Handle disassembly
In differential topology , a branch of mathematics , the handle decomposition is the basis for the classification and description of manifolds .
Definition: gluing on a handle
Notation: denote the -dimensional full sphere, the -dimensional sphere.
In the following, we denote the product as the handle of a -dimensional manifold
with the decomposition given by the product structure
- .
is called the core and the coke core of the handle.
Now be a -dimensional differentiable manifold with a boundary . The result of sticking a handle on is manifold
- with the equivalence relation generated by for all ,
for an embedding . A differentiable manifold is obtained by canonically smoothing the corners. (In particular, sticking a -handle is the disjoint union with a -ball ).
The manifold obtained in this way is clearly determined by the embedding or, equivalently, by a framed embedding .
The sphere is called the stick-on sphere and the sphere is called the belt sphere .
Handle disassembly
Every compact differentiable manifold has a handle decomposition.
The proof of this theorem uses Morse theory . For every differentiated manifold there is a Morse function , the critical points of which correspond to different function values (and do not lie on the edge). The theorem then follows by means of complete induction from the following local description of the vicinity of a critical point.
Let it be a function with exactly one critical point in and no further critical points in (for a suitable one ). Then arises out by adhering a -Henkels, with the index of the critical point in is.
This theorem goes back to Stephen Smale , who sketched a proof in 1961 and then used the Henkel decomposition to prove the Poincaré conjecture in dimensions . John Milnor proved in his book "Morse Theory" a weaker version, which says that it is homotopy equivalent to the space created by gluing a k-cell . Complete proof was given by Palais in 1963. simplified versions can be found at Fukui and Madsen-Tornehave
Low dimensional examples
- Classification of the surfaces : Every closed, orientable surface has a handle split up from a 0-handle,1-handleand a 2-handle. The numberis the gender of the surface.
- Heegaard decomposition of 3-manifolds : A (3-dimensional) handle body of the genderis created by gluing1-handles to a 0-handle. The Heegaard decomposition is the decomposition of a 3-manifold into two handle bodies. Every closed, orientable 3-manifold has a Heegaard decomposition, the minimum possibleis called the Heegaard gender . A Heegaard decomposition determines a handle decomposition of the 3-manifold into a 0-handle,1-handle,2-handle and a 3-handle.
- Kirby calculus : Handle decompositions of 4-dimensional manifolds are described by Kirby diagrams .
Relative handle dissection
Let it be a compact, differentiable manifold with a decomposition of the boundary into (possibly empty) subsets
- .
A handle decomposition of relative to is a representation of manifold constructed as by successively gluing handles to . Using Morse theory, one can show that for every such pair there is a handle decomposition of relative to .
Cerf theory
Two handle dismantling of the same manifold can be transformed into one another by handle slide and adding or omitting two complementary handles ( cancellation ).
Handle slide
The manifold arises from gluing on a handle by means of the gluing image . Let it be an isotope with and . Then the manifold constructed by gluing a handle to by means of the gluing image is diffeomorphic to .
In particular, a handle can always be glued in such a way that its adhesive sphere is disjoint from the belt spheres of all handles . As a consequence, one can construct a handle decomposition for every compact, differentiable manifold in such a way that handles are attached to a set of handles in the ascending order of their indices , i.e. H. for which are -Henkel by the glued -Henkeln.
Complementary handles
A handle and a handle are called complementary if the adhesive sphere of the handle intersects the belt sphere of the handle transversely at exactly one point.
If a manifold is created from a manifold by gluing on a -handle and then gluing on a complementary -handle, then it is diffeomorphic to . As a consequence, one can always choose a handle decomposition in such a way that there is exactly one 0-handle and furthermore, if or so that there is exactly one or no handle .
Cerf's theorem
Two (relative) handle dissections of a pair (with handles glued on in ascending order of the indices) can be converted into one another by a sequence of handle slides, adding / removing a complementary pair of handles and isotopes.
Surgery (spherical modifications) and connection to the cobordism theory
If a manifold is created from by gluing on a handle, then the (m-1) manifold is created from by surgery , i.e. H. by cutting out the embedded and then pasting in by means of the canonical identification
- .
(These surgeries are also referred to as spherical modifications in the literature.)
Let be a cobordism between closed manifolds and , thus a compact manifold with . Then, with Smale's theorem, one obtains a handle decomposition of relative to, and therefore a construction of , through a sequence of operations (spherical modifications).
literature
- Robert E. Gompf, András I. Stipsicz: 4-manifolds and Kirby calculus. (= Graduate Studies in Mathematics. 20). American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI 1999, ISBN 0-8218-0994-6 .
- Yukio Matsumoto: An introduction to Morse theory. Translated from the 1997 Japanese original by Kiki Hudson and Masahico Saito. (= Translations of Mathematical Monographs. 208. Iwanami Series in Modern Mathematics). American Mathematical Society, Providence, RI 2002, ISBN 0-8218-1022-7 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Stephen Smale: On the structure of 5-manifolds. In: Ann. of Math. Vol. 75, No. 2, 1962, pp. 38-46.
- ↑ Stephen Smale: Generalized Poincaré's conjecture in dimensions greater than four. In: Ann. of Math. Vol. 74, No. 2, 1961, pp. 391-406.
- ^ J. Milnor: Morse theory. Based on lecture notes by M. Spivak and R. Wells. (= Annals of Mathematics Studies. No. 51). Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ 1963.
- ^ Richard S. Palais: Morse theory on Hilbert manifolds. In: Topology. 2, 1963, pp. 299-340.
- ↑ K. Fukui In: Math. Sem. Notes Kobe Univ. Volume 3, no. 1, paper no. X, 1975, pp. 1-4.
- ↑ Ib Madsen, Jørgen Tornehave: From calculus to cohomology. de Rham cohomology and characteristic classes. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1997, ISBN 0-521-58059-5 (Appendix C)
- ^ J. Milnor: Lectures on the h-Cobordism Theorem. notes by L. Siebenmann and J. Sondow. Princeton University Press, 1974.
- ↑ Jean Cerf: La stratification naturelle des espaces de fonctions différentiables réelles et le théorème de la pseudo-isotopie. In: Inst. Hautes Études Sci. Publ. Math. No. 39, 1970, pp. 5-173.