redrzewski
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I'm looking for a simple example of a differentiable manifold that doesn't have an associated riemann metric.
thanks
thanks
zhentil said:The proof that every manifold has a metric (as well as the proof of Whitney's embedding theorem) relies on paracompactness. If you drop this requirement, you can have all sorts of aberrations.
In fact, if your space has a metric, it has to be second countable (delta-balls type argument).
True, true. The space must be path-connected for what I said to hold.hamster143 said:We have to be careful with definitions here. In particular, it seems to me that a non-second-countable smooth manifold may be equipped with a local Riemann metric but not be a metric space.
zhentil said:True, true. The space must be path-connected for what I said to hold.