In mathematics, more specifically differential topology, a local diffeomorphism is intuitively a map between smooth manifolds that preserves the local differentiable structure. The formal definition of a local diffeomorphism is given below.
Let
X
Y
f:X\toY
x\inX
U
x
f(U)
Y
f:X\toY
x\inX
U
x
f(U)
f|U:U\tof(U)
X
f(U)
Y
A map is a local diffeomorphism if and only if it is a smooth immersion (smooth local embedding) and an open map.
The inverse function theorem implies that a smooth map
f:X\toY
Dfx:TxX\toTf(x)Y
x\inX
X
Y
It follows that a map
f:X\toY
\operatorname{dim}X=\operatorname{dim}Y
x\inX
TxX
Tf(x)Y
Dfx
Here is an alternative argument for the case of an immersion: every smooth immersion is a locally injective function, while invariance of domain guarantees that any continuous injective function between manifolds of equal dimensions is necessarily an open map.
All manifolds of the same dimension are "locally diffeomorphic," in the following sense: if
X
Y
x\inX
y\inY
U
x
V
y
f:U\toV
f
X
f:X\toY
For example, one can impose two different differentiable structures on
\R4
\R4
R4
As another example, there can be no local diffeomorphism from the 2-sphere to Euclidean 2-space, although they do indeed have the same local differentiable structure. This is because all local diffeomorphisms are continuous, the continuous image of a compact space is compact, and the 2-sphere is compact whereas Euclidean 2-space is not.
If a local diffeomorphism between two manifolds exists then their dimensions must be equal. Every local diffeomorphism is also a local homeomorphism and therefore a locally injective open map. A local diffeomorphism has constant rank of
n.
See also: Flow (mathematics).