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In mathematics, an embedding (or imbedding) is one instance of some mathematical structure contained within another instance, such as a group that is a subgroup.
When some object is said to be embedded in another object , the embedding is given by some injective and structure-preserving map . The precise meaning of "structure-preserving" depends on the kind of mathematical structure of which and are instances. In the terminology of category theory, a structure-preserving map is called a morphism.
The fact that a map is an embedding is often indicated by the use of a "hooked arrow" (U+21AA ↪ RIGHTWARDS ARROW WITH HOOK); thus: (On the other hand, this notation is sometimes reserved for inclusion maps.)
Given and , several different embeddings of in 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 with its image contained in , so that .
Topology and geometry
General topology
In general topology, an embedding is a homeomorphism onto its image. More explicitly, an injective continuous map between topological spaces
and
is a topological embedding if
yields a homeomorphism between
and
(where
carries the subspace topology inherited from
). Intuitively then, the embedding
lets us treat
as a subspace of
. Every embedding is injective and continuous. Every map that is injective, continuous and either open or closed is an embedding; however there are also embeddings that are neither open nor closed. The latter happens if the image
is neither an open set nor a closed set in
.
For a given space , the existence of an embedding
is a topological invariant of
. 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 is a topological space then the function is said to be locally injective at a point if there exists some neighborhood
of this point such that the restriction
is injective. It is called locally injective if it is locally injective around every point of its domain. Similarly, a local (topological, resp. smooth) embedding 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 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 of a locally injective function is necessarily a discrete subspace of its domain
Differential topology
In differential topology: Let and
be smooth manifolds and
be a smooth map. Then
is called an immersion if its derivative is everywhere injective. An embedding, or a smooth embedding, is defined to be an immersion that is an embedding in the topological sense mentioned above (i.e. homeomorphism onto its image).
In other words, the domain of an embedding is 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 there is a neighborhood
such that
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 . The interest here is in how large
must be for an embedding, in terms of the dimension
of
. The Whitney embedding theorem states that
is enough, and is the best possible linear bound. For example, the real projective space
of dimension
, where
is a power of two, requires
for an embedding. However, this does not apply to immersions; for instance,
can be immersed in
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 boundaries: one requires the map to be such that
, and
is transverse to
in any point of
.
The first condition is equivalent to having and
. The second condition, roughly speaking, says that
is not tangent to the boundary of
.
Riemannian and pseudo-Riemannian geometry
In Riemannian geometry and pseudo-Riemannian geometry: Let and
be Riemannian manifolds or more generally pseudo-Riemannian manifolds. An isometric embedding is a smooth embedding
that preserves the (pseudo-)metric in the sense that
is equal to the pullback of
by
, i.e.
. Explicitly, for any two tangent vectors
we have
Analogously, isometric immersion is an immersion between (pseudo)-Riemannian manifolds that preserves the (pseudo)-Riemannian metrics.
Equivalently, in Riemannian geometry, an isometric embedding (immersion) is a smooth embedding (immersion) that preserves length of curves (cf. Nash embedding theorem).
Algebra
In general, for an algebraic category , an embedding between two
-algebraic structures
and
is a
-morphism
that is injective.
Field theory
In field theory, an embedding of a field in a field
is a ring homomorphism
.
The kernel of is an ideal of
, which cannot be the whole field
, because of the condition
. Furthermore, any field has as ideals only the zero ideal and the whole field itself (because if there is any non-zero field element in an ideal, it is invertible, showing the ideal is the whole field). Therefore, the kernel is
, so any embedding of fields is a monomorphism. Hence,
is isomorphic to the subfield
of
. This justifies the name embedding for an arbitrary homomorphism of fields.
Universal algebra and model theory
If is a signature and
are
-structures (also called
-algebras in universal algebra or models in model theory), then a map
is a
-embedding exactly if all of the following hold:
is injective,
- for every
-ary function symbol
and
we have
,
- for every
-ary relation symbol
and
we have
iff
Here is a model theoretical notation equivalent to
. 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 between partially ordered sets
and
such that
Injectivity of follows quickly from this definition. In domain theory, an additional requirement is that
is directed.
