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The boundary of an -manifold with boundary is an ()-manifold. A disk (circle plus interior) is a 2-manifold with boundary. Its boundary is a circle, a 1-manifold. A square with interior is also a 2-manifold with boundary. A ball (sphere plus interior) is a 3-manifold with boundary. Its boundary is a sphere, a 2-manifold.
A boundary point of a set is any element of that set's boundary. The boundary defined above is sometimes called the set's topological boundary to distinguish it from other similarly named notions such as the boundary of a manifold with boundary or the boundary of a manifold with corners, to name just a few examples.
The boundary of a manifold is a manifold , which has dimension . An orientation on M {\displaystyle M} induces an orientation on ∂ M {\displaystyle \partial M} . We usually denote a submanifold by Σ ⊂ M {\displaystyle \Sigma \subset M} .
The case of dimension 4 is somehow a boundary case, as it manifests "low dimensional" behaviour smoothly (but not topologically); see discussion of "low" versus "high" dimension. Different categories of manifolds yield different classifications; these are related by the notion of "structure", and more general categories have neater theories.
The connected sum of two n-manifolds is defined by removing an open ball from each manifold and taking the quotient of the disjoint union of the resulting manifolds with boundary, with the quotient taken with regards to a homeomorphism between the boundary spheres of the removed balls.
The surface S is said to be boundary-compressible if either S is a disk that cobounds a ball with a disk in or there exists a boundary-compressing disk for S in M. Otherwise, S is boundary-incompressible. Alternatively, one can relax this definition by dropping the requirement that the surface be properly embedded.
In differential topology, an area of mathematics, a neat submanifold of a manifold with boundary is a kind of "well-behaved" submanifold. To define this more precisely, first let be a manifold with boundary, and be a submanifold of .
However, this definition doesn’t cover some basic objects such as a closed disk, so authors sometimes define a manifold with boundary and abusively say manifold without reference to the boundary. But normally, a compact manifold (compact with respect to its underlying topology) can synonymously be used for closed manifold if the usual ...