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- From: bhv@areaplg2.corp.mot.com (Bronis Vidugiris)
- Subject: Re: What's a manifold?
- Organization: Motorola, CCR&D, CORP, Schaumburg, IL
- Date: Thu, 5 Nov 1992 23:08:46 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov5.230846.3273@lmpsbbs.comm.mot.com>
- References: <abian.720562280@pv343f.vincent.iastate.edu> <1992Nov1.031410.17115@CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU> <1992Nov3.204551.29715@lmpsbbs.comm.mot.com> <1992Nov5.004804.24757@galois.mit.edu>
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- In article <1992Nov5.004804.24757@galois.mit.edu> jbaez@riesz.mit.edu (John C. Baez) writes:
-
- )I guess you may have the basic gut idea of a manifold, since you
- )referred to Lobachevsky. Anyway, the idea is that a manifold is a
- )generalization of a surface to higher dimensions.
-
- A rash assumption! I've picked up some of an idea from the net, however.
-
- I should mention that if you like mathematics and sarcastic humor, you
- could do a lot worse than pick up some of the songs by Tom Leher.
- "Lobachevsky" is one of his songs.
-
- In it, the main character of the song (who is Russian, of course) offers
- the following advice, in a thick russian accent and with fractured syntax.
-
- "Plagarize, Plagarize, Plagarize! Only be sure to always call it -
- research"
-
- Leher, a mathematics professor turned songwriter/performer, wrote other very
- nice sarcastic parodies, a fair number of which have some mathematical and/or
- scientific content (not all do, however), including the "Hunting Song",
- "Werner Von Braun", "National Brotherhood Week", "The New Math", and "The
- Elements". Leher is just as much (if not more) fun than reading usenet!
-
- )Anyway, manifolds come in several flavors, most notably "smooth" and
- )"topological". A topological manifold is a Hausdorff space such that every
- )point has a neighborhood homeomorphic to R^n (Euclidean n-space). Now
- )you should ask me to define whatever didn't make any sense in that
- )definition!
-
- What's a Hausdorff space? For that matter, what's homeomorphic? (one-to
- one reversible mapping??).
-
-