manifolds were brought to the forefront of mathematical research in the 1980s by
Michael Freedman and in a different setting, by
Simon Donaldson, who was motivated by the then recent progress in theoretical physics (
Yang–Mills theory), where they serve as a substitute for ordinary 'flat'
spacetime.
Andrey Markov Jr. showed in 1960 that no algorithm exists for classifying four-dimensional manifolds. Important work on higher-dimensional manifolds, including
analogues of the Poincaré conjecture, had been done earlier by
René Thom,
John Milnor,
Stephen Smale and
Sergei Novikov. A very pervasive and flexible technique underlying much work on the
topology of manifolds is
Morse theory. == Additional structure ==