Geometrization conjecture: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Three dimensional analogue of uniformization conjecture}} |
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[[Category:Riemannian geometry]][[Category:Conjectures]] |
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{{Infobox mathematical statement |
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| name = Geometrization theorem |
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| image = |
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| caption = |
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| field = [[Geometric topology]] |
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| conjectured by = [[William Thurston]] |
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| conjecture date = 1982 |
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| first proof by = [[Grigori Perelman]] |
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| first proof date = 2006 |
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| implied by = |
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| generalizations = |
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| consequences = [[Poincaré conjecture]]<br>[[Thurston elliptization conjecture]] |
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}} |
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[[File:William_Thurston.jpg | thumb | right | alt=A man with dark hair, large square glasses, and a white collared shirt is shown with a small smile | William Thurston (pictured) proposed this conjecture in 1982]] |
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The '''Geometrization Conjecture''', also known as '''Thurston's Geometrization Conjecture''', concerns the geometric structure of compact 3-dimensional [[manifold]]s. |
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In mathematics, '''Thurston's geometrization conjecture''' (now a [[theorem]]) states that each of certain three-dimensional [[topological space]]s has a unique [[geometry|geometric]] structure that can be associated with it. It is an analogue of the [[uniformization theorem]] for two-dimensional [[surface (topology)|surface]]s, which states that every [[simply connected space|simply connected]] [[Riemann surface]] can be given one of three geometries ([[Euclidean geometry|Euclidean]], [[Spherical geometry|spherical]], or [[hyperbolic geometry|hyperbolic]]). |
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It was proposed by [[William Thurston]] in the late 1970s. It 'includes' other conjectures, such as the [[Poincaré Conjecture]] and the [[Spherical Space-Form Conjecture]]. |
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Here are some essential concepts used in the conjecture: |
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In three dimensions, it is not always possible to assign a single geometry to a whole topological space. Instead, the geometrization conjecture states that every closed [[3-manifold]] can be decomposed in a canonical way into pieces that each have one of eight types of geometric structure. The conjecture was proposed by {{harvs|txt|authorlink=William Thurston|first=William|last= Thurston|year= 1982}} as part of his [[Thurston's 24 questions|24 questions]], and implies several other conjectures, such as the [[Poincaré conjecture]] and Thurston's [[elliptization conjecture]]. |
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[[3-manifold]]s exhibit a phenomenon called a [[standard two-level decomposition]]. |
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Thurston's [[hyperbolization theorem]] implies that [[Haken manifold]]s satisfy the geometrization conjecture. Thurston announced a proof in the 1980s and since then several complete proofs have appeared in print. |
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# a [[connected sum|connected sum decomposition]], where every compact 3-manifold is the connected sum of a unique collection of prime three-manifolds |
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# the [[Jaco-Shalen-Johannson torus decomposition]] |
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[[Grigori Perelman]] announced a proof of the full geometrization conjecture in 2003 using [[Ricci flow]] with [[Surgery theory|surgery]] in two papers posted at the arxiv.org preprint server. Perelman's papers were studied by several independent groups that produced books and online manuscripts filling in the complete details of his arguments. Verification was essentially complete in time for Perelman to be awarded the 2006 [[Fields Medal]] for his work, and in 2010 the [[Clay Mathematics Institute]] awarded him its 1 million USD prize for solving the Poincare conjecture, though Perelman declined both awards. |
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The Poincaré conjecture and the [[spherical space form conjecture]] are corollaries of the geometrization conjecture, although there are shorter proofs of the former that do not lead to the geometrization conjecture. |
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Here is a formulation of Thurston's conjecture: |
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==The conjecture== |
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:Separate a [[3-manifold]] into its [[connected sum]], and then each summand is reduced by its [[Jaco-Shalen-Johannson torus decomposition]]. |
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A 3-manifold is called '''closed''' if it is [[compact space|compact]] and has no [[Manifold#Manifold with boundary|boundary]]. |
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Every closed 3-manifold has a [[prime decomposition (3-manifold)|prime decomposition]]: this means it is the [[connected sum]] of [[prime manifold|prime 3-manifold]]s (this decomposition is essentially unique except for a small problem in the case of [[Orientability#Orientability of manifolds|non-orientable manifolds]]). This reduces much of the study of 3-manifolds to the case of prime 3-manifolds: those that cannot be written as a non-trivial connected sum. |
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Each remaining component can then be described using one particular geometry from the following list: |
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# [[Euclidean geometry]] |
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# [[Hyperbolic geometry]] |
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# [[Spherical geometry]] |
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# The geometry of S<sup>2</sup> x R |
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# The geometry of H<sup>2</sup> x R |
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# The geometry of ''SL<sub>2</sub>R'' |
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# [[Nil geometry]], i.e. geometry of group of upper triangular 3 by 3 matrices with units on diagonal |
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# [[Sol geometry]], i.e. geometry of group of upper triangular 2 by 2 matrices. |
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Here is a statement of Thurston's conjecture: |
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In the list of geometries above, S<sup>2</sup> is the [[2-sphere]] (in a topological sense) and H<sup>2</sup> is the [[hyperbolic plane]]. |
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Six of the eight geometries above (all except hyperbolic and spherical) are now clearly understood and known |
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to correspond to Seifert manifolds and certain [[torus bundle]]s. Using information about Seifert manifolds, we can restate the conjecture more tersely as: |
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:Every oriented prime closed [[3-manifold]] can be cut along [[torus|tori]], so that the [[interior (topology)|interior]] of each of the resulting manifolds has a geometric structure with finite volume. |
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Every irreducible, compact 3-manifold falls into exactly one of the following categories: |
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#it has a spherical geometry |
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#it has a hyperbolic geometry |
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#The fundamental group contains a subgroup isomorphic to the free abelian group on two generators (this is the fundamental group of a torus). |
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There are 8 possible geometric structures in 3 dimensions, described in the next section. There is a unique minimal way of cutting an irreducible oriented 3-manifold along tori into pieces that are [[Seifert manifold]]s or [[atoroidal]] called the [[JSJ decomposition]], which is not quite the same as the decomposition in the geometrization conjecture, because some of the pieces in the JSJ decomposition might not have finite volume geometric structures. (For example, the mapping torus of an [[Anosov map]] of a torus has a finite volume solv structure, but its JSJ decomposition cuts it open along one torus to produce a product of a torus and a unit interval, and the interior of this has no finite volume geometric structure.) |
