Skip to main content
followed comments of Allen Hatcher (email) to correct the decomposition
Source Link
Ben McKay
  • 26.3k
  • 7
  • 67
  • 102

Thurston approaches 3-manifolds by ``cuttingcutting them up''up along various surfaces (the Haken decompositionone first cuts along incompressible surfacesspheres [Kneser-Milnor] and then along tori [Jaco-Shalen-Johannson]) into pieces which each admit a locally homogeneous geometric structure, modelled on a homogeneous space with an invariant Riemannian metric. A compact, simply connected manifold with such a structure is homogeneous. But a Lie group is homogeneous under its own left translations (or right translations), with many invariant Riemannian metrics (given by left, or right, translation of any positive definite inner product on any one tangent space. So Thurston's programme contains your programme as a special case.

Thanks to Allen Hatcher for correcting my description of the decomposition.

Thurston approaches 3-manifolds by ``cutting them up'' (the Haken decomposition along incompressible surfaces) into pieces which each admit a locally homogeneous geometric structure, modelled on a homogeneous space with an invariant Riemannian metric. A compact, simply connected manifold with such a structure is homogeneous. But a Lie group is homogeneous under its own left translations (or right translations), with many invariant Riemannian metrics (given by left, or right, translation of any positive definite inner product on any one tangent space. So Thurston's programme contains your programme as a special case.

Thurston approaches 3-manifolds by cutting them up along various surfaces (one first cuts along spheres [Kneser-Milnor] and then along tori [Jaco-Shalen-Johannson]) into pieces which each admit a locally homogeneous geometric structure, modelled on a homogeneous space with an invariant Riemannian metric. A compact, simply connected manifold with such a structure is homogeneous. But a Lie group is homogeneous under its own left translations (or right translations), with many invariant Riemannian metrics (given by left, or right, translation of any positive definite inner product on any one tangent space. So Thurston's programme contains your programme as a special case.

Thanks to Allen Hatcher for correcting my description of the decomposition.

Thurston approaches 3-manifolds by ``cutting them up'' (Haakenthe Haken decomposition along incompressible surfaces) into pieces which each admit a locally homogeneous geometric structure, modelled on a homogeneous space with an invariant Riemannian metric. A compact, simply connected manifold with such a structure is homogeneous. But a Lie group is homogeneous under its own left translations (or right translations), with many invariant Riemannian metrics (given by left, or right, translation of any positive definite inner product on any one tangent space. So Thurston's programme contains your programme as a special case.

Thurston approaches 3-manifolds by ``cutting them up'' (Haaken decomposition) into pieces which each admit a locally homogeneous geometric structure, modelled on a homogeneous space with an invariant Riemannian metric. A compact, simply connected manifold with such a structure is homogeneous. But a Lie group is homogeneous under its own left translations (or right translations), with many invariant Riemannian metrics (given by left, or right, translation of any positive definite inner product on any one tangent space. So Thurston's programme contains your programme as a special case.

Thurston approaches 3-manifolds by ``cutting them up'' (the Haken decomposition along incompressible surfaces) into pieces which each admit a locally homogeneous geometric structure, modelled on a homogeneous space with an invariant Riemannian metric. A compact, simply connected manifold with such a structure is homogeneous. But a Lie group is homogeneous under its own left translations (or right translations), with many invariant Riemannian metrics (given by left, or right, translation of any positive definite inner product on any one tangent space. So Thurston's programme contains your programme as a special case.

Source Link
Ben McKay
  • 26.3k
  • 7
  • 67
  • 102

Thurston approaches 3-manifolds by ``cutting them up'' (Haaken decomposition) into pieces which each admit a locally homogeneous geometric structure, modelled on a homogeneous space with an invariant Riemannian metric. A compact, simply connected manifold with such a structure is homogeneous. But a Lie group is homogeneous under its own left translations (or right translations), with many invariant Riemannian metrics (given by left, or right, translation of any positive definite inner product on any one tangent space. So Thurston's programme contains your programme as a special case.