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English Pages 511 Year 1979
The Geometry and Topology of Three-Manifolds
William P. Thurston
1979
The Geometry and Topology of 3-manifolds William P. Thurston
Introduction
These notes (through p. 9.80) are based on my course at Princeton in
79.
Large portions were written by Bill Floyd and Steve Kerckhoff.
1978-
Chapter 7,
by John Milnor, is based on a lecture he gave in my course; the ghostwriter
was Steve Kerckhoff. next academic year.
The notes are projected to continue at least through the
The intent is to describe the very strong connection between
geometry and lowadimensional topology in a way which will be useful and accessible (with some effort) to graduate students and mathematicians working
in related fields, particularly
3-manifolds and Kleinian groups.
Much of the material or technique is new, and more of it was new to me.
As a consequence, I did not always know where I was going, and the discussion often tends to wander. The countryside is scenic, however, and it is fun to
tramp around if you keep your eyes alert so you don't get lost. The tendency
to meander rather than to follow the quickest linear route is especially pronounced in chapters
8
and
9,
where I only gradually saw the usefulness of "train
tracks" and the value of mapping out scum global information about the
structure
of the set of simple geodesics on surfaces.
I would be grateful to hear any
suggestions or corrections from readers,
since changes are fairly easy to make at this stage.
In particular, bibliographical
information is missing in many places, and I would like to solicit references
(perhaps in the form of preprints) and historical infommation.
Table of Contents
- 1.8 pp. 2.1 - 2.22
1. Some topological constructions for 3-manifolds
2. Geometry
-
elliptic, parabolic and hyperbolic
2.1 The
..............
2.5 2.6
Upper half space
2.h The
projective, or Klein model
2.5 The
sphere of imaginary radius
2.6
1.1
.................... 2.3
Poincare’ disk
2.2 The Southern hemisphere
2.3
pp.
Trigonometry
2.7
............................. 2.10
............,......................
3. Geometric Structures on
manifolds
2.12 pp.
3.1
- 3.2M
3.1 A
hyperbolic structure on the figure eight knot complement .
3.6
3.2 A
hyperbolic manifold with geodesic boundary
3.7
3.3 The Whitehead
link complement
3.9
3 h The Borromean
rings complement
3.11
3.5 The
developing map
......................................... 3.12
3.6
A sufficient condition for completeness
3.7
Conditions for completeness
3.8
Hbrospheres
3.9
Hyperbolic surfaces obtained from ideal triangles. The
.......
3.17
............................................... 3.18
completion
3.10
.................... 3.13
H
3.20
.....
Hyperbolic manifolds obtained by glueing ideal polyhedra ..
h. Hyperbolic Dehn surgery
.........................
H3
pp. h.l
3.22
- h.56
h.1
Shapes of ideal tetrahedra in
h.2
Glueing consistency conditions
h.3
Hyperbolic structures on the figure eight knot complement .. h.8
h.l
h.5
h.h The completion of hyperbolic 3-manifolds obtained from
h.l3
ideal polyhedra
h.5
h.6 Dehn surgery on
h.7
............... h.16
The generalized Dehn surgery invariant
Theorem.
(S3
the figure eight knot
- £3 )(u,k)
.... ................... h.18
has a hyperbolic sturucture unless
(in , 1x) = (1 , o) , (o , 1) (1 , 1) , (2 , 1) , (3 , 1) or
(M , l) ............................................ h.23
h.8 Degeneration of hyperbolic structures ..........
h.9 h.lo
Incompressible surfaces in
(S3
-
E: )(u X)
S3 - I:
3
(in , :A) = (o , 1) or
......
is irreducible and Haken only when
(h , 1)
............................ h.h1
Flexibility and rigidity of geometric structures ................... pp.
5.1
Nearby structures are determined by holonomy
5.2 A
crude dimension count
5.5 The
5.6
5.1
- 5.6h
........................5.2
.............................................5.3
........................................... 5.6 Special algebraic properties of groups of isometries of H3 ....... 5.1M
5.3 Teichmfiller
5.h
h.29 h.38
Theorem characterizing hyperbolic foliations of closed 3-manifolds.
4.11 Theorem.
5.
h.23
.
space
.......
.... 5.22
dimension of the deformation space of a hyperbolic manifold
Theorem
....
counting dimension for deformations of hyperbolic
3-manifolds .........................................
5.7 Mostow's
..... 5.22
theorem. (rigidity of hyperbolic manifohis with finite
volume)... ........... ........................;................
5.29
0.1!-
5.8
Generalized Dehn surgery and hyperbolic structures .............. 5.32
5.9 AProof ofMostow's
5.10 A decomposition of hyperbolic manifolds . 5.11 Complete hyperbolic manifolds with bomded 5.12 J¢rgensen's 6. Gromov's
5.56 5.61
volume
.....
............
invariant
Groinov's theorem
6.3
Gromov's proof of Mostow's theorem
6.’+
Strict version of Gromov's theor-
6.5
Manifolds with boundary
6.6
ordinals
6.7
Comensurability..... ...........
6.8 Some
examples
Computation of volume
7.1 The
6.1
- 6.118
....................... 6.1
.................................... 6.7
6.2
7.2
.......... 5.51
......
invariant and the volume of a hyperbolic manifold ....... pp.
6.1 Gromov's
7.
theorem
5.39
.........
theorem .......
.......
.....................
...... 6.11.
.,.......... 6.12
......................................... 6.19 '
6.25
..........
.............
.......
......
6.28
.....
................................................... 6.33 by J. W. Milnor
Lobachevsky function
..................... pp. 7.1
J( (9)
..................
7.1
7.6
.
.
Volumes of some polyhedra.
7.3 Some manifolds ......................................
- 7.21
......
7.13
.................................. ..... 7.17 References for chapter 7 ... .- ........................ .......,........ 7.21
7.1+
8
.
Arithmetic examples
Kleinian groups............... .......
pp.
8.1-8.77
................................................... 8.1
8.1 The
limit set
8.2 The
domain of discontinuity
8.3
........
Convex hyperbolic manifolds
.....................
............. 8.5
..................................... 8.9
8.1+
Geometrically finite groups
8.5 The geometry
.....
8.15 8.22
of the bomdary of the convex hull
8.6
Measuring laminations
8.29
8.7
Quasi-Fuchsian groups ....................
8.33
8.8
Uhcrumpled surfaces............ ......
..................
8.9 The structure
8.10
of geodesic laminations:
Realizing laminations in
8.1.1 The structure
8 .12 Eamonic 9.
................
Algebraic
of cusps
.....
9.1 Limits
8.51
train tracks
8.57 8.69 8.73
3-manifolds ....
-. ..........
functions and ergodicity
convergence ............: ........................... pp. 9.1
-?
of discrete groups ,....................
9.2 Theorem
9.1
- strong convergence of sequences of quasi-Fuchsian 9-9
groups...... .....
9.3 The
8.1m-
ending of an end
9.15
.
9.11-
Taming the topology of an end
9.25
9.5
Interpolating negatively curved surfaces .......................
9.28
9.6
Strong convergence from algebraic convergence ..................
9.52
9.7 Realization
of geodesic laminations for surface groups with
extra cusps, with a digression on stereographic
.......................
coordinates .........................
9.58
and
The theme I intend to develop is that topology and geometry, in dimensions
up through 3, are very intricately related.
Because of this relation, many
questions which seem utterly hopeless from a purely
can be fruitfully studied. eventually
topological
point of view
It is not totally unreasonable to hope that
all 3-manifolds will be understood in a systematic way.
In any
case, the theory of geometry in 3-manifolds promises to be very rich, bringing together many threads.
51
Before discussing geometry, 1 will indicate some topological constructions
yielding diverse 3-manifolds, which appear to be very tangled.
0. Start with the three sphere
S3 ,
which may be easily visualized as
together with one point at infinity.
1. Any knot ( = a closed simple curve) or link ( = a union of disjoint closed simple curves) may be removed. These examples can be made compact by removing the interior of a
tubular neighborhood of the knot or link.
113
1.2. The complement of a knot can be very enigmatic, if you try to think about it from an intrinsic point of view. Papakyriakopoulos proved that a knot complement has fundamental group
intuitively clear, but
Z iff the knot is trivial. This may seem
Justification
for this intuition is difficult.
It is
not known whether knots with homeomorphic complements are the same.
2. Cut out atubular neighborhood of a knot or link, and glue it backin by a different identification.
This is called Q§hn_surge£y.
ways to do this, because the torus has many diffeomorphisms.
of the kernel of the inclusion map
Tr1 (T2) +
n1
resulting 3—manifold determines the 3-manifold.
There are
many
The generator
(solid torus)
in the
The diffeomorphism can be
chosen to make this generator an arbitrary primitive ( = indivisible non-zero)
element of Z 6 Z . It is well defined up to change in sign.
Every oriented 3—manifold can be obtained by this construction, ( cf.
[Lickorish,
, ] for instance.) It is difficult, in general, to tell
much about the 3-manifold resulting from this is it simply connected?
construction.
When is it irreducible?
When, for instance,
(MEmeans every
embedded two sphere bounds a ball).
Note that the homology of the three-manifold is a very insensitive invariant. The homology of a knot complement is the same as the homology of a circle, so when Dehn surgery is performed, the resulting manifold always has a cyclic first homology group.
that
If generators for
Z) 9
Z =
#1 (T2)
(l , 0) generates the homology of the complement and
then any Dehn surgery with invariant
83 —
so‘
(O , l) is trivial
(l , n) yields a homology sphere.
3. Branched coverings. If L is a covering space of
are chosen
link, then any finite-sheeted
L can be compactified in a canonical way be adding
circles which cover covering of
L to give a closed manifold, M . 'M is called a branched
S3 over L . There is a canonical projection
which is a local diffeomorphism away simplest branched coverings of
S3
p-1
from
p : M +
3
K arrows
glue the faces of one tetrahedron to the other so
For instance, A is matched with A'. All the
are identified and all the
resulting complex has
—f+——9
arrows are identified, so the
2 tetrahedra, h triangles, 2 edges and l vertex.
Its Euler characteristic is +l , and (it follows that) a neighborhood of the vertex is the cone on a torus. Let M be the manifold obtained by removing the vertex.
It
turns out that
this manifold is homeomorphic with the complement of a
figure eight knot.
"Figure
eight
knot."
1.6
"Another view of the figure eight
This knot is
familiar
knot."
from extension cords, as the most commonly occurring knot,
after the trefoil knot
In order to see this homeomorphism we can draw a more suggestive picture of the figure eight knot,
4g
"Tetrahedron with
figure eight knot,
viewed from above."
arranged along the l-skeleton of a tetrahedron.
The knot can be spanned by a
2-complex, with two edges, shown as arrows, and
h 2-cells, one for each face
of the tetrahedron, in a more
- or - less obvious way: 3
I
This
picture illustrates
the typical way in which a
2—cell is attached.
Keeping in mind that the knot is not there, the cells are triangles with deleted
vertices.
The two complementary regions of the two-complex are the tetrahedra,
with deleted vertices.
We will return to this example later. For now, it serves to illustrate the need for a systematic way to compare and to recognize manifolds.
3933p
Suggestive pictures can also be deceptive. A trefoil knot can similarly
be arranged along the
l-skeleton of a tetrahedron
then 1.8.
From the picture, a cell-division of the complement is produced. however, the
3-cells are not tetrahedra.
The boundary of a 3-cell, flattened out on the plane.
In this case,
52.
There are three kinds of geometry which possess a notion of distance,
and which look the same from any viewpoint with your head turned in an orientation: these are elliptic geometry (or spherical geometry),
Euclidean or
parabolic geometry, and hyperbolic or Lobachevskiian geometry.
The underlying spaces of these three geometries are naturally Riemannian manifolds of constant sectional curvature resp. +1 , 0 , and -l . Elliptic
n-space is the n-sphere, with antipodal points identified.
TOpologically it is projective sphere.
n-space, with geometry inherited from the
The geometry of elliptic space is nicer than that of the sphere
because of the elimination of the pairs of identical, antipodal figures which always pop up in spherical geometry.
Thus, spy.two points in
elliptic space determines a unique line, for instance. object moving away from you
a distance of
2"
appears
smaller and smaller, until it reaches
Then, it starts looking larger and larger and optically,
it is in focus behind you. it
appears
In the sphere, an
Finally, when it reaches a distance of
W
so large that it wOuld seem to surround you entirely.
,
In elliptic space, on the other hand, the maximum distance is that apparent size is a monotone decreasing
g-
, so
function of distance. It
would none—the—less be distressing to live in elliptic space, since you would always be confronted with an image of yourself, turned inside out, upside down and filling out the entire background in your field of view. Euclidean space is familiar to all of us, since it very closely approximates
the geometry of the space in which we live, up to moderate distances. Hyperbolic space is the least familiar to most people.
revolution in
Certain surfaces of
IR 3 have constant curvature -l and so give an idea of
the local picture of the hyperbolic plane.
IE
_.
mz EG e i s
The simplest of these is the pseudosphere, the surface of revolution generated by a tractrix.
A tractrix is the track of a box of stones which
(O , 1) and is dragged by a team of oxen walking along the
starts at
x-axis and pulling the box by a chain of unit length.
Equivalently,
this curve is determined up to translation by the property that its
tangent lines meet the
x axis a unit distance from the point of tangency.
The pseudosphere is not complete, however
-
it has an edge, beyond which it
cannot be extended. Hilbert proved the remarkable theorem that pg complete
C2‘
surface
with
curvature -1 can exist in
I13 .
In spite of this,
convincing physical models can be constructed.
We must therefore resort to distorted pictures of hyperbolic space.
Just as it is convenient to have different maps of the earth for understanding various aspects of its geometry:
for seeing shapes,for
comparing areas, for plotting geodesics in navigation; so it is useful
to have several maps of hyperbolic space at our disposal.
2.1 The Poincaré disk model.
Let
Dn
n of D
denote the disk of unit radius in Euclidean
can be taken as a map of hyperbolic space
Hn
n—space.
The interior
. A hyperbolic
line in the model is any Euclidean circle which is orthogonal to
a hyperbolic
2-plane is a Euclidean sphere orthogonal to
BDn;
BDn
;
etc.
The words "circle" or "sphere" are here used in the extended sense, to include the limiting case of a line or plane.
This model is conformally
correct, that is, hyperbolic angles agree with Euclidean angles, but distances are greatly distorted.
Hyperbolic arc length
1
ds2
is given
2.h
length and r
2
ds2
by the formula
dx2
, where
is distance from the origin.
162;;
is Euclidean arc
Thus, the Euclidean image of
a hyperbolic object, as it moves away from the origin,shrinks in size
BDn
roughly in proportion to the Euclidean distance from
(when this n 8D , if it
distance is small). The object never actually arrives at
moves with a bounded hyperbolic velocity.
Lines
The sphere
BDn
People is called the sphere at inrini
. It is not actually
in hyperbolic space, but it can be given an interpretation purely in terms of hyperbolic geometry, as follows.
Choose any base point p0 in
Consider any geodesic ray R , as seen from
of a great circle in the visual sphere at
a
pO . R traces out
p0
(since
p0
and R
En
.
a segment determine
2-plane).Thisvisual segment converges to a point in the visual sphere.
If we translate
Hn
so that
pO
is at the origin in the Poincaré disk
model, we see that the points in the visual sphere correspond precisely
to
points
on the sphere at infinity, and that the end of a ray in this
Visual sphere corresponds to its Euclidean endpoint in the
Poincare
disk
model.
2.2 The southern hemisphere. The Poincaré disk as a hyperbolic
Dnc IR11
is contained in the Poincaré disk
n + 1 space.
n-plane in hyperbolic
Stereographic
projection (Euclidean)
sends the Poincaré disk
Dn
Dn+lC IRn+l
from the north pole of
to the southern hemisphere of
+ 1
BDn
Dn+1
[Rn+5.
mil Soufkaf“
Hemlsfihé’rfe
Thus hyperbolic lines in
to the equator
Sn _
l
the Poincaré
disk go to circles on
S? orthogonal
.
There is a more natural construction for this map, using only + C: l , consider the hyperbolic geometry. For each point p in
Hn
hyperbolic ray perpendicular to
En
at
En
p , and downward normal.
This
,
2.6
"l
ray converges to a point on the sphere at infinity, which is the same as
the Euclidean stereographic image of p.
\ n. be
\W
W
2.3. The upper half space model. This is closely related to the previous two, but it is often more convenient
for computation or for constructing pictures. sphere
space
-J
of
Sn
Sn
in
xn 1 0
IRn+l
so that the southern hemisphere lies in the half-
IR n+1 . Now stereographic projection from the top
(which is now on the equator) sends the southern hemisphere to the
upper half space LJ
in
To obtain it, rotate the
xn > 0
in
IRn+l_
U .
,
(J
(
2.7
(I T
”If
i
wM
. U .,
a;2.
\I
.‘l’ 11%,,
.n.,
C
.
\
(3*
4.5!
A hyperbolic line, in the upper half-sspace, is the bounding plane
1811-1C IR:1 .
a
circle perpendicular to
The hyperbolic metric is
(15:2-an dx2
Thus, the Euclidean image of a hyperbolic object moving toward size precisely proportional to the Euclidean distance from
2.1+ The
annl
has
Tin-l
projective model.
This is obtained by Euclidean orthogonal projection of the southern hemisphere of
line segments.
Sn
back to
the disk Dn
. Hyperbolic lines become Euclidean
This model is useful for understanding incidence in a
configuration of lines and planes.
Unlike the previous three models, it
fails to be conformal, so that angles and shapes are distorted.
It is better to regard this projective model to be contained not in
2.8
Euclidean space, but in projective space.
The projective model is very
natural from a point of view inside hyperbolic picture of a hyperplane, hovering above
Hn
in
En
Hn+l
n + 1 space: it gives a
, in true perspective. Thus, an observer ,
looking down, sees
En
as the interior of
a disk in his visual sphere. As he moves farther up, this visual disk shrinks, as he moves down, it expands, but (unlike in Euclidean space)
the visual radius of this disk is always strictly less than
line on
En
r/2 . A
appears visually straight. It is possible to give an
intrinsic meaning within hyperbolic geometry for the points outside the sphere at infinity in the projective model.
For instance, in the two-
dimensional projective model, any two lines meet somewhere. The conventional
sense of meeting means to meet inside the sphere at infinity (at a tinit e
point). If the two lines converge in they meet on the circle at
infinity,
Otherwise, the two lines are called
common perpendicular
the
visual circle, this means that
and they are called parallels .
we;
they have a unique
L and they meet in some point x in the Moebius
band outside the circle at infinity. Any other line perpendicular pg_m£
passes thropgh x , and any line through x is p___a*mndicular 39_ L.
2.8.a.
Evenly
lines
The region inside the circle is a plane, with a base line and a family of its perpendiculars, spaced at a distance of .051 fundamental units, as measured along the base line shown in perspective in hyperbolic 3-space (or in the projective ary meet ing point beyond model). The lines have been extended t0 their the her izon. U , the observer, is directly ab0V8 the X (which is .881 fundamental units HWY 51‘0“ the base 11ne). To see the view from different heights, us the following table:
To see the view of U at a height of
hold the picture a distance of
—
2 units
11"
3 units ’4 units 5 units
27"
10 units 20 units
2,523'
6' 17'
10,528.75
(28 cm.) (69 cm.) (191 cm.) (519.cm.) (771 m.) miles
(16,981 km.)
For instance, you may imagine that the fundamental distance is 10 meters. Then the lines are spaced about like railroad ties. Twenty units is 200
meters: U is in a hot air balloon.
To prove this, consider hyperbolic 2-space as a plane PC
33 .
Construct the plane Q through L perpendicular to P . Let U be an observer
e:
H3. ,Drop a perpendicular
Now if K is any line in by
U and K
P perpendicular to L , the plane determined
is perpendicular to
visual line determined by
M from U to the plane Q .
Q , hence contains M ; hence the
K in the visual sphere of U passes through
the visual point determined by
K . The converse is similar.
2.10
a one—to-one
This gi
e at infinity
the
s
L corre /
.r
S
lerly, there
w’8utside
. “.- 4'
the sphere
The
afl
infinity
a point
L in
int of all its perpendiculars.
s in
orreSpondence between
Sphere
HI1
and hyperplanes
sponds to the union of
p
of imaginary radius.
Euclidean
A sphere in
space with radius r
I
!
space should be
a sphere of 1 f .. we use an indeflnlte . . . . 1nterpretatlon, met
hyperbolic
in
hyperplanes
general) the set
outside
determined by hyperplanes through I
all points
2.5
in
the common intersection
is a
at of points x
between the
.
IRn+l. The sphere of radius .
hyperb0101d
i
,1" 2 + ... + xn2 xn+12 fxl —
I"
constant curvature 12 r
Thus,
i . To give this a reasonable
2
_— dxl2 + ... + dxn2 — dxn+12
the origin in this metric is the
K
\
\\ \
./
IJ
2.11
The metric
dx2
restricted to this hyperboloid is positive definite, and
curvature
it is not hard to check that it has constant
Any plane through the origin is
dx2 —
-l .
orthogonal'to the hyperboloid,
so it follows from elementary Riemannian geometry that it meets the hyperboloid in a geodesic.
The projective model for hyperbolic space is reconstructed
by projection of the hyperboloid from the origin to a hyperplane in Conversely, the quadratic form
from the projective model.
x12
+ ... +
xnz - xn+12
Tin
.
can be reconstructed
To do this, note that there is a unique
quadratic equation of the form
i,j=l
defining the sphere at infinity in the projective model.
this equation gives a quadratic form of type desired. Any isometry of the quadratic form
Homogenization of
IR'n+l , as x12 + ... xn 2 - xn_12 (n , 1) in
induces an isometry of the hyperboloid, and hence any projective transformation
of
IPn
which
preserves
hyperbolic space.
the sphere at infinity induces an isometry of
This contrasts with the situation in Euclidean geometry,
where there are many projective self-homeomorphisms: the affine transformations.
In particular, hyperbolic space has no similarity
transformations except isometries.
This is true also for elliptic space.
This means that there is a well-defined unit of measurement of distances in
hyperbolic geometry. We shall later see how this is related to 3-dimensional
topology, giving a measure of the
"size" of manifolds.
2.12
2.6
Trigonometry.
Sometimes it is convenient to have formulas for hyperbolic geometry, and
not just pictures. For this purpose, it is convenient to work with the description of hyperbolic space as one sheet of the "sphere" of radius
— X1
. with respect to the quadratic form Q(X) _2 + ... +
Iin+l
.
+
film
inner product
x: - Xn+1
i
2.‘ 1n
1 , equipped with this quadratic form and the associated
X
'Y
n
X. Y.
=_
_
X 1 Y 1 , is called
En a l .
i:
First we will describe the geodesics on level sets of
we
Q . Suppose that
Kt
is such a geodesic, with speed
Sr = {X s = V
: Q(X) =
Q(K )
may differentiate the equations
_
Xt Xt to obtain
Kt 'Kt
. _ Xt. Kt -
2
r
Xt Xt
= 0
- Kt Xt --
Xt Xt
I
I
Since any geodesic must lie in a a linear combination of
2.6.1
X
=
Xt
and
2
s
0
2
-5
2-dimensional subspace,
it
, and we
Xt
have
X
This differential equation, together with the initial conditions
must be
r2}
2.13
determines the geodesics. Given two vectors
X and Y
in
En’l
, if X and I have non-zero
length we define the quantity
c (X
IIXII
where
= /F_X_T_X—
, Y)
X
'Y
llxll
°
Irll
is positive real or positive imaginary. Note that
c (X , Y)
= c (1X , uY) , where A and u are positive constants, that
c(-X , Y)
= —c (x , r), and that c (x , x) = 1 . In Euclidean space
En+l
, c(X , I) is the cosine of the angle between X and I
En’l
In
there are several cases.
We identify vectors on the positive sheet of If Y
hyperbolic space.
to the subspace that
Y‘
intersects
the notation
Emsby_ 2.6.2.
Y‘"
If
Y‘
with
Q restricted
(n—l , l) . This
means
and determines a hyperplane. We will use
tat
to denote this hyperplane, piph_phe_normal orien
Y .
x
is any vector of real length, then
is indefinite of type
fin
Si (Xn+1 > 0)
and
ion
(We have seen this correspondence before, in 2.h) .
r
e.an
, then
c(X , r) = cosh d(X , r) where
d(X , Y)
denotes the hyperbolic distance between
To prove this formula, join X to X by a geodesic
and Y .
X
Xt
of unit speed.
2.1h
From 2.6.1 we have
Xt
Xt
so
c c c thus
c(X , xt) =
When
t
If X
XL
2.6.3
-
and Y and
X0
= 0
(xt, xt) - c (xt. It) (x0, x0) - o (x , x0) =
t.
cosh
d(X , Y) , then .L
X
Xt = Y
, giving
2.6.2.
. . are dlstlnct hyperplanes, then
J-
Y'L
intersect
(in En)
Q is positive definite on the subspace
C(X
,Y)2
1 consider an annulus of radii
, then a (G , JRn)
For instance, given a constant l and,
A + e . Identify
neighborhoods of the two boundary components by the map resulting manifold,- topologically, is
IR11
T2
3: -
f Xx. The
Here is another method, due to John Smillie, for constructing affine
T2
structures on
opposite edges of
from any quadrilateral
Q in the plane.
Identify the
Q by the orientation-preserving similarities which carry
one to the other. Since similarities preserve angles, the sum of the angles about the vertex in the resulting complex is
2v , so it has an
T2
affine structure. We shall see later how such structures on
connected with questions
concerning Dehn surgery in
are intimately
3-manifolds.
The literature about affine manifolds is interesting. Milnor [
] showed
that the only closed 2—dimensional affine manifolds are tori and Klein bottles.
The main unsolved question about affine manifolds is whether in
general an affine manifold has Euler characteristic zero.
If G
is the group of isometries of Euclidean space
En
, then a (G , En)-
manifold is called a Euclidean manifold, or often a flat_manifold. Bieberbach proved that a
Euclidean manifold
is finitely covered by a torus.
Furthermore,
a Euclidean structure automatically gives an affine structure, and Bieberbach
proved that closed Euclidean manifolds with the same fundamental group are equivalent as affine manifolds.
If G
is the group 0 (n + l) acting on elliptic space
then we obtain
ellifl ic
Cong ecture eve
I’n
( or on
Sn
) ,
manifolds.
g—manifold
m finite fundamental m g;a elliptic
structure. This conjecture is a stronger version of the Poincaré conjecture; we shall
see the logic shortly. All known 3—manifolds with finite fundamental group certainly have elliptic structures.
3.h As a final example (for the present),when G is the group of isometries of hyperbolic space
En
, then a
(G , fin)-manifold is a
manifold.
'
For instance, any surface of negative Euler characteristic has a hyperbolic structure.
The surface of genus two is an illustrative example.
Topologically, this surface is obtained by identifying the sides of an
octagon, in the pattern above, for instance. An example of a hyperbolic
structure on the surface is obtained from any hyperbolic octagonawhose opposite edges have equal lengths and whose angle sum
in the same pattern. instance.
is
2n , by identifying
There is a regular octagon with angles w/h , for
s/ A regular octagon with angles fi/h , whose sides can be identified to give a surface of genus 2.
3.6 3.1 A_
erbolic structure gg.the figgre eight knot
C
lament
Consider a regular tetrahedron in Euclidean space, inscribed in the unit sphere, so that its vertices are on the sphere. Now interpret this
tetrahedron to lie in the projective model for hyperbolic space, so that it determdnes an ideal hyperbolic simplex: combinatorially, a simplex with its vertices deleted.
60° .
The dihedral angles of the hyperbolic simplex are
This may be seen by extending its faces to the sphere at
they meet in four circles which meet each other in
\
60°
a
, which
angles.
A tetrahedron inscribed in the unit sphere, top view.
By considering the Poincaré disk model, one sees immediately that the angle made by two planes is the same as the angle of their bounding circles on the sphere at infinity.
Take two copies of this ideal simplex, and glue the faces together, in the pattern described in
§1
, using Euclidean isometries, which are also
(in this case) hyperbolic isometries, to identify faces. This gives a hyperbolic structure to the resulting manifold, since the angles add up to
360°
around each edge.
According to Magnus, Hyperbelie Tesselations, this manifold was constructed by
Gieseking
1912
in
R. Riley,
(but without any relation to knots).
, showed that the figure eight knot complement
'
has a hyperbolic structure (which
agrees with
this one).
This manifold also
coincides with one of the hyperbolic manifolds obtained by an arithmetic construction, because the fundamental group of the complement of the figure eight knot is isomorphic to a subgroup of index
where
3.2
m
12 in
PSI.2
( Z Du] ),
is a primitive cube root of unity.
A hmerbolic
manifold with geodesic bouncing
Here is another manifold which is obtained from two tetrahedra. First glue the two tetrahedra along one face; then glue the remaining faces according to this diagram:
|l
\
In the
diagram, one vertex has
been removed so that the polyhedron can be
flattened out in the plane. The resulting complex has only one edge and
one vertex. The manifold M obtained by removing a neighborhood of the vertex is oriented with boundary a surface of genus 2
.
Consider now a one-parameter family of regular tetrahedra in the projective model for
hyperbolic
space, beginning with the
space centered at the origin in Euclidean
tetrahedron
whose vertices are on the sphere at
infinity, and expanding until the edges are all tangent to infinity.
The dihedral angles go from
there is a tetrahedron with along each plane
v‘
300
600 to 00
, so somewhere in between,
dihedral angles.
, where v is a vertex
the sphere at
Truncate this simplex
(outside the unit ball),
to obtain a stunted simplex :
All angles are
900
or
300
with all angles
90° or 30° .
Two copies glued together give a hyperbolic structure for M , where the boundary of M
(which comes from the triangular faces of the stunted
simplices) is totally geodesic.
A_closed h erbolic 3—manifold can be
obtained by doubling this example: i;e; , taking two copies of M
and
glueing them together by the "identity" map on the boundary.
3.3 The Whitehead
link com lament
The Whitehead link may be spanned by a 2—complex which cuts the
complement into
an octahedron, with vertices deleted:
The
1—cells are the three arrows, and the attaching maps for the 2—cells
are indicated by the dotted lines. The 3—ce11 is an octahedron (with
3.10
vertices deleted), and the faces are identified thus:
A
/
(:I A hyperbolic structure may be obtained from a Euclidean regular octahedron inscribed in the unit sphere. Interpreted as lying in the projective model for hyperbolic space, this octahedron is an ideal octahedron with all
dihedral angles
90° .
a—‘Q"
Glueing it in the indicated pattern, again using Euclidean isometries
between the faces (which happen to be hyperbolic isometries as well) gives a hyperbolic
3.h
The
structure for the complement of the Whitehead link.
rings mama
This is spanned by a
2-complex which cuts the complement into two
T\
n
Q
\“n
ideal octahedra:
Borromean rings
A spanning 2—complex
3f
The corresponding glueing pattern two octahedra. Faces are glued to their corresponding faces with 120 rotations, alternating in direction like gears.
