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I am tinking that probably Andrew Stacey or somebody can give me an immediate answer to the following question, without me having to think about it:
take a convenient vector space , let be the standard -simplex regarded as a smooth manifold and consider the mapping vector space .
I want to consider the collection of all smooth functions on , and the collection of all “functions on the subspace of degenerate simplices” and ask if the restriction map
is surjective.
Here that collection of functions on degenerate simplices is the evident limit over function sets for .
In other words: given an function on the set of all degenerate smooth -simplices that is smooth when restricted to a function on -simplices for all , does it always have an extension to a smooth function on the space of all -simplices?
My guess would be that it does extend, and that an extension is given by something like
The signs may be wrong, of course.
The simplest case is considering the positive quadrant in the -plane and two functions with . Then define by , where is .
Thanks. Let’s see, you are thinking of maps that embed the simplex with straight edges and faces, right? so that only the images of the vertices need to be specified? I was thinkig of all smooth maps .
Should have made it clearer: the in the summation is a multi-index. So you sum over all proper subsets of . The idea being an extension of the example given with two variables.
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