Metric spaces
A mapping of metric spaces is called an embedding (with distortion
) if
for every and some constant
.
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 is, what is the maximal dimension
such that the Hilbert space
can be linearly embedded into
with constant distortion?
The answer is given by Dvoretzky's theorem.
Category theory
In category theory, 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 extremal monomorphism is an embedding and embeddings are stable under pullbacks.
Ideally the class of all embedded subobjects of a given object, up to isomorphism, should also be 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 that is an injective function from the underlying set of
to the underlying set of
and is also an initial morphism in the following sense: If
is a function from the underlying set of an object
to the underlying set of
, and if its composition with
is a morphism
, then
itself is a morphism.
A factorization system for a category also gives rise to a notion of embedding. If is a factorization system, then the morphisms in
may be regarded as the embeddings, especially when the category is well powered with respect to
. Concrete theories often have a factorization system in which
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 concept, known as quotient. All the preceding properties can be dualized.
An embedding can also refer to an embedding functor.
See also
- Ambient space
- Closed immersion
- Cover
- Dimensionality reduction
- Flat (geometry)
- Immersion
- Johnson–Lindenstrauss lemma
- Submanifold
- Subspace
- Universal space
Notes
- Spivak 1999, p. 49 suggests that "the English" (i.e. the British) use "embedding" instead of "imbedding".
- "Arrows – Unicode" (PDF). Retrieved 2017-02-07.
- Hocking & Young 1988, p. 73. Sharpe 1997, p. 16.
- Bishop & Crittenden 1964, p. 21. Bishop & Goldberg 1968, p. 40. Crampin & Pirani 1994, p. 243. do Carmo 1994, p. 11. Flanders 1989, p. 53. Gallot, Hulin & Lafontaine 2004, p. 12. Kobayashi & Nomizu 1963, p. 9. Kosinski 2007, p. 27. Lang 1999, p. 27. Lee 1997, p. 15. Spivak 1999, p. 49. Warner 1983, p. 22.
- Whitney H., Differentiable manifolds, Ann. of Math. (2), 37 (1936), pp. 645–680
- Nash J., The embedding problem for Riemannian manifolds, Ann. of Math. (2), 63 (1956), 20–63.
References
- Bishop, Richard Lawrence; Crittenden, Richard J. (1964). Geometry of manifolds. New York: Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-8218-2923-3.
- Bishop, Richard Lawrence; Goldberg, Samuel Irving (1968). Tensor Analysis on Manifolds (First Dover 1980 ed.). The Macmillan Company. ISBN 0-486-64039-6.
- Crampin, Michael; Pirani, Felix Arnold Edward (1994). Applicable differential geometry. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-23190-9.
- do Carmo, Manfredo Perdigao (1994). Riemannian Geometry. Birkhäuser Boston. ISBN 978-0-8176-3490-2.
- Flanders, Harley (1989). Differential forms with applications to the physical sciences. Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-66169-8.
- Gallot, Sylvestre; Hulin, Dominique; Lafontaine, Jacques (2004). Riemannian Geometry (3rd ed.). Berlin, New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-540-20493-0.
- Hocking, John Gilbert; Young, Gail Sellers (1988) [1961]. Topology. Dover. ISBN 0-486-65676-4.
- Kosinski, Antoni Albert (2007) [1993]. Differential manifolds. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-46244-8.
- Lang, Serge (1999). Fundamentals of Differential Geometry. Graduate Texts in Mathematics. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-98593-0.
- Kobayashi, Shoshichi; Nomizu, Katsumi (1963). Foundations of Differential Geometry, Volume 1. New York: Wiley-Interscience.
- Lee, John Marshall (1997). Riemannian manifolds. Springer Verlag. ISBN 978-0-387-98322-6.
- Sharpe, R.W. (1997). Differential Geometry: Cartan's Generalization of Klein's Erlangen Program. Springer-Verlag, New York. ISBN 0-387-94732-9..
