In mathematics, a parallelization[1] of a manifold
of dimension n is a set of n global smooth linearly independent vector fields.
Given a manifold
of dimension n, a parallelization of
is a set
of n smooth vector fields defined on all of
such that for every
the set
is a basis of
, where
denotes the fiber over
of the tangent vector bundle
.
A manifold is called parallelizable whenever it admits a parallelization.
Examples
Properties
Proposition. A manifold
is parallelizable iff there is a diffeomorphism
such that the first projection of
is
and for each
the second factor—restricted to
—is a linear map
.
In other words,
is parallelizable if and only if
is a trivial bundle. For example, suppose that
is an open subset of
, i.e., an open submanifold of
. Then
is equal to
, and
is clearly parallelizable.[2]
See also
Notes
References