Surgery stable curvature conditions (Q289820): Difference between revisions

From MaRDI portal
Importer (talk | contribs)
Created a new Item
 
Importer (talk | contribs)
Changed an Item
Property / review text
 
A curvature condition is said to be stable under surgeries of codimension \(k\) if given an \(n\)-dimensional Riemannian manifold \((M,g)\) satisfying this condition and an embedded \((n-k)\)-sphere \(S^{n-k}\subset M\), the manifold \(\chi(M,S^{n-k}):=M\setminus (S^{n-k}\times D^k)\cup_{S^{n-k}\times S^{k-1}}(D^{n-k+1}\times S^{k-1})\) obtained by removing a tubular neighborhood \(S^{n-k}\times D^k\) of \(S^{n-k}\) and gluing back a copy of \(D^{n-k+1}\times S^{k-1}\) also admits a Riemannian metric satisfying the same condition. Establishing the stability of curvature conditions under surgery is a difficult and delicate problem in Riemannian geometry. Remarkable examples of such achievements are the papers of \textit{M. Gromov} and \textit{H. B. Lawson jun.} [Ann. Math. (2) 111, 423--434 (1980; Zbl 0463.53025)] and \textit{R. Schoen} and \textit{S.-T. Yau} [Manuscr. Math. 28, 159--183 (1979; Zbl 0423.53032)], who independently proved that positive scalar curvature is stable under surgeries of codimension \(\geq3\). The paper under review builds on the deformation techniques pioneered in the above references to establish the most general surgery stability criteria available to date. Roughly, it is proved that an open curvature condition is stable under surgeries of codimension \(c\geq 3\) if it is satisfied by the curvature operator of the product \(S^{c-1}\times \mathbb R^{n-c+1}\) which is the ``neck'' introduced during the surgery. A comprehensive summary of the previous surgery stability results that this criterion generalizes is given in the introduction. More refined results are also provided, covering curvature conditions that are not necessarily open (but satisfy an ``inner cone condition''), surgeries along the normal bundle of submanifolds other than spheres, and surgeries equivariant under isometric actions. This elegant paper, which is based on the results of the author's PhD thesis [Surgery stable curvature conditions. Münster: Univ. Münster, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät, Fachbereich Mathematik und Informatik (Diss.) (2012; Zbl 1268.53001)], will likely become an important reference for geometers attempting to push curvature conditions to their topological limits.
Property / review text: A curvature condition is said to be stable under surgeries of codimension \(k\) if given an \(n\)-dimensional Riemannian manifold \((M,g)\) satisfying this condition and an embedded \((n-k)\)-sphere \(S^{n-k}\subset M\), the manifold \(\chi(M,S^{n-k}):=M\setminus (S^{n-k}\times D^k)\cup_{S^{n-k}\times S^{k-1}}(D^{n-k+1}\times S^{k-1})\) obtained by removing a tubular neighborhood \(S^{n-k}\times D^k\) of \(S^{n-k}\) and gluing back a copy of \(D^{n-k+1}\times S^{k-1}\) also admits a Riemannian metric satisfying the same condition. Establishing the stability of curvature conditions under surgery is a difficult and delicate problem in Riemannian geometry. Remarkable examples of such achievements are the papers of \textit{M. Gromov} and \textit{H. B. Lawson jun.} [Ann. Math. (2) 111, 423--434 (1980; Zbl 0463.53025)] and \textit{R. Schoen} and \textit{S.-T. Yau} [Manuscr. Math. 28, 159--183 (1979; Zbl 0423.53032)], who independently proved that positive scalar curvature is stable under surgeries of codimension \(\geq3\). The paper under review builds on the deformation techniques pioneered in the above references to establish the most general surgery stability criteria available to date. Roughly, it is proved that an open curvature condition is stable under surgeries of codimension \(c\geq 3\) if it is satisfied by the curvature operator of the product \(S^{c-1}\times \mathbb R^{n-c+1}\) which is the ``neck'' introduced during the surgery. A comprehensive summary of the previous surgery stability results that this criterion generalizes is given in the introduction. More refined results are also provided, covering curvature conditions that are not necessarily open (but satisfy an ``inner cone condition''), surgeries along the normal bundle of submanifolds other than spheres, and surgeries equivariant under isometric actions. This elegant paper, which is based on the results of the author's PhD thesis [Surgery stable curvature conditions. Münster: Univ. Münster, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät, Fachbereich Mathematik und Informatik (Diss.) (2012; Zbl 1268.53001)], will likely become an important reference for geometers attempting to push curvature conditions to their topological limits. / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / reviewed by
 