- Spivak, Michael (1999) [1970]. A Comprehensive introduction to differential geometry (Volume 1). Publish or Perish. ISBN 0-914098-70-5.
- Warner, Frank Wilson (1983). Foundations of Differentiable Manifolds and Lie Groups. Springer-Verlag, New York. ISBN 0-387-90894-3..
External links
- Adámek, Jiří; Horst Herrlich; George Strecker (2006). Abstract and Concrete Categories (The Joy of Cats).
- Embedding of manifolds on the Manifold Atlas
In mathematics an embedding or imbedding is one instance of some mathematical structure contained within another instance such as a group that is a subgroup When some object X displaystyle X is said to be embedded in another object Y displaystyle Y the embedding is given by some injective and structure preserving map f X Y displaystyle f X rightarrow Y The precise meaning of structure preserving depends on the kind of mathematical structure of which X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y are instances In the terminology of category theory a structure preserving map is called a morphism The fact that a map f X Y displaystyle f X rightarrow Y is an embedding is often indicated by the use of a hooked arrow U 21AA RIGHTWARDS ARROW WITH HOOK thus f X Y displaystyle f X hookrightarrow Y On the other hand this notation is sometimes reserved for inclusion maps Given X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y several different embeddings of X displaystyle X in Y displaystyle 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 displaystyle X with its image f X displaystyle f X contained in Y displaystyle Y so that X Y displaystyle X subseteq Y Topology and geometryGeneral topology In general topology an embedding is a homeomorphism onto its image More explicitly an injective continuous map f X Y displaystyle f X to Y between topological spaces X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y is a topological embedding if f displaystyle f yields a homeomorphism between X displaystyle X and f X displaystyle f X where f X displaystyle f X carries the subspace topology inherited from Y displaystyle Y Intuitively then the embedding f X Y displaystyle f X to Y lets us treat X displaystyle X as a subspace of Y displaystyle Y Every embedding is injective and continuous Every map that is injective continuous and either open or closed is an embedding however there are also embeddings that are neither open nor closed The latter happens if the image f X displaystyle f X is neither an open set nor a closed set in Y displaystyle Y For a given space Y displaystyle Y the existence of an embedding X Y displaystyle X to Y is a topological invariant of X displaystyle 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 Y displaystyle f X to Y is a topological space then the function is said to be locally injective at a point if there exists some neighborhood U displaystyle U of this point such that the restriction f U U Y displaystyle f big vert U U to Y is injective It is called locally injective if it is locally injective around every point of its domain Similarly a local topological resp smooth embedding 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 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 of a locally injective function f X Y displaystyle f X to Y is necessarily a discrete subspace of its domain X displaystyle X Differential topology In differential topology Let M displaystyle M and N displaystyle N be smooth manifolds and f M N displaystyle f M to N be a smooth map Then f displaystyle f is called an immersion if its derivative is everywhere injective An embedding or a smooth embedding is defined to be an immersion that is an embedding in the topological sense mentioned above i e homeomorphism onto its image In other words the domain of an embedding is 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 M displaystyle x in M there is a neighborhood x U M displaystyle x in U subset M such that f U N displaystyle 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 Rn displaystyle N mathbb R n The interest here is in how large n displaystyle n must be for an embedding in terms of the dimension m displaystyle m of M displaystyle M The Whitney embedding theorem states that n 2m displaystyle n 2m is enough and is the best possible linear bound For example the real projective space RPm displaystyle mathbb R mathrm P m of dimension m displaystyle m where m displaystyle m is a power of two requires n 2m displaystyle n 