Embedding (topology)
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In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, an embedding (or imbedding) is one instance of some
mathematical structure In mathematics, a structure is a set endowed with some additional features on the set (e.g. an operation, relation, metric, or topology). Often, the additional features are attached or related to the set, so as to provide it with some additional ...
contained within another instance, such as a group that is a subgroup. When some object X is said to be embedded in another object Y, the embedding is given by some
injective In mathematics, an injective function (also known as injection, or one-to-one function) is a function that maps distinct elements of its domain to distinct elements; that is, implies . (Equivalently, implies in the equivalent contrapositiv ...
and structure-preserving map f:X\rightarrow Y. The precise meaning of "structure-preserving" depends on the kind of mathematical structure of which X and Y are instances. In the terminology of
category theory Category theory is a general theory of mathematical structures and their relations that was introduced by Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane in the middle of the 20th century in their foundational work on algebraic topology. Nowadays, cate ...
, a structure-preserving map is called a
morphism In mathematics, particularly in category theory, a morphism is a structure-preserving map from one mathematical structure to another one of the same type. The notion of morphism recurs in much of contemporary mathematics. In set theory, morphisms a ...
. The fact that a map f:X\rightarrow Y is an embedding is often indicated by the use of a "hooked arrow" (); thus: f : X \hookrightarrow Y. (On the other hand, this notation is sometimes reserved for inclusion maps.) Given X and Y, several different embeddings of X in Y may be possible. In many cases of interest there is a standard (or "canonical") embedding, like those of the natural numbers in the integers, the integers in the rational numbers, the rational numbers in the real numbers, and the real numbers in the complex numbers. In such cases it is common to identify the domain X with its
image An image is a visual representation of something. It can be two-dimensional, three-dimensional, or somehow otherwise feed into the visual system to convey information. An image can be an artifact, such as a photograph or other two-dimensiona ...
f(X) contained in Y, so that f(X)\subseteq Y.


Topology and geometry


General topology

In general topology, an embedding is a homeomorphism onto its image. More explicitly, an injective continuous map f : X \to Y between topological spaces X and Y is a topological embedding if f yields a homeomorphism between X and f(X) (where f(X) carries the subspace topology inherited from Y). Intuitively then, the embedding f : X \to Y lets us treat X as a subspace of Y. Every embedding is injective and continuous. Every map that is injective, continuous and either open or
closed Closed may refer to: Mathematics * Closure (mathematics), a set, along with operations, for which applying those operations on members always results in a member of the set * Closed set, a set which contains all its limit points * Closed interval, ...
is an embedding; however there are also embeddings which are neither open nor closed. The latter happens if the image f(X) is neither an open set nor a
closed set In geometry, topology, and related branches of mathematics, a closed set is a set whose complement is an open set. In a topological space, a closed set can be defined as a set which contains all its limit points. In a complete metric space, a cl ...
in Y. For a given space Y, the existence of an embedding X \to Y is a topological invariant of X. This allows two spaces to be distinguished if one is able to be embedded in a space while the other is not.


Related definitions

If the domain of a function f : X \to Y is a topological space then the function is said to be ' if there exists some Neighbourhood (mathematics), neighborhood U of this point such that the restriction f\big\vert_U : U \to Y is injective. It is called ' if it is locally injective around every point of its domain. Similarly, a ' is a function for which every point in its domain has some neighborhood to which its restriction is a (topological, resp. smooth) embedding. Every injective function is locally injective but not conversely. Local diffeomorphisms, local homeomorphisms, and smooth Immersion (mathematics), immersions are all locally injective functions that are not necessarily injective. The inverse function theorem gives a sufficient condition for a continuously differentiable function to be (among other things) locally injective. Every Fiber (mathematics), fiber of a locally injective function f : X \to Y is necessarily a Discrete space, discrete subspace of its domain X.


Differential topology

In differential topology: Let M and N be smooth manifolds and f:M\to N be a smooth map. Then f is called an immersion (mathematics), immersion if its pushforward (differential), derivative is everywhere injective. An embedding, or a smooth embedding, is defined to be an immersion which is an embedding in the topological sense mentioned above (i.e. homeomorphism onto its image). In other words, the domain of an embedding is diffeomorphism, diffeomorphic to its image, and in particular the image of an embedding must be a submanifold. An immersion is precisely a local embedding, i.e. for any point x\in M there is a neighborhood x\in U\subset M such that f:U\to N is an embedding. When the domain manifold is compact, the notion of a smooth embedding is equivalent to that of an injective immersion. An important case is N = \mathbb^n. The interest here is in how large n must be for an embedding, in terms of the dimension m of M. The Whitney embedding theorem states that n = 2m is enough, and is the best possible linear bound. For example, the real projective space RP^m of dimension m, where m is a power of two, requires n = 2m for an embedding. However, this does not apply to immersions; for instance, RP^2 can be immersed in \mathbb^3 as is explicitly shown by Boy's surface—which has self-intersections. The Roman surface fails to be an immersion as it contains cross-caps. An embedding is proper if it behaves well with respect to Topological manifold#Manifolds with boundary, boundaries: one requires the map f: X \rightarrow Y to be such that *f(\partial X) = f(X) \cap \partial Y, and *f(X) is Transversality (mathematics), transverse to \partial Y in any point of f(\partial X). The first condition is equivalent to having f(\partial X) \subseteq \partial Y and f(X \setminus \partial X) \subseteq Y \setminus \partial Y. The second condition, roughly speaking, says that f(X) is not tangent to the boundary of Y.


