Handle decomposition

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In mathematics, a handle decomposition of an m-manifold M is a union

Mathematics Field of study concerning quantity, patterns and change

Mathematics includes the study of such topics as quantity, structure, space, and change.

Manifold topological space that at each point resembles Euclidean space

In mathematics, a manifold is a topological space that locally resembles Euclidean space near each point. More precisely, each point of an n-dimensional manifold has a neighbourhood that is homeomorphic to the Euclidean space of dimension n. In this more precise terminology, a manifold is referred to as an n-manifold.

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where each is obtained from by the attaching of -handles. A handle decomposition is to a manifold what a CW-decomposition is to a topological space—in many regards the purpose of a handle decomposition is to have a language analogous to CW-complexes, but adapted to the world of smooth manifolds. Thus an i-handle is the smooth analogue of an i-cell. Handle decompositions of manifolds arise naturally via Morse theory. The modification of handle structures is closely linked to Cerf theory.

In topology, a CW complex is a type of topological space introduced by J. H. C. Whitehead to meet the needs of homotopy theory. This class of spaces is broader and has some better categorical properties than simplicial complexes, but still retains a combinatorial nature that allows for computation.

"Morse function" redirects here. In another context, a "Morse function" can also mean an anharmonic oscillator see Morse potential.

In mathematics, at the junction of singularity theory and differential topology, Cerf theory is the study of families of smooth real-valued functions

A 3-ball with three 1-handles attached. Sphere with three handles.png
A 3-ball with three 1-handles attached.

Motivation

Consider the standard CW-decomposition of the n-sphere, with one zero cell and a single n-cell. From the point of view of smooth manifolds, this is a degenerate decomposition of the sphere, as there is no natural way to see the smooth structure of from the eyes of this decomposition—in particular the smooth structure near the 0-cell depends on the behavior of the characteristic map in a neighbourhood of .

The problem with CW-decompositions is that the attaching maps for cells do not live in the world of smooth maps between manifolds. The germinal insight to correct this defect is the tubular neighbourhood theorem. Given a point p in a manifold M, its closed tubular neighbourhood is diffeomorphic to , thus we have decomposed M into the disjoint union of and glued along their common boundary. The vital issue here is that the gluing map is a diffeomorphism. Similarly, take a smooth embedded arc in , its tubular neighbourhood is diffeomorphic to . This allows us to write as the union of three manifolds, glued along parts of their boundaries: 1) 2) and 3) the complement of the open tubular neighbourhood of the arc in . Notice all the gluing maps are smooth maps—in particular when we glue to the equivalence relation is generated by the embedding of in , which is smooth by the tubular neighbourhood theorem.

Tubular neighborhood neighborhood of a submanifold homeomorphic to that submanifold’s normal bundle

In mathematics, a tubular neighborhood of a submanifold of a smooth manifold is an open set around it resembling the normal bundle.

Handle decompositions are an invention of Stephen Smale. [1] In his original formulation, the process of attaching a j-handle to an m-manifold M assumes that one has a smooth embedding of . Let . The manifold (in words, M union a j-handle along f) refers to the disjoint union of and with the identification of with its image in , i.e.:

Stephen Smale American mathematician

Stephen Smale is an American mathematician, known for his research in topology, dynamical systems and mathematical economics. He was awarded the Fields Medal in 1966 and spent more than three decades on the mathematics faculty of the University of California, Berkeley.

where the equivalence relation is generated by for all .

Quotient space (topology) topological space consisting of equivalence classes of points in another topological space

In topology and related areas of mathematics, a quotient space is, intuitively speaking, the result of identifying or "gluing together" certain points of a given topological space. The points to be identified are specified by an equivalence relation. This is commonly done in order to construct new spaces from given ones. The quotient topology consists of all sets with an open preimage under the canonical projection map that maps each element to its equivalence class.

One says a manifold N is obtained from M by attaching j-handles if the union of M with finitely many j-handles is diffeomorphic to N. The definition of a handle decomposition is then as in the introduction. Thus, a manifold has a handle decomposition with only 0-handles if it is diffeomorphic to a disjoint union of balls. A connected manifold containing handles of only two types (i.e.: 0-handles and j-handles for some fixed j) is called a handlebody.

Terminology

When forming M union a j-handle

is known as the attaching sphere.

is sometimes called the framing of the attaching sphere, since it gives trivialization of its normal bundle.

is the belt sphere of the handle in .

A manifold obtained by attaching gk-handles to the disc is an (m,k)-handlebody of genus g.

Cobordism presentations

A handle presentation of a cobordism consists of a cobordism W where and an ascending union

where M is m-dimensional, W is m+1-dimensional, is diffeomorphic to and is obtained from by the attachment of i-handles. Whereas handle decompositions are the analogue for manifolds what cell decompositions are to topological spaces, handle presentations of cobordisms are to manifolds with boundary what relative cell decompositions are for pairs of spaces.

Morse theoretic viewpoint

Given a Morse function on a compact boundaryless manifold M, such that the critical points of f satisfy , and provided

,

then for all j, is diffeomorphic to where I(j) is the index of the critical point . The indexI(j) refers to the dimension of the maximal subspace of the tangent space where the Hessian is negative definite.

Provided the indices satisfy this is a handle decomposition of M, moreover, every manifold has such Morse functions, so they have handle decompositions. Similarly, given a cobordism with and a function which is Morse on the interior and constant on the boundary and satisfying the increasing index property, there is an induced handle presentation of the cobordism W.

When f is a Morse function on M, -f is also a Morse function. The corresponding handle decomposition / presentation is called the dual decomposition.

Some major theorems and observations

See also

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References

Notes

  1. S. Smale, "On the structure of manifolds" Amer. J. Math. , 84 (1962) pp. 387–399

General references