2m for an embedding However this does not apply to immersions for instance RP2 displaystyle mathbb R mathrm P 2 can be immersed in R3 displaystyle mathbb R 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 boundaries one requires the map f X Y displaystyle f X rightarrow Y to be such that f X f X Y displaystyle f partial X f X cap partial Y and f X displaystyle f X is transverse to Y displaystyle partial Y in any point of f X displaystyle f partial X The first condition is equivalent to having f X Y displaystyle f partial X subseteq partial Y and f X X Y Y displaystyle f X setminus partial X subseteq Y setminus partial Y The second condition roughly speaking says that f X displaystyle f X is not tangent to the boundary of Y displaystyle Y Riemannian and pseudo Riemannian geometry In Riemannian geometry and pseudo Riemannian geometry Let M g displaystyle M g and N h displaystyle N h be Riemannian manifolds or more generally pseudo Riemannian manifolds An isometric embedding is a smooth embedding f M N displaystyle f M rightarrow N that preserves the pseudo metric in the sense that g displaystyle g is equal to the pullback of h displaystyle h by f displaystyle f i e g f h displaystyle g f h Explicitly for any two tangent vectors v w Tx M displaystyle v w in T x M we have g v w h df v df w displaystyle g v w h df v df w Analogously isometric immersion is an immersion between pseudo Riemannian manifolds that preserves the pseudo Riemannian metrics Equivalently in Riemannian geometry an isometric embedding immersion is a smooth embedding immersion that preserves length of curves cf Nash embedding theorem AlgebraIn general for an algebraic category C displaystyle C an embedding between two C displaystyle C algebraic structures X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y is a C displaystyle C morphism e X Y displaystyle e X rightarrow Y that is injective Field theory In field theory an embedding of a field E displaystyle E in a field F displaystyle F is a ring homomorphism s E F displaystyle sigma E rightarrow F The kernel of s displaystyle sigma is an ideal of E displaystyle E which cannot be the whole field E displaystyle E because of the condition 1 s 1 1 displaystyle 1 sigma 1 1 Furthermore any field has as ideals only the zero ideal and the whole field itself because if there is any non zero field element in an ideal it is invertible showing the ideal is the whole field Therefore the kernel is 0 displaystyle 0 so any embedding of fields is a monomorphism Hence E displaystyle E is isomorphic to the subfield s E displaystyle sigma E of F displaystyle F This justifies the name embedding for an arbitrary homomorphism of fields Universal algebra and model theory If s displaystyle sigma is a signature and A B displaystyle A B are s displaystyle sigma structures also called s displaystyle sigma algebras in universal algebra or models in model theory then a map h A B displaystyle h A to B is a s displaystyle sigma embedding exactly if all of the following hold h displaystyle h is injective for every n displaystyle n ary function symbol f s displaystyle f in sigma and a1 an An displaystyle a 1 ldots a n in A n we have h fA a1 an fB h a1 h an displaystyle h f A a 1 ldots a n f B h a 1 ldots h a n for every n displaystyle n ary relation symbol R s displaystyle R in sigma and a1 an An displaystyle a 1 ldots a n in A n we have A R a1 an displaystyle A models R a 1 ldots a n iff B R h a1 h an displaystyle B models R h a 1 ldots h a n Here A R a1 an displaystyle A models R a 1 ldots a n is a model theoretical notation equivalent to a1 an RA displaystyle a 1 ldots a n in R A In model theory there is also a stronger notion of elementary embedding Order theory and domain theoryIn order theory an embedding of partially ordered sets is a function F displaystyle F between partially ordered sets X displaystyle X and Y displaystyle Y such that x1 x2 X x1 x2 F x1 F x2 displaystyle forall x 1 x 2 in X x 1 leq x 2 iff F x 1 leq F x 2 Injectivity of F displaystyle F follows quickly from this definition In domain theory an additional requirement is that y Y x F x y displaystyle forall y in Y x mid F x leq y is directed Metric spacesA mapping ϕ X Y displaystyle phi X to Y of metric spaces is called an embedding with distortion C gt 0 displaystyle C gt 0 if LdX x y dY ϕ x ϕ y CLdX x y displaystyle Ld X x y leq d Y phi x phi y leq CLd X x y for every x y X displaystyle x y in X and some constant L gt 