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If Thurston's conjecture is correct, then so is the Poincaré Conjecture (via [[Thurston elliptization conjecture]]). The [[Fields Medal]] was awarded to Thurston in 1982 partially for his proof of the conjecture for [[Haken manifold]]s. |
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For non-oriented manifolds the easiest way to state a geometrization conjecture is to first take the [[Orientable double cover|oriented double cover]]. It is also possible to work directly with non-orientable manifolds, but this gives some extra complications: it may be necessary to cut along [[projective plane]]s and [[Klein bottle]]s as well as spheres and tori, and manifolds with a projective plane boundary component usually have no geometric structure. |
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Progress has been made in proving that 3-manifolds that should be hyperbolic are in fact so. Mainly this progress has been limited to checking examples and reduction to more seemingly tractable conjectures, e.g. [[Virtually Haken Conjecture]]. |
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In 2 dimensions, every closed surface has a geometric structure consisting of a [[metric (mathematics)|metric]] with constant curvature; it is not necessary to cut the manifold up first. Specifically, every closed surface is diffeomorphic to a quotient of '''S'''<sup>2</sup>, '''E'''<sup>2</sup>, or '''H'''<sup>2</sup>.<ref name=geng/> |
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The case of 3-manifolds that should be spherical has been slower, but provided the spark needed for [[Richard Hamilton]] to develop his [[Ricci flow]]. In 1982, Hamilton showed that given a closed 3-manifold with a metric of positive Ricci curvature, the Ricci flow would smooth out any bumps in the metric, resulting in a metric of constant positive curvature, i.e. a spherical metric. He later developed a program to prove the Geometrization Conjecture by Ricci flow. |
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==The eight Thurston geometries== |
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[[Grigori Perelman]] may have now solved the Geometrization Conjecture (and thus also the Poincaré Conjecture) and there seems to be a consensus among experts that the proof is correct. Note that Perelman is eligible for a million dollar [[Millennium Prize Problems]] but his work will need to survive two years of systematic scrutiny after publication, which he seems uninterested in, before the Clay Mathematical Institute can deem the conjecture to have been solved. |
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A '''model geometry''' is a simply connected smooth manifold ''X'' together with a [[transitive action]] of a [[Lie group]] ''G'' on ''X'' with compact stabilizers. |
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A model geometry is called '''maximal''' if ''G'' is maximal among groups acting smoothly and transitively on ''X'' with compact stabilizers. Sometimes this condition is included in the definition of a model geometry. |
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A '''geometric structure''' on a manifold ''M'' is a [[diffeomorphism]] from ''M'' to ''X''/Γ for some model geometry ''X'', where Γ is a [[Discrete group|discrete]] subgroup of ''G'' acting freely on ''X'' ; this is a special case of a complete [[(G,X)-structure|(''G'',''X'')-structure]]. If a given manifold admits a geometric structure, then it admits one whose model is maximal. |
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A 3-dimensional model geometry ''X'' is relevant to the geometrization conjecture if it is maximal and if there is at least one compact manifold with a geometric structure modelled on ''X''. Thurston classified the 8 model geometries satisfying these conditions; they are listed below and are sometimes called '''Thurston geometries'''. (There are also [[uncountably]] many model geometries without compact quotients.) |
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There is some connection with the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi groups]]: the 3-dimensional Lie groups. Most Thurston geometries can be realized as a left invariant metric on a Bianchi group. However [[2-sphere|'''S'''<sup>2</sup>]] × '''R''' cannot be, Euclidean space corresponds to two different Bianchi groups, and there are an uncountable number of [[solvable group|solvable]] [[Haar measure|non-unimodular]] Bianchi groups, most of which give model geometries with no compact representatives. |
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===Spherical geometry S<sup>3</sup>=== |
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The point stabilizer is O(3, '''R'''), and the group ''G'' is the 6-dimensional Lie group O(4, '''R'''), with 2 components. The corresponding manifolds are exactly the closed 3-manifolds with finite [[fundamental group]]. Examples include the [[3-sphere]], the [[Poincaré homology sphere]], [[Lens space]]s. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi group of type IX]]. Manifolds with this geometry are all compact, orientable, and have the structure of a [[Seifert fiber space]] (often in several ways). The complete list of such manifolds is given in the article on [[spherical 3-manifold]]s. Under Ricci flow, manifolds with this geometry collapse to a point in finite time. |
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===Euclidean geometry ''E''<sup>3</sup>=== |
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The point stabilizer is O(3, '''R'''), and the group ''G'' is the 6-dimensional Lie group '''R'''<sup>3</sup> × O(3, '''R'''), with 2 components. Examples are the [[three-torus|3-torus]], and more generally the [[mapping torus]] of a finite-order [[automorphism]] of the 2-torus; see [[torus bundle]]. There are exactly 10 finite closed 3-manifolds with this geometry, 6 orientable and 4 non-orientable. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi groups of type I or VII<sub>0</sub>]]. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are all compact, and have the structure of a [[Seifert fiber space]] (sometimes in two ways). The complete list of such manifolds is given in the article on [[Seifert fiber space]]s. Under Ricci flow, manifolds with Euclidean geometry remain invariant. |
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===Hyperbolic geometry H<sup>3</sup>=== |
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The point stabilizer is O(3, '''R'''), and the group ''G'' is the 6-dimensional Lie group O<sup>+</sup>(1, 3, '''R'''), with 2 components. There are enormous numbers of examples of these, and their classification is not completely understood. The example with smallest volume is the [[Weeks manifold]]. Other examples are given by the [[Seifert–Weber space]], or "sufficiently complicated" [[Dehn surgery|Dehn surgeries]] on [[link (knot theory)|link]]s, or most [[Haken manifold]]s. The geometrization conjecture implies that a closed 3-manifold is hyperbolic if and only if it is irreducible, [[atoroidal]], and has infinite fundamental group. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi group of type V or VII<sub>h≠0</sub>]]. Under Ricci flow, manifolds with hyperbolic geometry expand. |
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===The geometry of S<sup>2</sup> × R=== |
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The point stabilizer is O(2, '''R''') × '''Z'''/2'''Z''', and the group ''G'' is O(3, '''R''') × '''R''' × '''Z'''/2'''Z''', with 4 components. The four finite volume manifolds with this geometry are: '''S'''<sup>2</sup> × '''S'''<sup>1</sup>, the mapping torus of the antipode map of '''S'''<sup>2</sup>, the connected sum of two copies of 3-dimensional projective space, and the product of '''S'''<sup>1</sup> with two-dimensional projective space. The first two are mapping tori of the identity map and antipode map of the 2-sphere, and are the only examples of 3-manifolds that are prime but not irreducible. The third is the only example of a non-trivial connected sum with a geometric structure. This is the only model geometry that cannot be realized as a left invariant metric on a 3-dimensional Lie group. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are all compact and have the structure of a [[Seifert fiber space]] (often in several ways). Under normalized Ricci flow manifolds with this geometry converge to a 1-dimensional manifold. |
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===The geometry of H<sup>2</sup> × R=== |
