This is a question regarding the proof of the Hopf theorem given in "Topology from a Differential Viewpoint" by Milnor:
If $v:X\to \Bbb{R}^m$ is a smooth vector field with isolated zeroes, and if $v$ points out of $X$ along the boundary, then the index sum $\sum{\iota}$ is equal to the degree of the Gauss mapping from $\partial X$ to $S^{m-1}$. In particular, $\sum{\iota}$ does not depend on the choice of $v$.
Remember that if $X\subset R^m$ is a compact manifold with boundary, then the Gauss mapping is $$g:\partial X\to S^{m-1}$$ which assigns to each $x\in\partial X$ the outward unit normal vector at $x$.
The proof of Hopf's theorem, as given in the text is:
Removing an $\epsilon$-ball around each zero, we obtain a new manifold with boundary. The function $\overline{v}(x)=v(x)/\|v(x)\|$ maps this manifold into $S^{m-1}$. Hence the sum of the degrees of $\overline{v}$ restricted to the various boundary conditions is zero. But $\overline{v}|\partial X$ is homotopic to $g$, and the degrees on the other boundary conditions add up to $-\sum{\iota}$ (the $-$ sign occurs because each sphere gets the wrong orientation.) Therefore $$\text{deg}(g)-\sum{\iota}=0$$
I have the following questions:
What is the new boundary of the manifold after all those $\epsilon$-balls are removed? Does the new boundary include the boundary of the $\epsilon$-balls?
If the vectors of $v(x)/\|v(x)\|$ can be arranged in a sphere, why does that imply that sum of the degrees of $v(x)/\|v(x)\|$, restricted to various boundary conditions, is zero?
How does "every sphere get the wrong orientation"?
Shouldn't the degree of every Gaussian map be just one? At least on a sphere?