3.12
3-5 _Th_e_ developig @Let X be any real analytic manifold, and G a group of real analytic diffeomorphisms of X
. Then an element of G is completely determined X .
by its restriction to any open set of
Suppose that M
(G , X)-manifold. Let
is any
¢i
coordinate charts for M , with maps
Yij
:
¢i (UiO UJ) YiJ
denoted
YiJ ' s
beginning in
U1
where
,
yeG
451
defined on
so they are determined by locally constant maps, also
, of
Ui n
U
G .
into
3
U1
. It is
. Mg,
¢1
of
along a path
a
in M
easy to see, inductively, that on a component of
the analytic continuation of
in M . It of
be
and transition functions
are local G—diffeomorphisms of X
Consider now an analytic continuation
0
,
satisfying
In general the
d
Ui -> X
U1 , U2
4’1
along
cpl SEE.analflicallx
a
is of the form Y o
oi
,
continued alogg avg-z Lag
follows immediately that there is a global analytic
continuation
defined on the universal cover of M . (Use the definition of the
universal cover as a quotient space of the paths on M )- . This map,
D : is called the developing map.
it is an immersion
inducing
the
D
M
+
X
is a local
(G , X)
(G , X)-diffeomorphis'.m
structure on
M
.)
D
is
(i.e.,
3.13 clearly unique up to composition with elements of
G
Although G acts transitively on X in the cases of primary interest, this condition is not necessary for the definition of D . For example, if G
the trivial group and
(G , X)
X is closed then closed
,
the finite-sheeted covers of X
and D
- manifolds are
precisely
is the covering projection.
From this uniqueness property of D , we have in particular that for any covering transformation
gag G
element
D
Since
0
Ta
of
a
a
M
over M , there is some (unique)
such that
Tc TB
g“ o D
0
0
TB
H : c r—+
correspondence
‘ called the is a homomorphism,
ga
o
g8
o D
it
follows that
the
86
holonm
of M .
In general, the holonomy of M need not determine the
(G , X)-structure
on M , but there is an important special case in which it does.
22g. M map.
is a comolete
(G , X)-manifold if D :
(In particular, if X
M +X
is a covering
is simply-connected, this means
D is a
homeomorphism.) If X
is simply connected, then any complete
may easily be reconstructed from the image
as the quotient space
P =
(G , X)-manifold M
H(nl(M))
of the holonomy,
X / P .
Here is a useful sufficient condition for completeness:
3.6
m.Let
G
EEEE Eoup of analytic
diffeomeorphisms acting
transitively o_n_ a manifold X , such that for any xE-X , the isotropy group
Gx
of
x i§_ comEct . Then every closed
Proof. of
Let
(G , X)-manifold M
is complete
Q be any positive definite on the tangent space
Tx(X)
X at some point' x . Average the set of transforms g(Q) , g
0
- ball in the Riemannian metric on
and contractible.
(G , x)- map
M is always convex
D-1 (Be/2 (x) )
is any point in X , then
be a union of homeomorphic copies of
38/2 (x)
in
M
.
must
D evenly covers
X , so it is a covering projection, and M is complete. For example, any closed elliptic 3-manifold has universal cover so any simply-connected elliptic manifold is
S3 .
83 ,
Every closed hyperbolic
manifold or Euclidean manifold has universal cover hyperbolic 3—space
or Euclidean space. Such manifolds are consequently determined by their holonomy.
3.15
The developing map of an affine torus constructed from a quadrilateral (see p. 3.3). The torus is plainly not complete. Exercise: construct other affine toruses with the same holonomy as this one. (Hint: walk once or twice around this page. )
3.16 Even for G and X as in proposition
or not a non-compact
(G , X)
- manifold
3.6
, the question of whether
M is complete can be much more
subtle. For example, consider the thrice-punctured sphere, which is obtained by glueing together two triangles minus vertices in this pattern:
A hyperbolic structure can be obtained by glueing two ideal triangles (with all vertices on the circle at infinity) in this pattern.
Each side of such
a triangle is isometric to the real line, so a glueing map between two sides may be modified by an arbitrary translation; thus, we have a family of
hyperbolic structures in the thrice-punctured sphere parametrized by
IR3 .
(These structures need not be, and are not, all distinct) . Exactly 923_ parameter
zalge_yields a_ Megs h erbolic structure, as we shall see
presently. Meanwhile, we collect some useful conditions for completeness of
structure with
(G , X) as in
3.6.
a (G , X)
For convenience, we fix some natural
-
3.17
metrics on
3.7.
(G , X) -structures.
Proposition.
(G , x) a_s
With
above , then§_ (G , X)-manifold M
complete
c
's
__
Q
(a). M
é)
(b). There
complete as g metric ppace
some a > 0
5
sucp that
e-ball ip M
each closed
i_s
act
Q
(o). For evgy k > 0 , all closed k—ball_s are compact
©
(d)- There.i_s 5 family
M , such that
m.
St+a
contains
Suppose that M
complete.
{St} ';
ta lR ,
g compact sets which
a neighborhood g radius
is metrically complete.
at
in X
St .
Then
M
is also metrically
M
—r
X is a covering map
We will show that the developing map D :
by proving that any path
about
a
ahaust
can be lifted to
M.
In fact, let
Tc [0 , 1] be a maximal connected set for which there is a lifting. Since
D is a local homeomorphism, T is open, and because is closed : hence,
a
can be lifted, so M
this
of
X
xoaX
there is some
s works for all is transitive.
Finally, if M
satisfies
xeX
(b) (c) (6.) => (a) .
such that the ball
since the group
Therefore X
is a complete
a
is metrically complete, T
is complete.
It is an elementary exercise to see that For any point
M
satisfies
G
of
Be(x)
(G , X)
- diffeomorphisms
(a) , (b) , (c) and
(G , X)—manifold, it is covered by
(b) . The proposition follows.
I
is compact;
X
(d)
.
, so it
3.18 3.7.
W-
To analyze what happens near the vertices of an ideal
polyhedron when it is glued together, we need the notion of
(or, in the hyperbolic plane, they-are called horocycles). A horosphere has the limiting shape of a sphere in hyperbolic space, as the radius goes to infinity.
One property which can be used to determine the spheres centered
at a point through
X is the fact that such a sphere is orthogonal to all lines
X . Similarly, if X is a point on the sphere at infinity, the
horo spheres
"centered" at X are
the surfaces orthogonal to all lines through
X . In the Poincaré disk model, a hyperbolic sphere is a Euclidean sphere in the interior of the disk, and a horosphere is a Euclidean sphere tangent
to the unit sphere. The point X of tangency is the center of the horosphere.
Concentric horocycles and orthogonal lines.
3.19
Translation along a line through X Thus,
22$. horo spheres 5;;M.
permutes the horospheres centered at X . The convex region bounded by a horosphere
is a horoball.
For another view of a horosphere, consider the upper half-space model. In this case, hyperbolic lines through the
point
at infinity are Euclidean lines
orthogonal to the plane bounding upper half-space. A horosphere about this point is a horizontal Euclidean plane.
that a horosphere in
fin
From this picture one easily sees
is isometric to Euclidean space
En-1 .
One also
sees that the group of hyperbolic isometries fixing the point at infinity in the upper half-space model acts as the group of Euclidean plane.
. An
isometry
horosphere through X
g
h' . Project
and
22
takes h
. The composition of these two maps is a
xna) dx2 .
centered at
to a concentric
11 and £2
similarity of
h
.
emanating from the point at
Recall that the hyperbolic metric is
This means that the hyperbolic distance between
£1
along a horosphere is inversely proportional to the Euclidean distance
above the bounding plane.
on
any horosphere
h' back to h along the family of parallel lines
infinity in the upper half-space model.
(1 /
h
of hyperbolic space fixing X
Consider two directed lines
ds2 =
of the bounding
One can see this action internally as follows. Let X be
any point at infinity in hyperbolic space, and
X
similarities
21 at heights of
that for any two
hl
The hyperbolic distance between points and
h2
is
[log (h2)
concentric horospheres hl
and
-
h2
log
(hi)
I
X1
and
X2
. It follows
which are a distance
d
3.20
21 and £2 orthogonal to hl and h2 the ratio of the distance between 11 and £2 measured along hl to their
apart, and any pair of lines
distance measured along
h2
is
9i c
exp(d) .
CeJ
Q9.
ha.
/——L/'\
‘"i
Horocycles and lines in the upper half-plane
3.9. Merbolic surfaces obtained fppp.idg§l triangles .
Consider an oriented
S obtained by glueing ideal triangles with all vertices at
surface
infinity, in some
pattern.
Exercise : gll_§pgp; Wiggles are
I
conflent . (Hint:
you can derive this from the fact that a finite triangle is determined by its angles
- see
Let
2.6.8.
Let the vertices pass to infinity, one at a time.)
K be the complex obtained by including the ideal vertices. Associated
with each ideal vertex
v of K , there is an invariant d(v) , defined as
follows. Let h be a horocycle in one of the ideal triangles, centered about a vertex which is glued to v in 8 counter
clockwise
and
about v
"near" this vertex.
Extend h as a horocycle
. It meets each successive
ideal triangle
as a horocycle orthogonal to two of the sides, until finally it re-enters the original triangle as a horocycle
td(v) h'
from h
.
h' concentric with h , at a distance
The sign is chosen to be positive iff the horoball bounded by
in the ideal triangle contains that bounded by
h .
AU)‘0
S i§_
The
iff all
instance, that some invariant
d(v) are 0 .
d(v) < 0 . Continuing h further around v ;
the length of each successive circuit around v factor
0
Y‘OCLiL
A(V,)
ol in
I
Let H'(o.)
77W)
I
d2 generate W) has length
{
I
} is dense in
IR+
H'(c)
I
}
is a cyclic group.
a manifold which is the
and it is obtained by adjoining a circle to
1
(oi , Bi)
happen to be primitive
is the topological manifold
M(ml
’81) ,
with a non—singular hyperbolic structure, so that our extended definition is
If each ratio
compatible with the original.
Pi/qi
in lowest terms, then
M (Plsql),--. '
M
,(Pk’qk) '
(xi/Bi
is the rational number
is topologically the manifold
ThemerOlcs tructure, however , has b l'
, (uk,8k )
1+.l'7
M'—
singularities at the component circles of
2
1r
in
M with cone angles of
+ . . . . (Pi / oi) [Since the holonomy H of the primitive element Pi ai qi bi «1 (Pi) is a pure rotation of angle 2w (pi / mi) 1 .
-
(0.1 , Bi)€Z a
There is also a topological interpretation in case the
In this case, all the cone angles are
although they may not be primitive.
of the form 2 r/
MI
:11 , where
which has branching index
each
:11
Z
:11
is an integer. Any branched cover
around the
of
M'- M
has a
shown on p
h.lO ,
i-th circle of
non-singular hyperbolic structure induced from M .
h.6. Dehn surges; on the figu_re eight knot.
m
For each value of w in the region R of the associated hyperbolic structure on eight knot, has
function d
Di2
manifold
, where K
is the figure
some Dehn surgery invariant d(w) = i(u(w) , A(w) ). The
is a continuous map from R
/ :1 of
element
S3 - K
I12
with vectors
v
to the one-point compactification
identified to -v . Every primitive
(p,q) of Z 9 Z which lies in the
(S3 - K)(P’q)
which
Actually, the map
d
image
d(R) describes a closed
possesses a hyperbolic structure.
/\L R
can be lifted to a map d
by using the fact that the sign of a
rotation of
(K3 -
z-ax
is)
I12 , is
well-defined.
(See §h.h. The extra information actually comes from the orientation of the z-axis determined by the direction in which the corners of tetrahedra wrap
around it) .
d
is defined by the equation
d (w)
(u , A) where
h. 18
uH(m) +
In order to compute the 2 and m
p.
h.ll.
two
for
image
(a rotation by + 2v)
d(R) , we need
first to express the generators
in terms of the previous generators
Referring to page
6, we
x and y on
see that a meridian which only intersects
2—cells can be constructed in a small neighborhood of K . The only
generator of iy
nl(P)
AH2(£)
wi(L(v))
(see p. h.ll) which intersects only two l-cells is
, so we may choose m = y . Here is a
figure eight knot can be arranged
cheap way to see what
1 is. The
(passing through the point at infinity)
so that it is invariant by the map
of
IR3 = S3 .
K)
v r—> -v
This map can be made an isometry of the complete hyperbolic structure
constructed for
53 - K
immediately from
Mostow's
. (This can be seen directly; it also follows theorem,
... ) .
an isometry of the Euclidean structure on
to
-1
. Hence,
a geodesic representing
This hyperbolic isometry induces
L(v) which takes m to m
and L
2 must be orthogonal to a geodesic
h.l9
representing m 'fi
, so
from the diagram on the bottom of p.
2 = +x + 2y is a longitude.
the curve
compute m
and
hill we deduce that
(Alternatively, it is not hard to
2 directly).
From p. h.l2 , we have
h.6.l
W(l
3(2.)
z2(l - z)2 d near the boundary of R
The behaviour of the map determine.
For
2
and
H(1)
is near the ray
w
instance, when
is near the ray
then
- z)
H(m)
is not hard to
Im(w) = O , Re(w) > 1 ,
Im(z) = 0 , Re(z) < 0 . The arguments of
H(m)
are easily computed by analytic continuation from the complete
3
case w = z = /:l (when the arguments are arg
Consequently,‘ (u , A)
H(m)
0
z
0 ) to be arg
is near the line
H(2)
: +2n
A = +1 . As w -» l we see from the
equation
z(l
- z)
w(l
- w)
=1
that
IZI2
-J
so then
1
(u , A) must approach the line u + kl = 0
IzI IwI2 -+ l
Then the map
lJ
IV]
d
.
, so (u , A) must approach
Similarly, as the line
u
w -+ +
- hi -
extends continuously to send the line segment 1 , fa
w
,
0 .
h.20
, +l ,
to the line segment
, +1 of the region R
There is an involution T
the solutions‘ z
and w
segment
so
u
follows that
d
to the line segment
When
IwI
we have also
is large and
,
u
- 2arg(w) . Thus - kl
=
0 , so
arg
d(ow) = ( u ,-A) . d
except when
In (W) 3_
H(m) =
(u , A)
w
or
if: 2
From. h.6.l
, -1 u/2 , then
arg w , arg
considering
IzI
is small
H(L) = 2n
IH(m)I
and
- harg w IH(£)I ,
= (h , 1)".
o of R which takes w to i—:_}
There is another involution
(and z to l_:—; ) .
,
0 < arg (w)
1
, and
in particular, the integer and half-integer (I) points along this ray, which
determine discrete groups.
The statement true fact that the six that at least
(since
ul(S3)
of the theorem is meant to suggest, but not imply, the exceptions do
223
have hyperbolic structures. Note
83 = (S3 - K)(l,0) does not admit a hyperbolic structure is finite.) We shall arrive at an understanding of the other
five exceptions by studying the way the hyperbolic structures are degenerating
as
(u , A)
h.8 Degeneration of
tends to the line segment
Merbolic
1 ,
,l
structures
h.8.l Definition A codimens ion—k folistion of an n—manifold M is a.
flLstructure, on
M
where
#7,
is the pseudogroup Of
local homeomorphisms
b.23
of JR
X
IIRk
which have the local form
¢(x
In other words,
.- 1')
(f(x
.y) .
g takes horizontal
z(v) )
(n—k)—planes to horizontal
(n-k)—planes. These horizontal planes piece together in M as
(n-k)-
(sub-manifolds), called the leaves of the foliation. M , like a book without its cover, is a disjoint union of its leaves.
For any pseudogroup
Nk
W
of local homeomorphisms of some k—manifold
, the notion of a codimension-k foliation can be refined:
h.8.2. Definit ion. An
J -structure for of
an-k >< Wk
Mn
, where
is a
is the pseudogroup of local homeomorphisms
which have the local form
¢(X with
J
W -foliation of a manifold M11
9
y)
(f(x
9
Y)
9
5(y) )
say If
then an
V’is the pseudo-group of local isometries of hyperbolic
71% -foliation shall, naturally, be
k—space,
called a codimension-k hyperbolic
foliation. A hyperbolic foliation determines a hyperbolic structure for each
k-manifold transverse When
w
w—simplex and the
to its leaves.
tends in the region RC!!! to apoint z-simplex are
both
IR
-
[0,1] , the
flattening out, and in the limit they are flat
1+. 2h-
If we regard these flat simplices as projections of non-degenerate simplexes A
and
B (with vertices deleted), this determines codimension
2 foliations on A and B , whose leaves simplexes:
are preimages
of points in the flat
u. 25 A and B glue together (in a unique way, given the combinatorial pattern) to yield a hyperbolic foliation on
S3 - K .
The reader should satisfy
himself that the glueing consistency conditions for the hyperbolic foliation near an edge result as the limiting case of the glueing conditions for the family of squashing hyperbolic
structures.
The notation of the developing map extends in astraightforward way
to the case of an
'%
-foliation on a manifold M, when
restrictions of a group J
’fib
is the set of
of real analytic diffeomorphisms of
N1‘ ;
it is
a map
D
:
Mn --->-Nk
Note that D is not a local homeomorphism, but rather a local projection map, or a submersion. The holonomy
H
1:1(M) ——>
J
is defined, as before, by the equation
D o T
H(c)
o D
Here is the generalization of proposition
3.6
to
$?-foliations.
For simplicity, assume that the foliation is differentiable:
h.8.1
are
Proms ition . if
J
E transitive
_
and if the isotropy subgroups ——_
compact , than the
developing map for any
‘gf-foliation
g;
J
x of a closed
1+.26 manifold M
is a fibration
D :
2522;; Choose
MP
-#
Nk
.
1k
a plane field
transverse to
32)
g2
greater than e we say that gl is greater then
; otherwise We
that this local ordering does not depend on our
l d(H(sl(x))
choice of y , we need to note that
U(gl , g2)
H(gg(x))
(in fact convex) set. This follows from
) < I } is a connected
= { x
,
the following lemma, the proof of which we defer.
14.9.l
~
:
51.82“”
f
=
d(glx , 32x)
' 1_S__8_._
convex function g H
One useful property of the ordering is that it is invariant under left
In other words g1
and right multiplication.
g3gl
G
—>
has
(id , id) since for any geG , (g , id) '—> id and
derivative zero at
(id , g)
[* , *] : G x G
1 . The tangent spaces of
tangent space to G
x G
at
G x id and id x G
span the
(id , id). Apply this to the group of isometries
ofHZ. From now on we choose a < I / 8 so that any two words of length four or less in which is the
GEGE
Ge
"smallest" element in ,a
7‘ B
id
id . In other words, if
, then a > B . This can be seen as follows. Take
x652
1.3
and look at its inverse image
and consider y
by the lifts of
1:) through y
and
and My) , where
a
a
under
GE
D . Choose
. We can
B (using the horizontal lifts of the geodesics
My) . Since this is a compact set there are
only a finite number of images of y there is one
which is
8
under
1rl
M contained in it.
Hence
8(y) whose IR co—ordinate is the closest to that of y itself.
8 is clearly our minimal element.
-
There are only finitely many translates of
y
in this region.
11-. 32
Now consider a > B > 1 , multiplication,
o‘lsa
e .
Then
a
>
and a >
> a
a‘lsa
> 1
1 then
>
s
invariance under left and right
By
o-lBa. so that >
1 .
>
1
oeo'l >
>
Suppose
“-1eas‘1 >
-1
s
.
1 so that 1 >
8.1 . Note that by multiplicative invariance, if 81 > g2 ggl = gilglggl > gllgaggl = gil . We have either 1 < 801—18—1u
aBa'IB-l or
So
>
a'lsa
Similarly if
then
:12
aEGE.
>
BcB-lo-l
PSL (2 ,
mfk
is a. polynomial map
(defined by
multiplication). Hence the dimension of the subvariety p = (l , ... , l)
is at least as great as the number of variables minus the number of defining equations .
I
We will later give an improved version of 5.2.2 whenever M has boundary components which are tori.
5.3.
In this section we will derive some information about the global
structure of the space of hyperbolic surface M
.
structures on a closed, oriented
This space is called the
W space
of M
and is
defined to be the set of hyperbolic structures on M where two are equivalent if there is an iSometry homotopic to the identity between them.
In order to understand hyperbolic structures on a surface we will cut the surface up into simple pieces, analyze
structures on these pieces,and
study
the ways they can be put together. Before doing this we need some information about closed geodesics in M
.
5.3.1 Pronosition: On
any closed hyperbolic
unique, closed geodesic
nsmanifold M
there is a
in any non-trivial
free
hmotogy
class. Proof: For any
ce_nlM
universal cover
En
consider the covering transformation
of M
. It
fixes some interior point of
En
is an isometry of
En
Tu
on the
. Therefore
it either
(elliptic), fixes a point at infinity
(parabolic) or acts as a translation on some unique geodesic (hyperbolic). That all isometries of
Proposition h.9.3
£235
He
are of one of these types was proved in
; the proof for
fin
is similar.
.A distinction is often made between
transformations in dimension 3
. In
"loxodromic" and "hyperbolic"
this usage a loxodromic transformation
means an isometry which is a pure translation along a geodesic followed by a non-trivial twist, while a hyperbolic transformation means a pure
translation. This is usually not a useful distinction from the point of view of geometry
and topology, so we will use the
Eggg_"buerbolic''
to
cover either case. Since
Ta
is a covering translation it can't have an interior fixed
point so it
can't be elliptic. For any parabolic transformation there are
points
moved
are
arbitrarily small distances.
This would imply that there
non-trivial simple closed curves of arbitrarily small length in M .
Since M
is closed this is impossible. Therefore
To
translates a
unique geodesic, which projects to a closed geodesic in M
. Two geodesics
5.8 corresponding to the translations geodesic in M
to the other.
To and To'
project to the same
if and only if there is a covering translation taking one
In other words
equivalently, c
(1'
=
g c
is free homotopic to
g_1
for some g e
1rlM ,
a .
5.3.2 Proposition : Two distinct geodesics EE universal cover M which are invariant by t at
or
covering translations have distinct
En 93 endpoints
a
Proof:
If two such geodesics had the same endpoint, they would be arbitrarily
close near the cammon endpoint . This would imply the distance between the
two closedgeodesics is uniformly i e. for all
5.3.3 W : I_n a Mex-belie homotogicalgl distinct represented by disjoint
M:
a , a
two manifold
M2
contradiction..
2 collection 2f_
d dis;oint non-trivial simple closed curves
E
, simole closed geodesics
Suppose the geodesics corresponding to two disjoint curves intersect.
Then there are lifts of the geodesics in the universal cover
32
which
intersect. Since the endpoints are distinct, the pairs of endpoints for
the two geodesics must link each other on the circle at infinity. Consider any homotopy of the closed geodesics in geodesics in
32 .
M2 .
It lifts to a homotopy of the
However, no homotopy of the geodesics moving points
only a finite hyperbolic distance can move their endpoints;
thus the images
of the geodesics under such a homotopy will still intersect,and this intersectic
projects to one on
M2
The proof that the closed geodesic corresponding to a simple closed
curve is simple is similar. The argument above is applied to two different lifts of the same geodesic.
Now we are in a position to describe the Teichmflller space for a closed surface. The coordinates given below are due to Nielsen and Fenchel. Pick
33
-3
disjoint, nonrparallel simple closed curves on
M2
(This is the maximum number of such curves on a surface of genus g .)
Take the corresponding into
of
2g
-2
geodesics
and cut along them . This divides
surfaces homeomorphic to
pants" from now on)
82 - three disks
with geodesic boundary.
M2
(called "pairs
is
--_‘\~
13/2.
23/3.
5.10 On each pair of pants P there is a unique arc connecting each pair of boundary components, perpendicular to both.
To see this, note that
there is a unique homotopy class for each connecting arc. Now double P along the boundary geodesics to form a surface of genus two. The union of the
two copies of the arcs connecting a pair of boundary components in P defines a simple closed curve in the closed surface. There is a unique geodesic in its free homotopy class and it is invariant under the reflection which interchanges the two copies of
P . Hence it must be perpendicular to the
geodesics which were in the boundary of
P .
This information leads to an easy computation of the Teichmflller
space of P .
5.3-h
:
f0”)
123 log 23 )
_i_s_ homeomogphi c
ED.
(log
21 ,
the
133 WW .
log
22 ,
with
where
co-ordinetes
ii = length 2:
The perpendicular arcs between boundary components divide P
into
two right angled hexagons. The hyperbolic structure of an all right hexagon is determined by the lengths of three alternating sides.
(See page
2.19)
The lengths of the connecting arcs therefore determine both hexagons so the two hexagons are isometric. Reflection in these arcs is an isometry of the hexagons and shows that the boundary curves are divided in half. lengths
1i / 2
The
determine the hexagons,; hence they also determine
P .
Any positive real values for the
ii
are possible so we are done.
I.
In order to determine the hyperbolic structure of the closed twomanifold from that of the pairs of pants, some measurment of the twist
with which the boundary geodesics are attached is necessary. Find 33
-3
more curves in the closed manifold which, together with the first set of
curves, divides the surface into hexagons.
In the pairs of pants the geodesics corresponding to these curves are arcs connecting the boundary components. However, they may wrap around the components.
In P it is possible to isotope these arcs to the perpendicula
connecting arcs discussed above.
moves
Let
2di
denote the total number of
o
degrees which this isotopy
boundary componat of p
.
the feet of arcs which lie on the
ith
5.12
Of course there is another copy of this curve in another pair of pants which has a twisting coefficient
are
gluedrtogether
di‘
. When the two copies of the geodesic
they cannot be twisted independently by an isotopy of the
Closed surface. Therefore
(di - di')
=
Ti
is an isotopy invariant.
If a hyperbolic surface is cut along a closed geodesic and glued
Remark
back together with a twist of
(n an integer) , then the
211' n degrees,
resulting surface is isometric to the original one.
However, the isometry
is not isotopic to the identity so the two surfaces represent distinct points in Teichmuller space.
Another way to say this is that they are
isometric as surfaces but not as markg surfaces. It follows that
1:i
is a well-defined real number, not just defined up to integral multiples
of
Zn .
5.3.5
W:
The TeichmflJler
space
J’(M)
genus g i_s homeomorphic t_o gg—ordinatas for
j(M)
£3 closed
m63-6
, (log
2.1
,
surface g
. There are M
11 ,
log
9.2 , 12
... , log
Ti
£38-3 , 138-3 )
where
ii
i§_the length and
Mara for a_system 22_
the twist
3g
-3
simple
closed geodesics
In order to see that it takes precisely 3g to cut a surface of genus g
Pi's
Therefore the number of has
3 curves, but
into pairs of pants
is equal to
- 2)
= 3g
Pi
-x(M8)
each curve appears in two
number of curves is 3/2 (2g
-3
Pi's
simple
closed curves
notice that
= 2g
x(Pi)
- 2 . Each
= -l .
Pi
. Therefore the
- 3 . We can rephrase Theorem
5.3
as
f(M) =
n‘3X(M)
It is in this form that the theorem extends to a surface with boundary.
cko)
The Fricke space
of a
surface M with boundary is defined to be the space of hyperbolic structures on M
such that the boundary curves are geodesics, moduloisometries isotopic
to the identity. A surface with boundary can also be cut into pairs of pants '
In this case the curves that were boundary curves
with geodesic boundary;
in M
have no twist parameter.
On the other hand these curves appear in
only one pair of pants. The following theorem is then immediate from the gluing procedures above.
5.3.6
:
3W)
_ii homeomoroh ic to
n'3X(M).
5.114 The definition of Teichmuller space can be extended
to
general
surfaces as the space of all metrics of constant curvature up to isotopy
and change of scale. In the case of the torus
set of all Euclidean structures zero) on
T2
with area one.
T2 ,
this space is the
(i.e. metrics with constant curvature
There is still a
closed
-
geodesic in each
free homotopy class although it is not unique. Take some simple, closed geodesic on
T2
and cut along it. The Euclidean structure on the resulting
annulus is completely determined by the length of its boundary geodesic. Again there is a real twist
glued to get
T2 .
parameter
that determines how the annulus is
Therefore there are two real parameters which
the flat structures on
T2 , the length
2. of a simple, closed geodesic
in a fixed free homotopy class and a twist parameter
5-3.T W :
1
along that geodesic
The ‘I‘eichmifller space if; the torus i_s homeomorphic _t_o_
Jam
withco
5-h
determine
Special algebraic properties
(log£,r),2,r
of a generating set
,5
g above
_or mus o_r" amiss
On large open subsets of PSL (2 , 0:)
132
e si-
, the space of representations
into PSL (2 , CI!) , certain relations imply other
relations. This fact was anticipated in the previous
section
from the
computation of the expected dimension of small deformations of hyperbolic
structures on closed three manifolds. surjective
(see
5.3.
The phenomenon that
dp
is not
) suggests that, to determine the structure of
5-15
n1M3 111M3
as a discrete subgroup of PSL (2 , II!) , not all the relations in
as an abstract group are needed. Below are some examples.
5.h.l
(Jorgensen) Let a , b ‘pgtwo isometries g
E gem fixed point g infinit . I_f w (,a , b)
(a'1 , b_l).=' 1.
such that w (a , b) = 1 than w and b
are
(i.e.
,g Trace
If a
(a) = rTrace (b)
PSL(2,m)) thenalso w(b,a) = 1.
i_n
are hyperbolic or elliptic, let 2 be the unique common
If a and b
Proof:
M
H3 with as. any word
perpendicular for the invariant geodesics
2a
1b
,
of
a
and b . (If
the geodesics intersect in a point x , 2. is taken to be the geodesic through
x perpendicular to the plane spanned by
of
a and b
2.5
and pass through
is parabolic,
b's
(say b is
fixed point at
2a
and
lb
) . If one
) 2. should be perpendicular to w
. If both are parabolic, 2.
should connect the two fixed points at infinity. In all cases rotation by l and b and b. , hence the first assertion. 180o in 2. takes a to
a’1
.If a and b with
invariant
are conjugate hyperbolic elements of PSL (2 , E)
geodesics
are perpendicular to midpoint between
Lb of
along
Eb
2. then m
6+1r/2 .
2.3
and
2b
, take the two lines m and n which
2. and to each other and which intersect and
2a .
Also, if
5b
2. at the
is at an angle of
should be at anangle of
6/2
and n
e
to
at anangle
516
Rotations of
versa.
Since
1800
a and b
through m
n
23
2b
to
and vice
are conjugate they act.the same with respect to
their respective fixed geodesics.
and
or n take
conjugate a _to b
It follows that the rotations about m
(and b to a) or a to
l
b-
(and b to
a—l) If one of a and b conjugate.
is parabolic then
they both are, since they are
In this case take m and n to be perpendicular to 2 and
to each other and to pass through the unique point X d (x , ex)
= d (x , bs) .
Again rotation by
180°
on in m
2 such that and n takes
atoboratob-l.. 1. This theorem fails when a and b fixed point
. For
example, consider
are allowed to have a common
5-17 where
A
*
...
(bk
I
Aer
. Then
A2
is chosen so that
1+
212
0
_
hke" bk
bk)2'
a.
is a root of a polynomial over Z , say
then a relation is obtained:
w(a ,b) =
-1)
l
However, w (a- , b
If
= I
in this caSe
(bah-l)2 =
(a)
.only if
f2
I .
is a root of the same polynomial.
This is not the case in the current example.
2. The geometric condition
that
and b
a
have a cannon fixed point at
infinity implies the algebraic condition that
solvable group.
5.h.2
a and b
generate a
(In fact, the commutator subgroup is abelian.)
mm W :
A_hy_ complete
huerbolic
manifold
fundamental 5393p i_s 51M 11pr elements involution
M3 m
a an_d b
admits an
s
v1 M2
i_s realized pygunigue
.
isomet
: Multiplication by an element in either fundamental group induces the identity map on the manifolds themselves so that
needs only to be
C)
defined up to composition with inner automorphisms to determine the isometry from
M1
to
M2 .
Since the universal cover of a hyperbolic manifold is
En
,
it is a
K (1: , l) . Two such manifolds are homotopy equivalent if and only if there is an isomorphism between their fundamental groups.
5.7.3
M1 and M2 are- hyperbolic manifolds which are complete with m volume, than they are homeomorphic i; d only
W
:
I;
_ii they are homotopy eguivalent . (The case gf_ dimension two _s well-known. )
For any manifold M , there is a homomorphism Diff M —* Out where
Out
(le)
automorphisms.
(le)
= Aut
Mostow's
/
Inn(1rlM)
the kernel
Diffo
is the group of outer
theorem implies this homomorphism splits, if M
is a hyperbolic manifold of dimension n
homorphism splits when
(nlM)
l 3 . It
is unknown whether the
M is a surface. When n = 2 [
(M) is contractible, provided
x(M) i 0 . If M is a
,
3-manifold which is not a Seifert fiber space, Hatcher has shown is contractible
5.7.h
:
;p_
J .
[
M11 pp Emerbolic
(nlM)
volume) and n 3_ 3 , then Out
pp_the gpoup
pg mum 23_
(complete , with finite total
Mn
.
finite gpoup, isomorphic
.
Proof : By Mostow's theorem any automorphism isometry of M
I”
Diffo M
that
|w
Haken
of
u M
induces a unique
1
Since any inner automorphism induces the identity on M ,
it follows that the group of isometries is isomorphic to
Out
(wlM)
Isom
Out
(le) .
That
is finite is immediate from the fact that the group of isometries,
(Mn) ,is finite. To see that
Isom
(Df3
is finite, choose a base point and frame at that
point and suppose first that M
is compact. Any isometry is completely
determined by the image of this frame
(essentially by
"analytic
continuation").
If there were an infinite sequence of isometries there would exist two image frames close to each other.
Since M
is compact, the isometries ,
corresponding to these frames would be close on all of
is homotopic to
¢2
outer automorphism If M
.
Since the isometry
on
“1M ,
p2-l
d’1
M . Therefore
the
, ¢ ,
induces the trivial
it is the identity; ie.,
is not compact, consider
¢l
submanifold
Mac
$2
=
o1 .
M which
consists of points which are contained in an embedded hyperbolic disk of radius
a . Since M has finite total volume,
Me
is compact. Moreover,
¢2
,
5:32 it is taken to itself under any isometry. The argument above applied to
Me
implies that the
group
of isometries of M
is finite even in the
nonscompact case. This result contrasts with the case n = 2 where
Out
(le2)
is
infinite and quite interesting.
The proof of Mostow's theorem in the case that
compact was completed by Prasad, and
5.7.2 (as well as
proved in Mostow,
J .
[
r
is not
Otherwise,
are
] . We shall discuss Mostow's
,
[
5.10 ,
5.7.1
giving details as far as they can be made
Later, we will give another proof due to Gromov, valid at
least for n =
5.8
/
generalizations to other homogeneous spaces)
proof of this theorem in geometric.
Hn
3.
Generalized Dehn surgery and hyperbolic structures
Let M be a non-compact, hyperbolic three—manifold, and suppose that
M has a finite number of ends
T2 x
El
, ... , Ek , each homeomorphic to
[0 , a) and isometric to the quotient space of the region in
(in the upper half-space model)
H3
above an interior Euclidean plane by a
group generated by two parabolic transformations which fix the point at infinity.
Topologically M
boundary is a union of
is the interior of a
T1 , ... , Tk
compact manifold
'M- whose
tori.
Recall the operation of generalized Dehn surgery on M
(section h.5);
5.33
(ai , bi)
it is parametrized by an ordered pair of real numbers
to
end which describe how
glue a solid torus to each boundary component.
If nothing is glued in, this is denoted by
82
be thought of as belonging to of
IR2
where
a
so that the parameters can
(ie., the one point
H1
(T2 , JR) ) . The resulting di = (a1 ,bi) or a. =
for each
compactification
space is denoted by
Mdl,..._,d.k
In this section we see that the new spaces often admit hyperbolic
d.i
= (ai , b.) structures. Since Mdl,...,dk is a closed man ifold when l 2 are primitive elements of (T , Z) , this produces mauy closed .
_
H1
First it is necessary to see that small deformations
hyperbolic manifolds.
of the complete structure on’ M
space M
5.8.1
d1
’ a]:
,
m
U
: Apy small defamation
T2X[0,l]
extends
determined pp 32 sign operators
M:
induce a hyperbolic structure on some
o,B
9;g"standard'' Mubolic structure 2
ppsome(D2xsl)d. py
of
the traces
an2 .
A "standard" structure on
T2 x
g the
d=(a,h)_i_s_
matrices representing
[O , 1] means a structure as
described on an end of M truncated by a Euclidean plane. The universal
cover of
T2 x
[0 , l] is the region between two horizontal Euclidean planes
(or horospheres), modulo a. group of translations. If the structure is
deformed
slightly the holonomy determines the new structure and the images
5.3h of
a
and
8 under the
If H(o)
is still parabolic then so is H(B)
equivalent to the standard one.
axis
2 in
H3
H are slightly perturbed.
holonomy map
OtherwiSe
and the structure is
H(c) and H(B) have a common
. Moreover since H(c) and H(B) are close to the original
parabolic elements, the endpoints of
2 are near the common fixed point
T2 x
[0 , l] is thought to be embedded
If
of the parabolic elements.
in the end,
towards image of
a
T2 x
.)
[o ,
, this means that the line lies far out
and does not intersect
T2 x
[0 , l] in
H3
T2
[0 , l] . Thus the developing
X
for the new structure misses
be lifted to the universal cover
H3 -
N2
of
H3
2 and can
-2
This is the geometric situation necessary for generalized
surgery. The e
{fi(a)
.3(3)}
ion to ,
whet e
3
(D2 x 81)d
is just the completion of R3
is the lift of
H to the cover r\/
that the completion depends only on the behavior of H(u)
2 . In particular, the pair
if
H(
a
d = (a , b)
H(m) +
N
53—17. r\/
and H(B)
- 2.
/
Recall ‘
along
) denotes the complex number determined by
(translation distance along 2 , rotation about
Dehn surgery coefficients
Dehn
b
2) , then the
are determined by the formula:
H(B) =
r2ri
The translation distance and amount of rotation of an isometry along its fixed line is determined by the trace
of its matrix in PSL (2 , m) .
This is easy to see since trace is a conjugacy invariant and the fact is
5-35
clearly true for a diagonal matrix.
In particular the complex number correspondi
to the holonomy of a matrix acting on its trace.
I
H3
is log A
where
The main restflt concerning deformations of M
5.8.2W : E
M =
,. admits
idk )e U
£351; (dj-S
hnerbolic
M0
manifold
A-1
is
is
a pyperbolic
structure then
d1""’dk
M
S
structure.
Consider the compact submanifold
Proof:
end.
I.-
A +_
hborhood ugh,“ . ,w)i_nSZXS2X.-..x82
thereisg nei such that
M. ’
.
Mo: M
gotten by truncating each
has boundary a union of k tori
and is homeomorphic to the
M
By theorem
such that M
= interior
M
.
5.6
,
MD
has a k
complex parameter family of non-trivial deformations, one for each torus.
From the lemma above, each small defamation gives a hyperbolic structure on some
Mdl ,
neighborhood of
, ‘11; . It remains to show that the (an ,
di
vary over a
, an) .
Consider the function
Tr: Def (M) —>
(Tr ( H(aln
.
.Tr (H(akn)
which sends a point in the deformation space to the k-tuple
of the holonomy of
cl , a2
fundamental group of the
iEll
,
, ak ,where
ai
,
Bi
of traces
generate the
torus. Tr is a holomorphic
(in fact,
lenWI q
5.36 algebraic) function on the algebraic variety Def LM) . Tr
Note that
(:2 , ... , 12) for some fixed choice of signs. if and only if if the
iEE-
H(ci)
di
surgery coefficient
... , k
equals
Ma
the hyperbolic structure on for i = l ,
3
H(ai)
in terms of
and
H(Bi)
,
Man
Ho (ulT) ,
:2
Tr-1
w
, :2)
(i2 ,
it follows from
(:2 , ... , i2)
iEQ-
torus depend on the
H(Bi)
it is necessary to estimate
in order to see how the surgery coefficients vary.
Restrict attention to one torus T image of
Therefore di =
is unique.
is an open neighborhood of
of both H(ci)
(H(ai) =
Tr of a small open neighborhood
Since the surgery coefficients of the
trace
Tr
. By Mostow's Theorem
Since dim (Def (M) ) 3_ k
that the image under
, ... , a
a
)=
.
is parabolic if and only
only in the original case and
consists of exactly one point.
of M
H(ai)
is parabolic and
(M°° , ... , a
and conJugate the original developing
, ... , a so that the parabolic fixed point of the holonomy,
is the point at infinity.
to put the holonomy matrices of the the following form:
no_(o)
=
Note that since
generators
[1 1] 0
Hobs)
By further conjugation it is possible
l
. 110(8)
a
no (8)
,
B
«IT
of
in
[l c] 0
1
act on the horospheres 3‘00“ " as
a two dimensional lattice of Euclidean translations, c and l are linearly
5.37
Roux)
IR . Since
independent over
,
30(8)
[1]
is near
Since 3(a)
0
Ho(c)
|: :|
L]
1
2
l
_
1
a
A
2
—
31c) =
between
c
1) I(A1“ - 15
’
Since
u
) respectively.
1 -1
e2
Therefore
Similarly,
2 Z
1
a
However
A
_AE-l *
(11
l
=
l
a
Let the
and
,
0
H(m)
as an
S
(A , A ‘1) and
3(a) and H(B) be
eigenvalues of
[1
, say
0
H(m) , H(B) will have
eigenvector, the perturbed holonomy matrices
common eigenvectors near
[J]
have
log. A
3(a) and 318)
v and H(B)
l
For
A
A
A'1 —l
u
= log 11
-n
, u
near
1
c
-
The surgery coefficients
(a. , b)
-
this is the desired relationship
are determined by the formula
5.38 a
Eh.)
+ b
313)
:2
'n'
i
From the above estimates this implies that (a
+
log A
b c )
(Note that the choice of sign corresponds to a choice of A
Since 1
c are linearly independent over
and
vary over an open neighborhood of of
l . Since Tr (H(m)) =
(up to sign) in the
image of
°° as
A + A _1
A
IR , the values of
.) (a. , b)
varies over a neighborhood
varies over a neighborhood of
mk Mdl’”"dk
Tr : Def (M)
that the surgery coefficeints for the
A4L
or
2
, we have shown
—>
possessing
hyperbolicrstructures vary over an Open neighborhood of
a
in each component.
The complement of the Borromean rings has a complete hyperbolic
structure. However, if the trivial surgery with coefficients performed on one component, the others are unlinked.
M 0 , we will study the decomposition M .
M(O,5]
consists of those points in M
5.5
non-trivial closed loop of length
, and
through which there is a
M[e
9
a) consists of those
points through which every non-trivial loop has length
In order to understand
the geometry of
universal covpr
M
En
and any x e
En
of
T which move x a distance i_s , and let
=
Hn
let
= M( O,e] U M [5,“),
M(0
2.5 .
,3] , we pass to the
. For
any discrete group
Fe(x)
be the subgroup generated by all elements
subgroup consisting of elements
whose derivative
P of isometries of
ré(x) 0
2f_ isometries g; H21
P
PE(x)
and for evepy
has pp_ abelian subgroup 93_ finite index.
This proposition is much more general than stated; if
is replaced by
"abelian"
"nilpotent" , it applies in general to discrete groups of
isometries of Riemannian manifolds with bounded curvature. The proof of the general statement is essentially the same.
In any Lie group G , since the commutator map G x G -» G has derivative 0 at
4*
[ ,
J
(l , l) , it follows that the size
].1
Il1J.
i !'1
5.52 of the commutator of two small elements is bounded above by some constant times the product of their sizes. Hence, if
r;
is any discrete subgroup
G generated by small elements, it follows immediately that the lower
of
1'"a
central series
3 [1" , I"_]D[I"
s
e
s
, II”a , P'JJ a
,
there is a lower bound to the size of elements of
F;
is nilpotent.
(by
idea is
first
Fe(x)
to find an
P;
is actually abelian.
has an abelian subgroup of finite index, the
I; (x)
s such that l
1 then choose a many times smaller than £1 , of
r€(x)
will lie in
) . In other words,
considering, for instance, the geometric classification
of isometries) that this implies
To guarantee that
P;
G is the group of isometries of hyperbolic space,
When
it is not hard to see
is finite (since
P;
1
SO
is always
abelian, and
the product
of generators
(x) . Here is a precise recipe:
Let N be large enough that any collection of elements of 0(n) with
a_N contains at least one
cardinality
El
more than
Choose of
H11
at x
61 /
6
/ 3
32 §_
5
1 / 3 so that for any pair of isometries
which translate a point x
of
pair separated by a distance not
¢l o ¢2
a
distance
5.32 ,
¢l
and
¢2
the derivative
(parallel translated back to x) is estimated within
by the product of the derivatives at x
of
pi
and
¢2
(parallel
translated back to x) .
Now let translating
a
x
=
52
2N
a distance
so that a product of 2N isometries, each
5.5 ,
translates
x
a distance
5.32 .
LEt
5-53 g1 ,
, gk be the set of elements ofI‘ which move x a distance
is ; y
e
I'e(x)
gil
=
bewritten
< N
-
in the generators
gig,
...-
(GM-1 ' (a
e‘ B) =
rél (x) . By I'él(x)
group
rél (x) ,
so
l
(x) , where
, gk . In fact, if
:N
e'
(c , s' , B#l)where
' 8.,
61/ 3
a' is within
B-l e' B
is in
induction, the claim
of
I‘E': (x) ;
1:
gi's
in the
'
réiX) n re (x)
, it can
B
has length: N
l . It follows that
hence
verified.
with finite index.
Y
the coset
I‘;
(x) =
abelia:
Thus, the
has finite index in the group generated by
I‘e(x)
and
I
n = 3 , the only possibilities for discrete abelian
When
Examples
gl ,
is any word. of length
e'
y= o-
and the derivative of
(as)
I"';
. Consider the cosets y
; the claim is that they are all represented by y's which are
words of length y
I‘€(x)
they generate
Z (acting
groups are Z (acting hyperbolically or parabolically) , Z x
parabolical-ly, conjugate to a group of Euclidean translations of the upper half-space model),
rotations of
Z
x
some axis) ,
Zn
(acting as a group of translations and
222
and
X
Z2 (acting by 180°
rotations
about three orthogonal axes). The last example of course cannot occur as
I‘; (x)
.
Similarly, when
T;(x)
occur as
is small compared to
i,
Z x
Zn
cannot
.
.
Any
a
discrete
group
n-l
I' of isometries of Euclidean space E
as a group of isometries of
Hn
, via the upper half-space model.
acts
5.51;
For any x
5.10.1
Thus, that
sufficiently high
r
contains as a special case one of the Bieberbach
contains an abelian subgroup of finite index.
Fél(x)
Fe(x) n
is parabolic,
this, note that if of y
(in the upper half space model) ,
could lie in
Fe(x)
Pél(x)
Pe(x)
Pe(x)
theorems,
Conversely, when
must be a Bieberbach group. To see
contained any hyperbolic element 7 , no power
, a contradiction. Hence,
re(x)
must
consist of parabolic and elliptic elements with a common fixed point
at
a
at p
=r
p
, so it acts as a group of isometries on any horosphere centered
.
P;
If re(x)r) (x) is not parabolic, it'must act as a group of l . translations and rotations of some axis a . Since it is discrete, it ,
contains
Z with finite index provided
follows that
re(x)
I‘e(x)
is infinite).
It easily
is either the product of some finite subgroup F
of
5.55 0(n
- l)
(acting as rotations about a) with Z , or it is the semi-
direct product of such an F with the infinite dihedral group,
Z/2 * z /2
The infinite dihedral
H3
group acting on
Foranyset
SCHn,let Br(S)
5.10.2 W . 3
hyperbolic
{xéHn|d(x,S) 1r}.
_
There jig a > 0 such that for 2y
- manifold
——
—
M , each copponent of M
(0.5]
(1)5 horoball modulo mgzzez,g_ (2)
Br(g)
modulo
Z, where
complete
oriented
——-— is either
g i_sg geodesic
The degenerate case r = 0 may occur . Proof.
Suppose x
eM(03 s] .
Let x e
to x . There is some covering translation y
i e . If
y
is hyperbolic, let
translations along
H3
be any point which proJects
which moves
at
a distance
a be its axis. A11 rotations around
a ,
a , and uniform contractions of hyperbolic space along
.
5.56 orthogonals to a commute with
Br(a)
,
a
Hence
. It follows that
, where r = d (a , x) , since Y moves any
a distance
at
y
_ X .
Gromov's norm on the real singular homology (really it is only a pseudo-norm) is obtained from this norm on cycles by passing to homology: is any homology class, then the norm of
the norms of cycles representing
6.1.2
01
if
= inf
{”le
,
I
z is a singular cycle representing
a}
It is immediate that
and for AeIR,
If
f : X —> Y
Hk(X; IR)
a is defined to be the infimum of
First definition.
”a”
a e
”OMB“ 5 ”all + ”Bil “Doll s D»! ”a”
is any continuous map, it is also immediate that
6.2
“mall
6.1.2
In fact, for any cycle
2
“all
_ M2
I! [Ml] H 2 Ides fl H [M21H
6.1.3.
invariant of M
,
.
What is not immediate from the definition is the existence of any nontrivial examples where
H
The n-sphere
n
Example.
[M] H
21
7! O
.
admits maps
where
2:.L
same
uziu
is
=
(l/i)
{zi}
1/1,
0'1
n
S:1 —> Sn
of degree 2 (and
[Sn] H = O . More explicitl , one representing the fundamental class of S:L ,
higher). As a consequence of 6.1.2, may picture a sequence
f :
0'].-
and
H
wraps a l-simplex i times around
H
[so] H
=2 .
Consider now the case of a complete hyperbolic manifold
0'vo’ ...,vk
vo,...,vk
k : A
—>I-II1
.
[shit = 0.
As a trivial example,
k + 1 points
Sl
in
,
Mn = fin .
determine .
M11
. Any
a straight k-simplex
whose mage 15 the convex hull‘I of
vo,..
There are various ways to define canonical parametrizations for
,vk
0'vo,...,vk
6.3
here is an explicit one.
vo,... ,vk
In this model,
a .
affine simplex
2'.
ti vi
IRn+l J
Consider the quadratic form model for
so they determine an
[In barycentric coordinates, on
. The central projection from .
-_ xl2 +
0'v0’...,vk
in
‘2 _ -1 xn - xn+l —
+ 2
HI1
in
M = fin
, since
Ak
.
gives
(to,... ,tk)
straight
'7':
back to one sheet of the . . a parametrized straight
H1’1
tural with respect to isometries of
—> M
1
can be lifted to a singular simplex
is simply connected.
straight simplex with the same vertices as
projection of
or
O of
fly.
Q
Any singular simplex
7r,
(§2.5).
. This parametrization is natural with respect to affine maps of
hyperb0101d simplex
an+l ,
become points in
Hn
7r
Let straight
and let straight
(7:) (1')
be the
be the
back to M . Since the straightening operation is natural,
(1') does not depend on the lift T .
Straight extends linearly to
a chain map
C*(M) —> C*(M) ,
straight :
chain homotopic to the identity.
(The chain homotopy is constructed from a
canonical homotopy of each simplex
for
any chain
c
,
”straight (c)”
'r
to straight
S ”c”
.
(1) . ) It is clear that
Hence,
in the computation of the
norm of a homology class in M , it suffices to consider only straight simplices-
6.1.h. 'Prcnosition. There is a finite suprexmm volume
Proof.
of a
vk to the k-dimensional
straight k- simplex in hyperbolic space
Hn
provided
k
#
It suffices to consider ideal simplices with all vertices on
since any finite simplex fits inside one of these.
l.
S°° ,
For k = 2 , there is only
one ideal simplex up to isometry. We have seen that 2 copies of the ideal triangle fit inside a compact surface
which equals
(§3.9). Thus
it has finite volume,
n by the Gauss-Bonnet theorem. When k = 3 , there is an
efficient fonnula for
the
computation of the volume of an ideal 3-simplex; see
Milnor's discussion of volumes,
6.7
The volume of such simplices attains
its unique maximum at the regular ideal simplex, which has all angles equal
I
6.1.5
3.1hl5926...
n
. Thus we have the values
4
600
4
to
1.0lh9hl6...
It is conjectured that in general,
vk
=
fl
is the volume of the regular ideal
k-simplex; if so, Milnor has computations for more values, and a good asymptotic
formula as k -—>
w
can be obtained for
. In lieu of a proof of this conjecture, an upper bound
vk
from the inductive estimate
6.1.6
vk-l
To prove this, consider any ideal k-simplex one of its vertices is the point at U
m
G
in
HR .
Arrange
6
so that
in the upper half-space model, so that
looks like a triangular chimney lying above a k-l face
do
of
U
.
6.5
de de=
kthe Euclidean
(—)k de.
Let
be
Let
volume element, so hyperbolic volume is
denote the projection of
1
k
h(x) denote the Euclidean volume of
v(0') =
0' is
height of
f foot-k
Euclidean k-l volume element for
(k-l) v M2
a
, we
obtain
6.2.
i_s any map between c_105ed oriented hyper-
bolic n-manifolds, then
v(Ml) 2 Ides fl v(Ma) Gromov's theorem can be generalized to any (G,X)-manifold, where G acts transitively on
X with compact isotropy groups.
To do this, choose an invariant Riemannian metric for X and normalize Haar measure on G as before. The smearing operation works equally well, so that one has a chain map
smearM
:
:kOC) —>
k(M)
-
In fact, if N is a second (G,X)-manifold, one has a chain map
smearmM : :kU‘T) —> 5km)
:
defined first on singular simplices in N via a lift to X linearly to all of
smearN,M(z)
(IAN) .
represents
If z is any cycle representing
(v(N)/v(M) )[M] . This
!| [N] v N
Interchanging M
and N
6.2.2 Theorem. For
any
, and
then extended
[N] , then
gives the inequality
II VI II [M] H W)—
, we
obtain the reverse inequality, so we have proved
pair
(G,X) , where G acts trans itively on X
compact fl—lisotropy groups and for
any invariant volume form
with
% X , there E a
6.10
constant C
such that every closed
H
(G,X)-manifold M satisfies
0riented
[M]
I
= C V(M) ,
I
(where v(M) is the volume of M) .
This line may be pursued still further. In a hyperbolic manifold a smeared k-cycle is homologically trivial except in dimension k = 0 or k = n
(G,X)-manifolds when G does not
but this is not generally true for other
act transitively on the frame bundle of‘ X . The invariant cohomolog
HEM)
is defined to be the cohomology of the cochain complex of differential forms
on
X. invariant by G . If 0: is any invariant cohomology class for X
it defines a cohomology class
C(M
on any (G,X)-manifold M . Let
,
PD(7)
denote the Poincare dual of a cohomology class 7
6.2.3
Theorem. There is a. norm
(G,X)-manifold M
oriented
H II
H:(X)
such that for any closed
a
ll MGM) I PI‘oof.
o_n
= v(M)
”all
It is an exercise to show that the map
smearM,M : H*(M) —> H*(M) is a retraction of the homology of M
in M
of
Rig-(X) .
to the
Poincare’ dual
of the image
The rest of the proof is another exercise.
I
In these variations, 6.2.2 and 6.2.3, on Gromov's theorem, there does not seem to be any general relation between the proportionality constants and
,
6.11
the maximal volume of simplices. However, the inequality
6.1.7
readily
X possesses an invariant Riemannian metric of
generalizes to any case when
non-positive curvature .
6.3
Gromov's proof o_f Mostow' s theorm . Gromov gave a very quick proof of Mostow's theorem for hyperbolic
3-manifolds, based on
6.2. The
proof would work for hyperbolic n-manifolds if
it were known that the regular ideal n-simplex Were the unique simplex of
maximal volume.
6.3.1.
The proof goes as follows:
I_f M1 and
manifolds , then
M2
g homotog equivalent , closed, oriented
O . There are
oriented ideal
0' such
spanned by the image of its neighborhoods of the vertices
in the disk such that for any simplex 0" with vertices in these
neighborhoods,
v(straight(FlU') 5 v3 - 8/2 .
Then for every finite simplex
6.12
0'0
very near to
0'
isometric copies
0'
Such a simplex
0';
,
this means that a definite Haar measure of the
0'0
of
near
0"
can be found with volume arbitrarily near
then the "total volume" of the cycle
exceeds the total
v(straight(flo'c'>)) < v3 - 8/2.
have
volume
of
z=
35-
straight(f*z) ,
smear
v3
(0'; - 66-)
contradicting
. But
strictly
6.3.1.
To complete the proof of Mostow's theorem in dimension 3, consider any ideal regular simplex
0'
together with all images of
repeated reflections in the 'faces of images of
0' is
vertices of
F1
0'
a dense subset of
, it
0'
s: -
7T1 M1
Once
Fl
is known on three of the
is determined on this dense set of points by
to the action of
from
. The set of vertices of all these
s:
must be a fractional linear transformation of
action of
0' coming
‘rrl M2
,
6.3.2,
so
conjugating the
'
. This completes Gromov's proof
of Mostow's theorem.
In this proof, the fact that
that v(Ml) = v(ME)
is a homotopy equivalence was used
and (b) that
?1
extends to a map of
With more effort, the proof can be made to work with only assumption
6.1+ Theorem. (Strict version
E degree 74 0
Gromov's inequality
f :
(a)
.
:
Ml —> M2
b_e
between closed oriented hyperbolic 3—manifolds such that
6.2.1 E equality, i.e.,
v(Ml) = [deg fl v(Mz) Then f i_s homot Ohio t_oanfipwhich
.
Ea local 1somet
.
if: [deg fl
I
any map
of Gromov's theorem) . Let
s:
P
to show (a)
fl
f is a homotog equivalence and otherwise it is homotopic to a covering rug.
6.13
Pr_oof_. The first step in the proof is to show that a lift universal. covering spaces extends to thesis of
6.1-I- has to
SE -
F
of
f to the
Since the information in the hypo-
do with volume, not topology, we will know at first only
that this extension is a measurable map of
Si .
Then, the proof in
6.3 will be
adapted to the current situation.
The proof works most smoothly if we have good information about the asymptotic behaviour of volumes of simplices.
in
H3
a. regular simplex
all of whose edge lengths are E .
6.1+.l. The volume
9:
0'E
differs from the maximal volume
which decreases exponentially with
Proof o_f 6.1L.l.
:0 6 1-13
O'E
xo
by drawing the four rays from a point
0’“
these rays, a distance D
C be the distance from
dv(UE)
‘
a face of
centered at
x0,
from
1:0
x0
centered at a point through the vertices of an
. The simplex whose vertices are on
is isometric to
0E
for some E . Let
to any face of this simplex. The derivative
is less than the area of 0'E
v3 L a quantity
E .
Construct copies of simplices
ideal regular simplex
x0
O'E be
Let
5 GE
times the maximal normal velocity of
. If on is the angle between such a face and the ray through
, we have
(NOTE) 'dD
From the hyperbolic law of
dv(oE) dD
.
Sines
(2.6.16)
decreases exponentially with
corresponding statement for E
< 21r
5111
sin
a
a sinh C = sinh D
.
showing that
D (since sinh C is bounded) . The
follows since asymptotically, E ~2D + constant.
6.1M
Clara
6.h.2.
E simplex with
volume close
t_o
v3
has all
dihedral angles close t_o
60° . Proof o_f
6.11-.2. Such
a simplex is properly contained in an ideal simplex
with any two face planes
follows from
6.1+.3. near
V
the same, so with one common dihedral angle.
7.
There is some constant C
3
6.h-.2
andforany angle
such that for every
simplex
0' with volume
Bonafaceflc,
v3-v(0') 3 c 62 Proof of
6.11-.3.
If the vertex v has a face angle of
that the other three vertices are at
on
The new spike added to
0'
enlarge
0
so
, without changing a neighborhood of 2
v . Now prolong one of the edges through v to this edge.
B , first
beyond
.
Sea , and push
v
out along
v has thickness at v estimated
6.15
by a linear function of
B
quadratic function of
B (from 2.6.12),
so its volume is estimated by a
. (This uses the fact that a
cross-section
of the spike
is approximately an equilateral triangle).
6.1+.3 6.1+.l+. For
fl(r)
every point
converges t_o _a point
6.1+.l-L. Let
Proof o_f
let the simplex
at
x0
x0
O'i
x0
e
in
on
s:
H3 , and let
r throgh x
r be some ray emanating from
x0
(with all edges having length i ) be placed with a vertex
and with one edge on r
in a neighborhood of
M1 ,_aii almost every ray
x0
,
Ti
and let
6i
be a simplex agreeing with
r lengthened, to have length
but with the edge on
i+l.
0’;
61
1"“
\\
x
an amount
Si
0'1
and
3.3..
