Hallo fellow mathematicians.
I try to understand why the normal bundle of
$\mathbb{PR}^n$ is isomorphic (in the category of vector bundles) to the tautological line Bundle. More aptly, why $\nu_{\mathbb{RP}^{n+1}}^{\beta} \mathbb{RP}^n \cong L, \text{ where } L$ denotes the tautological line bundle over $\mathbb{RP}^n$ and $ \beta \colon \mathbb{RP}^n \rightarrow \mathbb{RP}^{n+1} $ the inclusion induced by the inclusion $\mathbb{R}^{n+1} \subset \mathbb{R}^{n+2}$.
I followed a few loose ends until now.
One of them:
(1) In this script (pdf) I found a proof (p.8). I just don't understand, how that is supposed to be suffice as proof. Afaik under trivialisations I could identify every vector bundle of the same dimension, so what seals the proof here?
Another idea I came up with:
(2) On $\mathbb{PR}^{n+1}$ we have a riemannian metric, i.e. the tangent bundle allows a presentation as the whitney-sum: $\nu_{\mathbb{RP}^{n+1}}^{\beta} \mathbb{RP}^n \oplus T \mathbb{PR}^n \cong T\mathbb{RP}^{n+1}|_{\mathbb{PR}^n} $. According to Husemoller (Fibre Bundles, Theorem 2.7) we now (analogous to this) that two vector bundles - in order to be isomorphic - have to have cohomologous transition functions, i.e. they are related in a certain way to each other. Afaik we can split the transition functions of $T\mathbb{PR}^{n+1}$ into the direct sum (in the sense that $\phi_{ij}(p)=\begin{matrix} \phi_{ij}^1(p) & 0 \\ 0 & \phi_{ij}^2(p) \end{matrix} $ is the transition function of $T\mathbb{PR}^{n+1}$, where $ \phi_{ij}^1$ is the trans. function of $T\mathbb{PR}^{n}$ and $ \phi_{ij}^2 $ the is trans. function of the normal bundle). As soon as I try to compute all this I encounter problems. So I took the transition functions of the "standard" atlas of $\mathbb{RP}^n$, i.e. with $U_i:=\{[x_1:\dots x_n]|x_i \neq 0 \}$ the transition function is $\phi_j \circ \phi_i^{-1} (y^1, \dots y^n)=(\frac{y^1}{y^j}, \dots \frac{y^{i-1}}{y^{j}}, \frac{1}{y^j}, \frac{y^{i+1}}{y^j}, \dots,\frac{y^n}{y^j})$. When I pass this to the Jacobian (which is the transition function of the tangent bundle, right?) things get ugly.
(3) Another idea I had (which is... regressing I suppose) is to use the orientiability of $\mathbb{RP}^{2n}$ and $\mathbb{RP}^{2n+1}$ and their stiefel whitney classes, which inplies in every case, that the normal bundle is not trivial. But now I would have to show that a line bundle is either trivial or isomorphic to the tautological bundle over $\mathbb{RP}^n$. Is that even true? I'm very greatful for any help you may be able to provide. If I made a mistake, you are more than welcome to correct me.