Riemannian and pseudo-Riemannian geometry

In Riemannian geometry and pseudo-Riemannian geometry: Let (M,g) and (N,h) be Riemannian manifolds or more generally pseudo-Riemannian manifolds. An isometric embedding is a smooth embedding f:M\rightarrow N which preserves the (pseudo-)Riemannian metric, metric in the sense that g is equal to the pullback (differential geometry), pullback of h by f, i.e. g=f*h. Explicitly, for any two tangent vectors v,w\in T_x(M) we have :g(v,w)=h(df(v),df(w)). Analogously, isometric immersion is an immersion between (pseudo)-Riemannian manifolds which preserves the (pseudo)-Riemannian metrics. Equivalently, in Riemannian geometry, an isometric embedding (immersion) is a smooth embedding (immersion) which preserves length of curves (cf. Nash embedding theorem).Nash J., ''The embedding problem for Riemannian manifolds,'' Ann. of Math. (2), 63 (1956), 20–63.


Algebra

In general, for an Variety (universal algebra), algebraic category C, an embedding between two C-algebraic structures X and Y is a C-morphism that is injective.


Field theory

In field theory (mathematics), field theory, an embedding of a field (mathematics), field E in a field F is a ring homomorphism . The Kernel (algebra), kernel of \sigma is an ideal (ring theory), ideal of E which cannot be the whole field E, because of the condition . Furthermore, it is a well-known property of fields that their only ideals are the zero ideal and the whole field itself. Therefore, the kernel is 0, so any embedding of fields is a monomorphism. Hence, E is isomorphic to the Field extension, subfield \sigma(E) of F. This justifies the name ''embedding'' for an arbitrary homomorphism of fields.


Universal algebra and model theory

If \sigma is a signature (logic), signature and A,B are \sigma-structure (mathematical logic), structures (also called \sigma-algebras in universal algebra or models in model theory), then a map h:A \to B is a \sigma-embedding iff all of the following hold: * h is injective, * for every n-ary function symbol f \in\sigma and a_1,\ldots,a_n \in A^n, we have h(f^A(a_1,\ldots,a_n))=f^B(h(a_1),\ldots,h(a_n)), * for every n-ary relation symbol R \in\sigma and a_1,\ldots,a_n \in A^n, we have A \models R(a_1,\ldots,a_n) iff B \models R(h(a_1),\ldots,h(a_n)). Here A\models R (a_1,\ldots,a_n) is a model theoretical notation equivalent to (a_1,\ldots,a_n)\in R^A. In model theory there is also a stronger notion of elementary embedding.


Order theory and domain theory

In order theory, an embedding of partially ordered sets is a function F between partially ordered sets X and Y such that :\forall x_1,x_2\in X: x_1\leq x_2 \iff F(x_1)\leq F(x_2). Injectivity of F follows quickly from this definition. In domain theory, an additional requirement is that : \forall y\in Y:\ is Directed set, directed.


Metric spaces

A mapping \phi: X \to Y of metric spaces is called an ''embedding'' (with stretch factor, distortion C>0) if : L d_X(x, y) \leq d_Y(\phi(x), \phi(y)) \leq CLd_X(x,y) for every x,y\in X and some constant L>0.


Normed spaces

An important special case is that of normed spaces; in this case it is natural to consider linear embeddings. One of the basic questions that can be asked about a finite-dimensional normed space (X, \, \cdot \, ) is, ''what is the maximal dimension k such that the Hilbert space \ell_2^k can be linearly embedded into X with constant distortion?'' The answer is given by Dvoretzky's theorem.


Category theory

In
category theory Category theory is a general theory of mathematical structures and their relations that was introduced by Samuel Eilenberg and Saunders Mac Lane in the middle of the 20th century in their foundational work on algebraic topology. Nowadays, cate ...
, there is no satisfactory and generally accepted definition of embeddings that is applicable in all categories. One would expect that all isomorphisms and all compositions of embeddings are embeddings, and that all embeddings are monomorphisms. Other typical requirements are: any monomorphism#Related concepts, extremal monomorphism is an embedding and embeddings are stable under Pullback (category theory), pullbacks. Ideally the class of all embedded subobjects of a given object, up to isomorphism, should also be small class, small, and thus an ordered set. In this case, the category is said to be well powered with respect to the class of embeddings. This allows defining new local structures in the category (such as a closure operator). In a concrete category, an embedding is a morphism f:A\rightarrow B which is an injective function from the underlying set of A to the underlying set of B and is also an initial morphism in the following sense: If g is a function from the underlying set of an object C to the underlying set of A, and if its composition with f is a morphism fg:C\rightarrow B, then g itself is a morphism. A factorization system for a category also gives rise to a notion of embedding. If (E,M) is a factorization system, then the morphisms in M may be regarded as the embeddings, especially when the category is well powered with respect to M. Concrete theories often have a factorization system in which M consists of the embeddings in the previous sense. This is the case of the majority of the examples given in this article. As usual in category theory, there is a dual (category theory), dual concept, known as quotient. All the preceding properties can be dualized. An embedding can also refer to an Subcategory#Embeddings, embedding functor.


See also

*Closed immersion *Cover (algebra), Cover *Dimension reduction *Immersion (mathematics), Immersion *Johnson–Lindenstrauss lemma *Submanifold *Subspace (topology), Subspace *Universal spaces in the topology and topological dynamics, Universal space


Notes


References

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External links

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Embedding of manifolds
on the Manifold Atlas {{set index article Abstract algebra Category theory General topology Differential topology Functions and mappings Maps of manifolds Model theory Order theory