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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incompressible one - sided surfaces

Suppose we are given an orientable 3 - manifold M and an embedded closed and one - sided surface S with normal bundle N. It is well known that $\delta N$ is an orientable subsurface covering S. Suppose further that $\delta N$ is incompressible. Does…
H1ghfiv3
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Number of fixed order elements in the mapping class group of a closed surface

Let $S_g$ be a closed surface of genus $g\geq 2$. Given $r \in \mathbb{N}$, what is the number of elements of order $r$ in the mapping class group? Is it finite or infinite? If it is infinite is there any way to generate such a class? If it is…
Cusp
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Is there any connected n-manifold such that $H_n(X,Z)=Z\times Z$?

I think the question is equal to whether a n-manifold has a n-submanifold which is compact in n-manifold. I feel there is not such manifold, but I don't know how to prove it. In fact, I just need some reference about the proof. Thank you.
Farmer
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Boundary of a compact 3-dimensional manifold with boundary is a compact manifold of 2 dimensions.

I have been able to prove to myself that the boundary of a 3-dimensional manifold is indeed a compact set. I am stuck however proving that it is a 2 dimensional manifold. Specifically why the following each point in the boundary is contained in…
emka
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What do a minimal compact lamination look like in a punctured torus?

First, there are only three type of leaves: enter image description here If we assume lamination is compact ,all leaves is only can be a simple closed geodesic. I want to ask about how could union of uncountably many leaves be a minimal compact…
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Is a "Twisted Torus" its Own Topological Shape?

Assume you have a torus. Cut it at some place to make a cylinder. Twist one end of the cylinder 360 degrees. Glue the ends back together. Is this "twisted" torus different topologically than a regular torus?
Yamden
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Is p.l.(piecewise linear) map continuous?

I'm reading Rourke and Sanderson's book "Introduction to Piecewise-Linear Topology", and I tried to show that the composition of two p.l. maps is p.l. (this is an exercise 1.6(2)) , but I couldn't. I think if any p.l. map is always continuous, then…
Shim
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Connected sums where the separating "2"-sphere bounds a punctured ball

I have a question about connected sums in 3-dimensional spaces in relation to normal surfaces. I was reading the paper https://arxiv.org/abs/math/9712269 by Joel Hass, which at one point outlines a proof of "Knesers Theorem", which states that a…
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Define operations of cutting and pasting in topology, formally.

In topology a lot of arguments require to cut a manifold along a non-trivial closed simple curve, which gives other manifolds, and pasting manifolds along their boundaries. How are those operations defined in a more formal way, for example given a…
user746545
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What are the caps in the proof of Poincare Conjecture and does the insertion of caps into initial manifold preserve homeomorphism?

Quote from Wikipedia article "Poincare Conjecture": "He wanted to cut the manifold at the singularities and paste in caps (Question), and then run the Ricci flow again... In essence, Perelman showed that all the strands that form can be cut and…
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Projective planes homeomorphic?

I am having major trouble showing that the version of the projective plane here (with a Mobius strip) is homeomorphic to the projective plane that is defined as the quotient of the sphere $S^2$.. Is this a matter of showing one is orientable and the…
user645044
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Definition of homotopy classes of simple closed curves

I don´t know whether this kind of questions should be asked here or not. I am trying to explain the concept of a homotopy class of simple closed curves (that is, the vertices of curve complexes) to someone who are not familiar with topological…
BiM
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Sufficient condition for a metric space to not be totally bounded

Let $(X,d)$ be a metric space. Suppose that exists an $r>0$ that satisfies this property: For every $n$, there exist $x_1,\dots,x_n$ so that the balls $B_r(x_1),\dots,B_r(x_n)$ are not covering $X$ and the balls are pairwise disjoint. Is this…
Naj Kamp
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Topology of a balaclava

Consider a balaclava that fits over the head and has 3 distinct holes; one for each eye and one for the mouth. My question is: how many holes does this have, from a topological perspective? I can see two possibilities: Ignoring the eye & mouth…
andyb
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Are triangulations of compact manifolds finite?

Let $X$ be a compact manifold. Is any triangulation of $X$ by simplices already a finite triangulation? Can you give a proof or counter example?
shuhalo
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