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8
votes
injectivity radius of hyperbolic surface
Let $Y$ be a compact hyperbolic surface. There are only finitely many closed geodesics in $Y$ whose lengths are less that $\ell$. Since $\pi_1(Y)$ is residually finite, there is a normal subgroup of …
9
votes
How to smootly interpolate between möbius transformations?
An explicit interpolation is pretty easy to find. (I'll use the upper half plane model.)
$f$ is given by $\left( \begin{array}{cc} a & b \\\
c & d \end{array} \right)$.
$f$ is elliptic, parabolic, …
6
votes
Torsion in cuspidal cohomology
It is worth pointing out that $T$ may lie in the image of $i_*$:
There is an $M$ such that $H_1(M) \cong \mathbb{Z}^{n} \oplus T$ and $H_{\mathrm{cusp}}(M) \cong \mathbb{Z}^{n-\mathrm{number\ of\ cus …
15
votes
Accepted
Hyperbolic exceptional fillings of cusped hyperbolic 3-manifolds
Sixty is an upper bound.
Hodgson and Kerckhoff's Universal Hyperbolic Dehn Filling theorem ("Universal bounds for hyperbolic Dehn surgery." Annals of Mathematics. 162(1), 367-421) says that, in a one …
8
votes
Accepted
Example of hyperbolic 3-fold with no embedded incompressible subsurfaces
Infinitely many Dehn fillings on the figure eight knot complement $M_8$ have this property:
All but finitely many fillings on $M_8$ are hyperbolic, by Thurston's hyperbolic Dehn filling theorem.
The …
0
votes
Synthetic approach to hyperbolic geometry?
Cederberg's A Course in Modern Geometries does some of this.
10
votes
cocompact discrete subgroups of SL_2
For the arithmetic point of view you mention, Maclachlan and Reid's book "The arithmetic of hyperbolic 3-manifolds" is a great reference.
In case you're interested, there are also many geometric ways …
4
votes
can you fool SnapPea?
I remember finding examples like this in graduate school.
Draw the figure eight knot and then draw a parallel pushoff of a meridian.
Snappea gives you a volume for this link. (It should tell you th …
2
votes
Will the rank of fundemantal 3 manifold be decreased is I module the n(n>1) times of a element?
I would guess that the rank could go down in general, but that something like the following should be true (and may well be, but my memory is a little foggy).
Let $N$ be your $3$-manifold obtained by …
2
votes
Accepted
Does the fundamental group of a surface have rigid subgroups?
Regarding Question 2, you get lots of examples that are rigid for the lifting map $M(\Gamma) \to M(\Gamma_B)$.
Let $B$ be finitely generated subgroup of $\Gamma$ (considered a fuchsian group) such t …
13
votes
Accepted
Hyperbolic structures on $S\times\mathbb{R}$
It follows from Thurston's Covering Theorem that there are no such examples.
The covering theorem says that if a degenerate end is infinite-to-one under a covering map, then you are (virtually) in th …
21
votes
Accepted
For which surfaces is Penner's conjecture known to be true?
Shin and Strenner have shown that the conjecture is false when 3g + n > 4.
See http://arxiv.org/abs/1410.6974
3
votes
can you fool SnapPea?
Have you tried something like this (you probably have):
Take a diagram of a complicated hyperbolic knot and draw a diagram for the Whitehead double. Then change a crossing in the clasp.
I'd like to t …
16
votes
Accepted
F→E→B bundle with B,E,F hyperbolic: possible?
As Ryan points out, the interesting case is when the fiber is 2-dimensional. As Igor points out, this is a difficult open problem when the fiber has dimension 2.
When the fiber is a surface $F$, th …
12
votes
Accepted
What is the complex structure on the boundary torus of a hyperbolic knot complement?
The conformal structure on the cuspidal torus is usually called the "cusp shape."
See Adams, Hildebrand, Weeks Hyperbolic invariants of knots and links and McReynolds, Arithmetic cusp shapes are dense …