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What's the easiest way to see this? The only thing I could think to do was try to patch together trivializations. I couldn't find a way to make that work. Thank you!

edit: For the record, here's why I asked about this special case of the more general result about fiber bundles over contractible spaces.  In the much beloved book by Bott and Tu, it's claimed that the Leray Hirsch theorem can be proved in the same way the Kunneth theorem is proved:  Induct on the size of a finite good cover for the base space, applying the Mayer Vietoris sequence and the Poincare lemma for the induction step. Its assumed that there exists a finite good cover for the base space but it's not assumed this cover is a refinement of the cover of the base space which gives the local trivializations of the fiber bundle.  Therefore to apply the Poincare lemma in the induction step it seems that you need to know that the result I asked about is true.  Since fiber bundles had just been introduced in the text I thought may be there was a short, elementary proof that the authors had taken for granted.

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    let me know the reason for the downvote so I don't do it again. Is it because I didn't tell you what I've tried?2012-08-24
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    I did not downvote, but allow me to hazard a guess. (If I'm wrong, perhaps the downvoters will explain their thinking). My guess is that basically every resource on fiber bundles contains a proof of the fact that "A fiber bundle over a contractible space is trivial", and you are trying to prove a special case of this. They, perhaps, think you should have done more of your own research before asking here.2012-08-24
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    Thanks, Jason. I guess that's fair? I did see on Wikipedia that the bundle is trivial if the base space is a contractible CW complex. I guess I asked because I thought perhaps the proof of the special case might be easier.2012-08-24
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    @JasonDeVito There are usually several different correct answers to a mathematical question. Discouraging to post a question in this site just because it is easy to find *an* answer on the internet may not be a good idea. There might be a very good answer which is not well known.2012-08-24
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    Well, again, I was only speculating - I could be way off the mark. The special case may well have an easier proof, but I'm not familiar with one. Have you tried the extra special case of $\mathbb{R}$? My (completely unfounded) intuition says the $\mathbb{R}^2$ case should be similar to the general case.2012-08-24
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    Put a connection on the fiber-bundle, then parallel transport from the zero of your vector space along a straight line in the Euclidean space gives you your trivialization.2012-08-24

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