Ti D O'i
decreasing exponentially with
i
, so
..
r
and
straight
f*
[Ml] .
smeaerUi
and
smearM
U
l
Since straight
f*
must also be very efficient. In other words, for all but a set of
5 v(Ml) 8i
of simplices
v
straight
smearM 1i l
v(Ml) = ldeg fl v(Ma) , the cycles 1 measure
“......“ "llla
deviate frOm the supremal volume by
are very efficient cycles representing a multiple of
smearM Ti
[1
...-
AD The volume of
'5
l
3
fO' must have volume
0'
2 v3
in smear
- Si
0'i
(or smear
ti)
, the
simplex
6.16 Let 'B be a ball around
x0
M1 . smearM 0"i
which embeds in
smearB 1i correspond to the measure '
for
The chains and
to those singular simplices with the first vertex in
which take
xo
to B , all simplices
mapped to simplices straight
v
I(0'i)
smearBO'
f
smearM Ti
thoeo image
Z
2v (Ml)
Thus for all but a set of measure at most
3
smearB (Ti
Si
. restricted
of B
M1
in
of isometries I
i=i
I(Ti) for all volume 2 v3 - 8i
and
with
and
> io
i
are
. By 6.1+.3,
the sum of all face angles of the image simplices is a geometrically convergent series.
It follows that for all but a set of small measure of rays r
from points in B
io —> on , f(r)
, f(r) converges to a
s:
point on
it follows that for almost every ray
r
emanating
; in fact, by letting
emanating from points in
B ,
x'
Then there must be a point in B such that for almost ' every ray r emanating from x , f(r) converges. Since each ray emanating from converges.
a point
in
H3
~
I
through all points in
H3
6.1m.
.
-
Remark This measurable extension of f, to
5:
actually exists under very general
circumstances, with no assumption on the volume of
that if g
, this holds for rays
is asymptotic to some ray emanating from x
is a geodesic in
M1 , RS)
M1
and
M2 .
The idea is
~
M2
behaves like a random walk on
Almost every random walk in hyperbolic space converges to a point on
82-1
. .
(Moral: always carry a map when you are in hyperbolic space!)
6.’+.5
The measurable extension o_f_
every positively oriented ideal
positively oriented
Proofo_f6.l+.'-". I
ideal re
Let
t_o
regular
Si
simplex
_
carries the vertices
93 almost
to the vertices g another
ar simplex.
Consider a pOint
embeds in M , as before.
F
0'1
1:0
in
H3
and aball B about
be centered at
xO
xO
which
As before, for almost
6.17
all isometries I which take has volume converging to
xo
{straight f° I ° 0'1}
to B , the sequence
v3 , and all four vertices converging to
SE
.
If for almost all I these four vertices converge to distinct points, we are done. Otherwise, there is a set of positive measure of ideal regular simplices such that the image of the vertex set of
0' is degenerate: either all four
vertices are mapped to the same point, or three are mapped to one point and the
Q
third to an- arbitrary point.
Q
We will show this is absurd.
If the degenerate
v0 and vl
cases occur with positive measure, there is some pair of points with
f(vo) = f(vl)
vo, v1, v2, v3 set A
,
such that for almost all regular ideal simplices spanned by
either
f(va) = f(vo) f(A
of positive measure with
ideal simplex with two vertices in A
or
f(v3) = f(vo)
a single point.
under
'ITl M2 _Pr_o'c£
6.l-I- which
5E 6.1+.
(One method is to use ergodicity
will follow) . The image point
covering transformations of
has a fixed point on
Almost every regular
has one other vertex in A . It is easy
to conclude that A must be the entire sphere. as in the proof of
. Thus, there is a
S“ ,
It follows from
M1 .
f(A)
This implies the image of
which is absurd.
6.’+.5 that
v0, v1, v2,
Trl M1
6.h.5
there is a vertex
almost all regular ideal simplices spanned by
is invariant
vo
v3 ,
in
l
such that for the image vertices
6.18
span a regular ideal simplex. Arrange
v0
vo
the plane,
E2 .
f(vo)
to be the point at
Three other points
infinity in the upper half-space model.
an ideal regular simplex with
and
v3
v1, v2,
span
iff they span an equilateral triangle in
By changing coordinates, we may assume that
f maps vertices
of almost all equilateral traingles parallel to the x-axis to‘ the vertices
In
of an equilateral triangle in the plane.
complex notation, let
to
=
span and equilateral triangle. For almost all z e
so that O, l, w
entire countable set of triangles of the form spanned by vertices
-k
-k
z + 2 (n+1) , z + 2 (n+w)
[k,n,m e Z]
z+
3a
(1'.
, the
2-kn ,
are mapped to equilateral triangles
-11/
Then the map
? must
take the form
~f(z + 2'k(n+mw))= g(z) + h(z) for almost all z
. The function h is invariant a.e. by the dense group T
of translations of the form
h
is
2'k(n+mw)
2
constant a.e. Similar
—> z +
2-k(n+mw)
. This group _is ergodic, so
reasoning now shows that
g
is
constant a.e.,
so that f is essentially a fractional linear transformation on the sphere ‘
3:
Since
Isom(I-13)
'1‘".Ta
, to a
Tf*oz ° '5,
subgroup of
11'1M2
this shows that
TrlMl
is conjugate, in
6.1+
I
6.19
6.5
Manifolds with haunting.
There is an obvious way to extend Gromov's invariant to manifolds with boundary, as follows.
the relative chain group
The norm on element of
:k(M) tk(M,A)
If M
fk(M,A)
‘
'y e
Hk(M,A)
norm on ka(M,A)
goes over to a
is the total variation of
u
: the norm
Z:(M)/ Z:(A) . ll ull
of a
restricted to the set of
ll 7”
of a
homology
is defined, as before, to be the infimal norm of relative
7
cycles representing
with boundary
submanifold,
is defined to be t e quotient
singular simplices which do not lie in A . The norm
class
CM a
is a manifold and A
.‘
Gromov's invariant of a compact, oriented manifold
(M,8 M) is
ll
ll
[M,5 M]
, where
[M,5 M] denotes the relative
fundmental cycle.
There is a second interesting definition which makes sense in an important special
case. For concreteness,
we shall deal only with the case of 3-manifold
whose boundary consists of tori. For such a manifold M
ll
[M,B M]
Observe that
”o = a—>O lim inf {llzll
a2
l
z represent, [M,5M] and
represents the fundamental cycle of
condition for this definition to make sense is that
BM
in the present situation that self-maps of degree
> 1 . Then
, define
B M , so
ll [8 M] H
”6le S a} that a necessary
= O . This is true
consists of tori, since the torus admits
ll (M,8M) ”o
is the limit of a
non-decreasing
sequence, so to insure the existence of the limit we need only find an upper bound.
This involves a special property of the torus.
6.5.1.
Proposition.
trivial cycle
E
There _i_s_
{2(T2) ,
a constant
then
2
K such that _if z _i_s afl homologioag
bounds _a_chain
c with
”CH SKllzll
.
6.20
Proof.
Triangulate
Partition
T2
T2 (say, with two "triangles" and a single vertex) .
into disjoint contractible neighborhoods of the vertices.
Consider first the case that no simplices in the support of
2
have large
diameter. Then there is a chain homotopy of z to its simplicial approximation
a(z)
The chain homotopyhas a norm which is a bounded multiple of the norm of z . Since simplicial singular chains form a finite dimensional vector space, a(z) is homologous to zero by a homology whose norm is a bounded multiple of the norm
of
a(z) . This gives the desired result when the simplices of z are not
large.
finite
In the general case, pass to a very large cover
sheeted covering space
transfer: {*(M) —> KAI?) average of its lifts to simplices.
Clearly
is any cycle on
the transfer of
transfer
2
p
p :
M¥> M
T2
of
T2 .
For
any
there is a canonical chain map,
. The transfer of a singular simplex is simply the
if; this extends
otransfer = id
in an obvious way to measures on singular
, and
lltransfer
c
ll
2
llcll
. If 2
T2 , then for a. sufficiently large finite cover 352 of T2 , z to T2 = T2 has no large 2-simplices in its support. Then
is the boundary of a chain
c with
He”
__
C
-
,
V
5.11.2
k . This follows from the analysis in
components of
M[e
a)
k
such that every manifold with
cusps has volume
: the number of boundary
is bounded by the number of disjoint
e/2 balls which
I
can fit in M . It would be interesting to calculate or estimate the best constant C .
6.6.3..W . class
Q connected
The set g values
g Gromov's
invariant
“[
]
“O
o_n the
manifolds obtained from Seifert fiber spaces and complete
Marbolic manifolds g finite volume
Ea closed well-ordered We shall see later
subset
(5
at;
by identigzigg along
IR+ ,
with order type
incompressible tori
gum
.
) that this class contains all Haken manifolds
with toral boundaries .
M.
Extend the _volume function to
not mrperbolic.
From
6.5.5
and
v(M)
6.5.2, we know
finite sum of volumes of hyperbolic manifolds.
sequence of values of v pieces of a manifold
Mi
. Express with
each
v(Mi)
=
wi wi
=
v3
-
H [M] ”0
when
that every value of
Suppose
{vi}
v
M
is
is a
is a bounded
as the sum of volumes of hyperbolic . The number of terms is bounded,
since there is a lower bound to the volume of a hyperbolic manifold, so we may
pass to an infinite subsequence where the number of terms in this expression is‘
constant. Since every infinite sequence of ordinals has an infinite non—decreasing subsequence, we may pass to a subsequence of
wi's
where all terms in these
6.28
expressions are non—decreasing. This proves that the set of values of v
well-ordered.
Furthermore,
our subsequence has a limit w
v“
+
is
...+vu
k
l
which is expressed as a sum of limits of non-decreasing sequences of volumes.
va is the volume Of a hyperbolic manifold M.j with at least as many cusps as the limiting number of cusps of the corresponding hyperbolic piece of Mi .
Each
Therefore, the
HE'S
may be glued together to obtain a manifold
This shows the set of values of v
mm
is closed.
M with v(M) = w
The fact that the order type is
can be deduced easily by showing that every values of v
isnot
derived set, for some integer k ; in fact, k :_ v / C , where
in the
kth
C is the
constant Just discussed.
6.7
Comensurability
6.7.1 m .
En
, then
isometries
r1
of
P1
If
and
F2
is oommensurahle with
En) to
6.7.2. Definition.
a group
Two
finited sheeted covers
Pi
if
such that
manifolds M1
El
and
Commensurability in either
P1 is conjugate (in the group of ri.n F2 has finite index in Pi
“2
and
M2
are commensurahle if they have
which are homeomorphic.
sense is an equivalence
relation, as the reader
easily verify.
6-7-3then
S3
are two discrete subgroups of isometries of
r2
and in
may
P2
If V
83 - W
—B
is the Whitehead link and
B is the Borromean rings,
has a four-sheeted cover homeomorphic with a two sheeted cover of
-
6-29
IV‘
I
liéiflb
83 w
33’s
V= 3106386 The homeomorphism involves cutting along a disk, twisting
Thus and
53 - W and S3 - B wl (S3 - B)
360°
are commensurable. One can see that
V: 7. 317731
and glueing back.
“l (S3 —
W)
are commensurable as discrete subgroups of
PSL (2 , m) by considering the tiling of
H3
by regular ideal octahedra.
Both
groups preserve this tiling, so they are contained in the full group of symmetries
of the octahedral tiling, with finite index. Therefore, they intersect each other with finite index.
Symmetries (octahedral tiling) n
(s3 _
:::
B) 1r
(s3-B)n
nl
(s3-W)
&
v1
CS3 - W)
6.30
Mas
I‘l
Two groups
and
r2
can be commensurable, and yet not be
conjugate to subgroups of finite index in a single group.
6.1.3. m . E Ml and
M2
is
Merbolic
m
i_sa
commensurable with
complete
M1
Merbolic manifold
, then
M2
is homotopy
with finite volume
eguivalent Eg‘a complete
manifold
This is a corollary of Mostow‘s theorem. Under the hypotheses,
finite
cover
M3
which is hyperbolic.
M2
M3
has a finite cover
Mh
M2
has a
which is a
"1(M1I») is a normal subgroup .of nl(MZ) . Consider the action of 111(M2‘) on “1(Mh) by conjugation. "1.(Mk) has a trivial center, so in other words the action of "1(Mh) on itself is effective. Then for every k . . . a c “1(M2) , Since some power a is in 1r1(M)+) , a must conjugate "1(Mh) non-trivially. Thus "1042) is isomorphic to a group of automorphisms of “1(Mh) , so by Mostow's theorem it is a discrete group of isometries of fin .
regular cover of
, so that
In the three dimensional case, it seems likely that hyperbolic. Waldhausen
[
Ml
would actually be
] proved that two Haken manifolds which are
homotopy equivalent are homeomorphic, so this would follow whenever
There are some sorts of properties of
NLl
is Haken.
3—manifolds which do not change under
passage to a finite—sheeted-cover. For this reason
(and for its own sake) it
would be interesting to have a better understanding of the commensura‘oility relation among
3—manifolds. This is difficult to approach from a purely topological point
of view, but there is a great deal of information about comensurability given by
a hyperbolic structure. For instance, in the case of a complete non-compact
6.31 hyperbolic
3-manifold M
of finite volume, each cusp gives
a
canonical Euclidean
structure on a torus, well-defined up to similarity. A convenient invariant for this
structure is obtained by'arranging M- so that the cusp is the point at
w
in the
upper half space model and one generator of the fundamental group of the cusp is a translation
2
l—r' z + l
0'1
of complex numbers
. A second generator
is then
2
|——>
z + a . The set
... ck corresponding to various cusps is an invariant of
the commensurability class of M
well defined up to the equivalence relation
nai+m G.
1
where
n,m,pq€Z
"I
pci+q
:1:
9
#0.(n,m,pandqdependoni)
(la
a
(¢+3) I
0
1L
ld+i
Modulus: “+3
6.32 In particular, if a
s
v»
, then they generate the same fields Inca) = 111(3) .
oi
Note that these invariants
6.1.h. W . g
H3 / I‘
are always algebraic numbers, in view of
1' i__§._ discrete suhEoup 5g PSL(2 , m)
has finite volume , then
such that
F _ii coangate _3 g gpoup _f matrices whose
entries are algebraic
Proof: This is another easy consequence of Mostow's theorem.
Conjugate
that some arbitrary element is a diagonal matrix
and some other
[3 0-u 1]
I‘ so
element is upper triangular ,
[0 xfl]
variety of representations of
I‘ having this form is 0 dimensional, by Mostow's
A
. The component
I' in the algebraic
of
theorem, so all entries are algebraic numbers.
One can ask,the more subtle question, whether all entries can be made algebraic integers.
Hyman Bass has proved the following
remarkable
result regarding this
question:
6.7.5 W volume where
Then
(Bass) . Let M
either
"in“
‘p_g conmlete
is. Cog-1ugate t_og
Mex-bolic 3—manifold g finite
9’ _iithe' ripg gt; algebraic integers , 9; M
surface (not homotopic
3’) . .a_ closed Mare—551m
subgroup 9; PSL(2 ,
contains
2.3.- cusp) . r
The proof is out of place here, so we omit it. See Bass,
[
J
. As an
example, very few knot complements seem to contain non-trivial closed incompressible
surfaces. The property that a finitely generated group subgroup of
PSL (2 ,
(9’)
I‘ is conjugate to a
is equivalent to the property that the
M group
6.33 of.matrices generated by
I is finitely generated. It is also equivalent to the
property that the trace of every element of easy to see
from
I is an algebraic integer. It is
this that every group commensurable with a subgroup of
is itself conjugate to a subgroup of PSL(2 , ‘algebraic integer, then an.eigenvalue
A ,
Hence
A-1
and Tr y
= A +
A-1
A
of
£9 ) . y
(If Tr
satisfies
yn
PSL(2 , 6})
= a is an
A2n — a An + l = O
.
are algebriac integers) .
If two manifolds are commensurable, then their volumes have a rational ratio.
We shall see examples in the next section of incommensurable manifolds with equal volume.
6.7.6
Questions . Does every
commensurability class of discrete subgroups of
PSL(2 , T) have a finite collection of maximal groups
(up to isomorphism)?
Is the set of volumes of 3—manifolds in a given commensurability class a discrete set, consisting of multiples of some number
Vo
?
6.8. _LSDBrawn—es.. Consider the
6.8.1
k—link chain
Ck' pictured below:
6.31;
If each link of the chain is spanned by a disk in the simplest way, the complement of the resulting complex is an open solid torus.
Y. S3
- Ck
c
is obtained from a solid torus, with the cell division below on its
boundary, by deleting the vertices and identifying.
it nx L\ BdDeC Y’Z’ lb
,
\
.A1
C
XYYZ Z
2
I
a:
0‘
C marl
C)‘ 0 'r’\
J
a
c
I
\
c
C
Z
IDUJ
BL
Y
E
6.35 To construct a hyperbolic structure for S3
Ck
, cut the solid torus into two
drums.
,ea.‘
Let P be a regular k-gon in of P
obtained by displacing
center, then P' height of
and P
H3
with all vertices on
SE2
If P'
is a copy
P along the perpendicular to P through its
can be joined to obtain a regular hyperbolic drum. The
P' must be adjusted so that the reflection through the diagonal of a
rectangular side of the drum is an isometry of the drum. If we subdivide the drum into
-J
2k pieces as shown,
6.36 the condition is that there are horospheres about the ideal vertices tangent to three faces. Placing the ideal vertex at
ain.upper half-space, we have
a
figure bounded by three vertical Euclidean planes and three Euclidean hemispheres
of equal radius
r .
an.
‘I\
n
Vi e w
79‘;m
a
)30 V6
From this figure, we can compute the dihedral angles a and be
c
= arc cos
,
B=r
§
Fn
v
(C3)
(commensurable with PSL (2 , Z /-_2)
below can also be given hyperbolic
structures obtained from a third kind of drum:
m
6.8.11
8
-.‘T
6.148
The regular drum is determined by its angles
a
and
B =w
-a
. Any pair
of angles works to give a hyperbolic structure; one verifies that when the angle
a
= arc cos
(cos
2%. —
l-)‘, 2
n = 1 gives a trivial knot. simplices with
on
F2
=
if
and we obtain
the
the hyperbolic structure is complete. The case
In the case n = 2 , the drums degenerate into
600 angles, and we .
When
F3
B
obtain
n = 3 , the
once more
angles
are
Passing to the limit
the hyperbolic structure
90° , the drums become octahedra
n =
a
, and dividing by Z}, we obtai:
following link, whose complement is commensurable with
6.8.12
O@
S3 if
v=
h.05977.. .
With these examples, many maps between link complements may be constructed. The
reader should experiment for himself.
One gets a feeling that volume is a very
good measure of the complexity of a link
is really inherent in 3-manifolds.
, and that the ordinal structure
7
Computation
g§_volume.
J. W. Milnor.
by
7.1.
The Lobachevsky function
.fl(e) .
This preliminary section will describe analytic properties, and
conJecture
number theoretic properties, for the function
JT(9)
=
-I
9 log
I2 sin ul
0
Compare Figure'Tdnl. Thus the first derivative and the second derivative
LObachevsg function
J("(e)
du .
is equal to
.QKB)
is equal to
- cot e
-
. I will call
log
[2 sin e
.fl(8)
the
(This name is not quite accurate historically, since
Lobachevsky's formulas for hyperbolic volume were expressed rather in terms of the
function
I for
|e| i_w/Z .
6 log (sec u) du
= J((e + n/2) + 9
2
0
11(6)
However our function
is clearly a close relative, and is
more convenient to work with in practice. Compare Clausen Another close relative of
_fl(e)
is the dilo arithm
2
a
w(z)
which has been studied by many authors.
[9] , [12] , [13]
log
Writing
w(z)
J
n 2 z /n
m
for
(See for example
2
log (1
- w)
[3])-
dw / w
I2]
3_ 1 ,
[1] , [2] , [8] ,
(where
MI
1
l) , the substitution w = log (1
- w)
e216
dw/w
(.1:
w(l)
-e
yields
- 29 + 21 log(.2 sin 9))
for 0 h both of these can be realized since 8 varies continuously from
0 to n-2 / n as the distance between the two base planes of
7.17
77a B
varies from
3
7.3.1
W:
0 to
There are an_infinite number g§_oriented three-manifolds whose
volume i_‘a_finite rational sum
7.h We
Thus we have the following:
gf_-r((6)
8's commensurable with v .
for
will now discuss an arithmetic method for constructing hyperbolic
3-manifolds with finite volume. The construction and computation of volume go back to Bianchi
and
Humbert. (See [5] , [7] , [10].) The idea is to consider
ring of integers in an imaginary quadratic field, Q
square free integer. Then PSL (2 ,
é}h)
(6:3), where
PSL (2 ,
£93)
PSL (2 , E) is the group of orientation preserving isometries of
W.
3;1
is a
is a discrete subgroup of PSL (2 , m)
Let P be a torsion free subgroup of finite index in
is an oriented hyperbolic three
d
6?; ,
- manifold.
H3
. Since
H3 / F
,
It always has finite volume.
Let Z [i] be the ring of Gaussian integers. A fundamental domain
for the action of PSL (2 , z [i] ) has finite volume. give different
manifolds; eg., there is a F
Different choices of
of index 12 such that
is diffeomorphic to the complement of the Whitehead link; another
2h leads to
the complement of the Borromean rings.
Incase d=3, there is a subgroup
r
(9’d
C: PSL (2
is ZIw]
where
, Z [w] ) of
index
.
H3 /
H3 / P of index
(N. Wielenberg, preprint). w
=
—l-2-—i
and
12 such that H3 /
diffeomorphic to the complement of the figure eight knot.
In order to calculate the volume of
r
PSL (2 ,
(R. Riley,
69d)
r
r
.
is
[11])-
in general we
the
7.18 recall the following definitions. Define the discriminant, Q
of the extension
Q- ( V -d ) to be
D
lid
9:1
If
a:
/
9d
Dedekind
CK (Y c
otherwise
II!
is considered as a lattice in
. The
- function
g
E
(S)
Q
runs through all ideals in
(S) is also equal to
7.h.l
s 3 (mod 1:)
d
for a field K
1
8’and
_
is defined to be
where
«(2)5
—1
II
f
VD / 2 is the area of
then
l
I 87W I denotes the norm of 07 taking all prime ideals N (a ) =
C
N(P)S
(Essentially due to Humbert) : Vol (H 3 / PSL (2 ,
(9’) d
>
T 33/2 2
t;
cur-E)
c
(2 ) /
m
This volume can be expressed in terms of Lobachevslq's function using Hecke's
C
(My/:5.)
ouadratic symbol
(i) If n = (ii)
(s)/:
01
(s)=
zc‘%)
n>0
/ns.
Here(%)isthe
where we use the conventions:
Pl
If’pID
, then
-
, Pt , pi
prime
(‘3)
o;
then
(“311)
11 ) ( ~13.
+1.
(
a p2 ) Pl ) L -2
(
*0'U
formula
7-19 (iii) For p
anodd prime
( ‘2 )
+1 if -D E X2 (mod p) = -1 if not
p
2
(iv) For p
'2 )
= +1 if -D = 1 (mod 8)
P
-1 if
#- 3
(-D
*
transform;
ie.,
(1)
X
(
.2 )
Multiplying by
-%
) is equal to
J15
e21rikn/D
l/n2
(
l /
V-D
times its Fourier
p n
and suming over
A 11'3“ -2 (2)2220 n
(
k
k mod D
8)
(mod h) by definition)
I——>
The function n
5 (mod
E
k=0
e 21rikn/D
:1
> O
we get
J—DZ()/n2 U
(
for some X
n>0
For fixed k the imaginary part of the left side is just the Fourier series for 2 JZ( "k / D ) . Since the right side is pure imaginary we have:
2
(3)
('E)JZ(_"k/D) X k mod D
Multiplying by
(h)
2—2
2
D /
kmodD
21+
Z(
n>0
2
)l/n
and using Hecke's formula leads to
('%)J(("k/D)=Vol(H3/PSL(2,(9d))
*Compare Hecke, Vorlesangen 'uber algebr. for help on this point.
Zahlen, p.
2111. I
am grateful to A. Adler
7.20 In the case 6. = 3 , (h) implies that the volume of is
4:: (1((1r/3)
the figure eight
12 in PSL (2 ,
- J‘((21r / 3)) knot S3 - K
% I((n/3)
) . Thus it has volume
. . volume computed by thinking of
S3
-K
as two
(PSL (2 , z [oj
. Recall that the complement of
H3 / r
is diffeomorphic to
z [a]
H3 /
where
6 J7 (1r/3) . .
copies
of
r
had index
This agrees with the
:w/3 , fl/3
, fl/3
tetrahedra glued together. Similarly the volumes for the complements of the Whitehead link and the Borromean rings can be computed using
in
(h) .
The answers
agree with those computed geometricall;
7.2. This algebraic construction also furnishes
an infinite number of hyperbolic
manifolds with volumes equal to rational, finite linear combinations of
J(
that any
rational
. Note
and
B would imply
relation between the volumes of these manifolds
could occur at
( a rational multiple of n)
that Conjectures A
most as a result of common factors of the integers, d , defining the quadratic fields.
In fact, quite
relations.
likely they would imply that there are no such rational
7.21 Reference 5
L. Euler, Institutiones calculi integralis, I, pp. 110
- 113
C. J. Hill, Journ, reins angew. Math. (CreL‘Le) 3 (1828), 101 T. Clausen, Journ. reine angew. Math. (Crelle)
I
(1768).
- 139.
8 (1932), 298
- 300V.
I
N. Lobachevshy, Imaginary Geometry and its Application to Integration (Russian) Kasan
1836. German translation, Leipzig 1904-.
"13. L
Laptev, Kazan Gos Univ.
Bianchi, Math. Ann. Gieseking, Thesis,
38
U6.
(1891) 313
Munster
111. (19511), 53
- 77.)
- 333 and 1+0 (1892), 332 - 1:12.
1912. (See Magnus, Noneuclidean
and their Groups, Acad. Press
. Humbert, Comptes Rendus
Zapiski
(For a modern presentation see
1971+,
Tesselations
p. 153.)
169 (1919) M48
- 1:511.
S. M. Coxeter, Quarterly J. Math. 6 (1935), 13
- 29.
Lewin, Dilogarithms and Associated Functions, Macdonald (Laldon),
G. Swan, Bull. AMS
7h (1968), 576
Riley, Proc. Cambr.
Phil.
Soc.
1958.
- 581.
77 (1975) 281
- 288.
M- Gabrielov, I. M. Gel'fand, and M. V Losik, Fmetional Anal. and Appl. 9
IJ
.
(1975), pp- h9 , 193.
13.
. Bloch, to appear.
111». D. Kubert
and S. Lang, to appear.
8.1 Kleinian Groups
Our discussion so far has centered on hyperbolic manifolds which are closed, or at least complete with
finite volume.
The theory of
complete
hyperbolic manifolds with infinite volume takes on a somewhat different
character. Such manifolds occur very naturally as covering spaces of ClOSEd manifolds.
They also arise in the study of hyperbolic structures on
3~manifolds whose boundary has
compact
negative Euler
characteristic. We
will study such manifolds by passing back and forth between the manifold and
the action of its fundamental group on the disk.
8-1- Lhe Let
H11
sea.
I_imm
r
be any discrete group of orientation-preserving isometries of
. If x e
an
L1. c. sfl'l is defined to be Ix of x . One readily sees
is any point, the limit set
the set of accumulation points of the orbit
that L model.
I
is independent of the choice of x
If y
elements of
r
€ZHn
is any other point and if
O ; hence
The group
{Yix} d(yix , yiy)
such that
hyperbolic distance goes to
r
by picturing the Poincaré disk
lim
{vi}
is a sequence of
converges to a point on
82-1 ,
the
is constant so the Euclidean distance
yiy = lim yix .
is called elementg if the limit set consists of
O ,l
or 2 points.
8.1.1.
W. r
finite index.
—I
i_s elementfl iff
r
hasg abelian subgzoup g
8.2
When
I‘ is not elementary, then
LI‘
is also the limit set of any orbit
the
sphere at infinity. Another way to put it is this:
8.1.2.
. I; I' _i£_n0t elementary , then evgy
on
subset
31: So
M.
invariant by I‘. contains
Let K: S... be any closed
elementary,
set
LI‘
closed
.
invariant by
I‘ . Since I‘ is not
K contains more than one element. Consider the projective
(Klein) model for
H11
, and let H(K) denote the convex hull of K .
H(K) may be regarded either as the Euclidean convex bull, or equivalently, as the hyperbolic convex hull in the sense that it is the intersection of
"intersection" with
all hyperbolic half-spaces whose Clearly
H(K)n
s“
Sun
contains K .
= K.
H(K)
Hem Since K
is invariantby
point in
Hun
r ,
H(K)
is also invariant by
H(K) , the limit set of the orbit
the closed set H(K) . Therefore
LI‘ C K
.
1'x
MOJCI Ior H,5 r.
If x
is any
must be contained in
8.3 A closed set K invariant by a group T which contains no smaller closed invariant set is called a minimal set. It is easy to show, by Zorn's
lemma, that a closed invariant set always contains at least one minimal set.
It is remarkable that in the present situation,
8.1.3. W. If §_normal
suonup, then
I‘ i_sa non—elementm
LF'
=
LP
wand
,laér'dr
En which would be that Lr! 2’
Examples
If
M2
invariant by
LT
i_s
P' to itself, hence it takes
r' must be infinite, otherwise F' would have a
to L1"!
set for F
.
Proof. An element of I conjugates
8.1.2
LP is the unique minimal
P
so
Lr,
fixed point in
I would be finite. It follows from
. The opposite inclusion is immediate.
is a hyperbolic surface, we may regard
of isometries of a hyperbolic plane in
H3 .
nl(M)
as a group
The limit set is a circle. A
group with limit set contained in a geometric circle is called a Fuchsian
group
a
The limit set for a closed hyperbolic manifold is the entire sphere
If
M3
is a closed hyperbolic
82-1 .
3-manifold which fibers over the circle,
then the fundamental group of the fiber is a normal subgroup, hence its limit
set is the entire sphere. For instance, the figure eight knot complement has
fundamental group
< A,B :
ABA-J'BA = RAB-1A3 >
0A"8A=BA
It fibers over group
«1(F)
S1
with fiber F a punctured torus. The fundamental
is the commutator subgroup, generated by
AJB-l
A-lB . 82 even
and
Thus, the limit set of a finitely generated group may be all of when the quotient space does not have finite volume.
