A differentiable sphere theorem with positive Ricci curvature and reverse volume pinching (Q547373): Difference between revisions
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Milnor's exotic spheres showed that for a manifold being homeomorphic to a sphere \(S^n\) does not imply it is also diffeomorphic to \(S^n\). The \(\frac{1}{4}\)-pinched sphere theorem showed, however, that, if the sectional curvature is in \((\frac{1}{4},1]\), then the manifold is diffeomorphic to \(S^n\). Here, the authors reach the same conclusion under three assumptions: (1) the sectional curvature is at most 1; (2) the Ricci curvature is at least \(\frac{n+2}{4}\); (3) the volume of the manifold is not larger than \((1+\eta)\) times the volume of \(S^n\) for some positive constant \(\eta\) depending on \(n\). The first two conditions imply that the injectivity radius is at least \(\pi\). They use this to get an upper bound on the diameter of a sequence of manifolds, and then show that their third, volume condition is violated in the limit, thus establishing their result by contradiction. | |||
Property / review text: Milnor's exotic spheres showed that for a manifold being homeomorphic to a sphere \(S^n\) does not imply it is also diffeomorphic to \(S^n\). The \(\frac{1}{4}\)-pinched sphere theorem showed, however, that, if the sectional curvature is in \((\frac{1}{4},1]\), then the manifold is diffeomorphic to \(S^n\). Here, the authors reach the same conclusion under three assumptions: (1) the sectional curvature is at most 1; (2) the Ricci curvature is at least \(\frac{n+2}{4}\); (3) the volume of the manifold is not larger than \((1+\eta)\) times the volume of \(S^n\) for some positive constant \(\eta\) depending on \(n\). The first two conditions imply that the injectivity radius is at least \(\pi\). They use this to get an upper bound on the diameter of a sequence of manifolds, and then show that their third, volume condition is violated in the limit, thus establishing their result by contradiction. / rank | |||
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Property / reviewed by | |||
Property / reviewed by: Joseph O'Rourke / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 53C20 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 53C23 / rank | |||
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Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID | |||
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 53C24 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH DE Number | |||
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 5916797 / rank | |||
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Property / zbMATH Keywords | |||
differentiable sphere theorem | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: differentiable sphere theorem / rank | |||
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\(k\)-th Ricci curvature | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: \(k\)-th Ricci curvature / rank | |||
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Hausdorff convergence | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Hausdorff convergence / rank | |||
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harmonic radius | |||
Property / zbMATH Keywords: harmonic radius / rank | |||
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Revision as of 11:45, 1 July 2023
scientific article
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English | A differentiable sphere theorem with positive Ricci curvature and reverse volume pinching |
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A differentiable sphere theorem with positive Ricci curvature and reverse volume pinching (English)
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1 July 2011
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Milnor's exotic spheres showed that for a manifold being homeomorphic to a sphere \(S^n\) does not imply it is also diffeomorphic to \(S^n\). The \(\frac{1}{4}\)-pinched sphere theorem showed, however, that, if the sectional curvature is in \((\frac{1}{4},1]\), then the manifold is diffeomorphic to \(S^n\). Here, the authors reach the same conclusion under three assumptions: (1) the sectional curvature is at most 1; (2) the Ricci curvature is at least \(\frac{n+2}{4}\); (3) the volume of the manifold is not larger than \((1+\eta)\) times the volume of \(S^n\) for some positive constant \(\eta\) depending on \(n\). The first two conditions imply that the injectivity radius is at least \(\pi\). They use this to get an upper bound on the diameter of a sequence of manifolds, and then show that their third, volume condition is violated in the limit, thus establishing their result by contradiction.
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differentiable sphere theorem
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\(k\)-th Ricci curvature
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Hausdorff convergence
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harmonic radius
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