The curve complex has dead ends (Q2516419)

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The curve complex has dead ends
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    The curve complex has dead ends (English)
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    3 August 2015
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    Let \(\Sigma\) be an orientable surface of genus \(g\) with \(n\) boundary components and \(3g-3+n>0\). The curve graph \(\mathcal{C}^1(\Sigma)\) of \(\Sigma\) is a graph whose vertices are represented by homotopy classes of simple closed curves in \(\Sigma\). The graph \(\mathcal{C}^1(\Sigma)\) can be given the edge-length metric and studied as a metric space. The study of the large-scale geometry of the curve graph is complicated by two local pathologies: each vertex shares an edge with infinitely many other vertices and (typically) there are infinitely many geodesics joining two vertices. The paper under review points out a further yet-unnoticed pathology: dead ends exist in \(\mathcal{C}^1(\Sigma)\) and yet all have depth \(1\). Thus, there are vertices \(\alpha\) and \(\beta\) so that no geodesic joining \(\alpha\) to \(\beta\) can be extended to a geodesic beyond \(\beta\) (\(\beta\) is a dead end), yet if the geodesic is shortened by length \(1\) it can be extended to a geodesic of length at least \(2\) (it has depth \(1\)). Double dead ends also exist.
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    curve complex
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    dead end of a geodesic
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    depth of a dead end
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