. All of the cubes in the image are the same cube, since light in the manifold wraps around into closed loops, the effect is that the cube is tiling all of space. This space has finite volume and no boundary.]]
In
mathematics, a 3-manifold is a
space that locally looks like Euclidean 3-dimensional space. A 3-manifold can be thought of as a possible
shape of the universe. Just as a
sphere looks like a
plane to a small enough observer, all 3-manifolds look like our universe does to a small enough observer. This is made more precise in the definition below.
Introduction
Definition
A
topological space ''X'' is a 3-manifold if it is a
second-countable Hausdorff space and if every point in ''X'' has a
neighbourhood that is
homeomorphic to
Euclidean 3-space.
Mathematical theory of 3-manifolds
The topological,
piecewise-linear, and smooth categories are all equivalent in three dimensions, so little distinction is made in whether we are dealing with say, topological 3-manifolds, or smooth 3-manifolds.
Phenomena in three dimensions can be strikingly different from phenomena in other dimensions, and so there is a prevalence of very specialized techniques that do not generalize to dimensions greater than three. This special role has led to the discovery of close connections to a diversity of other fields, such as
knot theory,
geometric group theory,
hyperbolic geometry,
number theory,
Teichmüller theory,
topological quantum field theory,
gauge theory,
Floer homology, and
partial differential equations. 3-manifold theory is considered a part of
low-dimensional topology or
geometric topology.
A key idea in the theory is to study a 3-manifold by considering special
surfaces embedded in it. One can choose the surface to be nicely placed in the 3-manifold, which leads to the idea of an
incompressible surface and the theory of
Haken manifolds, or one can choose the complementary pieces to be as nice as possible, leading to structures such as
Heegaard splittings, which are useful even in the non-Haken case.
Thurston's contributions to the theory allow one to also consider, in many cases, the additional structure given by a particular Thurston model geometry (of which there are eight). The most prevalent geometry is hyperbolic geometry. Using a geometry in addition to special surfaces is often fruitful.
The
fundamental groups of 3-manifolds strongly reflect the geometric and topological information belonging to a 3-manifold. Thus, there is an interplay between
group theory and topological methods.
Invariants describing 3-manifolds
3-manifolds are an interesting special case of low-dimensional topology because their topological invariants give a lot of information about their structure in general. If we let
be a 3-manifold and
be its fundamental group, then a lot of information can be derived from them. For example, using
Poincare duality and the
Hurewicz theorem, we have the following calculations
where the last two groups are isomorphic to the
group homology and cohomology of
, respectively; that is,
From this information a basic homotopy theoretic classification of 3-manifolds can be found. Note from the
Postnikov tower there is a canonical map
If we take the pushforward of the fundamental class
into
we get an element
. It turns out the group
together with the group homology class
gives a complete algebraic description of the
homotopy type of
.
Connected sums
One important topological operation is the
connected sum of two 3-manifolds
. In fact, from general theorems in topology, we find for a three manifold with a connected sum decomposition
the invariants above for
can be computed from the
. In particular
Moreover, given a 3-manifold
which cannot be described as a connected sum of two 3-manifolds is called prime.
Second homotopy groups
For the case of a 3-manifold given by a connected sum of prime 3-manifolds, it turns out there is a nice description of the second fundamental group as a