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Torus bundle


Torus bundle


A torus bundle, in the sub-field of geometric topology in mathematics, is a kind of surface bundle over the circle, which in turn is a class of three-manifolds.

Construction

To obtain a torus bundle: let f {\displaystyle f} be an orientation-preserving homeomorphism of the two-dimensional torus T {\displaystyle T} to itself. Then the three-manifold M ( f ) {\displaystyle M(f)} is obtained by

  • taking the Cartesian product of T {\displaystyle T} and the unit interval and
  • gluing one component of the boundary of the resulting manifold to the other boundary component via the map f {\displaystyle f} .

Then M ( f ) {\displaystyle M(f)} is the torus bundle with monodromy f {\displaystyle f} .

Examples

For example, if f {\displaystyle f} is the identity map (i.e., the map which fixes every point of the torus) then the resulting torus bundle M ( f ) {\displaystyle M(f)} is the three-torus: the Cartesian product of three circles.

Seeing the possible kinds of torus bundles in more detail requires an understanding of William Thurston's geometrization program. Briefly, if f {\displaystyle f} is finite order, then the manifold M ( f ) {\displaystyle M(f)} has Euclidean geometry. If f {\displaystyle f} is a power of a Dehn twist then M ( f ) {\displaystyle M(f)} has Nil geometry. Finally, if f {\displaystyle f} is an Anosov map then the resulting three-manifold has Sol geometry.

These three cases exactly correspond to the three possibilities for the absolute value of the trace of the action of f {\displaystyle f} on the homology of the torus: either less than two, equal to two, or greater than two.

References

  • Jeffrey R. Weeks (2002). The Shape of Space (Second ed.). Marcel Dekker, Inc. ISBN 978-0824707095.

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Torus bundle by Wikipedia (Historical)