T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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719.1 | Poincare's Conjecture. | OTELLO::LOOI | | Thu Aug 06 1987 13:50 | 26 |
| re: -.1 Info about Poincare's conjecture:
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Mark,
The Poincare conjecture conjectures that the only simply connected
three dimensional manifold is the three-sphere. (A k-dimensional
manifold is an object that looks locally like k-dimensional space; thus
the boundary of the unit ball in 3-d space is a 2-dimensional manifold.
The k-sphere is the boundary of a ball in (k+1) dimensions.) So the
recent hoopla about the Poincare conjecture was that somebody last year
claimed that he had proved the Pwan-caray conjecture; however, when this
guy came to Berkeley last year to give a seminar on his proof, it was
found by the participants in the seminar to be a non-proof. There
was a big article in July 1987 Discover all about this. By the way,
the analogue of the Poincare conjecture for dimensions higher than
three is known to be true; the four-dimensional version was proved recently.
Ed
|
719.2 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Sun Jun 19 1988 16:56 | 14 |
| re .0 .1
Or simply stated:
Let M be an n-manifold. If M is homotopically equivalent to
S^n then M is homeomorphic to M.
The strange thing about this conjecture is that it had been proved
to be true for n = 1, 2 and n > 4 a long time ago (50's?). Yet
the case for 3 and 4 are more difficult. There was big excitement
when M. Friedman of U.C Sandiego proved for n = 4 (Although I think
he only proved it for the compact case). Friedman won the Veblon
and Fieltz prize for that year. I guess there will be some application
in physics since spacetime is a 4-manifold.
Eugene
|
719.3 | fun with typos | BLAKE::DERAMO | Daniel V. D'Eramo, VAX LISP developer | Sun Jun 19 1988 21:53 | 9 |
| typo alert
>> Let M be an n-manifold. If M is homotopically equivalent to
>> S^n then M is homeomorphic to M.
^
should be S^n
(Prove: M is homeomophic to M. State the homeomorphism
explicitly. :-)
|
719.4 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Mon Jun 20 1988 11:15 | 4 |
| re .3
Thanks for the correction.
Eugene
|
719.5 | what's it all mean? | AITG::DERAMO | I am, therefore I'll think. | Mon Jun 20 1988 13:10 | 7 |
| It seems to me that the explanations in .1 and .2 are different. .1
says "simply connected" which I understood to mean "path connected and
all loops based at a given point are path homotopic." .2 says
"homotopically equivalent to S^n" which seems to be both a stricter
requirement, as well as one that depends upon n.
Dan
|
719.6 | \ | HPSTEK::XIA | | Tue Jun 21 1988 09:50 | 4 |
| Simply connected does mean homotopy equivalence at least it is true
on the complex plane. I am not sure about what you mean by depends
on n.
Eugene
|
719.7 | | ZFC::DERAMO | Daniel V. D'Eramo, VAX LISP developer | Tue Jun 21 1988 10:43 | 14 |
| Re "depends on n"
I meant that, for example, unless S^3 is homotopy equivalent
to S^4, which seems untrue, the condition depends is
different for different n.
The Discover magazine article said simply connected meant
that [I can't remember exactly what they said] any sphere
[?] within the space could be shrunk continuously to a
point, always within the space. It may not have been a
sphere, but it definitely wasn't a "circle" (loop), which is
what I thought it meant.
Dan
|
719.8 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Tue Jun 21 1988 14:54 | 11 |
| Re .7 .6
Obviously S^3 cannot be possibly homeomorphic to S^4. The definition
of "simply connected" means exactly what you have defined in .7
However, when someone say "simply connected n-manifold" he/she
sometimes means "simply connected homology n-manifold".
Obviously simply connected is not good enough. R^3 is a 3-manifold,
and is simply connected. However, it is obviously not homeomorphic
to S^3.
Eugene
|
719.9 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Wed Dec 07 1988 09:18 | 6 |
| re .7 .8
After listening to a talk, I realize that the condition of being
simply connected might be sufficient for compact manifolds. On
the other hand, I think the standard way of stating the conjecture
is as in .2 and .3.
Eugene
|