As mentioned in the title, it's well know that boundary of the boundary of a manifold is empty. That is, if $M$ is the boundary of a manifold $N$, i.e. $M=\partial N$, then $M$ is a manifold without boundary, i.e. $\partial M=\varnothing$. For example, the sphere $S^n$ has no boundary because $S^n=\partial B^{n+1}$ where $B^{n+1}$ is the closed unit ball in $\mathbb{R}^{n+1}$. What I would like to ask is that: is there an easy proof or a short proof for this statement?
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Let us define a (topological) $n$-manifold with boundary to be a (Hausdorff, second-countable) topological space $M$ locally homeomorphic to the closed half space $H$ in $\mathbb R^n$, and the boundary $\partial M$ of $M$ to be the subset of $M$ of points which do not have a neighborhood homeomorphic to an open set in $\mathbb R^n$. Then:
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