HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, a Fuchsian model is a representation of a hyperbolic
Riemann surface In mathematics, particularly in complex analysis, a Riemann surface is a connected one-dimensional complex manifold. These surfaces were first studied by and are named after Bernhard Riemann. Riemann surfaces can be thought of as deformed vers ...
''R'' as a quotient of the
upper half-plane In mathematics, the upper half-plane, is the set of points in the Cartesian plane with The lower half-plane is the set of points with instead. Arbitrary oriented half-planes can be obtained via a planar rotation. Half-planes are an example ...
H by a
Fuchsian group In mathematics, a Fuchsian group is a discrete subgroup of PSL(2,R). The group PSL(2,R) can be regarded equivalently as a group of orientation-preserving isometries of the hyperbolic plane, or conformal transformations of the unit disc, or co ...
. Every hyperbolic Riemann surface admits such a representation. The concept is named after Lazarus Fuchs.


A more precise definition

By the
uniformization theorem In mathematics, the uniformization theorem states that every simply connected Riemann surface is conformally equivalent to one of three Riemann surfaces: the open unit disk, the complex plane, or the Riemann sphere. The theorem is a generali ...
, every Riemann surface is either elliptic, parabolic or
hyperbolic Hyperbolic may refer to: * of or pertaining to a hyperbola, a type of smooth curve lying in a plane in mathematics ** Hyperbolic geometry, a non-Euclidean geometry ** Hyperbolic functions, analogues of ordinary trigonometric functions, defined u ...
. More precisely this theorem states that a Riemann surface R which is not isomorphic to either the Riemann sphere (the elliptic case) or a quotient of the complex plane by a discrete subgroup (the parabolic case) must be a quotient of the
hyperbolic plane In mathematics, hyperbolic geometry (also called Lobachevskian geometry or Bolyai– Lobachevskian geometry) is a non-Euclidean geometry. The parallel postulate of Euclidean geometry is replaced with: :For any given line ''R'' and point ''P' ...
\mathbb H by a subgroup \Gamma acting properly discontinuously and
freely Freely is a British free-to-air IPTV service launched in 2024 by Everyone TV, a joint venture between the country's public broadcasters BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and 5. The service offers the ability to watch live television and on demand media from t ...
. In the
Poincaré half-plane model In non-Euclidean geometry, the Poincaré half-plane model is a way of representing the hyperbolic plane using points in the familiar Euclidean plane. Specifically, each point in the hyperbolic plane is represented using a Euclidean point with co ...
for the hyperbolic plane the group of biholomorphic transformations is the group \mathrm_2(\mathbb R) acting by homographies, and the uniformization theorem means that there exists a
discrete Discrete may refer to: *Discrete particle or quantum in physics, for example in quantum theory * Discrete device, an electronic component with just one circuit element, either passive or active, other than an integrated circuit * Discrete group, ...
, torsion-free subgroup \Gamma \subset \mathrm_2(\mathbb R) such that the Riemann surface \Gamma \backslash \mathbb H is isomorphic to R. Such a group is called a Fuchsian group, and the isomorphism R \cong \Gamma \backslash \mathbb H is called a Fuchsian model for R.


Fuchsian models and Teichmüller space

Let R be a closed hyperbolic surface and let \Gamma be a Fuchsian group so that \Gamma \backslash \mathbb H is a Fuchsian model for R. Let A(\Gamma) = \ and endow this set with the topology of pointwise convergence (sometimes called "algebraic convergence"). In this particular case this topology can most easily be defined as follows: the group \Gamma is finitely generated since it is isomorphic to the fundamental group of R. Let g_1, \ldots, g_r be a generating set: then any \rho \in A(\Gamma) is determined by the elements \rho(g_1), \ldots, \rho(g_r) and so we can identify A(\Gamma) with a subset of \mathrm_2(\mathbb R)^r by the map \rho \mapsto (\rho(g_1), \ldots, \rho(g_r)). Then we give it the subspace topology. The Nielsen isomorphism theorem (this is not standard terminology and this result is not directly related to the Dehn–Nielsen theorem) then has the following statement: The proof is very simple: choose an homeomorphism R \to \rho(\Gamma) \backslash \mathbb H and lift it to the hyperbolic plane. Taking a diffeomorphism yields quasi-conformal map since R is compact. This result can be seen as the equivalence between two models for
Teichmüller space In mathematics, the Teichmüller space T(S) of a (real) topological (or differential) surface S is a space that parametrizes complex structures on S up to the action of homeomorphisms that are isotopic to the identity homeomorphism. Teichmülle ...
of R: the set of discrete faithful representations of the fundamental group \pi_1(R) into \mathrm{PSL}_2(\mathbb R) modulo conjugacy and the set of marked Riemann surfaces (X, f) where f\colon R \to X is a quasiconformal homeomorphism modulo a natural equivalence relation.


See also

* the Kleinian model, an analogous construction for
3-manifolds In mathematics, a 3-manifold is a topological space that locally looks like a three-dimensional Euclidean space. A 3-manifold can be thought of as a possible shape of the universe. Just as a sphere looks like a plane (a tangent plane) to a smal ...
*
Fundamental polygon In mathematics, a fundamental polygon can be defined for every compact Riemann surface of genus greater than 0. It encodes not only information about the topology of the surface through its fundamental group but also determines the Riemann surfa ...


References

Matsuzaki, K.; Taniguchi, M.: Hyperbolic manifolds and Kleinian groups. Oxford (1998). Hyperbolic geometry Riemann surfaces