The tangent bundle comes equipped with a natural topology (
not the
disjoint union topology) and
smooth structure so as to make it into a manifold in its own right. The dimension of TM is twice the dimension of M. Each tangent space of an
n-dimensional manifold is an
n-dimensional vector space. If U is an open
contractible subset of M, then there is a
diffeomorphism TU\to U\times\mathbb R^n which restricts to a linear isomorphism from each tangent space T_xU to \{x\}\times\mathbb R^n. As a manifold, however, TM is not always diffeomorphic to the product manifold M\times\mathbb R^n. When it is of the form M\times\mathbb R^n, then the tangent bundle is said to be
trivial. Trivial tangent bundles usually occur for manifolds equipped with a 'compatible group structure'; for instance, in the case where the manifold is a
Lie group. The tangent bundle of the unit circle is trivial because it is a Lie group (under multiplication and its natural differential structure). It is not true however that all spaces with trivial tangent bundles are Lie groups; manifolds which have a trivial tangent bundle are called
parallelizable. Just as manifolds are locally modeled on
Euclidean space, tangent bundles are locally modeled on U\times\mathbb R^n, where U is an open subset of Euclidean space. If
M is a smooth
n-dimensional manifold, then it comes equipped with an
atlas of charts (U_\alpha,\phi_\alpha), where U_\alpha is an open set in M and :\phi_\alpha: U_\alpha \to \mathbb R^n is a
diffeomorphism. These local coordinates on U_\alpha give rise to an isomorphism T_xM\rightarrow\mathbb R^n for all x\in U_\alpha. We may then define a map :\widetilde\phi_\alpha:\pi^{-1}\left(U_\alpha\right) \to \mathbb R^{2n} by :\widetilde\phi_\alpha\left(x, v^i\partial_i\right) = \left(\phi_\alpha(x), v^1, \cdots, v^n\right) We use these maps to define the topology and smooth structure on TM. A subset A of TM is open if and only if :\widetilde\phi_\alpha\left(A\cap \pi^{-1}\left(U_\alpha\right)\right) is open in \mathbb R^{2n} for each \alpha. These maps are homeomorphisms between open subsets of TM and \mathbb R^{2n} and therefore serve as charts for the smooth structure on TM. The transition functions on chart overlaps \pi^{-1}\left(U_\alpha \cap U_\beta\right) are induced by the
Jacobian matrices of the associated coordinate transformation and are therefore smooth maps between open subsets of \mathbb R^{2n}. The tangent bundle is an example of a more general construction called a
vector bundle (which is itself a specific kind of
fiber bundle). Explicitly, the tangent bundle to an n-dimensional manifold M may be defined as a rank n vector bundle over M whose transition functions are given by the
Jacobian of the associated coordinate transformations. ==Examples==