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The main point of Riemann surfaces is that holomorphic functions may be defined between them. Riemann surfaces are nowadays considered the natural setting for studying the global behavior of these functions, especially multi-valued functions such as the square root or the logarithm.
Every Riemann surface is a two-dimensional real analytic manifold (i.e. a surface), but it contains more structure (specifically a complex structure) which is needed for the unambiguous definition of holomorphic functions. A two-dimensional real manifold can be turned into a Riemann surface (usually in several inequivalent ways) if and only if it is orientable. So the sphere and torus admit complex structures, but the Möbius stripThe Mobius strip or Mobius band (named after the German mathematician and astronomer August Ferdinand Mobius) is a topological object with only one surface and only one edge. It was co-discovered independently by Mobius and the German mathematician Johann and projective planeIn mathematics, a projective plane consists of a set of "lines" and a set of "points" with the following properties: #Given any two distinct points, there is exactly one line incident with both of them. Given any two distinct lines, there is exactly one p do not.
Geometrical facts about Riemann surfaces are as "nice" as possible, and they often provide the intuition and motivation for generalizations to other curves, manifolds or varieties. The Riemann-Roch theoremIn mathematics, specifically in complex analysis and algebraic geometry, the Riemann-Roch theorem is an important tool in the computation of the dimension of the space of meromorphic functions with prescribed zeroes and allowed poles. It relates the compl is a prime example of this influence.
Let X be a Hausdorff spaceIn topology and related branches of mathematics, Hausdorff spaces and preregular spaces are kinds of topological spaces. The conditions imposed are the most significant separation axioms. Definitions Suppose that X is a topological space. X is a Hausdorff. A homeomorphismThis word should not be confused with homomorphism. In topology, two geometrical objects (or "spaces") are called homeomorphic if, roughly speaking, the first can be deformed into the second by stretching and bending; cutting is also allowed, but only if from an open subset U⊂X to a subset of C is called a chart. Two charts f and g whose domains intersect are said to be compatible if the maps f o g-1 and g o f-1 are holomorphic over their domains. If A is a collection of compatible charts and if any x in X is in the domain of some f in A, then we say that A is an atlasIn topology, an atlas describes how a complicated space is glued together from simpler pieces. Each piece is given by a chart (also known as coordinate chart or local coordinate system . More precisely, an atlas for a complicated space is constructed out. When we endow X with an atlas A, we say that (X, A) is a Riemann surface. If the atlas is understood, we simply say that X is a Riemann surface.
Different atlases can give rise to essentially the same Riemann surface structure on X; to avoid this ambiguity, one sometimes demands that the given atlas on X be maximal, in the sense that it is not contained in any other atlas. Every atlas A is contained in a unique maximal one.