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Milnor's sphere
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In mathematics, specifically differential and algebraic topology, Milnor's sphere is the first discovered exotic sphere. During the mid 1950's John Milnor[1]pg 14 was trying to understand the structure of -connected manifolds of dimension (since -connected -manifolds are homeomorphic to spheres, this is the first non-trivial case after) and found an example of a space which is homotopy equivalent to a sphere, but was not explicitly diffeomorphic. He did this through looking at real vector bundles over a sphere and studied the properties of the associated disk bundle. It turns out, the boundary of this bundle is homotopically equivalent to a sphere , but in certain cases it is not diffeomorphic. This lack of diffeomorphism comes from studying a hypothetical cobordism between this boundary and a sphere, and showing this hypothetical cobordism invalidates certain properties of the Hirzebruch signature theorem.
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See also
- Exotic sphere
- Gromoll–Meyer sphere, special Milnor sphere
- Oriented cobordism
References
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