Topological surgery in nature (Q1697081)
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English | Topological surgery in nature |
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Topological surgery in nature (English)
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15 February 2018
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This paper reviews examples of topological surgery that arise in nature. Thus the breaking and recombination of DNA is an example of surgery on 1-manifolds if the DNA string is seen as 1-dimensional. A significant idea introduced by the authors is to view the process of surgery as continuous. Thus when a tornado cloud reaches down to the ground one can view this as a surgery on the cloud. The authors also introduce what they call a solid surgery. An example of this carried out on a solid 3-ball sees the ball as a 2-sphere crossed with an interval and one end identified to a point. The solid surgery performs a 0-surgery on each sphere in the product and explodes the central point of the disk to a circle. The authors use this to provide a model for the formation of black holes. Several other examples of natural surgeries are given, but this black hole example is the most developed. For the entire collection see [Zbl 1387.00028].
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topological surgery
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gluing homeomorphism
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solid topological surgery
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embedded topological surgery
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mathematical modeling
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natural processes
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attracting forces
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repelling forces
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DNA combination
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cosmic magnetic lines
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Falaco solitions
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tornadoes
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mitosis
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meiosis
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gene transfer
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necking
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black holes
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