A more typical example of a free group action is a Schottky group, whose limit set is a Cantor set. considering
Hn
minus
Examples of Schottky groups may be obtained by
2k disjoint half-spaces, bounded by
hyperplanes:
If
we choose isometric identifications between pairs of the bounding hyperplanes,
we obtain a complete hyperbolic manifold with fundamental group the free group on k
generators.
Sc.hott I“) SYOUP n
2
8.5 It is easy to see that the limit set for the group of covering transformations is a Cantor set.
8.2.
The domain 9; discontinuity The domain of discontinuity for a discrete group
Dr
=
89n-l - Lr
P is defined to be
. A discrete subgroup of PSL(2,T) whose domain of
discontinuity is non-empty is called a ICLeinian
gpoup.
(There are actually
two ways in which the term Kleinian group is generally used. Some people refer to any discrete subgroup of PSL(2,E) distinguish between a type
group, where DP
# ¢.
as a Kleinian group, and then
I group, for which
LP
=
Si ,
and a type II
As a field of mathematics, it makes sense for
Kleinian groups to cover both cases, but as mathematical objects it seems
Dr
useful to have a word to distinguish between these cases
# ¢
and
Dr=¢') We have seen that the action of P on
as much as
LP
is minimal
In contrast, the action of r on
possible.
Dr
- it mixes up LT is as discrete
as possible.
8.2.1.
.
If
r
is a group acting on a locally compact
space X ,
the action is properly discontinuous if for every compact set K C‘X , there
are only finitely many
7 6.? such that
7K 0 K ¢ ¢ .
Another way to put this is to say that for any compact set K , the map
F
X
K -* X given by the action is a proper map, where T has the discrete
(Otherwise there would be a compact set K'
topology. preimage of
K'
would carry K
is nonrcompact.
compact
Then infinitely many elements of
I2_ I acts pronerly discontinucualy pp the locally
I;
Hausdorff space X , then the auotient space X i§_Hausdorff.
x—> x/r i_sg coveripg projection
the action i_sfree, the quotient man
x1 , x2 6 X
Proof. Let
be points on distinct orbits of
Nl be a compact neighborhood of xl , so we may assume intersect
(J
7
yer
‘
N1
Nl
Then
r
U K' to itself) .
mm .
8.2.2
such that the
N1
P . Let
Finitely many translates of
is disjoint from the orbit of
gives an invariant neighborhood of
X1
x2
x2
.
disjoint from
N1
x2 . Similarly, x2 has an invariant neighborhood N2 disjoint from ; this shows that X / r is Hausdorff. If the action of r is free, we may find, again by a similar argument, a neighborhood of any point disjoint
to X /
from
r .
x which is
all its translates. This neighborhood projects homeomorphically
r
.
Since
acts transitively on the sheets of X
it is immediate that the
projection
X -+ X /
r
over X / F ,
is an even covering, hence
a covering space.
gpoung M g H“ , the and ip fact pp_ Hn U Dr) i§_properly discontinuous action Eran]?r .——
8.2.3. Wan .
Proof.
ball
to
r
i g a_sm
convex hull H(Lr). There H(Lr) defined as follows.
Consider the
Hnu s”
If
is a retraction r
of the
8.7 If x 6
H(LT)
H(LI')
. If x
, r(x) = x . Otherwise, map is an infinite point
to be the first point of touches
because
Lr
H(Lr)
in
Dr
.1:
to the nearest point of
, the nearest points is interpreted
where a horosphere
"centered" about x
. This point r(x) is always uniquely defined
H(Lr)
is convex, and spheres or horospheres about a point in the
ball are strictly convex. Clearly r is a proper map of
H(Lr)
- LI.
. The action of r on
discontinuous, since property
for
Hn'U Dr
r
H(LI.)
- LI,
Hn U Dr
to
is obviously properly
is a discrete group of isometries of
H(Lr)-
LT
follows immediately.
Remark. This proof doesn't work for certain elementary groups; we will ignore such technicalities.
It is both easy and common to confuse the definition of properly
discontinuous with other similar properties. To give two examples, one might make these
definitions:
; the
8.8 8.2.h. neighborhood N
. The action of I‘ is
wandering if every point has a
such that only finitely many translates of N
intersect
N.
8.2.5. Psalm.
The action of
I‘ has discrete orbits if every orbit of
I' has an empty limit set.
IE
X, the projection
—* X /
>4
8.2.6. Proposition.
rgafrre,uandanin¢action9_na
.
W
space
1‘. is a miss mismana-
Proof. An exercise. Warning
Even when X
is a manifold, X / I‘ may not be Hausdorff.
For instance, consider the map
L:
IR2-0—.> 132-0
L (any)
)
It is easy to see this is a wandering action. The quotient space is a surface with fundamental group Z 0 Z
The surface is non-Hausdorff, however,
8.9 since points such as (1,0) and (0,1)
do not have disjoint neighborhoods.
Such examples arise commonly and naturally; it is wise to be aware of this phenomenon.
r
The property that pair of points_ x , y
disjoint from y
of
Kleinian
.
groups
has discrete orbits simply means that for every
in the quotient space X /
r
, x has a neighborhood
This can occur, for instance, in-a l-parameter family
I‘t
9
t 5 [0,1]
.
There are examples where
and the family defines an action of Z: on orbits which is not a wandering action. See
[O , l] x §
33
I‘t
= Z ,
with discrete
. It is remarkable
that the action of a Kleinian group on the set of all points with discrete
orbits is properly discontinuous.
8.3.
Convex
huerbolic
manifolds
The limit set of a group action is determined by a limiting process,
so that it is often hard to "know" the limit set directly. The condition that a given group action is discrete involves infinitely many group elements,
so it is difficult to verify directly. Thus it is important to have a
concrete object, satisfying concrete conditions, corresponding to a discrete group action.
We consider for the present only groups acting freely.
8.3.1. convex
. A complete hyperbolic manifold M with boundary is if every path in M
is homotopic (rel endpoints) to a geodesic arc.
8.10 (The degenerate case of an arc which is a single point may occur).
8.3.2. We.. developing map D : Proof.
If
M
A 2L: iete hyperbolic manifold M _ii convex iff the _—
M —> En
i_s a homeomorphism Q _a_. convex subset g
is a convex subset
S of
En
H11
.
, then it is clear that
M is convex, since any path in M lifts to a path in S , which is homotopic to a geodesic arc in S , hence in M .
If' M
is convex, then D
is
l
-l,
since any two points in
may be joined by a path, which is homotopic in M geodesic arc.
MM)
and hence in
M
M
to a
D must take the endpoints of a geodesic arc to distinct points.
is clearly convex.
We need also a local criterion for M to be convex. We can define M to be locally convex if each point
aM
CoY‘
he A
x,
bar ’1". »
x e: M has a neighborhood isometric to a convex subset of
DOA
En
. If x e: M ,
then x will be on the boundary of this set. It is easy to convince oneself
that local convexity implies conVexity: picture a path, and imagine
8.11 straightening it out. Because of local convexity, one never needs to push it out of
8M . To make this a rigorous argument, given a path p of length
2 there is an e
CZ7L (p0)
such that any path of length i_s
is homotopic to a geodesic arc.
of length between
a / h
intervals in turn, putting
s / 2 .
and
intersecting
Subdivide p
Straighten out
a new division point
into subintervals
adjacent pairs of
in the middle of the resulting
arc unless it has length §_s/2 . Any time an interval becomes too small, change the subdivision. This process converges, giving a homotopy of p
to a geodesic
arc,
since any time there are angles
not close to v ,
the homotopy significantly shortens the path.
Local convexity convexity
M This gives us a very concrete object corresponding to a Kleinian group:
3—manifold M with non-empty boundary.
a complete convex hyperbolic Given a. convex manifold
M , we can define H(M) to be the intersection
of all convex submanifolds M'
of M
such that
n1 M' -—+ v1 M
is an
8.12
isomorphism. H(M)
is clearly the same as
H
Lnl(M)/ «1(M)
. H(M) is a
convex manifold, with the same dimension as M except in degenerate cases.
8.3.3. W . EL small
I_f; M "_sg compact convex
deformation
511 htl to give _E_I
marbolio
g the Methane structure 23
a new
M
manifold , then
can
__
‘33 enlar
ed
erbolic manifold __._1'P_ homeomo hic t_o M .
convex
Proof. A convex manifold is strictly convex if every geodesic arc in
M has interior in the interior of M . If M is not already strictly convex, it can be enlarged slightly to make it strictly convex.
follows from the fact that a neighborhood of radius
a
(This
about a hyperplane
is strictly convex) .
le convex
Stric
Convex
Thus we may assume that M'
is a hyperbolic structure that is a slight
defamation of a strictly convex manifold M . We may assume that our deformation M'
manifold length
M"
is small enough that it can be enlarged to a hyperbolic
which contains a
2. greater than
Ze-neighborhood of M' .
a in M has the middle
(9.
Every arc
- a)
of
some uniform
8.13 5 from 3M ; we may take our deformation M' of M small enough
distance
that such intervals in M' of
M'.
have the middle
2.
-a
still in the interior
This implies that the union of the convex hulls of intersections Of balls
of radius
36
IVith‘M'
is locally convex,
hence convex.
The convex hull of a uniformly small deformation of a uniformly convex manifold is locally determined.
When M
Remark
8.3.3
is non-compact, the proof of
applies provided that
M has a uniformly convex neighborhood and we consider only uniformly small deformations. We will study deformations in more generality in
8.3.h.
W.
hyperbolic manifolds
M: gag M: g M: Ed suppose .45 I“? Suppose
homeomoghism f :
wllll1
t_o
1'le .
strictly convex, compact
:
Liv-ans diffeomorphism 93
EBn —* En
§
—>
K
_i_s_g homotopy euuivalence
3M1 - Tar-amass quasi-conform o_f_ E Poincaré disk to itself con
fi_sa pseudo-isometry
o_an-
ati
8.1h
Proof.
Let m
¢
assume that of
M1
$
_
two normal rays
yp
l
p2
d
or
t
from
.
yp
2
8M2 3M1 ,
has a unique normal
let
is the distance and
6 is the angle between the normals of p1 and
From this it is evident that f is a pseudo-isometry extending of isometries of
r
8.3-5.
En
3'.
, there are
(which are manifolds
at least four distinct and interesting quotient spaces
acts freely). Let us name them:
Definition.
MT Nr
H(Lr)
.
‘.
T
(3“ u
Pr
(ant; Dr
or
the convex hull quotient
, the complete hyperbolic manifold without boundary
Dr)
/
r ,
u wr,\
the Kleinian manifold
wr
the t :1 . Here se is 1 dual to planes in of points in the projective mode
H(NI‘)
/
r
whose intersection with
=
MT C Nrc or c PT
acts properly discontinuously on
discontinuity on
and
r ,
or
We have incluSions fact that
/
En / r
En
Mr
We may
at nearby points is approximately cosh t + a sinh t ,
Associated with a discrete group F
when
M2
f(x) be the point on Y% . ¢(p, The distance between points at a distance.of t along
8M2
and
3M1
on
p
has distance
-
_——v—
where
.
Each point
ray 7 ; if x E.y p p a distance t from
to
a pseudo-isometry between the developing images
13 already
M2 .
and
Ml
¢ to a map from
be a lift of
En U Dr
.
MT
,
NT
and
.
S“ It
.
is
is contained in .
easy to derive
En U Dr U WT
Or
Dr
t he
from the proper
have the same homotopy type.
are homeomorphic except in degenerate
cases,
and
Nr
int
(Or)
8.15
PP
LP
is not always connected when
is not connected.
8.h. Geometrically finite gpoun .
r
8.h.l. Definition.
{’3gite if
is eom t
“Va (Mr)
has finite
volume.
‘715 (Mr)
The reason that
MT
isirequired to have finite volume,and not
, is to rule out the case that P is an arbitrary discrete group of
isometries of
Hn-lC: En
. We shall soon prove that geometrically finite
means geometrically finite (8.h.3
8.h.2.
mm .
has full measure
r
just
on
SQ
E
) .
I_‘ i_s a__xeometric&ll finite, then
LI.
3 o measure . I_f
L1. c s,
has full measure , the action
g
is ergodic.
Proof. This statement is equivalent to the assertion that every bounded
measurable function f
a.e.
L
supported on
T
and invariant by
(with respect to Lebesque measure on
consider the function
the points on
SQ
"visual" measure
on
En
determined by
Following Ahlfors, we
f as follows. If x e
En
correspond to rays through x ; these rays have a natural
Vx
to the visual measure gradient flow of
hf
so).
F is constant
hf
. Define
Vx
hf(x)
to be the average of f with respect
. This function
hf
is harmonic, i.e., the
preserves volume, div grad
For this reason, the measure
hf
Vx
= 0 is called harmonic measure.
,
8.16 To prove this, consider the contribution to area A
e.sn'l
centered at p
hf
coming from an infinitesimal
. (i.e., a Green's function). As x moves
a distance d in the direction of p , the visual measure of A in proportion to function of A
to
e(n-l)d
.
The gradient of any multiple of the characteristic
is in the direction of
e(n—l)d . The
goes up exponentially,
p , and also proportional in size
flow lines of the gradient are orthogonal trajectories
to horospheres; this flow contracts linear dimensions along the horosphere in
e.(1 , so
proportion to
it preserves volume.
A
.-
/
H(Lr)
be the canonical retraction. If G, is any fundamental polyhedron for the action of Z in some neighborhood of p in
H(Lr)
then
r-1(Q,)
is a
fundamental polyhedron
6\\\£
.
EB U Dr
in some neighborhood of p
21
.
A fundamental polyhedron near the cusps is easily extended to a global
fundamental polyhedron, since (c) '9 (a)
way
Suppose that
point x|e P n S.
A of P
.
n
x
S.
Or -
(neighborhoods of the cusps)
is compact.
T has a finiteysided fundamental polyhedron P .
is a regular point
(6
Dr)
if it is in the interior
or of some finite union of translates of P . Thus, the only
can be a limit point is for x to be
a point of tangency of sides
of infinitely many translates of P . Since P
points of tangency of sides, infinitely-many y
to x, so x is a fixed point for some element 7 the translates of P by powers of
arranged to be
a
in upper
7 would
half-space,
can have only finitely many
I must
r.
identify one of these points
7 must be parabolic, otherwise
limit on the axis of y . If x it is easy to see that
LT
E
must
is
be
contained in a strip of finite width: (Finitely many translates of P must form a fundamental domain for
{1n}, acting
finite index in the group fixing
-
on some horoball centered at
9, since
{yn}
has
. The faces of these translates of P which do notpass
8.22
through
0
T outside this finite
lie on hemispheres. Every point in
{yn}
collection of hemispheres and their translates by
It follows that v
('776 (M)) = v(‘77e IT‘A
the contribution near any point of
’77 s (H (Lr)) n P 8.5.
(H
lies in
(LT)) n P)
Dr
)
is finite, since
P is finite, and the rest of
is compact.
The geometgz of
the hounggy
Consider a closed curve
of the convex hull.
in Euclidean space, and its convex hull H(o)
a
.
The boundary of a convex body always has non-negative Gaussian curvature. 0n the other hand, each point
in
p
33(0)
-
line segment or triangle with vertices on
segment on
3H(o) through
at p . It follows that
p
3H(o)
0
o . Thus, there is some line
, so that
-
lies in the interior of some
33(0) has non-positive curvature
c has zero curvature, i.e., it is
"developable". If you are not familiar with this
idea, you can see it by
bending a curve out of a piece of stiff wire (like
coathanger). Now roll
the wire around on a big piece of paper, tracing out a curve where the wire
touches. Sometimes, the wire may touch at three or more points; this gives
alternate ways to roll, and you should carefully follow all of them. Cut out the region in the plane bounded by this curve (piecing if necessary).
By
taping the paper together, you can envelope the wire in a nice paper model of its convex hull.
The physical process of unrolling a develOpable surface
onto the plane is the origin of the notion of the developing map.
8.23
The
same
physical notion applies in hyperbolic
any closed set on
Sulu
, then H(K)
lies on a line segment in
hyperbolic plane.
curvature
3-space. If K is
is convex, yet each point on
8H(K) . Thus, 3H(K)
3H(K)
can be developed to a
(In terms of Riemannian geometry,
3H(K) has extrinsic
O , so its intrinsic curvature is the ambient sectional curvature,
-l . Note however that
BH(K)
is not usually differentiable) . Thus
BH(K)
has the natural structure of a complete hyperbolic surface.
8.5.1. i_s a
r o
.
‘t'o . If T
hflerbolic
EL torsion
free fleiniau group,
then
3M?
surface .
MT is of course not generally flat - it is bent in y c:aMT consist of those points which are not in the
The boundary of
some pattern.
is
Let
8.21;
3MT . Through each point x in y , there 5x is also a geodesic in the hyperbolic is a. unique geodesic 8x on 8M1. . structure of BMI, . y is a closed set. If 3M1. has finite area, then Y is compact, since a neighborhood of each cusp of 3M1. is flat. (See §8.h). interior of a flat region of
8.5.2. A CM
Definition. A lamination L
on a manifold
M”1
(the support of L) with a local product structure for A . More
_ IRn 1‘
precisely, there is a covering of a neighborhood of A
Ui
neighborhoods
JED-k the form ¢iJ form
is a closed subset
x
¢~
—1+
B , B
CIRk (fij
(x , y)
x
131‘
oi
so that
in M with coordinate
(A n
. The coordinate changes (x , y) ,
giJ (y)
)
when
U1) is of the (#13 must be of y éB . A lamination
is like a foliation of a closed subset of M . Leaves of the lamination are
defined just as for a foliation.
males .
If
98
is a foliation of M
closure of the union of leaves which meet
Any submanifold of a manifold M Clearly, the bending locus
whenever two points of
y
y
and S c M
is any set, the
S is a lamination.
is a lamination, with a single leaf.
for
Mr
has the structure of a lamination:
are nearby, the directions of bending must be
nearly parallel in order that the lines of bending do not intersect. A
lamination whose leaves are geodesics we will call a geodesic lamination
8.25
a‘—-' \ dm ’1 qe
odeSiC
Maxim).(on
By consideration of Euler characteristic, the lamination 7 cannot hava all of
3M as its support, or in other words it cannot be a foliation. The
complement
3M
-
y
consists of regions bounded by closed geodesics and
infinite geodesics. Each of these regions can be doubled along its boundary to give a complete hyperbolic surface, which of course has finite area. There
-
_v-
p’
8.26
is a lower bound of n for the area of such 2
I 3 (8M) I
lamination y
a region, hence an upper bound of
for the number of components of
3M
-
y
.
Every geodesic
on a hyperbolic surface S can be extended to a foliation with
isolated singularities on the complement. There
is an index formula
for
the Euler characteristic of
S in terms of these
\
singularities. Here are some values for the index.
UM
8.27 From the existence of an index formula, one concludes that the Euler S is half the Euler characteristic of the double of
characteristic of
S
-
. By the Gauss-Bonnet theorem,
y
Area (S or in other words, y
— y)
has measure
= Area (S) 0
To give an idea of the range of possibilities for geodesic laminations,
{Yi}
one can consider an arbitrary sequence
of geodesiclaminations:
[Yi] converges
simple closed curves, for instance.. Let us say that
to Y
if for each x 6 support y , and for each
enough
‘77:
Yi n x
the support of
i
. Note
(x) are within
a
Yi
intersects
a ,
g776(x)
of the direction of
the
geometrically
for all great
and the leaves of
leaf of y
through
that the support of y may be smaller than the limiting support of
so the limit of a sequence may not be unique. See argument shows that every
sequenge {vi}
58.10. An
Yi
easy diagonal
has a subsequence which converges
geometrically. From limits of sequences of simple closed geodesics, uncountably
many geodesic laminations are obtained.
Geodesic laminations on two homeomorphic hyperbolic surfaces may compared by passing to the circle at
by a pair of points diagonal
l (Su'
x
{(x
See1
, x)} . A
-A)
Topologically,
(x1 , x2
/ Z2
)
0 b_e
arbitrg . There i_s some a > 0 such that for all geodesic laminations
Y 3; S , the train track approximation such 5 way that all branch lines g
Te
Proof. Note first that by making the leaves of the
foliation
J
there would be a sequence of containing an open set.
When all branches of
Ta
1e_— can be
are
a
C2
realizedgz; S
curves with curvature < 6 .
sufficiently small, one can make
very short, uniformly for all Y
Y's
E
: otherwise
converging to a geodesic lamination
[One can also see this directly from
area considerations]-
are reasonably long, one can simply choose the tangent
vectors to the switches to be tangent to any geodesic of Y where it crosses the corresponding leaf of
j
; the
branches can be filled in
by curves of
small curvature. When some of the branch lines are short, group each set of
.
switches connected by very short branch lines together. First map each of
these sets into S
8.9.3. W
-
,
then extend over the reasonably long branches.
Messiaen Lamination ahishiscgnisabxaclosa
train track approximation
To
23 a
geodesic lamination Y
has
all leaves
close t_o M pf Y . Proof:
This follows from the elementary geometrical fact that a curve in
hyperbolic space with uniformly small curvature is uniformly close to a unique geodesic.
(One way to see this is by considering the planes perpendicular to r
8.55 the curve
-
they always advance at a uniform rate, so in particular the
curve crosses each one only once.)
—
8.9.h. W . A
lamination A
lamination iff
g;surface s i_s isotopic t_g seedesic
i_s carried.flwflafl
(a) A
1
ad“) 1km we SikfikaEIm-EE(g—inrinite)EQT-
2322:.
Given an arbitrary train track' T , it is easy to construct pep;
hyperbolic sturcture for
S on which
curvature. The leaves of A near
1
T
is realized by lines with small
then correspond to a set of geodesics on
. These geodesics do not cross, since the
Condition
(b) means that distinct leaves of A
When leaves of
A
leaves of
A
S ,
do not.
determine distinct geodesics.
are close, they must follow the same path for a long finite
interval, which implies the corresponding geodesics are close. Thus, we obtain a geodesic lamination Y
which is isotopic to
A . (To have an isotopy,
it suffices to construct a homeomorphism homotopic to the identity.
homeomorphism is constructed first in a neighborhood of
T
This
, then on the rest
of S) .
Remark . From this, one sees that as the hyperbolic structure on S varies, the corresponding geodesic laminations are all isotopic. This issue was quietly skirted in
When
58.5.
a lamination
associate a number
A has an invariant measure u , this gives a way to
h(b) to each branch line b of any train track which
8.56 dominates Y : h(b)
is just the
transverse measure of
the leaves of
A
collapsed to a point on b . At a switch , the sum of the "entering" numbers equals the sum of the "exiting" numbers.
,7
/.:>\
1.8 6
L1 5‘
2' 0 Conversely, any assignment of numbers satisfying the switch condition determines
a unique geodesic lamination with transverse measure: line b
of
foliation
g
1
to a corridor of constant width by equally spaced lines.
first widen each branch
u(b) , and give it a
3
3'
Z
8.57 As in 8.9.h,this determines a lamination Y ; possibly there are.many leaves of
the
19
collapsed to a single leaf of Y , if these leaves of
same
infinite path.
.88
4?
all have
has a transverse measure, defined by the distance
between leaves; this goes over to a transverse measure for Y .
8.10.
3-manifolds
Realizing laminations in
For a quasi-Fuchsian group P , it was relatively easy to "realize" a
corresponding surface in MT
geodesic lamination of the
at infinity.
, by using the circle
However, not every complete hyperbolic 3—manifold whose
fundamental group is isomorphic to a surface group is quasi-Fuchsian, so we must make a more systematic study of realizability of geodesic laminations.
8.10.1.
Definition.
Let f : S ——+ N be a map of a hyperbolic surface to
a hyperbolic 3-manifold which sends cusps to cusps. A geodesic lamination Y is realizable in the homotopy class of
a cusp-preserving homotopy)
8.10.2. I
. . . I;_
f if
f
is homotopic
(by
to a map.sending each leaf of Y to a geodesic.
ii realizable ip_the
Y
the realization ‘;§ (essentially ) unique: that
pp;
class
homoto
the
2;, f ,
p§_each leaf 2;
LEI
on S
Y i§_uni uel determined Proof.
Consider a lift
N . If S is closed,
h
3
of a homotopy connecting two maps of
S into
moves every point a bounded distance, so it can't
move a geodesic to a different geodesic. LIf S has cusps, the homotopy can be modified near the cusps of S
so
8
again is bounded.
8.58 In section 8.5, we touched on the notion of The geometric topolog
geodesic laminations.
geometric
on
convergence of
geodesic laminations is
the topology of geometric convergence, that is, a neighborhood of Y of laminations
Y'
which have leaves near every point of
parallel to the leaves of Y . If
curves, then neighborhood
fix
. The
track approximations of Y
The measure topolog on
(of full support)
Y2
are disjoint simple closed
(Y , 11)
geodesic laminations compatible with a
Y .
give a neighborhood basis for
SEOdF—‘Sie
laminations with transverse measures
is the topology induced from the weak topolow on measures
in the Moebius band J of
and
Y , and nearly
Y1 U Y2 is in every neighborhood of Y1 as well as in every of Y2 . The space of geodesic laminations on S with the geometric
topology we shall denote train
Y1
consists
outside
consists of
S”
in the Klein model. That is, a neighborhood
(Y' , 11') such that for a finite set
of continuous functions with compact support in J
,
I
I fi du -
fl
, ..., fk
J fi
du'
O is a real number.
8.10.3. W . o_n;_thl m_a_.p_
772$
Let
be the space of
——~M
modulo
c
8.59 8.1o.h.
W . ’Themm
2each uncrumpled Proof g
W
:
W
#1585
(s , N)
(s) which
a_ss;525
surface its wrinklig locus i_s continuous .
8.10.3.
For any point x in the support of a measure
11
U of x , the support of a measure close enough to u
and any neighborhood
must intersect U .
_Pro_of g 8.1o.h. An interval which is bent Cannot suddenly straightenAway from any cusps, there is a positive infimum to the an interval of length
"amount" of
bending of
a which intersects the wrinkling locus w(S)
middle third, and makes an angle of at least
in its
"amount"
a with w(S) . (The
of bending can be measured, say, by the difference between the length of
a
and the distance between the image endpoints) . All such arcs must still cross
w(S')
for any nearby uncrumpled surface S' .
When
I
S has cusps, we are also interested in measures supported on compact
geodesic lamination.
This space we denote
track diescription for
(Y , u) ,
then neighborhoods for
(Y
|u(b) - u'(b)|
< a
9
m
777560(S). h(b)
75
('r , u)
If
is a train
0 fipflbranch of
u) are described by {(‘r' , u')}, where
. (If b is a branch of r' not in
'r
branches of
1:
,
1" and
, u(b) = O by definitic:
In fact, one can always choose a hyperbolic structure on S so that good approximation
1' c
1:
T
is a
to Y . If S is closed, it is always possible to squeeze
together along non-trivial arcs in the complementary regions to
obtain a new train track which cannot be enlarged.
8.60
This implies that a. neighborhood of
number of real parameters.
W: (S)
has cusps,
212:.boundfl
M.
7774?
4335
(s) i_s coppact ,9;
a0flow) m
compact branch of
Te
is compact.
5
Similarly, when
”560(8) 10$ (s)
S
i_s_g compact
i_s at. compact
Tl ,..., 1k
carrying every
(There is an upper bound to 'the length of a
, when- S and e are fixed). The set of projective
classes of measures on any particular
remarks. In
s
There is a finite set of train tracks
possible geodesic lamination.
P x (S)
(S) is a. manifold.
is a. manifold with boundary
8.10.5. W33. manifold
Thus,
(Y , u) is parametrized by a. finite
That
9d“: (S)
1:
is obviously compact, so this implies
is a. manifold
follows from the preceding
we shall see that in fact it is the simplest of possible
manifolds .
In
8.5
, we indicated one proof of the compactness of
”at
(S) . Another
8.61 proof goes as follows.
First, note that
8.10.6. W . Every measure
1.:
, (possibly with smaller support).
Br_oof_£ 8.10.6. Choose leaves of V
(33's
such that the total number
goes to infinity. Let
times the counting measure of converging
a1
a finite set of transversals
meet every leaf of y . Suppose there is a sequence
the
admits some transverse
geodesic lamination y
2i
“i n
Ni
{1i}
. The sequence
(in the weak topology) to _a measure
which
of intervals on
of intersections of
be the measure on
aJ
,..., “k
Uov.J
{1.11}
Li
with
which is l /
Ni
has a subsequence
u . 'It is easy to see
that
u
is invariant under local projections along leaves of y , so that it determines
a' transverse measure. If there is no such sequence counting
every leaf is proper, so the
measure for any leaf will do.
Continuation fiproof g
'0) cf
{2i} then
(S) in
iffi (S)
8.10.5:
compact
intersects the closure of every point of
set
‘1‘
;
g
4‘
of
Because of this fact, the image
Any collection of open sets which covers which covers the
3-10-5
J35
22556
(S)
(S) has a finite subcollection
therefore, it covers all of
flat
(S)
Armed with topology, we return to the question of realizing geodesic lamination
Let
R f C Joe—(S)
consist of the laminations realizable in the homotopy
class of f First, if y
consists of finitely many simple closed geodesics, then
y
8.62
is realizable provided
nl(f)
maps each of these simple closed curves to
non—trivial, non-parabolic elements.
If we add finitely many geodesics whose ends spiral around these closed geodesics or converge toward cusps the resulting lamination is also realizable
except in the degenerate case that f restricted to an appropriate non-trivial pair of pants on
S factors through a map to
S1 .
To see this, consider for instance the case of a geodesic g on S whose
f Ito H3 , we see that the two ends of f(z) are asymptotic to geodesics ?(El) and ¥(32) Then f is homotopic to a map taking g to a geodesic unless ¥(§l) and ?(EZ) converge to the same point on S“ , which can only happen if ¥geodesic lamination
(Logically, one can of
M2 into H3
v on S
is realizable in
near 9 , every
N' near its realization in N .
, with the compact—open topology, so that
Mi
9'
think of uncrumpled surfaces as equivariant uncrumpled maps
Choose any subsequence of the components of
___
converges strongl‘;
converge
pi's
injflfifs)
"nearness" makes
sense).
so that the bending loci for the two boundary
. Then the two boundary components must
converge to locally convex disjoint embeddings of S in N (unless the limit is Fuchsian).
M
These two surfaces are homotopic, hence they bound a convex submanifold
N , so p(I)
of
Since
8.3.3:
M[s
a)
is geometrically finite. is compact, strong convergence of
{pi}
follows from
3
no unexpected
perturbation of
identifications
N can be created by a small
which preserVes parabolicity.
p
If the set of uncrumpled maps of compact, then
of
S homotopic to the standard map is not
it follows immediately from the
definition that N has at least
one geometrically infinite tame end. We must show that both ends are geometrically tame. The possible phenomenon to be wary of is that the bending loci and
B;
of the two boundary components of
to a single point
A
in
jf§fls)
M:
might
8:
converge, for instance,
. (This would be conceivable if the "simplest"
9.10
homotopy of one of the two boundary components to a reference surface which
persisted in the limit first carried it to the vicinity of the other boundary
component.) To help in
understanding the picture, we will first find a
restriction for the way in which a hyperbolic manifold with
a
geometrically
tame end can be a covering space.