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The point stabilizer is O(2, '''R''') × '''Z'''/2'''Z''', and the group ''G'' is O<sup>+</sup>(1, 2, '''R''') × '''R''' × '''Z'''/2'''Z''', with 4 components. Examples include the product of a [[hyperbolic surface]] with a circle, or more generally the mapping torus of an isometry of a hyperbolic surface. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry have the structure of a [[Seifert fiber space]] if they are orientable. (If they are not orientable the natural fibration by circles is not necessarily a Seifert fibration: the problem is that some fibers may "reverse orientation"; in other words their neighborhoods look like fibered solid Klein bottles rather than solid tori.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Ronald |last=Fintushel |title=Local S<sup>1</sup> actions on 3-manifolds |journal=[[Pacific Journal of Mathematics]] |volume=66 |number=1 |year=1976 |pages=111–118 | doi=10.2140/pjm.1976.66.111 |doi-access=free }}</ref>) The classification of such (oriented) manifolds is given in the article on [[Seifert fiber space]]s. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi group of type III]]. Under normalized Ricci flow manifolds with this geometry converge to a 2-dimensional manifold. |
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===The geometry of the universal cover of SL(2, R)=== |
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The [[universal cover]] of [[SL2(R)|SL(2, '''R''')]] is denoted <math>{\widetilde{\rm{SL}}}(2, \mathbf{R})</math>. It fibers over '''H'''<sup>2</sup>, and the space is sometimes called "Twisted H<sup>2</sup> × R". The group ''G'' has 2 components. Its identity component has the structure <math>(\mathbf{R}\times\widetilde{\rm{SL}}_2 (\mathbf{R}))/\mathbf{Z}</math>. The point stabilizer is O(2,'''R'''). |
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Examples of these manifolds include: the manifold of unit vectors of the tangent bundle of a hyperbolic surface, and more generally the [[homology sphere|Brieskorn homology spheres]] (excepting the 3-sphere and the [[Poincare dodecahedral space]]). This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi group of type VIII or III]]. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are orientable and have the structure of a [[Seifert fiber space]]. The classification of such manifolds is given in the article on [[Seifert fiber space]]s. Under normalized Ricci flow manifolds with this geometry converge to a 2-dimensional manifold. |
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===Nil geometry=== |
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{{see also|Nilmanifold}} |
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This fibers over ''E''<sup>2</sup>, and so is sometimes known as "Twisted ''E''<sup>2</sup> × R". It is the geometry of the [[Heisenberg group]]. The point stabilizer is O(2, '''R'''). The group ''G'' has 2 components, and is a semidirect product of the 3-dimensional Heisenberg group by the group O(2, '''R''') of isometries of a circle. Compact manifolds with this geometry include the mapping torus of a [[Dehn twist]] of a 2-torus, or the quotient of the Heisenberg group by the "integral Heisenberg group". This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi group of type II]]. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are compact and orientable and have the structure of a [[Seifert fiber space]]. The classification of such manifolds is given in the article on [[Seifert fiber space]]s. Under normalized Ricci flow, compact manifolds with this geometry converge to '''R'''<sup>2</sup> with the flat metric. |
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===Sol geometry=== |
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{{see also|Solvmanifold}} |
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This geometry (also called '''Solv geometry''') fibers over the line with fiber the plane, and is the geometry of the identity component of the group ''G''. The point stabilizer is the dihedral group of order 8. The group ''G'' has 8 components, and is the group of maps from 2-dimensional Minkowski space to itself that are either isometries or multiply the metric by −1. The identity component has a normal subgroup '''R'''<sup>2</sup> with quotient '''R''', where '''R''' acts on '''R'''<sup>2</sup> with 2 (real) eigenspaces, with distinct real eigenvalues of product 1. This is the [[Bianchi classification|Bianchi group of type VI<sub>0</sub>]] and the geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on this group. All finite volume manifolds with solv geometry are compact. The compact manifolds with solv geometry are either the [[mapping torus]] of an [[Anosov map]] of the 2-torus (such a map is an automorphism of the 2-torus given by an invertible 2 by 2 matrix whose eigenvalues are real and distinct, such as <math>\left( {\begin{array}{*{20}c} |
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2 & 1 \\ |
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1 & 1 \\ |
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\end{array}} \right)</math>), or quotients of these by groups of order at most 8. The eigenvalues of the automorphism of the torus generate an order of a real quadratic field, and the solv manifolds can be classified in terms of the units and ideal classes of this order.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Quinn |first1=Joseph |last2=Verjovsky |first2=Alberto |date=2020-06-01 |title=Cusp shapes of Hilbert–Blumenthal surfaces |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/s10711-019-00474-w |journal=Geometriae Dedicata |language=en |volume=206 |issue=1 |pages=27–42 |doi=10.1007/s10711-019-00474-w |s2cid=55731832 |issn=1572-9168|arxiv=1711.02418 }}</ref> |
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Under normalized Ricci flow compact manifolds with this geometry converge (rather slowly) to '''R'''<sup>1</sup>. |
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==Uniqueness== |
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A closed 3-manifold has a geometric structure of at most one of the 8 types above, but finite volume non-compact 3-manifolds can occasionally have more than one type of geometric structure. (Nevertheless, a manifold can have many different geometric structures of the same type; for example, a surface of genus at least 2 has a continuum of different hyperbolic metrics.) More precisely, if ''M'' is a manifold with a finite volume geometric structure, then the type of geometric structure is almost determined as follows, in terms of the fundamental group π<sub>1</sub>(''M''): |
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*If π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') is finite then the geometric structure on ''M'' is spherical, and ''M'' is compact. |
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*If π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') is virtually cyclic but not finite then the geometric structure on ''M'' is '''S'''<sup>2</sup>×'''R''', and ''M'' is compact. |
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*If π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') is virtually abelian but not virtually cyclic then the geometric structure on ''M'' is Euclidean, and ''M'' is compact. |
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*If π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') is virtually nilpotent but not virtually abelian then the geometric structure on ''M'' is nil geometry, and ''M'' is compact. |
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*If π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') is virtually solvable but not virtually nilpotent then the geometric structure on ''M'' is solv geometry, and ''M'' is compact. |
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*If π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') has an infinite normal cyclic subgroup but is not virtually solvable then the geometric structure on ''M'' is either '''H'''<sup>2</sup>×'''R''' or the universal cover of SL(2, '''R'''). The manifold ''M'' may be either compact or non-compact. If it is compact, then the 2 geometries can be distinguished by whether or not π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') has a finite [[Index of a subgroup|index]] subgroup that splits as a semidirect product of the normal cyclic subgroup and something else. If the manifold is non-compact, then the fundamental group cannot distinguish the two geometries, and there are examples (such as the complement of a trefoil knot) where a manifold may have a finite volume geometric structure of either type. |
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*If π<sub>1</sub>(''M'') has no infinite normal cyclic subgroup and is not virtually solvable then the geometric structure on ''M'' is hyperbolic, and ''M'' may be either compact or non-compact. |
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Infinite volume manifolds can have many different types of geometric structure: for example, '''R'''<sup>3</sup> can have 6 of the different geometric structures listed above, as 6 of the 8 model geometries are homeomorphic to it. Moreover if the volume does not have to be finite there are an infinite number of new geometric structures with no compact models; for example, the geometry of almost any non-unimodular 3-dimensional Lie group. |
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There can be more than one way to decompose a closed 3-manifold into pieces with geometric structures. For example: |
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*Taking connected sums with several copies of '''S'''<sup>3</sup> does not change a manifold. |
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*The connected sum of two projective 3-spaces has a '''S'''<sup>2</sup>×'''R''' geometry, and is also the connected sum of two pieces with '''S'''<sup>3</sup> geometry. |
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*The product of a surface of negative curvature and a circle has a geometric structure, but can also be cut along tori to produce smaller pieces that also have geometric structures. There are many similar examples for Seifert fiber spaces. |
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It is possible to choose a "canonical" decomposition into pieces with geometric structure, for example by first cutting the manifold into prime pieces in a minimal way, then cutting these up using the smallest possible number of tori. However this minimal decomposition is not necessarily the one produced by Ricci flow; in fact, the Ricci flow can cut up a manifold into geometric pieces in many inequivalent ways, depending on the choice of initial metric. |
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==History== |
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The [[Fields Medal]] was awarded to Thurston in 1982 partially for his proof of the geometrization conjecture for [[Haken manifold]]s. |
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In 1982, [[Richard S. Hamilton]] showed that given a closed 3-manifold with a metric of positive [[Ricci curvature]], the [[Ricci flow]] would collapse the manifold to a point in finite time, which proves the geometrization conjecture for this case as the metric becomes "almost round" just before the collapse. He later developed a program to prove the geometrization conjecture by [[Ricci flow with surgery]]. The idea is that the Ricci flow will in general produce singularities, but one may be able to continue the Ricci flow past the singularity by using surgery to change the topology of the manifold. Roughly speaking, the Ricci flow contracts positive curvature regions and expands negative curvature regions, so it should kill off the pieces of the manifold with the "positive curvature" geometries '''S'''<sup>3</sup> and '''S'''<sup>2</sup> × '''R''', while what is left at large times should have a [[thick-thin decomposition|thick–thin decomposition]] into a "thick" piece with hyperbolic geometry and a "thin" [[graph manifold]]. |
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In 2003, [[Grigori Perelman]] announced a proof of the geometrization conjecture by showing that the Ricci flow can indeed be continued past the singularities, and has the behavior described above. |
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One component of Perelman's proof was a novel collapsing theorem in Riemannian geometry. Perelman did not release any details on the proof of this result (Theorem 7.4 in the preprint 'Ricci flow with surgery on three-manifolds'). Beginning with Shioya and Yamaguchi, there are now several different proofs of Perelman's collapsing theorem, or variants thereof.<ref>{{cite journal |first1=T. |last1=Shioya |first2=T. |last2=Yamaguchi |title=Volume collapsed three-manifolds with a lower curvature bound |journal=Math. Ann. |volume=333 |year=2005 |issue=1 |pages=131–155 |doi=10.1007/s00208-005-0667-x |arxiv=math/0304472 |s2cid=119481 }}</ref>{{sfnm|1a1=Morgan|1a2=Tian|1y=2014}}<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kleiner |first1=Bruce |last2=Lott |first2=John |title=Locally collapsed 3-manifolds |journal=Astérisque |date=2014 |volume=365 |issue=7–99}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Cao |first1=Jianguo |last2=Ge |first2=Jian |title=A simple proof of Perelman's collapsing theorem for 3-manifolds |journal=J. Geom. Anal. |date=2011 |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=807–869|doi=10.1007/s12220-010-9169-5 |arxiv=1003.2215 |s2cid=514106 }}</ref> Shioya and Yamaguchi's formulation was used in the first fully detailed formulations of Perelman's work.{{sfnm|1a1=Cao|1a2=Zhu|1y=2006|2a1=Kleiner|2a2=Lott|2y=2008}} |
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A second route to the last part of Perelman's proof of geometrization is the method of [[Laurent Bessières]] and co-authors,<ref>{{cite arXiv |first1=L. |last1=Bessieres |first2=G. |last2=Besson |first3=M. |last3=Boileau |first4=S. |last4=Maillot |first5=J. |last5=Porti |title=Weak collapsing and geometrization of aspherical 3-manifolds |eprint=0706.2065 |class=math.GT |year=2007 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |first1=L. |last1=Bessieres |first2=G. |last2=Besson |first3=M. |last3=Boileau |first4=S. |last4=Maillot |first5=J. |last5=Porti |title=Collapsing irreducible 3-manifolds with nontrivial fundamental group |journal=[[Inventiones Mathematicae|Invent. Math.]] |volume=179 |issue=2 |year=2010 |pages=435–460 |doi=10.1007/s00222-009-0222-6 |bibcode=2010InMat.179..435B |s2cid=119436601 }}</ref> which uses Thurston's hyperbolization theorem for Haken manifolds and [[Mikhail Leonidovich Gromov|Gromov]]'s [[norm (mathematics)|norm]] for 3-manifolds.<ref>{{cite book |first=J.-P. |last=Otal |chapter=Thurston's hyperbolization of Haken manifolds |title=Surveys in differential geometry |volume=III |location=Cambridge, MA |pages=77–194 |publisher=Int. Press |year=1998 |isbn=1-57146-067-5 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author-link=Mikhail Leonidovich Gromov |first=M. |last=Gromov |title=Volume and bounded cohomology |journal=Inst. Hautes Études Sci. Publ. Math. |issue=56 |pages=5–99 |year=1983 }}</ref> A book by the same authors with complete details of their version of the proof has been published by the [[European Mathematical Society]].<ref>L. Bessieres, G. Besson, M. Boileau, S. Maillot, J. Porti, 'Geometrisation of 3-manifolds', EMS Tracts in Mathematics, volume 13. European Mathematical Society, Zurich, 2010. Available at https://www-fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr/~besson/book.pdf</ref> |
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==Higher dimensions== |
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In four dimensions, only a rather restricted class of closed [[4-manifold]]s admit a geometric decomposition.<ref name=hillman>{{cite arXiv|last=Hillman|first=Jonathan|author-link=|date=13 November 2022|title=Four-manifolds, geometries and knots|eprint=math/0212142|class=}}<!--section 13.3, example 3 gives a Seifert manifold with no geometric decomposition--></ref> However, lists of maximal model geometries can still be given.<ref name=filipkiewicz/> |
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The four-dimensional maximal model geometries were classified by Richard Filipkiewicz in 1983. They number eighteen, plus one countably infinite family:<ref name=filipkiewicz>{{cite thesis |last=Filipkiewicz |first=Richard |date=1983 |title=Four dimensional geometries |url=https://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/954/ |degree=PhD |chapter= |publisher=University of Warwick |docket= |oclc= |access-date=31 January 2024}}</ref> their usual names are '''E'''<sup>4</sup>, Nil<sup>4</sup>, {{nowrap|Nil<sup>3</sup> × '''E'''<sup>1</sup>}}, {{nowrap|Sol{{su|p=4|b=''m'',''n''}}}} (a countably infinite family), {{nowrap|Sol{{su|p=4|b=0}}}}, {{nowrap|Sol{{su|p=4|b=1}}}}, {{nowrap|'''H'''<sup>3</sup> × '''E'''<sup>1</sup>}}, {{nowrap|<math>{\widetilde{\rm{SL}}}</math> × '''E'''<sup>1</sup>}}, {{nowrap|'''H'''<sup>2</sup> × '''E'''<sup>2</sup>}}, {{nowrap|'''H'''<sup>2</sup> × '''H'''<sup>2</sup>}}, '''H'''<sup>4</sup>, '''H'''<sup>2</sup>('''C''') (a [[complex hyperbolic space]]), '''F'''<sup>4</sup> (the [[tangent bundle]] of the hyperbolic plane), '''S'''<sup>2</sup> × '''E'''<sup>2</sup>, {{nowrap|'''S'''<sup>2</sup> × '''H'''<sup>2</sup>}}, {{nowrap|'''S'''<sup>3</sup> × '''E'''<sup>1</sup>}}, '''S'''<sup>4</sup>, '''CP'''<sup>2</sup> (the [[complex projective plane]]), and {{nowrap|'''S'''<sup>2</sup> × '''S'''<sup>2</sup>}}.<ref name=hillman/> No closed manifold admits the geometry '''F'''<sup>4</sup>, but there are manifolds with proper decomposition including an '''F'''<sup>4</sup> piece.<ref name=hillman/> |
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The five-dimensional maximal model geometries were classified by Andrew Geng in 2016. There are 53 individual geometries and six infinite families. Some new phenomena not observed in lower dimensions occur, including two uncountable families of geometries and geometries with no compact quotients.<ref name=geng>{{cite arXiv|last=Geng|first=Andrew|author-link=|date=9 June 2016|title=5-dimensional geometries I: the general classification|eprint=1605.07545|class=math.GT}}</ref> |
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==Notes== |
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{{reflist|2}} |
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==References== |
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*L. Bessieres, G. Besson, M. Boileau, S. Maillot, J. Porti, 'Geometrisation of 3-manifolds', EMS Tracts in Mathematics, volume 13. European Mathematical Society, Zurich, 2010. [https://www-fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr/~besson/book.pdf] |
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*M. Boileau [https://web.archive.org/web/20110930020447/http://www.crm.es/Publications/Quaderns/Quadern25-1.pdf Geometrization of 3-manifolds with symmetries] |
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*F. Bonahon ''Geometric structures on 3-manifolds'' Handbook of Geometric Topology (2002) Elsevier. |
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*{{wikicite|ref={{sfnRef|Cao|Zhu|2006}}|reference={{cite journal|author-link1=Huai-Dong Cao|mr=2233789|zbl=1200.53057|author-link2=Xi-Ping Zhu|last1=Cao|first1=Huai-Dong|last2=Zhu|first2=Xi-Ping|title=A complete proof of the Poincaré and geometrization conjectures—application of the Hamilton–Perelman theory of the Ricci flow|journal=[[Asian Journal of Mathematics]]|volume=10|year=2006|issue=2|pages=165–492|doi-access=free|doi=10.4310/ajm.2006.v10.n2.a2|ref=none}}<br>{{cite journal|last1=Cao|first1=Huai-Dong|last2=Zhou|first2=Detang|author-mask1=–|author-mask2=–|mr=2282358|title=Erratum|journal=[[Asian Journal of Mathematics]]|volume=10|issue=4|pages=663–664|doi-access=free|doi=10.4310/AJM.2006.v10.n4.e2|year=2006}}<br>{{cite arXiv|author-mask1=–|author-mask2=–|author-link2=Xi-Ping Zhu|last1=Cao|first1=Huai-Dong|last2=Zhu|first2=Xi-Ping|title=Hamilton–Perelman's Proof of the Poincaré Conjecture and the Geometrization Conjecture|eprint=math/0612069|year=2006|ref=none}}}} |
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* Allen Hatcher: [http://pi.math.cornell.edu/~hatcher/3M/3M.pdf ''Notes on Basic 3-Manifold Topology''] 2000 |
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*J. Isenberg, M. Jackson, ''Ricci flow of locally homogeneous geometries on a Riemannian manifold'', J. Diff. Geom. 35 (1992) no. 3 723–741. |
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* {{cite journal|author-link1=Bruce Kleiner|last1=Kleiner|first1=Bruce|last2=Lott|first2=John|title=Notes on Perelman's papers|journal=[[Geometry & Topology]]|volume=12|year=2008|issue=5|pages=2587–2855|mr=2460872|doi=10.2140/gt.2008.12.2587|doi-access=free|others=Updated for corrections in 2011 & 2013|zbl=1204.53033|author-link2=John Lott (mathematician)|arxiv=math/0605667}} |
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* [[John Morgan (mathematician)|John W. Morgan]]. [https://www.ams.org/bull/2005-42-01/S0273-0979-04-01045-6/S0273-0979-04-01045-6.pdf ''Recent progress on the Poincaré conjecture and the classification of 3-manifolds.''] Bulletin Amer. Math. Soc. 42 (2005) no. 1, 57–78 (expository article explains the eight geometries and geometrization conjecture briefly, and gives an outline of Perelman's proof of the Poincaré conjecture) |
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*{{Cite book |
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| title = Ricci Flow and Geometrization of 3-Manifolds |
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| year = 2010 |
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| series = University Lecture Series |
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| url = https://www.ams.org/bookstore-getitem/item=ulect-53 |
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| last1 = Morgan | first1 = John W. |
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| last2 = Fong | first2 = Frederick Tsz-Ho |
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| isbn = 978-0-8218-4963-7 |
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| access-date = 2010-09-26 }} |
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* {{cite book|author-link1=John Morgan (mathematician)|last1=Morgan|first1=John|last2=Tian|first2=Gang|title=The geometrization conjecture|series=[[Clay Mathematics Monographs]]|volume=5|publisher=[[Clay Mathematics Institute]]|location=Cambridge, MA|year=2014|isbn=978-0-8218-5201-9|mr=3186136|author-link2=Tian Gang}} |
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* {{cite arXiv|last1=Perelman|first1=Grisha|author-link1=Grigori Perelman|title=The entropy formula for the Ricci flow and its geometric applications|eprint=math/0211159|year=2002}} |
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* {{cite arXiv|last1=Perelman|first1=Grisha|author-link1=Grigori Perelman|title=Ricci flow with surgery on three-manifolds|eprint=math/0303109|year=2003}} |
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* {{cite arXiv|last1=Perelman|first1=Grisha|author-link1=Grigori Perelman|title=Finite extinction time for the solutions to the Ricci flow on certain three-manifolds|eprint=math/0307245|year=2003}} |
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*[[G. Peter Scott|Scott, Peter]] [http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~pscott/8geoms.pdf ''The geometries of 3-manifolds.''] ([http://www.math.lsa.umich.edu/~pscott/errata8geoms.pdf errata]) Bull. London Math. Soc. 15 (1983), no. 5, 401–487. |
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*{{Cite journal | last1=Thurston | first1=William P. | author1-link=William Thurston | title=Three-dimensional manifolds, Kleinian groups and hyperbolic geometry | doi=10.1090/S0273-0979-1982-15003-0 | mr=648524 | year=1982 | journal=Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society |series=New Series | issn=0002-9904 | volume=6 | issue=3 | pages=357–381 | doi-access=free }} This gives the original statement of the conjecture. |
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* William Thurston. ''Three-dimensional geometry and topology. Vol. 1''. Edited by Silvio Levy. Princeton Mathematical Series, 35. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1997. x+311 pp. {{ISBN|0-691-08304-5}} (in depth explanation of the eight geometries and the proof that there are only eight) |
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* William Thurston. [http://www.msri.org/publications/books/gt3m/ The Geometry and Topology of Three-Manifolds], 1980 Princeton lecture notes on geometric structures on 3-manifolds. |
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==External links== |
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* {{cite web |url=http://athome.harvard.edu/threemanifolds/ |archive-date=January 27, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100127081050/http://athome.harvard.edu/threemanifolds/ |title=The Geometry of 3-Manifolds (video) |access-date=January 20, 2010 |url-status=dead }} A public lecture on the Poincaré and geometrization conjectures, given by [[Curtis T. McMullen|C. McMullen]] at Harvard in 2006. |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Geometrization Conjecture}} |
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[[Category:Geometric topology]] |
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[[Category:Riemannian geometry]] |
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[[Category:3-manifolds]] |
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[[Category:Conjectures that have been proved]] |
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[[Category:Theorems in topology]] |
Latest revision as of 18:17, 27 December 2024
Field | Geometric topology |
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Conjectured by | William Thurston |
Conjectured in | 1982 |
First proof by | Grigori Perelman |
First proof in | 2006 |
Consequences | Poincaré conjecture Thurston elliptization conjecture |
In mathematics, Thurston's geometrization conjecture (now a theorem) states that each of certain three-dimensional topological spaces has a unique geometric structure that can be associated with it. It is an analogue of the uniformization theorem for two-dimensional surfaces, which states that every simply connected Riemann surface can be given one of three geometries (Euclidean, spherical, or hyperbolic).
In three dimensions, it is not always possible to assign a single geometry to a whole topological space. Instead, the geometrization conjecture states that every closed 3-manifold can be decomposed in a canonical way into pieces that each have one of eight types of geometric structure. The conjecture was proposed by William Thurston (1982) as part of his 24 questions, and implies several other conjectures, such as the Poincaré conjecture and Thurston's elliptization conjecture.
Thurston's hyperbolization theorem implies that Haken manifolds satisfy the geometrization conjecture. Thurston announced a proof in the 1980s and since then several complete proofs have appeared in print.
Grigori Perelman announced a proof of the full geometrization conjecture in 2003 using Ricci flow with surgery in two papers posted at the arxiv.org preprint server. Perelman's papers were studied by several independent groups that produced books and online manuscripts filling in the complete details of his arguments. Verification was essentially complete in time for Perelman to be awarded the 2006 Fields Medal for his work, and in 2010 the Clay Mathematics Institute awarded him its 1 million USD prize for solving the Poincare conjecture, though Perelman declined both awards.
The Poincaré conjecture and the spherical space form conjecture are corollaries of the geometrization conjecture, although there are shorter proofs of the former that do not lead to the geometrization conjecture.
The conjecture
[edit]A 3-manifold is called closed if it is compact and has no boundary.
Every closed 3-manifold has a prime decomposition: this means it is the connected sum of prime 3-manifolds (this decomposition is essentially unique except for a small problem in the case of non-orientable manifolds). This reduces much of the study of 3-manifolds to the case of prime 3-manifolds: those that cannot be written as a non-trivial connected sum.
Here is a statement of Thurston's conjecture:
- Every oriented prime closed 3-manifold can be cut along tori, so that the interior of each of the resulting manifolds has a geometric structure with finite volume.
There are 8 possible geometric structures in 3 dimensions, described in the next section. There is a unique minimal way of cutting an irreducible oriented 3-manifold along tori into pieces that are Seifert manifolds or atoroidal called the JSJ decomposition, which is not quite the same as the decomposition in the geometrization conjecture, because some of the pieces in the JSJ decomposition might not have finite volume geometric structures. (For example, the mapping torus of an Anosov map of a torus has a finite volume solv structure, but its JSJ decomposition cuts it open along one torus to produce a product of a torus and a unit interval, and the interior of this has no finite volume geometric structure.)
For non-oriented manifolds the easiest way to state a geometrization conjecture is to first take the oriented double cover. It is also possible to work directly with non-orientable manifolds, but this gives some extra complications: it may be necessary to cut along projective planes and Klein bottles as well as spheres and tori, and manifolds with a projective plane boundary component usually have no geometric structure.
In 2 dimensions, every closed surface has a geometric structure consisting of a metric with constant curvature; it is not necessary to cut the manifold up first. Specifically, every closed surface is diffeomorphic to a quotient of S2, E2, or H2.[1]
The eight Thurston geometries
[edit]A model geometry is a simply connected smooth manifold X together with a transitive action of a Lie group G on X with compact stabilizers.
A model geometry is called maximal if G is maximal among groups acting smoothly and transitively on X with compact stabilizers. Sometimes this condition is included in the definition of a model geometry.
A geometric structure on a manifold M is a diffeomorphism from M to X/Γ for some model geometry X, where Γ is a discrete subgroup of G acting freely on X ; this is a special case of a complete (G,X)-structure. If a given manifold admits a geometric structure, then it admits one whose model is maximal.
A 3-dimensional model geometry X is relevant to the geometrization conjecture if it is maximal and if there is at least one compact manifold with a geometric structure modelled on X. Thurston classified the 8 model geometries satisfying these conditions; they are listed below and are sometimes called Thurston geometries. (There are also uncountably many model geometries without compact quotients.)
There is some connection with the Bianchi groups: the 3-dimensional Lie groups. Most Thurston geometries can be realized as a left invariant metric on a Bianchi group. However S2 × R cannot be, Euclidean space corresponds to two different Bianchi groups, and there are an uncountable number of solvable non-unimodular Bianchi groups, most of which give model geometries with no compact representatives.
Spherical geometry S3
[edit]The point stabilizer is O(3, R), and the group G is the 6-dimensional Lie group O(4, R), with 2 components. The corresponding manifolds are exactly the closed 3-manifolds with finite fundamental group. Examples include the 3-sphere, the Poincaré homology sphere, Lens spaces. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the Bianchi group of type IX. Manifolds with this geometry are all compact, orientable, and have the structure of a Seifert fiber space (often in several ways). The complete list of such manifolds is given in the article on spherical 3-manifolds. Under Ricci flow, manifolds with this geometry collapse to a point in finite time.
Euclidean geometry E3
[edit]The point stabilizer is O(3, R), and the group G is the 6-dimensional Lie group R3 × O(3, R), with 2 components. Examples are the 3-torus, and more generally the mapping torus of a finite-order automorphism of the 2-torus; see torus bundle. There are exactly 10 finite closed 3-manifolds with this geometry, 6 orientable and 4 non-orientable. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the Bianchi groups of type I or VII0. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are all compact, and have the structure of a Seifert fiber space (sometimes in two ways). The complete list of such manifolds is given in the article on Seifert fiber spaces. Under Ricci flow, manifolds with Euclidean geometry remain invariant.
Hyperbolic geometry H3
[edit]The point stabilizer is O(3, R), and the group G is the 6-dimensional Lie group O+(1, 3, R), with 2 components. There are enormous numbers of examples of these, and their classification is not completely understood. The example with smallest volume is the Weeks manifold. Other examples are given by the Seifert–Weber space, or "sufficiently complicated" Dehn surgeries on links, or most Haken manifolds. The geometrization conjecture implies that a closed 3-manifold is hyperbolic if and only if it is irreducible, atoroidal, and has infinite fundamental group. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the Bianchi group of type V or VIIh≠0. Under Ricci flow, manifolds with hyperbolic geometry expand.
The geometry of S2 × R
[edit]The point stabilizer is O(2, R) × Z/2Z, and the group G is O(3, R) × R × Z/2Z, with 4 components. The four finite volume manifolds with this geometry are: S2 × S1, the mapping torus of the antipode map of S2, the connected sum of two copies of 3-dimensional projective space, and the product of S1 with two-dimensional projective space. The first two are mapping tori of the identity map and antipode map of the 2-sphere, and are the only examples of 3-manifolds that are prime but not irreducible. The third is the only example of a non-trivial connected sum with a geometric structure. This is the only model geometry that cannot be realized as a left invariant metric on a 3-dimensional Lie group. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are all compact and have the structure of a Seifert fiber space (often in several ways). Under normalized Ricci flow manifolds with this geometry converge to a 1-dimensional manifold.
The geometry of H2 × R
[edit]The point stabilizer is O(2, R) × Z/2Z, and the group G is O+(1, 2, R) × R × Z/2Z, with 4 components. Examples include the product of a hyperbolic surface with a circle, or more generally the mapping torus of an isometry of a hyperbolic surface. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry have the structure of a Seifert fiber space if they are orientable. (If they are not orientable the natural fibration by circles is not necessarily a Seifert fibration: the problem is that some fibers may "reverse orientation"; in other words their neighborhoods look like fibered solid Klein bottles rather than solid tori.[2]) The classification of such (oriented) manifolds is given in the article on Seifert fiber spaces. This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the Bianchi group of type III. Under normalized Ricci flow manifolds with this geometry converge to a 2-dimensional manifold.
The geometry of the universal cover of SL(2, R)
[edit]The universal cover of SL(2, R) is denoted . It fibers over H2, and the space is sometimes called "Twisted H2 × R". The group G has 2 components. Its identity component has the structure . The point stabilizer is O(2,R).
Examples of these manifolds include: the manifold of unit vectors of the tangent bundle of a hyperbolic surface, and more generally the Brieskorn homology spheres (excepting the 3-sphere and the Poincare dodecahedral space). This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the Bianchi group of type VIII or III. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are orientable and have the structure of a Seifert fiber space. The classification of such manifolds is given in the article on Seifert fiber spaces. Under normalized Ricci flow manifolds with this geometry converge to a 2-dimensional manifold.
Nil geometry
[edit]This fibers over E2, and so is sometimes known as "Twisted E2 × R". It is the geometry of the Heisenberg group. The point stabilizer is O(2, R). The group G has 2 components, and is a semidirect product of the 3-dimensional Heisenberg group by the group O(2, R) of isometries of a circle. Compact manifolds with this geometry include the mapping torus of a Dehn twist of a 2-torus, or the quotient of the Heisenberg group by the "integral Heisenberg group". This geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on the Bianchi group of type II. Finite volume manifolds with this geometry are compact and orientable and have the structure of a Seifert fiber space. The classification of such manifolds is given in the article on Seifert fiber spaces. Under normalized Ricci flow, compact manifolds with this geometry converge to R2 with the flat metric.
Sol geometry
[edit]This geometry (also called Solv geometry) fibers over the line with fiber the plane, and is the geometry of the identity component of the group G. The point stabilizer is the dihedral group of order 8. The group G has 8 components, and is the group of maps from 2-dimensional Minkowski space to itself that are either isometries or multiply the metric by −1. The identity component has a normal subgroup R2 with quotient R, where R acts on R2 with 2 (real) eigenspaces, with distinct real eigenvalues of product 1. This is the Bianchi group of type VI0 and the geometry can be modeled as a left invariant metric on this group. All finite volume manifolds with solv geometry are compact. The compact manifolds with solv geometry are either the mapping torus of an Anosov map of the 2-torus (such a map is an automorphism of the 2-torus given by an invertible 2 by 2 matrix whose eigenvalues are real and distinct, such as ), or quotients of these by groups of order at most 8. The eigenvalues of the automorphism of the torus generate an order of a real quadratic field, and the solv manifolds can be classified in terms of the units and ideal classes of this order.[3] Under normalized Ricci flow compact manifolds with this geometry converge (rather slowly) to R1.
Uniqueness
[edit]A closed 3-manifold has a geometric structure of at most one of the 8 types above, but finite volume non-compact 3-manifolds can occasionally have more than one type of geometric structure. (Nevertheless, a manifold can have many different geometric structures of the same type; for example, a surface of genus at least 2 has a continuum of different hyperbolic metrics.) More precisely, if M is a manifold with a finite volume geometric structure, then the type of geometric structure is almost determined as follows, in terms of the fundamental group π1(M):
- If π1(M) is finite then the geometric structure on M is spherical, and M is compact.
- If π1(M) is virtually cyclic but not finite then the geometric structure on M is S2×R, and M is compact.
- If π1(M) is virtually abelian but not virtually cyclic then the geometric structure on M is Euclidean, and M is compact.
- If π1(M) is virtually nilpotent but not virtually abelian then the geometric structure on M is nil geometry, and M is compact.
- If π1(M) is virtually solvable but not virtually nilpotent then the geometric structure on M is solv geometry, and M is compact.
- If π1(M) has an infinite normal cyclic subgroup but is not virtually solvable then the geometric structure on M is either H2×R or the universal cover of SL(2, R). The manifold M may be either compact or non-compact. If it is compact, then the 2 geometries can be distinguished by whether or not π1(M) has a finite index subgroup that splits as a semidirect product of the normal cyclic subgroup and something else. If the manifold is non-compact, then the fundamental group cannot distinguish the two geometries, and there are examples (such as the complement of a trefoil knot) where a manifold may have a finite volume geometric structure of either type.
- If π1(M) has no infinite normal cyclic subgroup and is not virtually solvable then the geometric structure on M is hyperbolic, and M may be either compact or non-compact.
Infinite volume manifolds can have many different types of geometric structure: for example, R3 can have 6 of the different geometric structures listed above, as 6 of the 8 model geometries are homeomorphic to it. Moreover if the volume does not have to be finite there are an infinite number of new geometric structures with no compact models; for example, the geometry of almost any non-unimodular 3-dimensional Lie group.
There can be more than one way to decompose a closed 3-manifold into pieces with geometric structures. For example:
- Taking connected sums with several copies of S3 does not change a manifold.
- The connected sum of two projective 3-spaces has a S2×R geometry, and is also the connected sum of two pieces with S3 geometry.
- The product of a surface of negative curvature and a circle has a geometric structure, but can also be cut along tori to produce smaller pieces that also have geometric structures. There are many similar examples for Seifert fiber spaces.
It is possible to choose a "canonical" decomposition into pieces with geometric structure, for example by first cutting the manifold into prime pieces in a minimal way, then cutting these up using the smallest possible number of tori. However this minimal decomposition is not necessarily the one produced by Ricci flow; in fact, the Ricci flow can cut up a manifold into geometric pieces in many inequivalent ways, depending on the choice of initial metric.
History
[edit]The Fields Medal was awarded to Thurston in 1982 partially for his proof of the geometrization conjecture for Haken manifolds.
In 1982, Richard S. Hamilton showed that given a closed 3-manifold with a metric of positive Ricci curvature, the Ricci flow would collapse the manifold to a point in finite time, which proves the geometrization conjecture for this case as the metric becomes "almost round" just before the collapse. He later developed a program to prove the geometrization conjecture by Ricci flow with surgery. The idea is that the Ricci flow will in general produce singularities, but one may be able to continue the Ricci flow past the singularity by using surgery to change the topology of the manifold. Roughly speaking, the Ricci flow contracts positive curvature regions and expands negative curvature regions, so it should kill off the pieces of the manifold with the "positive curvature" geometries S3 and S2 × R, while what is left at large times should have a thick–thin decomposition into a "thick" piece with hyperbolic geometry and a "thin" graph manifold.
In 2003, Grigori Perelman announced a proof of the geometrization conjecture by showing that the Ricci flow can indeed be continued past the singularities, and has the behavior described above.
One component of Perelman's proof was a novel collapsing theorem in Riemannian geometry. Perelman did not release any details on the proof of this result (Theorem 7.4 in the preprint 'Ricci flow with surgery on three-manifolds'). Beginning with Shioya and Yamaguchi, there are now several different proofs of Perelman's collapsing theorem, or variants thereof.[4][5][6][7] Shioya and Yamaguchi's formulation was used in the first fully detailed formulations of Perelman's work.[8]
A second route to the last part of Perelman's proof of geometrization is the method of Laurent Bessières and co-authors,[9][10] which uses Thurston's hyperbolization theorem for Haken manifolds and Gromov's norm for 3-manifolds.[11][12] A book by the same authors with complete details of their version of the proof has been published by the European Mathematical Society.[13]
Higher dimensions
[edit]In four dimensions, only a rather restricted class of closed 4-manifolds admit a geometric decomposition.[14] However, lists of maximal model geometries can still be given.[15]
The four-dimensional maximal model geometries were classified by Richard Filipkiewicz in 1983. They number eighteen, plus one countably infinite family:[15] their usual names are E4, Nil4, Nil3 × E1, Sol4
m,n (a countably infinite family), Sol4
0, Sol4
1, H3 × E1, × E1, H2 × E2, H2 × H2, H4, H2(C) (a complex hyperbolic space), F4 (the tangent bundle of the hyperbolic plane), S2 × E2, S2 × H2, S3 × E1, S4, CP2 (the complex projective plane), and S2 × S2.[14] No closed manifold admits the geometry F4, but there are manifolds with proper decomposition including an F4 piece.[14]
The five-dimensional maximal model geometries were classified by Andrew Geng in 2016. There are 53 individual geometries and six infinite families. Some new phenomena not observed in lower dimensions occur, including two uncountable families of geometries and geometries with no compact quotients.[1]
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Geng, Andrew (9 June 2016). "5-dimensional geometries I: the general classification". arXiv:1605.07545 [math.GT].
- ^ Fintushel, Ronald (1976). "Local S1 actions on 3-manifolds". Pacific Journal of Mathematics. 66 (1): 111–118. doi:10.2140/pjm.1976.66.111.
- ^ Quinn, Joseph; Verjovsky, Alberto (2020-06-01). "Cusp shapes of Hilbert–Blumenthal surfaces". Geometriae Dedicata. 206 (1): 27–42. arXiv:1711.02418. doi:10.1007/s10711-019-00474-w. ISSN 1572-9168. S2CID 55731832.
- ^ Shioya, T.; Yamaguchi, T. (2005). "Volume collapsed three-manifolds with a lower curvature bound". Math. Ann. 333 (1): 131–155. arXiv:math/0304472. doi:10.1007/s00208-005-0667-x. S2CID 119481.
- ^ Morgan & Tian 2014.
- ^ Kleiner, Bruce; Lott, John (2014). "Locally collapsed 3-manifolds". Astérisque. 365 (7–99).
- ^ Cao, Jianguo; Ge, Jian (2011). "A simple proof of Perelman's collapsing theorem for 3-manifolds". J. Geom. Anal. 21 (4): 807–869. arXiv:1003.2215. doi:10.1007/s12220-010-9169-5. S2CID 514106.
- ^ Cao & Zhu 2006; Kleiner & Lott 2008.
- ^ Bessieres, L.; Besson, G.; Boileau, M.; Maillot, S.; Porti, J. (2007). "Weak collapsing and geometrization of aspherical 3-manifolds". arXiv:0706.2065 [math.GT].
- ^ Bessieres, L.; Besson, G.; Boileau, M.; Maillot, S.; Porti, J. (2010). "Collapsing irreducible 3-manifolds with nontrivial fundamental group". Invent. Math. 179 (2): 435–460. Bibcode:2010InMat.179..435B. doi:10.1007/s00222-009-0222-6. S2CID 119436601.
- ^ Otal, J.-P. (1998). "Thurston's hyperbolization of Haken manifolds". Surveys in differential geometry. Vol. III. Cambridge, MA: Int. Press. pp. 77–194. ISBN 1-57146-067-5.
- ^ Gromov, M. (1983). "Volume and bounded cohomology". Inst. Hautes Études Sci. Publ. Math. (56): 5–99.
- ^ L. Bessieres, G. Besson, M. Boileau, S. Maillot, J. Porti, 'Geometrisation of 3-manifolds', EMS Tracts in Mathematics, volume 13. European Mathematical Society, Zurich, 2010. Available at https://www-fourier.ujf-grenoble.fr/~besson/book.pdf
- ^ a b c Hillman, Jonathan (13 November 2022). "Four-manifolds, geometries and knots". arXiv:math/0212142.
- ^ a b Filipkiewicz, Richard (1983). Four dimensional geometries (PhD thesis). University of Warwick. Retrieved 31 January 2024.
References
[edit]- L. Bessieres, G. Besson, M. Boileau, S. Maillot, J. Porti, 'Geometrisation of 3-manifolds', EMS Tracts in Mathematics, volume 13. European Mathematical Society, Zurich, 2010. [1]
- M. Boileau Geometrization of 3-manifolds with symmetries
- F. Bonahon Geometric structures on 3-manifolds Handbook of Geometric Topology (2002) Elsevier.
- Cao, Huai-Dong; Zhu, Xi-Ping (2006). "A complete proof of the Poincaré and geometrization conjectures—application of the Hamilton–Perelman theory of the Ricci flow". Asian Journal of Mathematics. 10 (2): 165–492. doi:10.4310/ajm.2006.v10.n2.a2. MR 2233789. Zbl 1200.53057.
– – (2006). "Erratum". Asian Journal of Mathematics. 10 (4): 663–664. doi:10.4310/AJM.2006.v10.n4.e2. MR 2282358.
– – (2006). "Hamilton–Perelman's Proof of the Poincaré Conjecture and the Geometrization Conjecture". arXiv:math/0612069. - Allen Hatcher: Notes on Basic 3-Manifold Topology 2000
- J. Isenberg, M. Jackson, Ricci flow of locally homogeneous geometries on a Riemannian manifold, J. Diff. Geom. 35 (1992) no. 3 723–741.
- Kleiner, Bruce; Lott, John (2008). "Notes on Perelman's papers". Geometry & Topology. 12 (5). Updated for corrections in 2011 & 2013: 2587–2855. arXiv:math/0605667. doi:10.2140/gt.2008.12.2587. MR 2460872. Zbl 1204.53033.
- John W. Morgan. Recent progress on the Poincaré conjecture and the classification of 3-manifolds. Bulletin Amer. Math. Soc. 42 (2005) no. 1, 57–78 (expository article explains the eight geometries and geometrization conjecture briefly, and gives an outline of Perelman's proof of the Poincaré conjecture)
- Morgan, John W.; Fong, Frederick Tsz-Ho (2010). Ricci Flow and Geometrization of 3-Manifolds. University Lecture Series. ISBN 978-0-8218-4963-7. Retrieved 2010-09-26.
- Morgan, John; Tian, Gang (2014). The geometrization conjecture. Clay Mathematics Monographs. Vol. 5. Cambridge, MA: Clay Mathematics Institute. ISBN 978-0-8218-5201-9. MR 3186136.
- Perelman, Grisha (2002). "The entropy formula for the Ricci flow and its geometric applications". arXiv:math/0211159.
- Perelman, Grisha (2003). "Ricci flow with surgery on three-manifolds". arXiv:math/0303109.
- Perelman, Grisha (2003). "Finite extinction time for the solutions to the Ricci flow on certain three-manifolds". arXiv:math/0307245.
- Scott, Peter The geometries of 3-manifolds. (errata) Bull. London Math. Soc. 15 (1983), no. 5, 401–487.
- Thurston, William P. (1982). "Three-dimensional manifolds, Kleinian groups and hyperbolic geometry". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. New Series. 6 (3): 357–381. doi:10.1090/S0273-0979-1982-15003-0. ISSN 0002-9904. MR 0648524. This gives the original statement of the conjecture.
- William Thurston. Three-dimensional geometry and topology. Vol. 1. Edited by Silvio Levy. Princeton Mathematical Series, 35. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1997. x+311 pp. ISBN 0-691-08304-5 (in depth explanation of the eight geometries and the proof that there are only eight)
- William Thurston. The Geometry and Topology of Three-Manifolds, 1980 Princeton lecture notes on geometric structures on 3-manifolds.
External links
[edit]- "The Geometry of 3-Manifolds (video)". Archived from the original on January 27, 2010. Retrieved January 20, 2010. A public lecture on the Poincaré and geometrization conjectures, given by C. McMullen at Harvard in 2006.