Thurston Boundary
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

In
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, the Thurston boundary of
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 a surface is obtained as the
boundary Boundary or Boundaries may refer to: * Border, in political geography Entertainment *Boundaries (2016 film), ''Boundaries'' (2016 film), a 2016 Canadian film *Boundaries (2018 film), ''Boundaries'' (2018 film), a 2018 American-Canadian road trip ...
of its closure in the projective space of functionals on simple closed curves on the surface. The Thurston boundary can be interpreted as the space of projective measured foliations on the surface. The Thurston boundary of the Teichmüller space of a closed surface of genus g is homeomorphic to a sphere of dimension 6g-7. The action of the
mapping class group In mathematics, in the subfield of geometric topology, the mapping class group is an important algebraic invariant of a topological space. Briefly, the mapping class group is a certain discrete group corresponding to symmetries of the space. Mot ...
on the Teichmüller space extends continuously over the union with the boundary.


Measured foliations on surfaces

Let S be a closed surface. A ''measured foliation'' (\mathcal F, \mu) on S is a
foliation In mathematics (differential geometry), a foliation is an equivalence relation on an ''n''-manifold, the equivalence classes being connected, injectively immersed submanifolds, all of the same dimension ''p'', modeled on the decomposition of ...
\mathcal F on S which may admit isolated singularities, together with a ''transverse measure'' \mu, i.e. a function which to each arc \alpha transverse to the foliation \mathcal F associates a positive real number \mu(\alpha). The foliation and the measure must be compatible in the sense that the measure is invariant if the arc is deformed with endpoints staying in the same leaf. Let \mathcal S be the space of isotopy classes of closed simple curves on S. A measured foliation (\mathcal F, \mu) can be used to define a function i((\mathcal F, \mu), \cdot) \in \mathbb R_+^ as follows: if \gamma is any curve let : \mu(\gamma) = \sup_ \left(\sum_^r \mu(\alpha_i) \right) where the supremum is taken over all collections of disjoint arcs \alpha_1\ldots, \alpha_r \subset \gamma which are transverse to \mathcal F (in particular \mu(\gamma) = 0 if \gamma is a closed leaf of \mathcal F). Then if \sigma \in \mathcal S the intersection number is defined by: :i \bigl((\mathcal F, \mu), \sigma \bigr) = \inf_ \mu(\gamma). Two measured foliations are said to be ''equivalent'' if they define the same function on \mathcal S (there is a topological criterion for this equivalence via ''Whitehead moves''). The space \mathcal of ''projective measured laminations'' is the image of the set of measured laminations in the projective space \mathbb P(\mathbb R_+^) via the embedding i. If the genus g of S is at least 2, the space \mathcal is homeomorphic to the 6g-7-dimensional sphere (in the case of the torus it is the 2-sphere; there are no measured foliations on the sphere).


Compactification of Teichmüller space


Embedding in the space of functionals

Let S be a closed surface. Recall that a point in the Teichmüller space is a pair (X, f) where X is a hyperbolic surface (a Riemannian manifold with sectional curvatures all equal to -1) and f a homeomorphism, up to a natural equivalence relation. The Teichmüller space can be realised as a space of functionals on the set \mathcal S of isotopy classes of simple closed curves on \mathcal S as follows. If x = (X, f) \in T(S) and \sigma \in \mathcal S then \ell(x, \sigma) is defined to be the length of the unique closed geodesic on X in the isotopy class f_*\sigma. The map x \mapsto \ell(x, \cdot) is an embedding of T(S) into \mathbb R_+^, which can be used to give the Teichmüller space a topology (the right-hand side being given the product topology). In fact, the map to the projective space \mathbb P(\mathbb R_+^) is still an embedding: let \mathcal T denote the image of T(S) there. Since this space is compact, the closure \overline \mathcal T is compact: it is called the ''Thurston compactification'' of the Teichmüller space.


The Thurston boundary

The boundary \overline \mathcal T \setminus \mathcal T is equal to the subset \mathcal of \mathbb P(\mathbb R_+^). The proof also implies that the Thurston compactfification is homeomorphic to the 6g - 6-dimensional closed ball.