9.2.1. Definition. Let N be a hyperbolic manifold, P a union of horoball neighborhoods of its cusps, E' an end of N
finite-sheeted cover of end.
- P . E'
E' is (up to
is almost geometrically ting if some
a compact set) a geometrically tame
, that if E is almost geometrically
(Later we shall prove, in
tame, it is geometrically tame.)
9.2.2. Ihgg‘m . Let N Egg hnerbolic manifold , 2; N such that
N
3
5 connect set,
3
space
bounded
_cgthe imageg E i_n' N-P,
22313.
is El; almost geometrically tame end o_f. N .
in the projection to N
degree of the projection of image of
2 coverigg
has finite volume and some finite cover
Consider first the case that all points of E
SLQ: a)
N
has a_ geometrically infinite tame and E
sh: a) . Then either N fibers over S:L with fiber S ,
by 5; surface
93
N-P
and
identified with
lie in a compact subset of E . Then the local
E to
N is finite in a neighborhood of the
S . Since the local degree is constant except at the image of S ,
it is everywhere finite.
Let
G
Col N
be the set of covering transformations of
E3
over N
consisting of elements
g
bounded neighborhood of
v1 S
such that
g
. G
gEfi
E
is all of
E
except for a
is obviously a group, and it contains
E 3 up to compact sets, is an
with finite index. Thus the image of
almost geometrically tame and of N
E
r-— .~ L 1 - a l (
.
I/. (
/
El
\
1'}
‘
I
L
‘._-.—
The other case is that of
S[;,n)
is identified with a non-compact
subset
E by projection to N . Consider the set I of all uncrumpled surfaces
in E Whose images intersect the image of
an uncrumpled surface of
S[s,°)'
Any short closed geodesic on
E is homotopic to a short geodesic of E
(not a
cusp), since E contains no cusps other then the cusps of S . Therefore, by the proof of
8.8.5,
a compact closure). which fibers over
the set of images of
If I itself is not compact, than N
S1 ,
by the proof of
(since uncrumpled surfaces cut E
8.10.9.
S .
has a finite cover
If I is compact, then
into compact pieces)
componentsof the set of points identified with disjoint from
I in N is precompact (has
,
S[s a) are 9
infinitely many
compact and
9.12
A non—(ompflt‘fsur’eff .3, id6n+‘n‘Ff?J (4)!”ng (5f'
5 Surgcés {gent-gal wiflS: S These components consist of immersions of k-sheeted covering spaces of injective on
11’]- , which must be homologous to
immersions with .the same sign, homologous say to
S
ik [SJ . Pick two disjoint
- k[S]
and -2.[S].
Appropriate multiples of these cycles are homologous by a compactly supported
3-chain which maps to a 3-cycle in N theorem follows from
8.10.9.
to
a subsequence
N has finite volume. The
9.2.2.
Cont inuation £110ng 9.2. pass
- P ,hence
We may, without loss of generality,
of‘representations pi
such that the sequences of
{8:} and {Bi} converge, in 9580(8) to laminations 8+ and 8‘ . If 8+ , say, is realizable for the limit representation 9 , then any uncrumpled surface whose wrinkling locus contains 8+ is embedded
bending loci
and locally convex
- hence
it gives
a
geometrically finite end of N . The
only missing case for which we must prove geometric tameness is that
neither
9.13
8+
8
nor
is realizable.
Let
A:
CP;%(S)
(s = + , -) é
be a sequence
of geodesic laminations with finitely many leaves and with transverse measures approximating
realization of
B: 8:.
closely enough that the realization of
Also
suppose that
lim
a
in
A;
in N
Nj to
go to
Ni
is near the
The laminations
A:
in N , since their limit is
not realized. We will show that they tend toward
{AI}
in
A: s B6 in4%flo(s) .
all realized in N . They must tend toward
Imagine the contrary
A:
in the
a
e
—
direction.
- for definiteness, suppose the realizations A: in the The realization that
of
of each
direction.
a
must be near the realization in N , for high enough j . Connect
A:
by a short path
surfaces
a. o.
that for
t. near
Aid-,1:
realizing the
1.3.“6
tO ,
Si,j,t
A.
in
1.3.t
and
6830(8)
. A
family of uncrumpled
is not continuous, but has the property
Si,J,to
have points away from their
cusps which are close in N . Therefore, for every uncrumpled surface
S.
between
138:0
such that
S.
?\3
and
19.1.13
n U
S.
lejal
n
(N
—
in a homolo ical sense
( S P) is non—void.
) ,
there is some
U t
7x;
a:
9.1h
U3 be a sequence of uncrumpled
Let Y be any lamination realized in N , and surfaces realizing is a sequence
U
J
y
in
Nj
, and
S.1(j),j,t(j)
converging to a surface in N . There
of uncrumpled 5urfaces
toward
whose wrinkling loci tend
NJ.
' in
‘ ' 1ntersect1ng
8+
Without loss of generality we may pass to a geometrically convergent subsequence, with geometric limit
finite volume
-
E_ of N .
end
ckze «1 E_
.
implies that the
a:
“i
have
Each element
{ai}
a
of
N . It cannot have
for instance)
a
has a finite power
in
«1 (Ni)
bounded length in the generators of
have bounded length, so a
so by
E which is the image of
le
approximating
E_ = E (up to compact sets) . Using
si(J).J.t
5 ,
geometrically tame end
Then a sequence
property that the
°f
is covered by
(from the analysis in chapter
8.1h.2 , it has an almost the
Q . Q
is in fact in
has the
rlS
; this
le_,
and
this, we may pass to a subsequence
's which cenverge to an uncrumpled surface R
incompressible, so it is in the standard homotopy class.
in E . R
It realizes
is
+
B ,
which is absurd.
We may conclude that N has two geometrically tame ends, each of which is mapped homeomorphically toihe geometric limit
Q . (This holds whether or
not they are geometrically infinite). This implies the local degree of N -—+ Q is finite one or two
(in case the two ends are identified in Q.)
But any covering transformation a of N over Q has a power in
nlN
, which implies, as before, that a e nlN , so that N
(its square) Q .
9.2
9-15
9.3.
The ending of an end.
In the interest of
avoiding circumlocution, as well as developing our
image of a geometrically tame end, we will analyze the possibilities for
non-realizable laminations in a geometrically tame end.
We will need an estimate for the area of a cylinder in a mrperbolic 3—manifold. Given any map f :
S:L x
[O , l]
6
hyperbolic manifold, we may straighten each line obtaining a ruled cylinder with the
9.3.1.
The area
931 ruled
N , where N
—>
x
is a convex
[0 , l] to a geodesic,
same boundary.
cylinder (g above ) _ii less than the len h
E
its
Proof. The cylinder can be
Co-approximated by
a union of small quadrilaterals,
.
each subdivided into two triangles.
The area of a triangle is less than the
minimum of the lengths of its sides
(see p. 6.5).
9.16 If the two boundary components of the cylinder
C are far apart, then
most of the area is concentrated near its boundary. Let the two components of
9.3.2. Area
(C
Y1
and
Y2
denote
BC .
- Werl)
§_
e-r 1(yl) +
z(yz)
where
r
3.0
2 denotes
and
This is derived by integrating the area of a triangle in polar coordinates from any vertex: T(e) A e sinh t dt d6 1) d6 (cosh w(a)
II
J
-
mm)_ a) .
.19 m
ok The area outside a neighborhood of radius r of its far edge a
I
- r)
1 d8
n) . Clearly there is some cyclic train path through b , so T
D
b
admits a positive measure.
If r
is oriented, then each region of
on its boundary. The area of S must be
S
-
T
has an even number of cusps
hr or greater (since the
complete oriented surfaces of finite area having
x = —l
only
are the thrice
9.36 punctured sphere, for which
7Wéflo
is empty, and the punctured torus.)
If
there is a polygon with more than four sides, it can be subdivided using a
branch which preserves orientation, hence admits a cyclic train path.
The
case of a punctured polygon with more than two sides is similar.
Otherwise,
S
-
y
has at least two components. Add one branch
bl
which
reverses positively oriented trains, in one region, and another branch
b2
which reverses negatively oriented trains in another.
"tit
There is a cyclic train path through
b1
and
b2
in
r U
bl U b2
9
hence an
invariant.measure.
Now consider the case when S
-
T
has more complexly connected regions.
9.37 If a boundary component of such a region R
a train pointing away.from R
toward R
.
If R
has one or more vertices, then
can return to at least one vertex pointing
is not an annulus, hook a new branch around a non-trivial
V
homotopy class of arcs in R with ends on such a pair of vertices.
If R
is an annulus and each boundary component has at least one vertex, then
add one or two branches running across R which admit a cyclic train path.
Pm
‘T.-
If R
is not topologically a thrice punctured disk or annulus, we can
add an interior closed curve to R .
Any boundary component of R which is a geodesic c has another region
R' (which may equal R) on the other side. In this case, we can add one or more branches in R
and R' tangent to o
in Opposite directions on opposite
9.38 sides, and hooking in ways similar to those previously mentioned.
I
I
'01
.'
_L
From the existence of these extensions of the original train track, it follows that an element
75
“72727.00
of triangles and punctured monogons.
is essentially complete iff S
Furthermore, every y 6
approximated by essentially complete elements dense set has the property that the
e
Wehbeo .
-Y
We
consists
can be
In fact, an open
- train track approximation re
has
only triangles and punctured monOgons as complementary regions, so generically
avg
'I:E
has this property.
then holds for
szo
The characterization of essential completeness
as well.
Here is some useful geometric information about uncrumpled surfaces.
9.5.5.
s t‘
. (a) The sum gfthe dihedral angles along
gt; the wrinklipg locus w(S)
all
edges
tending toward §._ cusp pf E uncrumpled surface
S is 0. (The smni_s_takenipthe grogp
81
= fined 21!):
(b) The sum 9; the dihedral angles along all edges 9; w(S)
tandipg
9-39 toward fl side £5 closed geodesic y
31; T«f(S) i_s
id
, where c i_s
the ggl_e fl rotation o_f_ parallel translation around 7 . (The sign depends
on the sense of the spiralling of near
geodesics toward
y) .
39%. Consider the upper half-space model, with either the end of 2; toward which the geodesics in w(S) are spiralling at level
cusp or the c-
. Above some
(in case a) or inside some cone (in case (b) ) , S consists of
vertical planes bent along vertical lines. The proposition merely says that
the total angle of bending in some fundamental domain is
\
9.5.6.
m.
lamination
_
_i_n‘
the
sum of the parts.
\
A_.n uncrumpled surface raalizipg an essentially complete
W7? 0
_ip 1 given homotopy class
E unique._
Such
a uncrumpled
surface is totally geodesic near its cusos.
Proof:
If the surface S is not a punctured torus, then it has a unique
completion obtained by adding a single geodesic tending toward each cusp.
9.5.5 , an
uncrumpled surface cannot be bent along any of these
added
By
geodesics,
9.1+o 9.5.6.
so we obtain
If S is the punctured torus a lamination y
Complete
y
T
-p ,
then we consider first the case of
which is an essential completion of a single closed geodesic.
by adding two closed geodesics going from the vertices of the
punctured bigon to the puncture.
Ar
7’
essem‘tia H y
Complelc
COWP
1 e
9
re
\
\.
If the dihedral angles along the infinite geodesics are shown, then by
9.5.5
62 + 63 a
e2
and
e3
, as
we have
el + 62 el + 63 where
6l
is some angle.
= 0 = a =
a
(The signs are the same for the last two equations .
because any hyperbolic transformation anti—commutes with a any perpendicular line).
o
180
.
rotation around
L0
el
Thus
=
92
punctured bigon.
element
7
1.7%
7,}
—
a .11; to :7:r/ 1
u-fl’t’i
(90°“(a TL: n
9.1+l
= 0 , so an uncrumpled surface is
EWXO
totally geodesic in the
Since simple closed curves are dense in
7770?
, every
realizable in a given homotopy class has a realization by
an uncrumpled surface which is totally geodesic on a punctured bigon.
If Y
'
is essentially complete, this means its realizing surface is unique.
-
W I_f v .i.§._a_n essentially complete geodesic lamination . realized 131315 uncglupled surface U , then a_ny uncrumpled surface U' realizipg 9-5-7-
E lamination y'
near
Y ignear U .
Proof: You can see this from train track approximations. This also follows from the uniqueness of the realization of
y
uncrumpled surfaces realizing laminations converging to
a surface realizing
.
on an uncrumpled surface, since y
must converge to
9.h.h
y .
Consider now a typical path
Y t 6'
771%O .
The path
Yt
is likely to
consist mostly of essentially complete laminations, so that a family of
uncrumpled surfaces
continuous.
Ut
realizing
Yt
would he usually (with respect to t)
At a countable set of values of t ,
Yt
is likely to be
essentially incomplete, perhaps having a single complementary quadrilateral.
9.h2
Ut-
Then the left and right hand limits
and
Ut+
would probably exist, and
give uncrumpled surfaces realizing the two essential completions of
Yt
In fact, we will show that any path "generic" path in
which
.
can be perturbed slightly to give a
the only essentially incomplete laminations are ones
with precisely two distinct completions.
In order to speak of generic paths,
we need more than the topological structure of
9.5.8
Yt
Wm. 177;?
911417th Er;
777x43 .
canonical PL
(piecewise linear )
structures.
2m:
We must check that changes of the natural coordinates coming from
(pp
maximal train tracks proof for
Let
W280
y
8.59 -
8.60) are piecewise linear. We will give the
; the proof for
77132
is obtained by appropriate modifications.
be any measured geodesic lamination in
WXOS) .
Let
Tl
and
2 be maximal compactly supported train tracks carrying Y , defining and the from neighborhoods of y to convex subsets coordinate systems 'r
o1
of
En
(consisting of measures on
approximation
”wall“
name‘slul.“
0
of
Y
Tl
is carried by
and
1'1
12)
and
. A close enough train track
12 .
9.1+3 The set of measures on a go linearly to measures on
Tl
and
1'2 _.
is a maximal compact train track supporting a measure, we are done
4’2 0 ¢Zl
of coordinates
is linear near
alwazs
Otherwise, we can find a finite set of enlargements of so that every element of a neighborhood of y
oi
- the change
. (In particular, note that if y
y
is essentially complete, change of coordinates is
of the
If a
linear at
o ,
.
y )
cl ,..., a
,
is closely approximated by one
. Since every element of a neighborhood of y is carried by
2 , it follows that (if the approximations are good enough ) each ' carried ' by 11 and 1'2 . Each oi defines a convex polyhedron of the al. is 1 and
1'
1:
431
which is mapped linearly by neighborhood of
9.5.9
m.
coefficients.
y
and
¢2
, so
¢2 o (bil
must be PL
in a
.
It is immediate that change of coordinates involves only rational
In fact, with more care
integral linear structure.
77%
and
77560
can be given a peicewise
To do this, we can make use of the set
'9"
of
integer-valued measures supported on finite collections of simple closed curves
(in the case of
GI.n Z
‘7”)?0) ; .9
is analogous to the integral lattice in
consists of linear transformations of
lattice. The set
V.r
u(bi)
>
En
.
which preserve the integral
of measures supported on a given train track
subset of some linear subspace V C linear inequalities
En
mm
1
is the
which satisfies a finite number of
0 . Thus
V1
is the convex hull of a finite
number of lines, each passing through an integral point. The integral points
in U
are closed under integral linear combinations (when such a combination is
9.1.1. in U)
, so they determine an integral linear structure which is preserved
whenever
U is mapped linearly to another coordinate system.
Note in particular that the natural transformations
of‘7flgi,o
are volume-
preserving.
The structure on
(jfif
and
(?G£o
is a piecewise integral projective
structure. We will use the abbreviations
PIL
PIP
and
for piecewise
integral linear and piecewise integral projective.
9.5.10.
Definition . The rational depth of an element
of the space of rational linear functions vanishing on any natural local coordinate system. From I
9.5.8
and
Y
e'szfo
is the dimension
Y , with respect to
9.5.9 ,
it is clear
that the rational depth is independent of coordinates.
9.5.11. Egg i' iop. I_f
Y has rational depth 0 , then Y
E assentially
C omnlete .
m
For any Y
ejhޣo
which is not essentially complete we must
a rational linear function vanishing on Y . Let
T
construct
be some train track
approximation of Y which can be enlarged and still admit a positive measure.
It is clear that the set of measures on r spans a proper rational subspace in any natural coordinate system coming from a train track which carries
(Note that measures
on
T
.
consist of positive linear combinations of integral
measures, and that every lamination carried by
not carried by r.)
T
r
is approximable by one
9.145 9.5.12. figpositigg . _I;
y
e777£0_ has rational depth
1 , then either
Y i_s essentially emulate _o_r- Y has precisely two essential completions. I_n this case,
new;
A. Y Egg closed
afl
3 2n .
1r
unless
m , a_nd_a_l_J= complementgy regions have
Y
Lara i_so_nl_ygz£ fish—n with
E oriented a]:
there are two. Such
a punctured
area (S) =
_
area
21f
1m , in which case
5 region i_s fie;g fladrilateral g
bigon .
Or 9; B . Y
has precisely one closed leaf
YO
has area
l.
S i_s a punctured torus
or 2.
Yo (a)
YO
. Each region touching
21r . Either
touches two regions , each
or (b)
a on
pointed crown £5devils cap. or (c)
9.h6 Suppose Y has rational depth 1 and is not essentially complete.
Let
'r
set
Tl
be a close train track approximation of
,..., Tk
approximate and let
V0,
of essentially complete enlargements of
every
Y'
in a neighborhood of Y . Let
be its coordinate system. The set of
measures carried by a given proper subtrack of a
space of
Va
. Since
set of measures
(If
Y . There is some finite
Vt.
Ti
which closely
a carry all the
carried on any
Ti
is a proper rational
positive on all branches of
Ti
VT
Y would come from a. measure
) . Since this works for any degree of
approximation of nearby laminations, Y
9.5.h
sub—
V-r , the
must consist of one side of
VT. intersected both sides, by convexity
ri's
corresponding to
is in a unique proper rational subspace,
Y
A review of the proof of
Y
t
has precisely two essential completions.
gives the list of possibilities for
Y€7W°£O
with precisely two essential completions. The ambiguity in the essential completions comes from the
manner of
and the direction of spiralling
dividing a quadrilateral or other region,
around a geodesic.
9.h7 Remark . There are good examples of Y but are essentially
complete. The
6777090
which have large rational depth
construction will occur naturally in
another context.
We return to the construction of continuous families of surfaces in a hyperbolic
3—manifold. To each essentially incomplete Y e
jfifi£o
- parameter
Us
depth 1 , we associate a l
family of surfaces
of rational
, with
U0
U1 being the two uncrumpled surfaces realizing Y . US is constant where U0 and U1 agree, including the union of all triangles and punctured and
monogons in the complement of
S
—
Y
Y . The two images of any quadrilateral in
form an ideal tetrahedron. Draw the common perpendicular p to the two
triangulate the quadrilateral with h triangles by l ’ adding a vertex in the middle, and let this vertex run linearly along p',
edges not in U 17 U
0
from
U0
to Ul . This extends to a homotopy of S
The two images of any punctured bigon in
the generating curve parabolic.
S
Y
straight on the triangles
form a solid torus, with
The union of the two essential completions in
this punctured bigon gives a triangulation except in a neighborhood of the
9.h8 puncture, with two new vertices at intersection points of added leaves.
“!vA
‘
“
Draw the common perpendiculars to edges of the realizations corresponding to these intersection points, and homotope
U0
to
Ul
by moving the added
vertices linearly along the common perpendiculars.
When
Y has a closed leaf
Yo
have added leaves spiralling around homotoped to
Ul
, the two essential completions of Y
Y0 in opposite directions. Uo
through surfaces with added vertices on
Y0
.
can be
9.19 Note that all the surfaces
Us
point on
Us
constructed above have the property that any
Us
is in the convex hull of a small circle about it on
i -l : curvature -l
particular, it has curvature
. In
everywhere except
singular vertices, where negative curvature is concentrated.
m.
9.5.13.
bnerbolic 3—manifold
Given any complete
s[s a) , there _i_s_g proper g s 39 .. i_nE.
tame and E cut off _‘qya merbolic surface
m. in
WAD
the
Yi
segment
s[8,a)x[o,o)~
F:
homotopy
VT
Let
0(8)
9
be a natural coordinate system for a neighborhood of
, and choose a sequence
slightly. so that the path
te [i , i+l]
0 or 1 . Let
Yt
N
N with geometrically
Ut
a(E) . Perturb
limiting on
[O _
S' has only one sheet
J
- it is
a homeomorphism.
Let Q be the geometric limit of any subsequence of the
Ni
. N is a
Q . Every boundary component of the convex hull M
covering space of
Mi
is the geometric limit of boundary components of the
of N
; consequently, M
covers the convex hull of Q . This covering can have only finitely many sheets, since M
-P
is made of a compact part together with geometrically
infinite tame ends. Any element
[k 1 l]
a, E
le
has some finite
power ck E
1T1N
. In any torsion-free subgroup of PSL (2 , E) , an element has at
most one
kth
of elements
(by consideration of axes). If we write a as the limit
root
pi(gi)
constant so a
, gig
r1 N0
,
by this remark,
is actually in the algebraic limit
converges strongly to
p
gi must be eventually
wlN
. Q = N , and pi
.
Ni
A cusp-preserving homeomorphism from N to some
, hence to
No
,
can be constructed by using an approximate isometry of N' with a sub—manifold of
to
Ni - Pi
N1
, for
high enough
i . The image of N'
is homotopy equivalent
, so the fundamental group of each boundary component of N' must
map surjectively, as well as injectively, to the fundamental group of the neighboring component of into
Ni
(Ni , Pi)
- N' .
This implies that the map of N'
extends to a homeomorphism from N
There is a special case remaining.
constructed in N
-P
to
Ni
.
If any pair of the surfaces
is homot0pic, perform all such homotopies.
Si
Unless
N
-P
9-58
8N0 - Po .
is homotopy equivalent to a product, the argument continues as before is no reason the cover of
When N then by 8
-P
Si
must be a connected component of
standard
argument
NO - P0 must be homeomorphic to Si 9.2 .
the case essentially dealt with in
ends of N
-P
Si
is homotopy equivalent to the oriented surface
laminations of the two ends of
Ni - Pi
in it,
I . This is
The difficulty is to control both
9.2
7 but the argument of
X
there
shows that the ending or bending
cannot converge to the same
x1
lamination, otherwise the limit of some intermediate surface would realize
.
9.6.la
59.7.
nggizatiggs _of geodesig Emily :9; surface gpoups with extra cusps,
with_a.
WW— on Minates .
In order to analyze geometric convergence, and algebraic convergence in more general cases, we need to clarify our understanding of realizations of geodesic laminations for a discrete faithful representation
group
«1(8)
Let N =
when certain non-peripheral elements of
Np«ls
be the quotient
"top"
N+
y_ be the (possibly empty) cusp loci and
51-
,..., Sk-
the components of
-P ,
where
are parabolic,
§8.ll , we may embed S in N ,
and the
for
S
N+
- 7+
hyperbolic structures with finite area). Let denote the ends of N
"1(8)
of a surface
3-manifold. Equip S with a complete
hyperbolic structure with finite area. As in cutting it in two pieces, the
9
"bottom" N_ . Let
and
N_ , and
and S
Elr
- Y-
,..., EJ+
Y+
denote by
and
81+ ,..., Sj+
(endowed with complete and
El—
,..., Ek-
P is the union of horoball neighborhoods
9-59 of all cusps.
A compactly supported lamination on
e(Ei+)
S . In particular,
Si+
or
Ei+
S for
.
W . g lamination yeiiow) contains g cammnent g Y+ . a component E c(Ei_) . 9.7.1.
If y
defines a lamination on
may be thought of as a lamination on
each geometrically infinite tame end
Proof.
Si—
i_s realizable i_g N Y_.
.
iff y
and-a a(Ei+) gr;
contains any unrealizable lamination, it is unrealizable,
so the necessity of the condition is immediate.
Let
y'
c’7NE?o(s)
be any unrealizable compactly supported measured
lamination. If y is not connected, at least one of its components is unrealizable, so we need only consider the case that
y
has zero intersection number with any components of
7+
is connected. If y or
y_ , we may cut
S along this component, obtaining a simpler surface S' . Unless y component of
7+
covering space of
of
or
y_
in question,
N corresponding to
S' are parabolic, so we
is the
8' supports y , so we pass to the
NlS'
. The new boundary components
have made an inductive reduction of this case.
We may now suppose that y has positive intersection number with each component of
7+
and
y_ . Let
{8i}
be a sequence of measures, supported
on simple closed curves non-parabolic in' N which converges to Y . Let
{Ui}
be a sequence of uncrumpled surfaces realizing the
Si
. If
Ui
penetrates
9.60 far into a component of P
corresponding to an element
a
in
7+
or y_ ,
then it has a large ball mapped into P ; by area considerations, this ball
on
Ui
of c
must have a short closed loop, which can only be in the homotopy class
.
Then the ratio
£S(Bi)/ i(Bi,
a.)
is large. Therefore (since i(y , a)
Ui
iUi(Bi)/i(Bi,c)
;
is positive and
18(7)
is finite) the
, away from their cusps, remain in a bounded neighborhood of N
N . If
Y+
so that any
-P
in
(say) is non-empty, one can now find a compact subset K of N
Ui
By the proof of
intersecting
8.8.5 ,
P
intersect K
if infinitely many
Ui
intersected K , there would
be a convergent subsequence, contradicting the non-realizability of y . The only remaining possibility is that we have reached, by induction, the case that
either
N+
or N
has no extra cusps, and
y
is an ending lamination.
Y€i& (S)
A general lamination
is obtained from a possibly empty
lamination which admits a compactly supported measure by the addition of
(Let 5 C Y be the maximal lamination
finitely many non-compact leaves.
supporting a positive transverse measure.
5 or go to
each end must come close to
enlarge
If w
2. is any leaf in Y
in
is realizable iff
5 is .
The picture of unrealizable laminations in
A+
S , otherwise one could
6 . By area considerations, such leaves are finite in number.) From
58.10 , Y
Let
-6,
@f o(S)
is the following.
consist of all projective classes of transverse measures (allowing
x+ = Y+ U U 1 a(E.1+)
degenerate non-trivial cases) on a coordinate system
VT
coming from any train track
.
1:
A+ is convex.in carrying
x+
.
To see a larger, complete, picture, we must find a larger natural coordinate system. This requires a little stretching of our train tracks and imaginations.
In fact, it is possible to find coordinate systems which are quite large. For any
Y€
(1pr ,
let
AY C. 6’30
denote the set of projective classes of
measures on Y
9.7.2.
Mam .
of train tracks
—- natural of
Ti ,
Let
where
coordinate systems
b_e essentially complete . There i_s_a_
Y
i_s_ carried by
Ti
5Y
= Ui v11
‘L'i+1
sequence
, such that the union
— 6765 0 -
contains all g
A 'Y .
The proof will be given presently.
Since
I. 1
is carried by
1+1 , the inclusion V Ti C V Ti+l
1'.
is a projective
9.62 map
(In
Wflo ,
the inclusion is linear) . Thus
SY
comes naturally
equipped with a projective structure. We have not made this analysis, but
AY
=
the typical case is that Y
We think of
SY
as a stereographic
coordinate system, based on projection from Y . (You may imagine as a convex polyhedron in
IRn
, so that
WEE/O
changes of stereographic coordinates
are piecewise projective, although this finite-dimensional picture cannot be strictly correct, since there is no fixed subdivision .sufficient to make all
coordinate changes.)
’Y
57 9.7.3. Corolla. will be computed in
Proof.
65f. o(S) )
t_oa Sphere. (whose dimension
_i_s_
.
(9.7.29 9.7.3) Let Y
lamination. Let
E‘ 9.7.h) The only projective structure on
n > 1 , is the standard one, since
Sn
is simply connected.
S11
, when
The binary
relation of antipodality is natural in this structure. What would be the
antipodal lamination for a simple closed curve
at o ,
Remark
the Dehn twist around
When
? It is easy to construct
but moving any other given lamination.
a diffeomorphism fixing a i (Y , a)
a
63» O(S)
quadruply punctured sphere)
is
, the
a. will do.)
l—dimensional
PIP
(If
9.7.h.
(S = punctured torus or
structure does come from a projective
2P1 . The natural transformations of 073‘ o(S) are necessarily integral - in PSL2 ( Z ) . structure, equivalent to
Proof region
Ri
IR
g 9.7.2. Don't of
S
blink.
Let Y be essentially complete. For each
- Y , consider a smaller
with finite points, rotated so its points
very slightly through the sides of
Bi
,
region
ri
of the same shape but
alternate with cusps of ending on a leaf of
Y .
R1
and pierce
9.6h
fi—L
By
9.5.h , 9.5.2
so the regions
S
- Y - Uiri
ri
and
ri
9.3.9 ,
both ends of each leaf of
separate leaves of Y into arcs. Each region of
muSt be a rectangle with two edges on
covers the "interesting" part of
Bi
Collapse all rectangles, identifying the
a surface
I
3r;
and two on Y , since
. (Or, prove this by area, x) .
ri
edges with each other, and obtain
S' homotopy-equivalent to S , made of
to a train track
Y are dense in Y ,
Uiri
. (Equivalently, one may think of S
, where
- Uiri
ari
projects
as made of
very wide corridors, with the horizontal direction given approximately by
Y) .
9.65 If we take shrinking sequences of obtain a sequence of train tracks
T.)
Tk
carries
when
j > k
13
. Let
regions
ri,j
in this manner, we
which obviously have the property that
Y' e
6:. o(S) - AY
be any lamination
not topologically equivalent to Y . From the density in Y of
Y , it follows that whenever leaves of Y
and
Y'
of ends of leaves
cross, they cross
at an angle. There is a lower bound to this angle. It also follows that
Y
LIY'
cuts S into pieces which are compact exc
S .
for cusps of
”Y
9L:
7' When
R1
is an asymptotic triangle, for instance, it contains exactly one
‘region of S
- Y - Y'
which is a hexagon, and all other regions of S
are rectangles. For sufficiently high changing the leaves of
follows
’Y
F
Y'
j , the
r13 can be isotoped, without
Y which they touch, into the complement of
projects nicely to
- Y - Y'
Y'
. It1
rJ
’Y 7' 9.7.2. I
9.66 Stereographic coordinates give a method for computing and understanding
intersection number.
measure
Y
The transverse measure for Y projects to a "tangential"
vY on each of the train tracks
Ti
- transverse length of the sides of the
: i.e., u (b) is the Y
rectangle projecting to
b .
b
It is clear that for any a a
777£0
which is determined by a. measure
u“
011':
i
9.7-3
i(a
.Y)
Thus, in the coordinate system
I):
ua(b) -vY(b)
VT i
in
Wg-o
, intersection with Y is a
linear function.
