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Variations on a Theme of Borel: An Essay on the Role of the Fundamental Group in Rigidity [Hardback]

(University of Chicago)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 351 pages, height x width x depth: 235x158x26 mm, weight: 700 g
  • Sērija : Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Dec-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1107142598
  • ISBN-13: 9781107142596
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 131,44 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 351 pages, height x width x depth: 235x158x26 mm, weight: 700 g
  • Sērija : Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics
  • Izdošanas datums: 08-Dec-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1107142598
  • ISBN-13: 9781107142596
Shmuel Weinberger describes here analogies between geometric topology, differential geometry, group theory, global analysis, and noncommutative geometry. He develops deep tools in a setting where they have immediate application. The connections between these fields enrich each and shed light on one another.

In the middle of the last century, after hearing a talk of Mostow on one of his rigidity theorems, Borel conjectured in a letter to Serre a purely topological version of rigidity for aspherical manifolds (i.e. manifolds with contractible universal covers). The Borel conjecture is now one of the central problems of topology with many implications for manifolds that need not be aspherical. Since then, the theory of rigidity has vastly expanded in both precision and scope. This book rethinks the implications of accepting his heuristic as a source of ideas. Doing so leads to many variants of the original conjecture - some true, some false, and some that remain conjectural. The author explores this collection of ideas, following them where they lead whether into rigidity theory in its differential geometric and representation theoretic forms, or geometric group theory, metric geometry, global analysis, algebraic geometry, K-theory, or controlled topology.

Papildus informācija

Explains, using examples, the central role of the fundamental group in the geometry, global analysis, and topology of manifolds.
Preface xi
1 Introduction
1(9)
1.1 Introduction to Geometric Rigidity
1(3)
1.2 The Borel Conjecture
4(4)
1.3 Notes
8(2)
2 Examples of Aspherical Manifolds
10(21)
2.1 Low-Dimensional Examples
10(4)
2.2 Constructions of Lattices
14(6)
2.3 Some More Exotic Aspherical Manifolds
20(7)
2.4 Notes
27(4)
3 First Contact: the Proper Category
31(48)
3.1 Overview
31(2)
3.2 K\GΓ and its Large-Scale Geometry
33(6)
3.3 Surgery
39(6)
3.4 Strong Approximation
45(3)
3.5 Property (T)
48(8)
3.6 Cohomology of Lattices
56(9)
3.7 Mixing the Ingredients
65(5)
3.8 Morals
70(1)
3.9 Notes
71(8)
4 How Can It Be True?
79(50)
4.1 Introduction
79(2)
4.2 The Hirzebruch Signature Theorem
81(3)
4.3 The Novikov Conjecture
84(1)
4.4 First Positive Results
85(7)
4.5 Novikov's Theorem
92(2)
4.6 Curvature, Tangentiality, and Controlled Topology
94(5)
4.7 Surgery, Revisited
99(7)
4.8 Controlled Topology, Revisited
106(4)
4.9 The Principle of Descent
110(4)
4.10 Secondary Invariants
114(5)
4.11 Notes
119(10)
5 Playing the Novikov Game
129(57)
5.1 Overview
129(5)
5.2 Anteing Up: Introduction to Index Theory
134(13)
5.3 Playing the Game: What Happens in Particular Cases?
147(13)
5.4 The Moral
160(3)
5.5 Playing the Borel Game
163(12)
5.6 Notes
175(11)
6 Equivariant Borel Conjecture
186(72)
6.1 Motivation
186(3)
6.2 Trifles
189(10)
6.3 h-Cobordisms
199(3)
6.4 Cappell's UNil Groups
202(4)
6.5 The Simplest Nontrivial Examples
206(6)
6.6 Generalities about Stratified Spaces
212(8)
6.7 The Equivariant Novikov Conjecture
220(12)
6.8 The Farrell--Jones Conjecture
232(3)
6.9 Connection to Embedding Theory
235(7)
6.10 Embedding Theory
242(7)
6.11 Notes
249(9)
7 Existential Problems
258(33)
7.1 Some Questions
258(3)
7.2 The "Wall Conjecture" and Variants
261(6)
7.3 The Nielsen Problem and the Conner--Raymond Conjecture
267(5)
7.4 Products: On the Difference that a Group Action Makes
272(5)
7.5 Fibering
277(6)
7.6 Manifolds with Excessive Symmetry
283(3)
7.7 Notes
286(5)
8 Epilogue: A Survey of Some Techniques
291(20)
8.1 Codimension-1 Methods
291(3)
8.2 Induction and Control
294(2)
8.3 Dynamics and Foliated Control
296(4)
8.4 Tensor Square Trick
300(2)
8.5 The Baum--Connes Conjecture
302(4)
8.6 A-T-menability, Uniform Embeddability, and Expanders
306(5)
References 311(29)
Subject Index 340
Shmuel Weinberger is Andrew MacLeish Professor of Mathematics at the University of Chicago. His work is on geometry and topology and their applications. To Weinberger, the only thing cooler than discovering some new geometric result (by any method from any area of mathematics) is discovering a hidden geometric side to the seemingly 'ungeometric'. He has written two other books, one on stratified spaces, and the other on the large-scale structure of spaces of Riemannian metrics using tools from logic. An inaugural Fellow of the American Mathematical Society, he is also a Fellow of the American Academy for the Advancement of Science.