| 
 | 
 | 
Let 
 be a Map between two compact, connected, oriented 
-D Manifolds without
boundary.  Then 
 induces a Homeomorphism 
 from the Homology Groups 
 to
, both canonically isomorphic to the Integers, and so 
 can be thought of as a
Homeomorphism of the Integers. The Integer 
 to which the number 1 gets sent is
called the degree of the Map 
.
There is an easy way to compute 
 if the Manifolds involved are smooth. Let 
, and
approximate 
 by a smooth map Homotopic to 
 such that 
 is a ``regular value'' of 
 (which exist
and are everywhere by Sard's Theorem).  By the Implicit Function Theorem, each point in 
 has a
Neighborhood such that 
 restricted to it is a Diffeomorphism. If the Diffeomorphism is orientation
preserving, assign it the number 
, and if it is orientation reversing, assign it the number 
. Add up all the numbers
for all the points in 
, and that is the 
, the degree of 
. One reason why the degree of a map is important
is because it is a Homotopy invariant. A sharper result states that two self-maps of the 
-sphere are homotopic
Iff they have the same degree. This is equivalent to the result that the 
th Homotopy Group of the
-Sphere is the set 
 of Integers.  The Isomorphism is given by taking the degree
of any representation.
One important application of the degree concept is that homotopy classes of maps from 
-spheres to 
-spheres are
classified by their degree (there is exactly one homotopy class of maps for every Integer 
, and 
 is the degree
of those maps).
| 
 | 
 | 
© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein