Questions tagged [geometric-topology]

The corpus of tools and results that arose from studying manifold theory using non-algebraic techniques, that is, as opposed to (algebraic-topology). The focus of the field tends to be on special objects/manifolds/complexes and the topological characterisation and classification thereof. A key example is the literature surrounding the Poincaré Conjecture.

The terminology "geometric topology" is fairly recent.

The words used by topologists to describe their areas has had a fair bit of flux over the years. Before the mid-40's, algebraic topology was called combinatorial topology. The urge to use the phrase "geometric topology" began sometime after the advent of the h-cobordism theorem, and the observation that high-dimensional manifold theory, via a rather elaborate formulation can be largely turned into elaborate algebraic problems.

So there was a desire to have a term that held-together all the aspects of topology where these techniques either don't apply, or were not used (or at least, not predominantly used). Thus a big chunk of "geometric topology" is concerned with 2, 3 and 4-dimensional manifold theory. But of course, even if high-dimensional manifold theory in principle reduces to algebra, that doesn't necessarily mean that the reduction is the right tool to use -- it may be too complicated to be useful. These higher-order type high-dimensional manifold theory problems that don't fit the traditional reductions -- like say Vassiliev's work on spaces of knots -- also end up under the banner of geometric topology.

Defining a subject by what it's not is kind of strange and artificial, but so is taxonomy in general. To again compare it with algebraic topology, note that algebraic topology tends to be more focused on a broad set of tools. Geometric topology, on the other hand, is focused more by the goals, things like the Poincare conjecture(s) and such. So the latter tends to have a more example-oriented culture.

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$6n\pm 1$th fold cyclic covers of $S^3$ branched over the trefoil.

This questions is actually exercise 10D4 from Rolfsen's Knots and Links. In example 8D7 Rolfsen computes a presentation matrix for $\Sigma _n$ the n-fold cyclic cover of $S^3$ branched over the trefoil. It is then clear that the $6n\pm 1$th cyclic…
lev
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A question on orientation in manifolds (with or without boundary)

I am currently reading Prasolov and Sossinsky's Knots, Links, Braids and 3-Manifolds. In their proof of the Dehn-Lickorish theorem there are some arguments that confuse me. They begin with a statement that any self-homeomorphism of a surface with…
Amontillado
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Proof of the bigon criterion

In Farb and Margalit's "A Primer on Mapping Class Groups" we have the following Proposition 1.7: Two transverse simple closed curves in a surface $S$ are in minimal position iff they do not form a bigon. The proof for the reverse direction for the…
Huy
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Something like the weak Whitney embedding theorem for continuous maps and homotopy.

This is sort of a reference request. Consider a continuous map of orientable topological manifolds $f:N\longrightarrow M$ of dimension $n$ and $m$ respectively. I have been told that there is a theorem something like "if $m>2n$ then $f$ is…
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Are there PL-exotic $\mathbb{R}^4$s?

The title may or may not say it all. I know that there are examples of topological 4-manifolds with nonequivalent PL structures. In some lecture notes, Jacob Lurie mentions that not every PL manifold is smoothable, and that while smoothings exist in…
Kevin Carlson
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PL and triangulizable

Is it correct that the notion of triangulizable manifold (in the sence "homeomorphic to a simplicial complex") is weaker than the notion of a PL-manifold? If yes, why? (eg is it true that a star of vertex in a general triangulizable manifold need…
Dmitry K
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Homologous tori in 4-manifold

Let $X$ be a 4-manifold and $T$, $S$ two tori embedded in $X$. Let $m_1$, $l_1$ and $m_2$, $l_2$ be loops in $X$ generating $H_1$ of $T$ and $S$, respectively (where I am identifying the tori with their images in $X$). Suppose that $m_1$ and $m_2$,…
user31714
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Handle decomposition of closed $4$-dimensional manifold

I am trying to understand handles. So I have seen some easy examples in lower dimensions but I want to understand some (slightly) higher dimensional ones. So let $M$ be a closed $4$ dimensional manifold and let us say that it admits a handle…
Stacy
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Do these curves fill the surface?

We say a collection of closed curves $\alpha_1,...,\alpha_k$ on a surface $S_{g,n}$ (a surface of genus $g$ with $n$ boundary components) fill the surface $S_{g,n}$, if $S_{g,n}-\{\alpha_1,...,\alpha_k\}$ is a collection of disks and annuli. Let us…
braid rep
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Continuity of some function related to the Hopf fibration of $S^3$

By the identification $\mathbb R^4$ with the field of quaternions $\mathbb H$ by $(x_0,x_1,x_2,x_3) \sim x_0+x_1 i+x_2 j+x_3k$ and $S^3$ with the set of unit quaternions and $S^2$ with the set of purely imaginary unit quaternions, let's consider…
Alex
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ENR spaces which group of homeomorphisms is not locally contractable

Siebenmann on page 1 of his manuscript gives an example of an ENR space (euclidean neighborhood retract) whose group of homeomorphisms is not locally contactable. Take the sphere $S^3=R^3\cup\{\infty\}$ and a sequence of wild non-cellular arcs…
Dmitry K
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Rushing's proof of an immersion of punctured torus

I've been reading Benny Rushing's book Topological Embeddings. In the last section of the book he gives a topological proof (which he attributes to R. D. Edwards) that a punctured $n$-torus admits an immersion (i.e. a continuous map which is locally…
Simon
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Two ambient isotopic curve segments, one has the length and the other does not

Let me ask if the following is possible: Let $L_1$ be some curve segment in the $\mathbb{R}^3$ space which has the length $1$. Let $L_2$ be some curve segment in the $\mathbb{R}^3$ space which you can not define the length. Then some $\mathbb{R}^3$…
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Morton Brown's theorem

Suppose that a topological space $X$ is the union of an increasing sequence of open subsets $U_i$c each of which is homeomorphic to the Euclidean space $\mathbb{R}^n$. How does one show that $X$ is homeomorphic to $\mathbb{R}^n$? I am unable to…
Koushik
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Poincaré conjectures for other shapes

If you replace spheres in the Poincaré conjecture with objects-with-some-kinds-of-holes can you say that every manifold with the same number and type of holes is homeomorphic to every other such manifold ? Motivation: mainly interested in shapes…
vtt
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