To make this observation more useful, we can reverse the process of finding a family of
"transverse" train
tracks
Ti
depending on a lamination Y .
9.6? Suppose we are given an essentially complete train track
, and a non-negative
T
function (or "tangential" measure) v on the branches of b , subject only to the triangle inequalities
a +b
Whenever
_
in
S .
-c
a + c
a , b and c
-r .
regions
3_ O
-b
O
b + c
-a
3_ 0
are the total v-lengths of the sides of any triangle it
We shall construct a "train track" 1 dual to r , where we permit ' * 1 to be bigons as well as ordinary types of admissible regions of S
let us call
a
1
—
track.
a
Q t l LLLT\
fitsjturecj
SP‘he‘re Ta:
*-
1
is constructed by shrinking each region
obtain a region points are
branches
R: i
—)
on.
on.
"transverse"
. If we drop the restriction that the measure
9'72 on
Ti
on
1:j
on
1'1
is non-negative, still it often pushes forward to a positive measure
.
The image of
SY
is the set of such arbitrary
which eventually become positive when pushed far enough forward.
For
Y' e
AY
9.7.6. W .
, let
vy,
-
1: >
be a "tangential" measure on
11 pp
0 .
(Note that the functions
vY,
In particular, note that if coordinates for
sY
The image Q
necessarily positive , measures
vY
"transverse" measures
7”)? 0
-
Tl
“Y"
AY
= Y
-
k-simplex, then the image of
int
(Ak)
x
u are distinct
AY
for
,
Y' a! Y"
$7
for
We}; 0
fid'fo
the image is
IRn
Ime—
Emu-36 SA“-
The condition that
intersection number
If
(This image is defined only up to projective equivalence,
L
Proof.
.)
is of the form.
until a normalization is made).
711A”?
not
, the image of stereographic
is a half-space, or for
is a
Y'g
Y'
defining
939.11"transverse'' ,
such that forall
u and
AY
Ian-k .
i_sthe set
Tl _
VY'
i(Y' , Y") for
-u Y
>
e
0 is clearly necessary:
AY
Y" 6
SY
is bilinear
9.73 and
given by the formula
i(Y'
vY
.Y") u
Consider any transverse measure
Ti
nonrpositive when pushed forward to
such that the push-forward of
for high
u
HY" on
.
11 Let
u
such that
bi
be a branch of
is non-positive on
bi
i , comes from a very long and thin rectangle
pi .
average transverse counting measures of one of the sides of
pi in a natural way to
of the
pi . To make
13*
for 1
j
5.1
.
carries
in a narrow corridor around 1 , so that branches of a a is obtained by squeezing do not pass through switches of o . Now
To see this, embed a
bi
'There is a
limit
(In general, whenever an essentially complete train track l* a train track carries T 0 , then a
I
Ti
. This branch
standard construction for a transverse measure coming from a
this more concrete, one can map
is always
a
all intersections of branches of
*
T
.
with a Slnglebranch of
.
o to a Single
point, and then eliminating any bigons contained in a single region of
S
- o .)
9.7h
1:1
On
, pi
pi
times
is a finite but very long path.
The average number of
it
Tl
tranverses a branch of
gives a function
vi
which almost
satisfies the switch condition, but not quite. Passing to a limit point of
{vi}
one obtains a
-
v
single branch
CY
bi
at
Ti
of
Y'
ZY
. The
#3? 0(5)
(bi)
u
, and
consist of laminations
arbitrary element of
Y
Y'
i(Y , Y') = 0
such that
not intersecting
Y
a
Y
is disjoint from the support of
i-e-a
. An
CY , together with some measure
is an element of
c untaining
Y
is a simple closed curve and
of
Y'
consist of
ZY
withgygfngg canonical
i_s convex . (In
Suffices to give the proof in
X
777360
«WHQO . First
= Vr ,
or $660) . consider the case
for some train track
Y . Pass to the cylindrical covering space C of
group generated by track
, for all i
.
Pm;- It carrying
1;?-
same symbols will be used to denote the images of these sets in
coordinatesystems X
Y
, whose lamination topo-
0 .
i(I) and
_>
i(I)
w(I)
for all subintervals I ‘
_jZn.
Tenibme‘mlei'r arTcron—le‘H' _‘
Q >>O
‘
L-hX
l-n
E‘s-(ea dum
r
\F
l
I
L
0 suchthat
sure snace
9".
T1(M)
t>T,a_.n_cl
is recurrent.
x;\.16¢t(A) (A flow
¢t
and a
.)
on a mea-
(X,u) is recurrent when for every measurable set A.C:X. pf
measure and
..(A ߢt(A)) >
every
T
>
0 there is a t
>
T such that
o .>
(d) The geodesic flow on
T1(M)
ergodic
Note that in the case M has finite volume, recurrence of the geodesic flow is immediate (from the Poincare recurrence lemma). The ergodicity of the geodesic flow in this case was proved by Eberhard Hopf, in [Hopf, The idea of
] .
(c) ———+ (d) goes back to Hopf, and has been developed more
generally in the theory of Anesov flows {Anosov,
] .
9.9-2.
9.9.2.
If the geodesic flow is not
Corollgz
ergodic.
there is a
non-constant bounded suoerharmonic function on M . Proof of 9.9.2. _ Consider the Green's function g(x) = ,
for hyperbolic space.
By (a), the series which projects to (where arctan
a
(This is a harmonic function
2
g o y
1-
.
813
d(x,xo)
blows up at
nt dt
h
no .)
converges to a function, invariant by y ,
afar En's function
= n/2)
which
I.
G for M . The function f = arctan G
is a bounded superharmcnic function, since arctan is
convex. Remark
The
convergence of the
series of (a) is actually equivalent to
the existence of a Green's function on M ,
and also equivalent to the existence of
a bounded superharmonic function. See [Ahlfors and Sario,
case n = 2 , and
IE
] for the general case.
909'3. Corollfl.
E r is a geometricallz tame Kleinian geodesic flow on T1(sn/r) is ergodic iff LT = 82 . Proof
9.9.3.
] for the
From 9.9.2 and
8.12.3.
gone, the
9.9.3.
B
Sullivan's proof of 9.9.1 makes use of the theory of Brownian motion
on
MP
. This approach is conceptually simple, but takes a certain amount
of technical background (or faith). Our proof will be phrased directly in terms of geodesics, but a basic underlying idea is that a geodesic behaves like a random path:
its future is "nearly" independent of its past.
r
9.9—2a.
.l I«
fil
r
J! ‘. 5"“: 555644”
,.
Pa ’C 5
Geodesics with nearly identical pasts can have very different futures.
r;,LL-lUv“ - c24.
9.9-3. (d) -* (c). This is a general fact. If a flow
measure,
Li ¢t(B)
section with A
is not recurrent,
of positive measure such that only for t in.scme bounded
there is some set A
interval is u(At1
¢t
¢t(A))
>
0 . Then for any subset B C A of small enough
is an invariant subset which is proper, since its inter-
is proper.
(c) —* (b). Immediate.
(b) —r (a). Let B be any ball in
where
r = “1M . For the
an , and consider its orbit
r3
series of (a) to diverge means precisely that the
x0 3 En
total apparent area of PB as seen from a point
, (measured with
multiplicity) is infinite.
In general, the underlying space of a flow surable parts, X
= D U R , where ¢t
is decomposed into two
mea-
is dissipative on D (the union of all
subsets of X which eventually do not return) and recurrent on R . The reader may check this elementary fact. If the recurrent part of the geodesic flow is non-empty, there is some ball B in
M11
sure of the tangent vectors to points of B
give rise to geodesics that intersect B
infinitely often.
such that a set of positive mea-
This clearly implies that the series of
(a) diverges.
The idea of the reverse implication (a) -> (b) is this: if the geodesic flow is dissipative.there are points
x0
such that a positive pro-I
portion of the visual sphere is not covered infinitely often by images of
some ball. Then for gagh "group" of geodesics that return to B, a definite proportion must eventually escape rB , because future and past are nearly independent. The series of (a) can be regrouped as a geometric progression,
so it converges. We now make this more precise.
Recall that the term "visual sphere" at rays" emanating from
x0.
x0
is a synonym to the
"set of
It has a metric and a measure obtained from its iden-
tification with the unit sphere in the tangent space at
x0 ,
9.9-4. Let
x0 a Mr1
be any point and B C
portion of the rays emanating from
1:0
M‘n
any ball.
If a positive pro-
pass infinitely often through B ,
then for a slightly larger ball B' , a definite proportion of the rays emanating from 21 point
x e
M11
spend an infinite amount of time in B' ,
since the rays through 1 are parallel to rays through
a subset of
T1(B')
x0
. Consequently,
of positive measure consists of vectors whose geodesics
spend an infinite total time in
T1(B')
; by the Poincare
recurrence lemma,
the set of such vectors is a recurrent set for the geodesic flow. (b)
holds so
(a) ——r(b)
is valid in this case.
To prove (a) —* (b),
it remains to consider the case that almost every ray from
1:0
eventually
escapes B ; we will prove that (a) fails, i,_e,—.,-_t'h.e. series of (a) converges. Replace B by a slightly smaller ball. Now almost every ray from al—
most every point x e M eventually escapes the ball. Equivalently, we have a ball B C through at
an
such that for every point x
intersects I'B , or even
P(NE(B))
5
En
, almost no geodesic
, more than a finite number
of times.
Let x0 be the center of B and let a be the infinum, for y 2 En , of the diameter of the set of rays from xO which are parallel to rays from y which intersect B . This infinum is positive, and very rapidly approached
as y moves away from
1:0 .
9.9 5 Let R be large enough so that for every ball of diameter greater than a
x0
in the visual sphere at
intersect
I'NE(B)
, at most (say) half of the rays in this ball
at a distance greater than R from
x0
. B should also
be reasonably large in absolute terms andin comparison to the diameter of B.
Let x0 be the center of B . Choose a subset I'l c I‘ of elements such that! (i) For every 7 e I‘ there is a ‘1'. e I" with d(y'xo,yx0)
0 .
'31
and
Let us consider what I must look like near aa
B1 x 32 .
If
y
is a "large" element of
1'
such that 7x is near x , then. the preimage by Y of a product of small
e-ball
around Yxl
and
of one of the factors," in one direction mately
:2 .)
7x2 (x1 x
is
one of two types: it is a thin neighborhood
32) or
(231 x x2)
or the other along an
Since
.
(Y must be a translation
axis from approximately
I'. is recurrent, almost every point x a
1.1
to approxi-
El x 32
-s
the
9.9-8. preimage by elements 7 of both types, of an infinite rather of points where
I‘ has density 0 or 1 . Define
x1
f(xl) =
[32 xICnyxz) dx2 _, who...
is the characteristic function of I, for
:1 a B1 (using a.
on B ).' By the above, for almost every a, there are arbismall. intervals aromd xi such that the average of f _nthat in-
probability measure trarfly
terval is either 0 or .1 . Therefore f is a characteristic function, so
I 0 Bl
x
B2
is of the tom
3
x
32
(up to a set of measure zero) for
someset
sc:1al . Similarly,'i'.- isofthefon
(In; to a set of measure zero).
]l A[
B. XB,_so
31x32 9.9.1 U
I is either ¢>
Tx (H3) .
coming from orthogonal projection
to take care of covariant tensor
fields, like vector fields, and contravariant tensor fields, like differential forms and quadratic forms, aswell as tensor fields of mixed type. The visual average of any tensor field T
on
H3 .
on
Si
is thus a tensor field
In general, avT needs to be modified
by a
avT, of the same type,
constant to give it the
right boundary behaviour.
We need some formulas, in order to make computations in the upper half-space
Let x be a point in upper half-space, at Euclidean height h above
model.
the bounding plane hits
a
a.
A geodesic through x at angle 9 from the vertical
at a distance r = h cotangent (9 / 2) from the foot
perpendicular from x to
c.
.3
20
of the
Thus, dr = sphere at
- mlo‘ csc2 56 d9
x to
SE
u
h
is Lebesgue measure on
Any tensor T at the point 9
S;
= 0'.
by the maps
9(-
1
and
2
r -2 (h+—h) do (1'.
Vx
and
is visual measure at
x
x pushes out to a tensor field
Tm
on
X is a vector, then
Xan
is a
p* . When
holomorphic vector field, with derivative
TX
Since the map from the visual
is conformal, it follows that
de where
- % (h + 1'?) d9 .
=
iHX“
at its zeros. To see this, let
be the vector field representing the infinitesimalisometry of translation
in the direction X . The claim is that geometrically when
X
X”
=
is at the center in the
TX I S0° .
Poincare
This may be seen
disk model.
K a. flxis circ‘e \
PP.
'
(01
‘->.
\,
u
Alternatively, if X
§
.n
_‘i
aT-ra ;:1
ra‘
Q
‘5
is a vertical unit vector in upper half space, then we can
compute that
a . X..=-Sm9m= where
20
h
sine
§.—2— Sin 9/2
orB
B
B
In
is the foot of the perpendicular from x
(Z'zo)ez':
to C: . This clearly agrees
with the corresponding infinitesimal isometry.
(As a "physical" vector field,
is the same as the unit horizontal vector
,
ield
this notation is that the differential operators
on holomorphic functions:
g , a: § 3% on
and
§z
. The reason for have the same action
they are directional derivatives in the appropriate
Even though the complex notation may at first seem obscure it is useful
direction.
because it makes it meaningful to multiply vectors by complex numbers.)
=
where
Tx(H3) ,
g _is the standard inner product on
When
Y1 Y2 '
then
2 -2
r_
1
.
is the izmer product of two vectors on
a
m
.
Let us now compute av ( F ). By symmetry considerations, it is clear that .
av (
g2 )
is a' horizontal vector field, parallel to
8;
vector of unit hyperbolic length, parallel to
g
. Let
at a point
e be the
x in upper half-
space. Then
em: --2£h-(Z-Zo-h)(Z-Zo+h)
382'
e
e /.\
L
Wehave
3 5V3;
$1;er (5;)av $2
soavsa; e‘fifge,
=EfRe(-:(Z-ZO)
'3)de
CL
1
1
2 'h)16 2
2 -1+
r_ (h+h)
d“
(1
Clearly, by symmetry, the term involving Re (z
—
2 .
zo)
.
integrates to zero, so we ha'.
%ff
av(a)
8h
O
0
r2-3m
2h2
(h+—)l h o
i
bul .)
(
we
h
§z
Note that the hyperbolic norm of av
goes to
99
as h
O , while the
—-)
Euclidean norm is the constant 2
3
We now introduce the fudge factor by defining the extension of a vector field
X on
82
to be
an
ex (X) and
arm 11.1.1
E
Proposition.
X
E
When
av(X) in
x
on
H3
s:
E continuous
X
ho lomornhic , then ex(X)
Proof.
=
%
or Lipschitz ,
, then so
ex(X) .
is an infinitesimsl isometry.
X is an infinitesimaltranslation of E , then ex(X) is the
1
same infinitesimal translation of upper half-space. Thus every "parabolic" vector fiel:
,-;
i. a zero of order 2) on (With
--..._.__._---
J
9 S;
_
extends to the correct infinitesimal isometry.
A general holomorphic vector field on
Si
_
_ _
is of the form
9
_.
(az' + bz + o)
$-
on
(I:
"Since such a vector field can be expressed as a linear combination of the parabolic '
.
vector fields
o—za
,
2
2
a F2
and
(z
- 1)2 Fz'a
.
.
it follows that every holomorphic
vector field extends to the correct infinitesimal isometry. Suppose X
H3
is continuous, and consider any sequence
converging to a point at
on
. Bring
xi
[
xi
} of points in
back to the origin 0 by the translati;
.
1.1.6
Ti
along the line
a:
. If
neighborhood of the endpoint yi
all the sphere-
11* X
point to yi
, so
that for any
8
”11,3 - Pill s ).i
where
.
s:
is close to
Ti
,
from
of the geodesic
spreads a small
O to
xi
over almost
is large on most of the sphere, except near the antipodal
it is close to a parabolic vector field
, and
s
xi
Pi ,
in the sense
1,
sufficiently high
T-LX "L
- xi ,
is the norm of the derivative of
parabolic vector field agreeing with
Ti*X
Ti
Pi
at yi . Here
is the
at yi , and O at the antipodal
point of yi . It follows that
exX so X
BB3 .
is continuous along
you see
the. evidence).
Suppose now that X
(xi)
-
X(yi)
-—-)
0 ,
Continuity in the interior is self-evident
is a vector field on
SE
C
E3
(if
which has a global
Lipschitz constant
k =
Then the translates
11* X
vmr' GS
“H
X
- Xy H l
y
v
-y'
H
satisfy
H where
sup 2
Ti, x
Pi ll 5
B
B is some constant independent of i . This may be seen
by
considering
stereographic projection from the antipodal point of yi . The part of the image
of X
11*
- 1:73; P. 1
i
in the unit disk is Lipschitz and vanishes at the origin.
is applied, the resulting vector field on
When
C: satisfies a linear growth
condition (with a uniform growth constant). This shows that, on
JI [
52
H 71* X - Pi”
,
is uniformly bounded in all but a neighborhood of the
,
antipodal point of Y
ex r,* l
at the
-
P.(x.)” l l -< B3 u.IL , where u.1 is the norm origin in B , or 1 / Xi up to a bounded
“i
Since
it follows that
is on the order of the
1'
Si .
be a translation as before taking x to O
vector field approximating
1*X .
xi
B3 ,
1*
B3 .
that
x . Since the vector fields
'
7;]- P
Si
consider x e B3
,
obtained in this
ex(1'*X
- P)
By comparison with the
- 1,11 P)
at an arbitrary
are uniformly Lipschitz, it follows
Si
(l
of a uniformly Lipschitz vector field
is not necessarily uniformly Lipschitz
This is explained by the
example.
on
,
X is globally Lipschitz.
Note that the stereOgraphic image in on
l
can be taken to be a similarity, we obtain
a uniform bound on the local Lipschitz constant for ex(X point
171
from yi
way are uniformly bounded, so it is clear that the vector fields
upper half-space model, where
-
, and P a parabolic
1*X - P
The vector fields
have a uniform Lipschitz constnat at the origin in
X(xi)
factor.
(Euclidean) distance of
ex X is Lipschitz along
ex
of the derivative of
To see that ex X has a global Lipschitz constant in and let
H
Then
where boundedness is obvious.
and on
field on
B3
large
0'. near the point at
an
—
consider
H3 ,
,
for
deviation of the covariant derivatives
. Similarly, a uniformly Lipschitz vector
is not generally uniformly Lipschitz on
the curvature of
22 3%
H3 .
In fact, because of
a uniformly Lipschitz vector field on
E3
must be bounded;
3
such vector fields correspond precisely to those Lipschitz vector fields on B which vanish on
633 .
’PQV'Q\‘e"
J
51
HQ.
11.8
A hyperbolic parallel vector fiel; along a curve near S°° appears to turn rapidly.
°°
eodcsk The significance of the Lipschitz condition stems from the elementary fact that Lipschitz vector fields are uniquely integrable. Thus, any isotopy
of the boundary of a Kleinian manifold
ht
derivative
' /
to an isotopy ex ‘
proog that
.9
,
OF- = (B3 - LP) / P
is Lipschitz as a vector field on
¢t
on
of .
IX
whose time
BOP
extends canonically
One may see this most simply by observing that the
ex X is Lipschitz works locally.
A k-guasi- isometric vector field is a vector field whose flow,
distances
njmff must
mt
¢t
distorts
at a rate of at most k . In other words, for all x , y and t satisfy
-kt e
d(x,v)
S d(vtx,¢tv) 5
en d(x,y)
A' k-Lipschitz vector field on a Riemannian manifold is k-quasi-isometric. In fact, a Lipschitz vector field X on
isometric as a vector field on of the origin in
B3 .
H3
To see this
B3
which is tangent to
int
B3 .
for an
BB3
is quasi-
This is clear in a neighborhood
arbitrary point
x , approximate X
near x by a parabolic vector field, as in the proof of 11.1.1, and translate
x to the origin.
In particular, if then ex
Qt
¢t
is an isotopy
of
BOP
with Lipschitz time derivative,
has a quasi-isometric time derivative, and
$1
is a quasi-isometry.
Our next step is to study the derivatives of ex X , so we can understand
how a more general isotopy such as
the definition of
T is an If X
distorts the hyperbolic metric.
From
ex X , it is clear that ex is natural, or in other words,
isometry of
T, (ex (10)
(53* X)
ex when
(pt
ex
H3
(extended to
SE
where
appropriate.)
is differentiable, we can take the derivative at
ex[Y,X]
[Y,exX]
for any infinitesimal isometry Y . If Y point on the axis of
vXYx
Y , then
VZW
covariant derivative, so
in the direction of the vector
[Y
T = id., yielding
is a pure translation and
X is any
= O . (Here, V is the hyperbolic
is the directional derivative of a vector field W
Z .) Using the formtfln.
va - VXY
, x]
we obtain
11.1.2. Proposition. The directional derivative o_f ex X in the direction fiapoint
er3,§ V
Yx
where
Yx ,
exX = ex[Y,X]
Y i_s fix grim—e_maltim—lmn with axis throgh x and value
Yx
at x.
The covariant derivative V
tangent space
Tx(H3)
Xx
,
which is a linear transformation of the
to itself, can be expressed as the sum of its symmetric
and antisymmetric parts ,
11.10
VSX
VX where
and
Va'x,
stx
r - El (VYx r
V; x
Y'
The anti-symmetric part
VaX
=
+
E1 (V& x r'
VY.
x
V&,
X
I
r)
Y)
describes the infinitesimal rotational affect of
the flow generated by X . It can be described by a vector field curl X
pointing
along the axis of the infinitesimal rotation, satisfying the equation
vgx where X
-1 — 2curlXXY
is the cross-product.
If
eo , e1 , e2
forms a positively oriented
orthonormal frame at X , the formula is
Z
curl X
(V i X
vei+l X - ei) ei+2
e.
i e Z /3
Consider now the contribution to area on
SE ,
centered at
horosphere about y fixing y
is the
ex X from the part of X
y . This part of
on an infinitesimal
ex X has constant length on each
(since the first derivative of a parabolic transformation
identity) , and it scales as
e-3t
,
t
where
is a. parameter
(Linear
measuring distance between horospheres and increasing away from y .
measurements
scale as
e-t
. Hence, there is a factor of
scaling of the apparent area from a point in
the scaling of the lengths of vectors.)
t , x1
, x2 , so
that
3x1
1
describing the
H3 , and a factor of e-t
representing
Choose positively oriented coordinates
use = at2 + .22t (dxi + dx:) ,
contribution to ex X is in the
e-2Jc
direction.
Let
and this infinitesimal
eo , el
and
e2
be unit
vectors in the three coordinate directions. The horospheres t = constant are parallel surfaces, of constant
7‘1
'7
233) ,
normal curvature 1 (like the unit sphere in V7
= V’
Ve1 eO
=
e0 e0
V
and
e9
e0
so you can see that
= V’
e0 e1
0
e0 e2
+e1 ’ Vt e1
ea ’Ve9 e2
-e0 Vt1 e2 =
-e0 ’Ve2 e1
0
0
(This information is also easy to compute by using the cartan structure equations.) The infinitesimal contribution to ex X is proportional to
Z =
e'3t el
curl Z =
_—
, so
Cve0 Z
'
el
,
-
V;
l
Z
e0 e2
-2 e ‘3t e2 .
(The curl is in the opposite sense from the curving of the flow lines because the effect of the flow speeding up on inner horospheres is
This is proportional
iX to
the contribution of
stronger.)
ex iX from the same
infinitesimal region, so we have
11.1.3 Propgsition. Curl
(ex X)
2 ex (iX) ,
Curl2
(ex X)
-h ex X
and consequently _l
.J
Div (ex X)
0
11.12
Proof. The first statement follows by integration of the infinitesimal contributions 9 to curl ex X . The second statement, curl curl ex X = 2curl ex 1 X = h ex 1' X =
-ll- ex X , is immediate. The third statement follows from the div curl Y
identity
= 0 , or by considering the infinitesimal contributions to ex X .
The differential equation the statement that symmetric part
curl2 ex X
+ ex X = O
ex f = av f is harmonic, when
I
is the counterpart to
is a function. The
f
V5 X of the covariant derivative measures
the infinitesimal
strain, or distortion of the metric, of the flow generated by X . That is, if
Y and Y' are vector fields invariant by the flow of X , so that
VYX= VXYandVY,X=VXY',sothe
[X,Y]=[X,Y']=O,then
derivative of the dot product of Y and Y'
in the direction X
,
by the
Leibniz rule, is
X(Y'Y')
ava-Y = WV?
+
y.vxIv
+
VYX
Y
2(V;X'Y') The symnetric part of V
and a part with trace 0
VSX
can be further decomposed into its effect on volume
, =
E’;1 Trace(VsX)'I
5‘0
+ VX
Here, Irepresents the identity transformation (which has trace
Note that
trace
VSX
= trace VX
divergence X
2
Va iX
3
in dimension
ei
is an orthonormal basis, so for a. vector field of the form ex X , s
VoexX.
where
VS
3 .)
Eei]
ex X =
11.13 Now let us consider the analogous decomposition of the covariant derivative
VX of a. vector field on the
VaX
VX = Define linear maps
and
5
and
(or any surface). There is a. decompositicr
Riemann sphere
3
g(traceVXH .
+
s + V O X.
of the tangent space to itself by the formulas
3x0!)
[VYX
thr)
NIH {fo
- w i
+
i
V1120
for any vector Y . (On a general surface, 1 is interpreted as a
900
counter-
clockwise rotation of the tangent space of the surface.)
11.1.1-I». Progos1tion.
BX
and
3x
5X E invariant
=
i—‘(trace VX) I
=
% 30
= V
under conformal
localcoordinates.
,VaX
[(div X)I+ (curl X)iI]
x
cbfles _o_f
metric.
Notational remark. Any vector field on __J
+
m
.
be written
The derivative of f can be written df =
This can be re-expressed interms of dz = dx + idy rand as df = f dz + f-
z
..J
X =
where
-l
z = 2
f
z
f x
-
1 f
y
d'z'
dz
6 f(z)?z
fx dx = dx
+
-
. , 1h
fy dy idy
11.11:f-z
3f =
Then
fz dz
HIN
(rx +if) Y
3f i f; d;
and
61‘. Similarly,
linear parts of the real linear map
3X
=
f; d;
i
are the complex
ear and complex conjugate
BX
=
fz dz 38;
and
are the complex linear and conjugate linear parts of the map
dX=VX. Proof.
If L:
n: —-’ m
is any real linear map,
then
-]2-'-(L-i5L°i)
.
L
PIN
(L+i°L°i)
is clearly the decomposition into its complex linear and conjugate linear parts.
A complex linear map, in matrix form
L:
'2] ,_
is an expansion followed by a b , is a symmetric -a rotation, while a. conjugate Linear map in matrix form
[1:
1
map with trace 0 .
To see that
inY
=
iVxY
Ex
is invariant under conformal changes of metric, note that
and write
3x
Exm
without using the metric as
-%
32E
[vyx
iVflX}
+
VXY
[vyx
%[[Y,X] We can now derive a nice formula for
11.1.5.
Proposition,
m mm
Y a
+
iVx iY}
ivflx
+ i[iY,X]].
V5
ex X
T2: (H3)
and a_nl
C:L
vector field X on
s:
u.15
VgexX
=
73 —1, f
S2
1*(3x'(rm)') cwx
.
M
Proof. Clearly both sides are symmetric linear maps applied to Y
to show that the equation gives the right value for
VY ex X - Y .
, so
VYexX'Y
=
ex[Yu,X]
_— .3. 817
x (where ex i Y, = 0)
[exiYa,X] 'exiYm
- , X] . iYu [le
K.) Therefore ,
vx p.
pf:
w13
d
K:
i 8n
5.
O =
2
F4
the point
Y
I
, at
,1: F
and also
SP.
Y
[Yw,X]
it suffices
From 11.1.2 ,
we have
l
”7
avx
13.1 Chapter
13
Orb ifolds
As we have had occasion to see, it is often more effective to study the quotient manifold of a group acting freely and properly discontinuously on a
space rather than to limit one's image to the group action alone.
It is time
now to enlarge our vocabulary, so that we can work with the quotient spaces of groups acting properly discontinuously but not necessarily freely. In the first place, such quotient spaces will yield a technical device useful for showing the
existence of hyperbolic structures on many 3-manifolds.
In the second place, they
are often simpler than 3-manifolds tend to be, and hence they often give easy, graphic examples of phenomena involving
3—manifolds. Finally, they are beautiful
and interesting in their own right.
13.1. Some
example5 of
u notth
sac
s.
We begin our discussion with a few examples of quotient spaces of groups acting properly discontinuously on manifolds in order to get a taste of their
geometric flavor.
13.1.1. .3 ins}; mirror. Consider the action of
22
on
The quotient space is the half-space
183
by reflection in the y
a. person in this half-space is like all of
22
symmetry.
plane.
x Z O . Physically, one may imagine a mirror
placed on the y .. z “Ta-Jr]- of the half-space x
the
-z
ZO
IRS ,
. The scene as viewed by
with
scenery
invariant by
13.2
13.1.2. _A; m $11—02. Consider the group G generated by reflections in the planes
x = l in
123 .
G is the infinite dihedral group
quotient space is the slab O
SxSl .
D”
=
x =O
22 *Z2 .
and
The
Physically, this is related to two mirrors
on parallel walls, as commonly seen in a barber shop.
13.1.3.
A billiard M.
Let G be the group of isometries of the Euclidean plane generated by reflections in the four sides of a rectangle R . G
quotient space is R
. A
is isomorphic to
D”
x
D”
,
and the
physical model is a billiard table. A collection of balls
on a billiard table gives rise to an infinite collection of balls on
182 ,
G . (Each side of the billiard table should be one ball diameter
invariant by
larger than the corresponding side of R
so that the centers of the balls can take
any position in R . A ball may intersect its images in
o
’O
‘I
s
I
o
o
,3
\
9(‘
.
