When are two Coxeter orbifolds diffeomorphic? (Q2512541)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
When are two Coxeter orbifolds diffeomorphic?
scientific article

    Statements

    When are two Coxeter orbifolds diffeomorphic? (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    7 August 2014
    0 references
    An \(n\)-orbifold \(\mathcal{Q}\) is \textit{of reflection type} if it is locally modeled on quotients of \(\mathbb{R}^n\) by finite linear reflection groups. The underlying space of a smooth orbifold of reflection type has naturally the structure of a smooth manifold with corners, which is also \textit{nice}, i.e. each stratum of codimension two is contained in the closure of exactly two strata of codimension one. Suppose that each codimension \(k\) stratum of \(\mathcal{Q}\) is the intersection of \(k\) codimension one strata. The author defines a \textit{Coxeter orbifold} to be an orbifold of reflection type \(\mathcal{Q}\) for which one of the following successively stronger conditions hold: (I) Each stratum of \(\mathcal{Q}\) is a compact contractible manifold. (II) Each stratum of \(\mathcal{Q}\) is homeomorphic to a disk. (III) As a manifold with corners, \(\mathcal{Q}\) is isomorphic to a simple convex polygon. A Coxeter orbifold \(\mathcal{Q}\) is said to be of type (II) or type (III) if it satisfies the corresponding condition. The orbifold structure on \(\mathcal{Q}\) induces a labeling of each codimension two stratum by an integer \(m \geq 2\) indicating the order \(2m\) of the local dihedral group along the stratum, and such that it determines a finite Coxeter group of rank \(k\) on each codimension \(k\) stratum. The labeling on the codimension two strata of \(\mathcal{Q}\) becomes a \textit{proper} labeling on the edges of the \textit{nerve} \(N(\mathcal{Q})\), the dual simplicial complex to \(\mathcal{Q}\). A \textit{combinatorial equivalence} between two Coxeter orbifolds is a label-preserving simplicial isomorphism between their nerves. In the paper under review the author answers the question \textit{``When are two combinatorially equivalent Coxeter orbifolds diffeomorphic?'' } For a general Coxeter \(n\)-orbifold \(\mathcal{Q}\) of type (I), the nerve \(N(\mathcal{Q})\) is a \(\text{GHS}^{n-1}\) (generalized homology \((n-1)\)-sphere), so the question can be reformulated as follows: given a \(\text{GHS}^{n-1}\) simplicial complex \(N\) with a proper labeling on its edges, does there exist a unique (up to isotopy) Coxeter orbifold \(\mathcal{Q}\) such that \(N(\mathcal{Q})=N\)? In the topological category, the existence part follows from the author's work in [Ann. Math. (2) 117, No. 2, 293--324 (1983; Zbl 0531.57041)] and the uniqueness is a consequence of the fact that the Poincaré conjecture and the topological \(h\)-cobordism theorem hold in all dimensions. In the smooth category, the existence part holds, again as shown by the author in [loc. cit.], provided each three-dimensional link in \(N\) bounds a smooth contractible \(4\)-manifold. In the paper under review, the author proves that two such smooth Coxeter orbifolds are diffeomorphic if each of their four-dimensional faces are diffeomorphic rel boundary. Furthermore, using a result of \textit{S. Akbulut} [J. Differ. Geom. 33, No. 2, 335--356 (1991; Zbl 0839.57015)], the author shows that in each dimension \(\geq 4\) there are smooth Coxeter orbifolds which are combinatorially equivalent but not diffeomorphic, so the hypothesis of diffeomorphic four-dimensional faces is necessary. As a consequence the author proves that combinatorially equivalent Coxeter orbifolds of type (III) are necessarily diffeomorphic (the nerve of a type (III) Coxeter orbifold \(\mathcal{Q}\) is the boundary complex of the simplicial polytope that is dual to \(\mathcal{Q}\)). As pointed out in the paper, the fact that combinatorially equivalent polytopes are diffeomorphic as manifolds with corners was also independently established by \textit{M. Wiemeler} [Math. Z. 273, No. 3--4, 1063--1084 (2013; Zbl 1269.57014)]. As applications, the author obtains smooth equivariant rigidity results for reflection groups and locally standard torus actions.
    0 references
    orbifold
    0 references
    Coxeter orbifold
    0 references
    manifolds with corners
    0 references
    contractible manifolds
    0 references
    reflection groups
    0 references
    homology sphere
    0 references

    Identifiers

    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references
    0 references