Happy easter to everyone!
I was wondering which kind of "local pictures" can arise when one quotients a manifold modulo the action of a finite group. I will call a $G$-manifold a space $X$ that can be obtained as the quotient $\tilde{X}/G$ for some space $\tilde{X}$.
Since this is a big question, I will try to cut the problem into smaller funnier pieces which can actually be answered.
Let me do an observation. If $(M, \partial M) $ is a manifold with boundary, then it is a $\mathbb{Z}_2$ - space. Indeed, if you glue two copies of $M$ along the boundary you will get a manifold: in a neighborhood of a point on the boundary, we have two copies of $\mathbb{R}^{n-1}\times \mathbb{R}_{\ge 0} $ glued along $\mathbb{R}^{n-1}\times \mathbb{R}_{= 0} $ , which is $\mathbb{R}^n$.
Question. Suppose $X$ is a smooth $\mathbb{Z}_2$-space, that is it can be written as $\tilde{X}/\mathbb{Z}_2$ with $\mathbb{Z}_2$ acting smoothly on the (smooth) manifold $\tilde{X}$.
- Are the fixed points $\tilde{X}^G$ a submanifold of $\tilde{X}$?
- Suppose $\tilde{X}^G$ is a submanifold of codimension 1. Is $X$ a manifold with boundary $\simeq \tilde{X}^G$?