Topologically nontrivial counterexamples to Sard's theorem
classification
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mathbbomegaconstanthomotopicmathrmrankthereanswers
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We prove the following dichotomy: if $n=2,3$ and $f\in C^1(\mathbb{S}^{n+1},\mathbb{S}^n)$ is not homotopic to a constant map, then there is an open set $\Omega\subset\mathbb{S}^{n+1}$ such that $\mathrm{rank}\, df=n$ on $\Omega$ and $f(\Omega)$ is dense in $\mathbb{S}^n$, while for any $n\geq 4$, there is a map $f\in C^1(\mathbb{S}^{n+1},\mathbb{S}^n)$ that is not homotopic to a constant map and such that $\mathrm{rank}\, df<n$ everywhere. The result in the case $n\geq 4$ answers a question of Larry Guth.
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