From Wikipedia:
The broadest common definition of manifold is a topological space locally homeomorphic to a topological vector space over the reals.
A topological manifold is a topological space locally homeomorphic to a Euclidean space.
In both concepts, a topological space is homeomorphic to another topological space with richer structure than just topology. On the other hand, the homeomorphic mapping is only in the sense of topology without referring to the richer structure.
I was wondering what purpose it is to map from a set to another with richer structure, while the mapping preserves the less rich structure shared by both domain and codomain? How is the extra structure on the codomain going to be used? Is it to induce the extra structure from the codomain to the domain via the inverse of the mapping? How is the induction like for a manifold and for a topological manifold?
Thanks!