Manifolds Roughly speaking, an n-dimensional
manifold M is a
topological space locally (i.e., near each point)
homeomorphic to an open subset of
Euclidean space \R^n. A
manifold with boundary is similar, except that a point of M is allowed to have a neighborhood that is homeomorphic to an open subset of the
half-space :\{(x_1,\ldots,x_n) \in \R^n \mid x_n \geqslant 0\}. Those points without a neighborhood homeomorphic to an open subset of Euclidean space are the boundary points of M; the boundary of M is denoted by \partial M. Finally, a
closed manifold is, by definition, a
compact manifold without boundary (\partial M=\emptyset).
Cobordisms An (n+1)-dimensional
cobordism is a
quintuple (W; M, N, i, j) consisting of an (n+1)-dimensional compact differentiable manifold with boundary, W; closed n-manifolds M, N; and
embeddings i\colon M \hookrightarrow \partial W, j\colon N \hookrightarrow\partial W with disjoint images such that :\partial W = i(M) \sqcup j(N)~. The terminology is usually abbreviated to (W; M, N). M and N are called
cobordant if such a cobordism exists. All manifolds cobordant to a fixed given manifold M form the
cobordism class of M. Every closed manifold M is the boundary of the non-compact manifold M\times [0,1); for this reason we require W to be compact in the definition of cobordism. Note however that W is
not required to be connected; as a consequence, if M=\partial W_1 and N=\partial W_2, then M and N are cobordant.
Examples The simplest example of a cobordism is the
unit interval I=[0,1]. It is a 1-dimensional cobordism between the 0-dimensional manifolds \{0\}, \{1\}. More generally, for any closed manifold M, (M\times I;M\times \{0\},M\times\{1\}) is a cobordism from M\times\{0\} to M\times\{1\}. If M consists of a
circle, and N of two circles, M and N together make up the boundary of a
pair of pants W (see the figure at right). Thus the pair of pants is a cobordism between M and N. A simpler cobordism between M and N is given by the disjoint union of three disks. The pair of pants is an example of a more general cobordism: for any two n-dimensional manifolds M, M', the disjoint union M \sqcup M' is cobordant to the
connected sum M\mathbin{\#}M'. The previous example is a particular case, since the connected sum \mathbb{S}^1\mathbin{\#}\mathbb{S}^1 is isomorphic to \mathbb{S}^1. The connected sum M\mathbin{\#}M' is obtained from the disjoint union M \sqcup M' by surgery on an embedding of \mathbb{S}^0 \times \mathbb{D}^n in M \sqcup M', and the cobordism is the trace of the surgery.
Terminology An
n-manifold
M is called
null-cobordant if there is a cobordism between
M and the empty manifold; in other words, if
M is the entire boundary of some (
n + 1)-manifold. For example, the circle is null-cobordant since it bounds a disk. More generally, a
n-sphere is null-cobordant since it bounds a (
n + 1)-disk. Also, every orientable surface is null-cobordant, because it is the boundary of a
handlebody. On the other hand, the 2
n-dimensional
real projective space \mathbb{P}^{2n}(\R) is a (compact) closed manifold that is not the boundary of a manifold, as is explained below. The general
bordism problem is to calculate the cobordism classes of manifolds subject to various conditions. Null-cobordisms with additional structure are called
fillings.
Bordism and
cobordism are used by some authors interchangeably; others distinguish them. When one wishes to distinguish the study of cobordism classes from the study of cobordisms as objects in their own right, one calls the equivalence question
bordism of manifolds, and the study of cobordisms as objects
cobordisms of manifolds. The term
bordism comes from French , meaning boundary. Hence bordism is the study of boundaries.
Cobordism means "jointly bound", so
M and
N are cobordant if they jointly bound a manifold; i.e., if their disjoint union is a boundary. Further, cobordism groups form an extraordinary
cohomology theory, hence the co-.
Variants The above is the most basic form of the definition. It is also referred to as unoriented bordism. In many situations, the manifolds in question are
oriented, or carry some other additional structure referred to as
G-structure. This gives rise to
"oriented cobordism" and "cobordism with G-structure", respectively. Under favourable technical conditions these form a
graded ring called the
cobordism ring \Omega^G_*, with grading by dimension, addition by disjoint union and multiplication by
cartesian product. The cobordism groups \Omega^G_* are the coefficient groups of a
generalised homology theory. When there is additional structure, the notion of cobordism must be formulated more precisely: a
G-structure on
W restricts to a
G-structure on
M and
N. The basic examples are
G = O for unoriented cobordism,
G = SO for oriented cobordism, and
G = U for
complex cobordism using
stably complex manifolds. Many more are detailed by
Robert E. Stong. In a similar vein, a standard tool in
surgery theory is surgery on
normal maps: such a process changes a normal map to another normal map within the same
bordism class. Instead of considering additional structure, it is also possible to take into account various notions of manifold, especially
piecewise linear (PL) and
topological manifolds. This gives rise to bordism groups \Omega_*^{PL}(X), \Omega_*^{TOP}(X), which are harder to compute than the differentiable variants. ==Surgery construction==