In
complex geometry, a Hopf surface is a compact complex surface obtained as a quotient of the complex
vector space (with zero deleted)
by a
free action of a discrete group. If this group is the integers the Hopf surface is called primary, otherwise it is called secondary. (Some authors use the term "Hopf surface" to mean "primary Hopf surface".) The first example was found by , with the discrete group isomorphic to the integers, with a generator acting on
by multiplication by 2; this was the first example of a compact complex surface with no
Kähler metric.
Higher-dimensional analogues of Hopf surfaces are called
Hopf manifold In complex geometry, a Hopf manifold is obtained
as a quotient of the complex vector space
(with zero deleted) (^n\backslash 0)
by a free action of the group \Gamma \cong of
integers, with the generator \gamma
of \Gamma acting by holomorphic co ...
s.
Invariants
Hopf surfaces are
surfaces of class VII In mathematics, surfaces of class VII are non-algebraic complex surfaces studied by that have Kodaira dimension −∞ and first Betti number 1. Minimal surfaces of class VII (those with
no rational curves with self-intersection −1) a ...
and in particular all have
Kodaira dimension , and all their plurigenera vanish. The geometric genus is 0. The
fundamental group
In the mathematical field of algebraic topology, the fundamental group of a topological space is the group of the equivalence classes under homotopy of the loops contained in the space. It records information about the basic shape, or holes, of ...
has a normal central infinite cyclic subgroup of finite index. The
Hodge diamond
Homological mirror symmetry is a mathematical conjecture made by Maxim Kontsevich. It seeks a systematic mathematical explanation for a phenomenon called mirror symmetry first observed by physicists studying string theory.
History
In an address ...
is
In particular the first
Betti number is 1 and the second Betti number is 0.
Conversely showed that a compact complex surface with vanishing the second Betti number and whose fundamental group contains an infinite cyclic subgroup of finite index is a Hopf surface.
Primary Hopf surfaces
In the course of
classification of compact complex surfaces, Kodaira classified the primary Hopf surfaces.
A primary Hopf surface is obtained as
:
where
is a group generated by
a polynomial contraction
.
Kodaira has found a normal form for
.
In appropriate coordinates,
can be written as
:
where
are complex numbers
satisfying
, and either
or
.
These surfaces contain an elliptic curve (the image of the ''x''-axis) and if
the image of the ''y''-axis is a second elliptic curve. When
, the Hopf surface is an elliptic fiber space over the projective line if
for some positive integers ''m'' and ''n'', with the map to the projective line given by
, and otherwise the only curves are the two images of the axes.
The
Picard group of any primary Hopf surface is isomorphic to the non-zero complex numbers
.
has proven that a complex surface
is diffeomorphic to
if and only if it is a primary Hopf surface.
Secondary Hopf surfaces
Any secondary Hopf surface has a finite unramified cover that is a primary Hopf surface. Equivalently, its fundamental group has a subgroup of finite index in its center that is isomorphic to the integers. classified them by finding the finite groups acting without fixed points on primary Hopf surfaces.
Many examples of secondary Hopf surfaces can be constructed with underlying space a product of a
spherical space form
In mathematics, a spherical 3-manifold ''M'' is a 3-manifold of the form
:M=S^3/\Gamma
where \Gamma is a finite subgroup of SO(4) acting freely by rotations on the 3-sphere S^3. All such manifolds are prime, orientable, and closed. Spherical 3-man ...
s and a circle.
References
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*{{eom, id=H/h110270, first=Liviu , last=Ornea, title=Hopf manifold
Complex surfaces