Property / reviewed by: Renato G. Bettiol / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 53C20 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID
 
Property / Mathematics Subject Classification ID: 57R65 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH DE Number
 
Property / zbMATH DE Number: 6587932 / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
surgery
Property / zbMATH Keywords: surgery / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
surgery stability
Property / zbMATH Keywords: surgery stability / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
curvature conditions
Property / zbMATH Keywords: curvature conditions / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
Riemannian geometry
Property / zbMATH Keywords: Riemannian geometry / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
positive scalar curvature
Property / zbMATH Keywords: positive scalar curvature / rank
 
Normal rank
Property / zbMATH Keywords
 
spin manifolds
Property / zbMATH Keywords: spin manifolds / rank
 
Normal rank

Revision as of 19:31, 27 June 2023

scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Surgery stable curvature conditions
scientific article

    Statements

    Surgery stable curvature conditions (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    31 May 2016
    0 references
    A curvature condition is said to be stable under surgeries of codimension \(k\) if given an \(n\)-dimensional Riemannian manifold \((M,g)\) satisfying this condition and an embedded \((n-k)\)-sphere \(S^{n-k}\subset M\), the manifold \(\chi(M,S^{n-k}):=M\setminus (S^{n-k}\times D^k)\cup_{S^{n-k}\times S^{k-1}}(D^{n-k+1}\times S^{k-1})\) obtained by removing a tubular neighborhood \(S^{n-k}\times D^k\) of \(S^{n-k}\) and gluing back a copy of \(D^{n-k+1}\times S^{k-1}\) also admits a Riemannian metric satisfying the same condition. Establishing the stability of curvature conditions under surgery is a difficult and delicate problem in Riemannian geometry. Remarkable examples of such achievements are the papers of \textit{M. Gromov} and \textit{H. B. Lawson jun.} [Ann. Math. (2) 111, 423--434 (1980; Zbl 0463.53025)] and \textit{R. Schoen} and \textit{S.-T. Yau} [Manuscr. Math. 28, 159--183 (1979; Zbl 0423.53032)], who independently proved that positive scalar curvature is stable under surgeries of codimension \(\geq3\). The paper under review builds on the deformation techniques pioneered in the above references to establish the most general surgery stability criteria available to date. Roughly, it is proved that an open curvature condition is stable under surgeries of codimension \(c\geq 3\) if it is satisfied by the curvature operator of the product \(S^{c-1}\times \mathbb R^{n-c+1}\) which is the ``neck'' introduced during the surgery. A comprehensive summary of the previous surgery stability results that this criterion generalizes is given in the introduction. More refined results are also provided, covering curvature conditions that are not necessarily open (but satisfy an ``inner cone condition''), surgeries along the normal bundle of submanifolds other than spheres, and surgeries equivariant under isometric actions. This elegant paper, which is based on the results of the author's PhD thesis [Surgery stable curvature conditions. Münster: Univ. Münster, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät, Fachbereich Mathematik und Informatik (Diss.) (2012; Zbl 1268.53001)], will likely become an important reference for geometers attempting to push curvature conditions to their topological limits.
    0 references
    surgery
    0 references
    surgery stability
    0 references
    curvature conditions
    0 references
    Riemannian geometry
    0 references
    positive scalar curvature
    0 references
    spin manifolds
    0 references

    Identifiers