Whitney conditions
In differential topology, a branch of mathematics, the Whitney conditions are conditions on a pair of submanifolds of a manifold introduced by Hassler Whitney in 1965.
A stratification of a topological space is a finite filtration by closed subsets, such that the difference between successive members and of the filtration is either empty or a smooth submanifold of dimension. The connected components of the difference are the strata of dimension i. A stratification is called a Whitney stratification if all pairs of strata satisfy the Whitney conditions A and B, as defined below.
The Whitney conditions in '''R'''''n''
Let X and Y be two disjoint submanifolds of Rn, of dimensions i and j.- X and Y satisfy Whitney's condition A if whenever a sequence of points x1, x2, … in X converges to a point y in Y, and the sequence of tangent i-planes Tm to X at the points xm converges to an i-plane T as m tends to infinity, then T contains the tangent j-plane to Y at y.
- X and Y satisfy Whitney's condition B if for each sequence x1, x2, … of points in X and each sequence y1, y2, … of points in Y, both converging to the same point y in Y, such that the sequence of secant lines Lm between xm and ym converges to a line L as m tends to infinity, and the sequence of tangent i-planes Tm to X at the points xm converges to an i-plane T as m tends to infinity, then L is contained in T.
David Trotman showed in his 1977 Warwick thesis that a stratification of a closed subset in a smooth manifold M satisfies Whitney's condition A if and only if the subspace of the space of smooth mappings from a smooth manifold N into M consisting of all those maps which are transverse to all of the strata of the stratification, is open. The subspace of mappings transverse to any countable family of submanifolds of M is always dense by Thom's transversality theorem. The density of the set of transverse mappings is often interpreted by saying that transversality is a 'generic' property for smooth mappings, while the openness is often interpreted by saying that the property is 'stable'.
The reason that Whitney conditions have become so widely used is because of Whitney's 1965 theorem that every algebraic variety, or indeed analytic variety, admits a Whitney stratification, i.e. admits a partition into smooth submanifolds satisfying the Whitney conditions. More general singular spaces can be given Whitney stratifications, such as semialgebraic sets and subanalytic sets. This has led to their use in engineering, control theory and robotics. In a thesis under the direction of Wieslaw Pawlucki at the Jagellonian University in Kraków, Poland, the Vietnamese mathematician Ta Lê Loi proved further that every definable set in an o-minimal structure can be given a Whitney stratification.