Applications


Pseudo-Anosov diffeomorphisms

A diffeomorphism S \to S is called
pseudo-Anosov In mathematics, specifically in topology, a pseudo-Anosov map is a type of a diffeomorphism or homeomorphism of a surface. It is a generalization of a linear Anosov diffeomorphism of the torus. Its definition relies on the notion of a measured fo ...
if there exists two transverse measured foliations, such that under its action the underlying foliations are preserved, and the measures are multiplied by a factor \lambda, \lambda^ respectively for some \lambda > 1 (called the stretch factor). Using his compactification Thurston proved the following characterisation of pseudo-Anosov mapping classes (i.e. mapping classes which contain a pseudo-Anosov element), which was in essence known to Nielsen and is usually called the Nielsen-Thurston classification. A mapping class \phi is pseudo-Anosov if and only if: *it is not reducible (i.e. there is no k \ge 1 and \sigma \in \mathcal S such that (\phi^k)_*\sigma = \sigma); *it is not of finite order (i.e. there is no k \ge 1 such that \phi^k is the isotopy class of the identity). The proof relies on the
Brouwer fixed point theorem Brouwer's fixed-point theorem is a fixed-point theorem in topology, named after L. E. J. (Bertus) Brouwer. It states that for any continuous function f mapping a compact convex set to itself there is a point x_0 such that f(x_0)=x_0. The simplest ...
applied to the action of \phi on the Thurston compactification \overline \mathcal T. If the fixed point is in the interior then the class is of finite order; if it is on the boundary and the underlying foliation has a closed leaf then it is reducible; in the remaining case it is possible to show that there is another fixed point corresponding to a transverse measured foliation, and to deduce the pseudo-Anosov property.


Applications to the mapping class group

The action of the
mapping class group In mathematics, in the subfield of geometric topology, the mapping class group is an important algebraic invariant of a topological space. Briefly, the mapping class group is a certain discrete group corresponding to symmetries of the space. Mot ...
of the surface S on the Teichmüller space extends continuously to the Thurston compactification. This provides a powerful tool to study the structure of this group; for example it is used in the proof of the
Tits alternative In mathematics, the Tits alternative, named for Jacques Tits, is an important theorem about the structure of finitely generated linear groups. Statement The theorem, proven by Tits, is stated as follows. Consequences A linear group is not am ...
for the mapping class group. It can also be used to prove various results about the subgroup structure of the mapping class group.


Applications to 3–manifolds

The compactification of Teichmüller space by adding measured foliations is essential in the definition of the ending laminations of a
hyperbolic 3-manifold In mathematics, more precisely in topology and differential geometry, a hyperbolic 3–manifold is a manifold of dimension 3 equipped with a hyperbolic metric, that is a Riemannian metric which has all its sectional curvatures equal to -1. It ...
.


Actions on real trees

A point in Teichmüller space T(S) can alternatively be seen as a faithful representation of 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 ...
\pi_1(S) into the isometry group \mathrm_2(\mathbb R) of the hyperbolic plane \mathbb H^2, up to conjugation. Such an isometric action gives rise (via the choice of a principal
ultrafilter In the mathematical field of order theory, an ultrafilter on a given partially ordered set (or "poset") P is a certain subset of P, namely a maximal filter on P; that is, a proper filter on P that cannot be enlarged to a bigger proper filter on ...
) to an action on the asymptotic cone of \mathbb H^2, which is a
real tree In mathematics, real trees (also called \mathbb R-trees) are a class of metric spaces generalising simplicial trees. They arise naturally in many mathematical contexts, in particular geometric group theory and probability theory. They are also the s ...
. Two such actions are equivariantly isometric if and only if they come from the same point in Teichmüller space. The space of such actions (endowed with a natural topology) is compact, and hence we get another compactification of Teichmüller space. A theorem of R. Skora states that this compactification is equivariantly homeomorphic the Thurston compactification.


Notes


References

* *{{cite book , last=Ivanov , first=Nikolai , title=Subgroups of Teichmüller Modular Groups , publisher=American Math. Soc. , year=1992 Geometric topology Geometric group theory