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Topology of cell complexes and manifolds, classification of manifolds (e.g. smoothing, surgery), low dimensional topology (e.g. knot theory, invariants of 4-manifolds), embedding theory, combinatorial and PL topology, geometric group theory, infinite dimensional topology (e.g. Hilbert cube manifolds, theory of retracts).

13 votes
0 answers
221 views

Examples of manifolds with first nontrivial SW-class in degree 16 or bigger

As a module over the Steenrod algebra, $H^{\ast}(BO;\mathbb F_2) = \mathbb F_2[w_1, w_2, w_3, \dots]$ is generated by $w_{2^t}, t \geq 0$. Thus, the first nontrivial SW-class of any vector bundle $\xi …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
7 votes
2 answers
600 views

Status of the Hopf-Thurston sign conjecture in dimension 4

A famous conjecture in topology asserts: The Euler characteristic of a closed aspherical $2n$-manifold $M$ satisfies $(-1)^n\chi(M) \geq 0$. This was conjectured by Hopf for manifolds with non-positiv …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
8 votes
0 answers
262 views

$\mathbb RP^n$ bundles over the circle, II

EDIT: I fixed the issue pointed out by Nicholas Tholozan, thanks for sheding light on this! This question is written as a follow-up to this one. Both answers there are great, but my impression is ther …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
124 views

Restrictions on pointed lifts of isometries

Let $M$ be a (closed) Riemannian manifold and let $f$ be an isometry of $M$ fixing a point $\ast \in M$ that acts trivially on $\Gamma := \pi_1(M,\ast)$. Then there is a unique isometry $\tilde{f}$ of …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
19 votes
0 answers
640 views

Bernoulli & Betti numbers (of manifolds) and the prime 34511

The purpose of this question is to resolve a mystery surrounding the prime 34511 that has got me bogged down for a while now. If you only care about the number theory and not the motivation coming fro …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
8 votes
1 answer
353 views

Cohomological dimension bounds on the fundamental group of a manifold

Suppose $M$ is a (closed, connected, oriented, smooth) manifold. If $M$ is aspherical, i.e., if the inversal covering $\tilde{M}$ is contractible, $M$ is a $B\pi_1(M)$. This is often enforced by geome …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
7 votes
1 answer
288 views

A finitely presented group whose rational cohomology is not nilpotent

Does there exist a finitely presented (preferably $\text{FP}_{\infty}$) group $\Gamma$ and an element $\alpha \in \text{H}^{\ast>0}(B\Gamma;\mathbf{Q})$ that is not nilpotent? If non-discrete groups w …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
16 votes
1 answer
499 views

How many cells needed to build the classifying space $BG$?

Let $G$ be a finitely presented group of cohomological dimension $n$. Apart from the unresolved ambiguity pertaining to the Eilenberg--Ganea conjecture, it is known that we can find an $n$-dimensional …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
18 votes
1 answer
990 views

On the definition of A-theory

Waldhausen's A-theory is a version of algebraic K-theory of spaces. Concretely, for a (pointed) space $X$, he considers the 'Waldhausen category' $\mathcal R_f(X)$ of finite retractive CW-complexes ov …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
8 votes
0 answers
215 views

Hopf invariants of elements from spherical fibrations

Let $G_n$ be the space of homotopy-equivalences of $S^{n-1}$. Evaluation produces a map $G_{n} \to S^{n-1}$. For $n = 2m+1$, I would like to understand the induced map on $\pi_{4m-1}$. More precisely, …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
18 votes
1 answer
865 views

Oriented cobordism classes represented by rational homology spheres

Any homology sphere is stably parallelizable, hence nullcobordant. However, rational homology spheres need not be nullcobordant, as the example of the Wu manifold shows, which generates $\text{torsion …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
9 votes
0 answers
286 views

Rational cobordism classes of manifolds fibered over spheres

Let us fix positive integers $k, m$. Let $A^k_{4m} \subset \Omega^{\text{SO}}_{4m} \otimes \mathbb Q$ be the subgroup generated by oriented cobordism classes of manifolds fibered over $S^k$. The signa …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
20 votes
1 answer
564 views

Can every manifold be dominated by a parallelizable one?

A closed, oriented $d$-manifold $M$ is said to dominate another such manifold $N$ if there exists a map $M \to N$ of non-zero degree. (This notion should not be confused with the unrelated concept of …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
19 votes
1 answer
786 views

Which cohomology classes are detected by tori?

Given a space $X$, I am looking for a characterization of classes $\alpha \in H^n(X;\bf Q)$ such that there is a map $f\colon T^n \to X$ so that $f^{\ast} \alpha$ pairs non-trivially against the funda …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar
12 votes
3 answers
1k views

Fixed point set of smooth circle action

Suppose $M$ is a connected closed smooth $d$-dimensional manifold, and suppose $S^1 = SO(2)$ acts smoothly on $M$. Then the fixed point set $Y = M^{S^1}$ will be a submanifold of $M$ of even codimensi …
Jens Reinhold's user avatar

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