/
7 O
Ignoring spin, in order
to
of the images of y by G
13.l.1+. g rectanflar
R2.)
make ball x ,
hit bfll y
it suffices to aim it at any
(Unless some ball is in the way.)
pillow.
Let H be the subgroup of index 2 which preserves orientation in the group
13.3 G of the preceding example. A fundamental domain for H consists of two adjacent rectangles.
The quotient space is obtained by identifying the edges of the two
rectangles by reflection in the common edge. ” -e‘i
"
a.
Topologically, this quotient space is,a sphere, with four distinguished points or
1R2
singular points, which come from points in
The sphere inherits a Riemannian metric of O
’4-
points, and it has curvature
points
KPi
=
with non-trivial isotropy
( Z2 )
curvature in the complement of these
1r concentrated at each of the four
pi . In other words, a. neighborhood of each point pi is a cone, with cone
angle Tr
= 2.“.
- KPi
P;
0
m =-
Exercise. On any tetrahedron in
every geodesic is simple.
strips of paper.
fl
Rs
G
all of whose four sides are congruent,
This may be tested with a cardboard model and string or With
Explain.
- presently cmtallogranhic 3 - dimensional example to illustrate the geometry of quotient
13.1.5. g orientation Here is one more
out.
13.11spaces. Consider the
(m+%,t,n) a real parameter.
and
3
families of lines in
1
(n,m+-,t)
a
where
1&3
of the form
n and m
(t , n , m +
are integers and t
%) ,
is
They intersect a cube in the unit lattice as depicted.
Let G be the group generated by
180°
rotations about these lines.
It is not
hard to see that a fundamental domain is a trait cube. We may construct the quotient
space by making all identifications coming from non-trivial elements of G acting on the faces of the cube. This means that each face must be folded shut, like a book. doing this, we will keep track of the images of the axes, which form the singular
c
locus.
@
In
13.5 As you can see by studying the picture, the quotient space is
S3
locus consisting of three circles in the form of the Borromean rings.
with singular
S3
inherits
a Euclidean structure (or metric of zero curvature)
in the complement of these
rings, with a cone-type singularity with cone angle
11' along the rings.
In these examples, it was not hard to construct the quotient space from the In order to go in the opposite direction, we need to lmow not only
group action.
the quotient space, but also the singular locus and appropriate data concerning
the local behaviour of the group action above the singular locus.
13-2
Basic definitions
«-
An orbifold actions.
[
modulo finite group
Here is the formal definition: 0 consists of a Hausdorff space
with some additional structure.
sets
an
0 is a space locally modelled on
Ui
}
finite group homeomorphism
X0
is to have a. covering by a collection of open
closed under finite intersections. To each
Pi cpi
, an :
action of
Ui
3
vi
XO ,
ti
on an open subset
/ 1"i .
Whenever
Ui
Ui
iii C
is associated a
of
Uj ,
Ru
and a
there is to be
an injective hOmomcrphism
ij‘i
a
and an embedding
p l (U) consists of components of the form U / I", I" C I‘ . Let system. We may suppose that
_
0:.L
(i = l , 2) , and consider components of
be covering orbifolds
U / P1
for notational convenience we identify with
we can write the notation
and
726P
91,72 y
U / Pl ] . For
1" 7 n 1 l 7 1 and P
7‘1 1" 7 . 2 2 2
72 y _Of
course, f
272. Furthermore, for any
factors through
depends only on the cosets
71:72
7 e 1" , the maps
f71’72
U ‘,
are identical so only the product
really matters. Thus, the
invariant of
f
71,72 is
the double coset
in the fiber product of coverings
X1
and
f717’727
in particular,their images
7'1 1‘2
F 7 1. 1 2
and
71
,bytheformula
differ only by a group element acting on
71-72:L
which
Formally,
each pair of elanents
£71,72
In fact,
(U) ,
be more consistent to use
U/l"le/1"2
U—->
7 ,72
U / P2 .
and
U} . [It would
y e
,weobtainamap f
(Fl 7 1 y , F2
U / 7'1 1
Pl
U / F1 = [Fl y I Fl\ U instead of
pit-1
X2
e
"real."
Pl\F / 1‘2 .
of a. space X
,
(Similarly,
the components are
parametrized by the double cosets
‘rrle\11'lX / 7T1X2) .
U / F1
defined now to be the disjoint union, over
and
U/
over
l"
,is
7 representing double cosets
elements
U / rln
U / F2
7'l F27
U / r2 ,
.
I‘l\
I"
/
F2
The fiber product of
of the orbifolds
We have shown above how this canonically covers
via the map
fl,7 .
U / F1
and
This definition agrees with the usual definition
of fiber product in the complement of
£0 .
These locally defined patches easily
fit together to give a fiber product orbifold
spaces, a universal covering orbifold
.over some suitable set
0
U
01
3 O2 . As
in the case of
is obtained by taking the inverse limit
representing all isomorphism classes of orbifolds.
The universal cover
U
of an orbifold
O
is automatically a regular cover:
13. 11!» for any preimage
:9
5':
of the base point
* there is a deck transformation taking
3':
to
13.2.5.
The fundamental
Definition.
"1(0)
53mm
of an orbifold
o
is the
6.
group of deck transformations of the universal cover
The fundamental groups of orbifolds can be computed in much the same ways as fundamental groups of manifolds:
Trl(0)
in
terms
see
§
. Later we shall interpret
.
of loops on O
Here are two more definitions which are completely parallel to the definitions for manifolds .
13.2.6.
Definition.
_an
on
or
X0 X50
13.2.7. X
1
IR:
modulo finite groups and
When
80
g orbifold with boundary means
C X
a space locally modelled
modulo finite groups.
is a topological manifold, be careful not to confuse
5X0
with
a
Definition. A suborbifold
C’2
01
of an orbifold
le C an
locally modelled on
modulo
Thus, a triangle orbifold has seven distinct orbifolds, up to isotopy:
Dn
one
81
D...
and six mI's
02
means a subspace
finite groups.
"closed" one-dimensional
. i o1d The orb'f
An,m,p
with
seven suborbifolds .
DP
Note that each of the seven is the boundary of a suborbifold with boundary .
(defined in the obvious
way)
9
with universal cover D' .
sub-
13.15 13.3 T_W2-dimensional
orbifolds
To avoid technicalities, we shall work with differentiable orbifolds from DOW
on.
The nature‘of the singular locus of a differentiable orbifold may be
U =
Let
understood as follows.
There is a Riemannian metric on
U
obtained from any metric on
U
U
/ F
be any local coordinate system.
invariant by
F : such a. metric may be
by averaging under
1"
. For
any point
consider the exponential map, which gives a diffeomorphism from the
3':
in the tangent space at
to a small neighborhood of
map commutes with the action of the isotropy group of isomorphism between a neighborhood of the image of
an /
of the origin in the orbifold
U
8 ball
Since the exponential
3': , it in O
e
gives rise to an
,
and a neighborhood
l" is a finite subgroup of
On .
the orthogonal group
13.3.1.
I‘ , where
3':
3': .
5':
Pronosi ion.
The sin
ar locus _o_f
a: two-dimensional orbifold h_as_
these types o_f local models
(i)
km:
122 / 22 ,
where
22
ax_is.
(ii)
Elliptic points
of
order n :
m2 /
acts by reflection Eth_e y
zan ,
with
zzn
acting
BY
rotations.
(iii)
(logr reflectors _of o_rfl n dihedral group of order
ma / DI1 ,
where
2n , with presentation
Dn
is the
13.16 The generators a
at
correspond to reflections in lines meetigg
and b
angle w / n .
r1/
02 .
Proof. These are the only three types of finite subgroups of
It follows that the underlying space of a two dimensional orbifold is always a topological surface, possibly with boundary.
It is easy to enumerate all
2-dimensiona1 orbifolds, by enumerating surfaces, together with combinatorial
information which determines the orbifold structure. From a topological point of view, however, it is not completely trivial to deterndne which of these
orbifolds are good and which are had. ,.
“W
We shall classify 2-dimensional orbifolds from a geometric point of view. When
G is a group of real analytic diffeomorphisms of a real analytic manifold
X , then the elementary properties of (G , X) case of manifolds
(see
§ 3.5) . In particular D :
can be defined for a (G , X) of paths in O
,
- orbifolds are similar to the
U
-9
- orbifold
a developing map
X O . Since we do not yet have a notion
this requires a little explanation.
Let
{
Ui
} be a covering
of O by a collection of open sets, cloSed under intersections, modelled on
13.17
Ui / I‘i
,
wit
C X
isometries
Ui
Uj
Ui
D
C
U1
,
such that the inclusion maps
UO
. Choose a "base" chart
Ui C Uj
. When
UO
come from 3
Ui
C
1 (a simplicial path in the
is a chain of open sets
2 2n 1 skeleton of the nerve of [ Ui }) , then for each choice of isometries of
-
the form
U0
70¢i,0 1
,.
Ul
72%1’i2
Ui
one obtains an isometry of
a
in X
,
U.1211
“
U.12
(—
obtained by composing the transition
~
fimctions (which are globally defined on X). A covering space 0 of O
is defined
Ui
pri)»
can: where Cp is any isometry of obtained by the above construction. These are glued together by the obvious "inclusion" maps, ( q) ,
by the covering[ (q) ,
(pUi)
c_, ( '4’:l0
U3
"
.q)
-l
) whenever I)
73 .351'].
is of the form
for some
I" 7:163 The reader desiring a picture may construct a "foliation" of the space
[(x , y , g)
x e X ,y e
Xo , g
is the germ of a
G—map between neighborhoods
y] . Any leaf of this foliation gives a developing map.
of x and
13.3.2.
I
Proposition.
When
G i_s g
X , then evez_'y (G , X)
manifold
holonm
analfiic group 9f diffeomorphisms
- manifold E good.
o_f g
A developing map
homomorphism
are defined.
If
G
E2 Eoup 5g
closed gr metrically
gparticuier, i_f
x
isometries actig transitively g X , then
complete ,
E i_s emulate. (i.e., D
i_s simply connected , mg
6
0 i_s
_‘E 2 coverg‘ map) .
= X __9
”1(0) 22
13.18 discrete
suonup o_f G .
area:
§ 3.5.
see
Here is an eSample.
A2 3 6 3
2
has a Euclidean structure, as a
30° , 60° 90°
The developing map looks like this:
triangle.
I_
/.
/
_ / \/
..3/
I
,
,,
\/ «" /xx71\’ 4/ /I\ /\\>//\/:IX/1 A.‘
l
/,
/
l» .
‘
/
~
Here is a definition that will aid us in the geometric classification of
2— dimensional orbifolds.
13.3.3 . Definition. _— each open
cell
When an orbifold
is in the same
O has a cell-divison of
Xo
such that
stratum of the singular locus (i.e.! the 33°11? ESSOCJ-avf
to the interior points of a cell is constant), then the Euler number X(o) is
13.19 defined by the formula
Z
x(o)
(c.)
d'
(.1) m
1
(l/
[P(ciH),
C.
l
where
ci
ranges over cells and
associated to each cell.
IP(ci)I
is the order of the group
P(ci)
The Euler number is not always an integer.
The definition is concocted for the following reason. Define the number _o_f sheets of a cover to be the number of preimages of a non-singular point.
13.3.h Proposition . X(6) =
k X(o)
—>
o ise coverigg mwith
k
sheets, then
. verifiedtha-t
Proof : It is easily by the ratio
#
6
If
z
sheets =
the number of sheets of a cover can be computed
(IPxI
III—i”
/
:
i 3p(x) =x where
x is g point.
The formula
for the Euler number of
a cover follows immediately.
As an example, a triangle orbifold A
n1’I‘2’r‘3
1/2(Z(1/ni)-l).
+
D
NIH D
“3
a:
3
.1 2 g 2
+1
2n2
n2
has Euler number
13.20
A2 3 5
Thus,
9
3
has Euler number +
1/60 . Its
Se ,
universal cover is
with
deck transformations the group of symmetries of the dodecahedron. This group
x(h2 3 6) = o covered by $2
has order
120 = 2/(1/60) . On the other hand ,
)((A2,3 7)
= -l/8)+. These orbifolds cannot be
3
3
3
and
*
The general formula for the Euler number of an orbifold O with k corner
n:L
reflectors of orders
,..., nk
z
and
elliptic points of orders
m1
,..., 11113
is
13.3.u.
x(xo)
x(o) =
S x(Xo) ,
Note in particular that X(o)
X0
“3": 2(1 - l/ni) - 2(1 .' 1/mi) with equality iff O
is the surface
O-=mXo .
or if
If 0 is equipped with a metric coming from invariant Riemannian metrics
U , then
on the local models
one may easily derive the Gauss-Bonnet theorem,
f
13.3.5.
0
KdA
211' x(o) .
One way to prove this is by excising small neighborhoods of the singular locus, the usual Gauss-Bonnet theorem for manifolds with boundary.
and a
For 0
to have an elliptic, parabolic or hyperbolic structure, X(o) must be respectively positive, zero or negative.
2n
If 0 is elliptic or hyperbolic, then area
(0) '=
[x(o)] .
13.3.6.
Theoran .
A glLsed
E gmerbolic structure
A2 orbifold parabolic
0
2-dimensional orbifold
E5 2Mrs—rifle ,
i_fg E E gEd.
EEE hmrbolic
structurei_ff_ x(o) < 0, Egg
structure iff X(0)=O. An orbifold is
elliptic
Egg;
13.21 x(o) > o .. All bad,
elliptic
and
parabolic
orbifolds
£9.M below,
(nl ,..., bk; m1 ,..., mg) denotes _a_; orb ifold with elliptic points 9_f o_r—___ders 1:1:L ,..., nk aldcorner reflectors of orders m1,...,mz. M
where
not listed are
hmrbolic Bad
Elliptic
(
n
(n)
(“1 ’n2) I31< n2
The sphere
n)
a
(2 , 2 , n)
. 3) (2 , 3 . 1+) (2 , 3
S2
Parabolic
(2,3;6)
(2,h,h)
(3,3,3) (2,2,2,2)
(2 , 3 , 5)
($n’n)
(H11 , n2) n1 < n2
(3222,11) (; 2 , 3 , 3)
The disk
D2
(32.3.10
(53.3.3) (,2,2,2,2)
($2.3,5)
(2;2.2)
(ns)
(333)
(2;m)
(1H2)
(352) The projective plane
The torus The Klein bottle
K
The annulus A
The Moebius band M
2
JP
(;2:3,6) (,2,1+,1+)
(3.))
l3.a.a. 2 D(;LL,’+,’J.-)
n 5 q-n' —" The universal c.ve--_ng of spec.
and
2 SWAN-4')
generated by reflections in the faces of one of the tri
-
9
.e s of this ti__'1g 1* of F symmetfi”'1 I
.
'2 71'1 (D(-,’+,Lt,h)/ \
is
les. The full group of
2 - ”1(D(.,2,3,a))
is
O
This picture was drawn with a computer by Peter Oppenheimer.
~
wee; i‘1:3VI ,_
......l "9'."7‘ _ 3: 1"",
.
_.
..-
..———
.
_
13.22
M.
It is routine to list all orbifolds with non-negative Euler number,
as in the table. We have already indicated an easy, direct argument to show the orbifolds listed as bad are bad ; here is another. First, by passing
to covers, we only need consider the case that the Imderlving space is
$2 ,
and that if there are two elliptic points their orders are relatively prime. These orbifolds have Riemannian metrics of curvature bounded above zero,
which implies (by elementary Riemannian
geometry) that
must be compact. But the Euler number is either 1 is a rational nmber with numerator
any surface covering them
+i-
or
>2 .
Since no connected surface has an Euler
1— n1
+
«l— ,
n2
which
number greater than 2 , these orbifolds
must be bad. Question
What is the best pinching constant for Riemannian metrics on these
orb ifolds '2
All the orbifolds listed as elliptic and parabolic may be readily identified as the quotient of
$2
correspond to the
or
E2
modulo a discrete group.
The
17 parabolic
17 "wallpaper groups". The reader should unfold
orbifolds
these orbifold
13.23 for himself, to appreciate their beauty. Another pleasant exercise is to identify the orbifolds associated with some of Escher's prints. Hyperbolic structures can be found, and classified, for orbifolds with negative Euler characteristics by decomposing them into primitive pieces, in a
manner analogous
to our analysis of Teichmiiller space for a. surface
Given an orbifold
0
with
x(o) < 0 ,we may repeatedly cut it
(§ 5.3) .
along simple
closed curves and then "mirror" these curves (to remain in the class of closed
orbifolds) Lmtil we are left with pieces of the form below. (If the underlying surface is unoriented, then make the first cut so the result is oriented.)
n
EQZ
Z“a
13.2hThe orbifolds mP
2
case
A(n
,
. ) and D
3
A(2,2; )) and S(n1,n2,n3)
(D1 2 n2
3 )
(except the degenerate
have hyperbolic structures parameterized by the
lengths of their boundary components. Theproof is precisely analogous to the classific: tion of shapes of pants in
§ 5.3
(see § 2.6) .
"generalized triangles"
The orbifold
; one decomposes these orbifolds into two congruent
D? _
,..., m!
9
triangles",
for instance in the pattern above. hyperbolic structures (provided X
(
33+ )2-3 .
"generalized
0”,,
0"‘1
L
,
"'4
3
DM
that is
0
also can be decomposed into
One immediately sees that the orbifold has
< O)
parametrized by the lengths of the cuts;
(Special care must be taken when, say,
ml = m2
2
13.25
Then one of the cuts must
be omitted, and an edge length becomes a parameter.
In general any disjoint set of edges with ends on order 2 corner reflectors can be taken as positive real parameters, with extra parameters coming from cuts
is
not meeting these edges
a
Q4
:1. The annulus with more than one corner reflector on one boundary component be diesected, as below,
corner reflectors .
Dan
D
2 . D(2;2,2) is not
they are determined by their edges of length
and
However, it has a degenerate hyperbolic structure as an
rectangle, modulo a
rotation of order
A
2
—
infinitely thin
or, an interval.
k) This is consistent with the way in which it arises in considering hyperbolic
structures, in the dissection of D2(2;m1,...,mz)
'
One can out such an orbifold
along the perpendicular arc from the elliptic point to an edge, to obtain
D(2 ; 2 ,2 ’”1"“ ,mz).
. In the case of an annulus with only one corner reflector,
13.27
f
&
M
010nm)
note first that it is symmetric, since it can bedissected into an isosceles
"triangle".
now,
from a second.dissection,we see hyperbolic structures are
parametrized by the length of the boundary component without the reflector.
By the same argument,
D%n-
9
m) has a unique hyperbolic structure.
All these pieces can easily be reassembled to give a hyperbolic structure
on 0 . l
From the proof of
13.3.6
we derive
-
13-3-7 Corolla Ens Teichm'uller ems J(0) 21:21.1 orb ifold 0 113 X(O)
+t
Ln 20 ,m 20] .\-
+
[I [:0
O
.
e
Z€L(T”,
(1r
-e(e))+2rrx(szf.)
)
This may be deduced quickly by comparing the R metric with a metric which
R' in
R' (z/') is near 0 . In other words, the image F(A) is contained in the
interior of the polyhedron P C Z defined by the above inequalities. Since F(A) is an open set whose boundary is
this completes the proof of
5P , F(A) =
interior
(P) . Since 0 e int(P) ,
13.7.1. 13.7.1, 13.6.h,
'
13.6.5
Remarks. This proof was based on a practical algorithm for actually constructing
patterns of circles. The idea of the algorithm is to adjust, iteratively, the radii of the circles. A change of any single radius affects most strongly the curvature
at that vertex, so this process converges reasonably well.
13.61 The patterns of circles on surfaces of constant curvature, with singularities
at the centers of the circles, have a the inclusions
isom
(HZ)
C isom
(H3)
associated with such a surface S to S
x JR ,
3-dimensional and isom
interpretation. Because of
(E2) C. isom (H3) , there 3-manifold
a hyperbolic
Ms
,
homeomorphic
(the singularities of S) x IR
with cone type singularities along
Each circle on S determines a totally geodesic submanifold
(a "plane") in
These, together with the totally geodesic surface isotopic to S when
cut out a submanifold of
13.6.h
or
13.6.5
Ms
with finite volume
is
—
MS
.
S is hyperbolic,
it is an orbifold as in
but with singularities along arcs or half-lines running from
the top to the bottom.
13.7.h. Carol—1.5g. Theorems 13.6.u Bid 13.6.5 hold when 8 _i_gg mclidea: g hmrbolic urbifol , instead 23 _a_. surface. (TE orbifold 0 _i3 19 have 9311 sflities fig 13.6.h_&r_ 13.6.5, 'Dlus (singularities of s) x: g (singxflarities of s) x
[o
, w)
:)
Proof. Solve for pattern of circles on S in a. metric of constant curvature on
S
—
the underlying surface of S will have a Riemannian metric with cone type
singularities of curvature 2n (
%-
l) at elliptic points of S , and angles at
corner reflectors of S . An alternative proof is to find a surface of the
orbifold
covering space
S
6
, and
S
which is a finite covering space
find a. hyperbolic structure for the corresponding
of 0 . The existence of a hyperbolic structure for 0 follows
from the uniqueness of the hyperbolic structure on O thence the invariance by
deck transformations
of 6
over 0
.
13.62 compactificat ion $2; Egg Teichm‘iller 13.8. A geometric ___—___-
spaces
9:
orbifolds.
We will construct hyperbolic structures for a much greater variety of
orbifolds by studying the quasi-isometric deformation spaces of orbifolds with boundary whose underlying space is the
three-disk. In order to do this, we
need a description of the limiting behaviour of conformal structures on its boundary.
We shall focus on the case when the boundary is a disjoint union of
For this, the greatest
polygonal orbifolds. right
clarity is
attained by finding the
compactifications for these Teichmfiller spaces.
When M
is an orbifold,
M[5 m)
is defined to consist of points
3
8/2 about x
such that the ball of radius
x in M
has a finite fundamental group.
Equivalently, no loop through x of length < 8 has infinite order in
M
(0.6]
is defined similarly.
.
It does not, in general, contain a neighborhood .
(as in §5) that each
of the singular locus. With this definition, it follows
component of
M(O
axis, and its
fundamental group contains Z or Z EB Z
5
ni(M)
s] is covered by a horoball or a unifonn neighborhood of an with finite index.
In §5., we defined the geometric topology on sequqnces of hyperbolic 3manifolds of finite volume. For our present purpose, we want to modify this definition slightly. First, define a
hmrbolic
structure
dimensional orbifold O to be a complete hyperbolic
with Eggs; on
structure with
a
2-
finite volume
on the complement of some l-dimensional suborbifold, whose components are the
ngdeg. This includes
the
case when there are no nodes. A topology is defined
on the set of hyperbolic structures with nodes, up to diffeomorphisms isotopic to the identity on a given surface, by saying that
if there is a diffeomorphism of O
to M
Hanan)
is a
(e5) -
M1
and
M2
have
distance
5
a
[isotopic to the identity] whose restriction
quasi-isometry to
M9[e' — ,m)
. Here, 5' is some fixed,
13.63 small number.
M15.
The related topology on hyperbolic structures with nodes up
diffeomorphism on a given surface is always compact.
E
(Compare J¢rgensen's theorem,
5.12, and Mumford's theorem, 8.8.3.) This gives a beautiful compactification for the modular space
Earle and Marden
7 (M) / Diff(M)
,
which has been studied by Bers [
].
] and Abikoff [
[
],
What we shall do works
because a polygonal orbifold has a finite modular group.
For any two-dimensional orbifold O with X(o) < O,
the
Theorem . When P
EE
be the
(up to isotopy) on. O .
space of all hyperbolic structures with nodes
13.8.1.
let77(0)
n-gone]. orbifold ,
‘7](P) E homeomorphic t_o
Dn'3 , with interior j(P) . pt has 3 natural cell-structure open cells were 2y the E o_f nodes (pp 2 isotopy).
(closed) disk
with
,
Here are the three simplest examples.
J (P)
24mm EX If P
nodes
is a quadrilateral, then
77(P)
is
IR . There are two possible
looks like this:
“V S 24-4.
If there are two adjacent order 2 corner reflectors, the qualitative picture
must be modified appropriately. For instance,
’ 0"
When
1
1‘3—
P is a pentagon,
j(P)
is
R2 .
and the cell-structure is diagrammed below:
There are five possible nodes,
13.61;
ad 3
(.6
End
5,
P
WP)
When there is only one node, the pentagon is pinched into a quadrilateral and a triangle, so there is still one degree of freedom.
When P is a hexagon, there are
9
possible nodes.
Each single node pinches the hexagon into a pentagon and a triangle, or into two quadrilaterals, so its associated
division of
8D3
2-cell is a pentagon or a square. The cell
is diagrammed below:
13.65 (The zero and one dimensional cells are parameterized by the union of the nodes of the incident
Proof as in
2-cells.)
92 13.8.1. 5.12
that P
(0,51
and
It is easy to see that
8.8.3,
77(P)
for instance. In fact, choose 8 sufficiently small so
is always a disjoint union of regular neighborhoods of short arcs.
Given a sequence
{Pi} ,
of the components of
we can pass to a. subsequence so that the core
Pi(0,5]
[Pi]
arcs remain bounded in
[C21 ,..., Elk}
. The lengths of all such
(this follows from area considerations), so there
is a subsequence so that all lengths converge
[z(ai) I z(ai) Z
l-orbifolds
are constant. Extend this system of arcs to a
maximal system of disjoint geodesic arcs
converges in
is compact by familiar arguments,
- possibly to zero.
But any set of
0] defines a hyperbolic structure with nodes, so our sequence
'77 (P ) .
Furthermore, we have described a covering of diffeomorphic to quadrants, so
it
‘77 (P )
by neighborhoods
has the structure of a manifold with
corners. Change of coordinates is obviously differentiable. Each stratum consists of hyperbolic structures with a prescribed set of nodes, so it is diffeomorphic
to Euclidean space (this also follows directly from the nature of our local
coordinate systems. ) Theorem
13.8.1
follows from this information. Here is a little overproof.
An explicit homeomorphism to a disk can be constructed by observing that has a natural triangulation, which is dual to the cell structure of
356(P)
a 77(P)
.
This arises from the fact that any simple geodesic on P must be orthogonal to
the mirrors, so a geodesic lamination on P
is finite.
The simplices in
are measures on a maximal family of geodesic l-orbifolds.
*For definition, and other information, see
p.
8.58.
Wifi)
*
13.66 A projective structure for homeomorphism to a sphere
955 (P) - that
flafi (P) .
take the directional derivative at
convex hull, in the direction f .
132
to
IR is added to f . Thus,
To lift the map to measured laminations,
O of the bending measure for the top of the The global description of this map is that a
function f is associated to the measure which assigns to each edge e of the bending locus the change in slope of the intersection of the faces adjacent to
e with a plane
perpendicular to c
It is geometrically clear that we thus obtain a piecewise linear homeomorphism.
*
See remark
9.5.9-
13.67 e
W£(P)
==
le-3
O
The set of measures which assign a maximal value of l to an edge gives a
€06 (P)
realization of
*
hedron Q,
-
-
which is, by definition, the set of vectors
- Y=
supyeQ X
l
13-9- a geometric 52°11'05-
compactification
6
_
EV 3 such that
man defamation spaces a certain Kleinian
Let 0 be an orbifold with underlying space
520
X
The dual poly-
— is the boundary of a convex disk, combinatorially equal to 77(P).
This seems explicit enough for now.
and
lav-'3.
as a convex polyhedral sphere Q in
x0
D3
,
20
c
3133
a union of polygons.
We will use the terminology Kleinian s_tructure on 0 to mean a diffeomorphism of
O
to
. a.
Kleinian manifold
33 - LI. / 1" ,
where
I" is a Kleinian group.
In order to describe the ways in which Kleinian structures on O can degenerate, we will also define the notion of a
on
with nodes
O . The nodes are meant to represent the linu‘ting behaviour as some l—dimensional
suborbifold S becomes shorter and shorter, finally becoming parabolic.
shall see that this happens only when
We
S is isotopic in one or more ways to
the geometry depends on the set of suborbifolds on being pinched in the conformal geometry of
30
30
50
;
isotopic to S which are
. To take care of the various
possibilities, nodes are to be of one of these three types:
(a) An incompressible l-suborbifold of 30 . (b) An incompressible 2 ‘ dimensional suborbifold of O , with Euler characteristic zero and non-empty bomdary. In general, it would be one of these five:
.
13.68
mirrors
mirror
but for the orbifolds we are considering only the last two can occur.
P2}: x m , k > 2 where P21: is a of P2]: are to alternate being on 30 and and b could be subsumed under this case
(c) An orbifold T modelled on polygon with
El: sides.
in the interior of O
The sides
. (Cases a
by thickening them and regarding them as the
cases k = l and k = 2 .)
A Kleinian structure with nodes is now defined to be a meinian structure in the complement of a union of nodes of the above types, neighborhoods of the nodes in ‘oeing horoball neighborhoods of cusps in the Kleinian
structures. Of course, if 0
minus the nodes is not connected, each component is the quotient of a separate
Kleinian group
Let
(so our definition was not general enough for this case.)
'77 (0)
to homeomorphisms isotopic to
on
77(0) ,
the
up
identity. As for surfaces, we define a topology
by saying that two structures
a
and
if there is a homeomorphism between them which is an
KEEN)
intersected with the convex hull of
13.9.1.
Theorem . psi
I_f O has
,
denote the set of all Kleinian structures with nodes on O
K1 .
K2
have distance
5
E:
e6 - quasi-isometry on
pg 55 above with o irreducible and Bo incomnressible . one non-elemental-x Rainier: structure, then ‘fl (0) 1?. compact . E
conformal structure o_n
0
80
i_s_ c mtinuous , and it
77(0)
gives
2: homomorphism t_o_
.. 72 (50)
Note: The necessary and sufficient conditions for existence of a Kleinian
a disk,
C-
13.69 , or
structure will be given in theorem
13.6.1.
they can be deduced from Andreev's
We will use 13.9.1 to prove existence.
Proof. We will study the convex hulls of the Kleinian structures with nodes on O
. (When the
Kleinian structure is disconnected, this is the union
of convex hulls of the
pieces.)
13.9.2.
35 5 m
lam. There
H , pf p
upper bound for the
new structure with nodes pm
Proof
2; 13.9.2.
The bending
vol—“ale p; the
convex hull,
0 .
lamination
for
50
has a bounded number
Therefore, H is (geometrically) a polyhedron with a bounded
of components.
number of faces, each with a bounded number of sides. Hence the area of the boundary of the polyhedron is bounded.
Its volume is also bounded, in view of
the isoperimetric inequality, volume
foraset
s c:
Theorem
H3
(S)