0 displaystyle L gt 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 displaystyle X cdot is what is the maximal dimension k displaystyle k such that the Hilbert space ℓ2k displaystyle ell 2 k can be linearly embedded into X displaystyle X with constant distortion The answer is given by Dvoretzky s theorem Category theoryIn category theory 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 extremal monomorphism is an embedding and embeddings are stable under pullbacks Ideally the class of all embedded subobjects of a given object up to isomorphism should also be 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 B displaystyle f A rightarrow B that is an injective function from the underlying set of A displaystyle A to the underlying set of B displaystyle B and is also an initial morphism in the following sense If g displaystyle g is a function from the underlying set of an object C displaystyle C to the underlying set of A displaystyle A and if its composition with f displaystyle f is a morphism fg C B displaystyle fg C rightarrow B then g displaystyle g itself is a morphism A factorization system for a category also gives rise to a notion of embedding If E M displaystyle E M is a factorization system then the morphisms in M displaystyle M may be regarded as the embeddings especially when the category is well powered with respect to M displaystyle M Concrete theories often have a factorization system in which M displaystyle 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 concept known as quotient All the preceding properties can be dualized An embedding can also refer to an embedding functor See alsoAmbient space Closed immersion Cover Dimensionality reduction Flat geometry Immersion Johnson Lindenstrauss lemma Submanifold Subspace Universal spaceNotesSpivak 1999 p 49 suggests that the English i e the British use embedding instead of imbedding Arrows Unicode PDF Retrieved 2017 02 07 Hocking amp Young 1988 p 73 Sharpe 1997 p 16 Bishop amp Crittenden 1964 p 21 Bishop amp Goldberg 1968 p 40 Crampin amp Pirani 1994 p 243 do Carmo 1994 p 11 Flanders 1989 p 53 Gallot Hulin amp Lafontaine 2004 p 12 Kobayashi amp Nomizu 1963 p 9 Kosinski 2007 p 27 Lang 1999 p 27 Lee 1997 p 15 Spivak 1999 p 49 Warner 1983 p 22 Whitney H Differentiable manifolds Ann of Math 2 37 1936 pp 645 680 Nash J The embedding problem for Riemannian manifolds Ann of Math 2 63 1956 20 63 ReferencesBishop Richard Lawrence Crittenden Richard J 1964 Geometry of manifolds New York Academic Press ISBN 978 0 8218 2923 3 Bishop Richard Lawrence Goldberg Samuel Irving 1968 Tensor Analysis on Manifolds First Dover 1980 ed The Macmillan Company ISBN 0 486 64039 6 Crampin Michael Pirani Felix Arnold Edward 1994 Applicable differential geometry Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 23190 9 do Carmo Manfredo Perdigao 1994 Riemannian Geometry Birkhauser Boston ISBN 978 0 8176 3490 2 Flanders Harley 1989 Differential forms with applications to the physical sciences Dover ISBN 978 0 486 66169 8 Gallot Sylvestre Hulin Dominique Lafontaine Jacques 2004 Riemannian Geometry 3rd ed Berlin New York Springer Verlag ISBN 978 3 540 20493 0 Hocking John Gilbert Young Gail Sellers 1988 1961 Topology Dover ISBN 0 486 65676 4 Kosinski Antoni Albert 2007 1993 Differential manifolds Mineola New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 46244 8 Lang Serge 1999 Fundamentals of Differential Geometry Graduate Texts in Mathematics New York Springer ISBN 978 0 387 98593 0 Kobayashi Shoshichi Nomizu Katsumi 1963 Foundations of Differential Geometry Volume 1 New York Wiley Interscience Lee John Marshall 1997 Riemannian manifolds Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 98322 6 Sharpe R W 1997 Differential Geometry Cartan s Generalization of Klein s Erlangen Program Springer Verlag New York ISBN 0 387 94732 9 Spivak Michael 1999 1970 A Comprehensive introduction to differential geometry Volume 1 Publish or Perish ISBN 0 914098 70 5 Warner Frank Wilson 1983 Foundations of Differentiable Manifolds and Lie Groups Springer Verlag New York ISBN 0 387 90894 3 External linksAdamek Jiri Horst Herrlich George Strecker 2006 Abstract and Concrete Categories The Joy of Cats Embedding of manifolds on the Manifold AtlasThis set index article includes a list of related items that share the same name or similar names If an internal link incorrectly led you here you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article