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In topology, puncturing a manifold is removing a finite set of points from that manifold. [1] The set of points can be small as a single point. In this case, the manifold is known as once-punctured. With the removal of a second point, it becomes twice-punctured, and so on.

Examples of punctured manifolds include the open disk (which is a sphere with a single puncture), the cylinder (which is a sphere with two punctures), [1] and the Möbius strip (which is a projective plane with a single puncture). [2]

References

Bibliography

  • Seifert, Herbert; Threlfall, William (1980). A Textbook of Topology. Pure and Applied Mathematics. Vol. 89. Translated by Goldman, Michael A. New York & London: Academic Press. p. 12. ISBN  0-12-634850-2. MR  0575168.