1,352 research outputs found
Floer homology and surface decompositions
Sutured Floer homology, denoted by SFH, is an invariant of balanced sutured
manifolds previously defined by the author. In this paper we give a formula
that shows how this invariant changes under surface decompositions. In
particular, if (M, \gamma)--> (M', \gamma') is a sutured manifold decomposition
then SFH(M',\gamma') is a direct summand of SFH(M, \gamma). To prove the
decomposition formula we give an algorithm that computes SFH(M,\gamma) from a
balanced diagram defining (M,\gamma) that generalizes the algorithm of Sarkar
and Wang.
As a corollary we obtain that if (M, \gamma) is taut then SFH(M,\gamma) is
non-zero. Other applications include simple proofs of a result of Ozsvath and
Szabo that link Floer homology detects the Thurston norm, and a theorem of Ni
that knot Floer homology detects fibred knots. Our proofs do not make use of
any contact geometry.
Moreover, using these methods we show that if K is a genus g knot in a
rational homology 3-sphere Y whose Alexander polynomial has leading coefficient
a_g non-zero and if the rank of \hat{HFK}(Y,K,g) < 4 then the knot complement
admits a depth < 2 taut foliation transversal to the boundary of N(K).Comment: 40 pages, 10 figures. Improved, expanded expositio
Laminar Branched Surfaces in 3-manifolds
We define a laminar branched surface to be a branched surface satisfying the
following conditions: (1) Its horizontal boundary is incompressible; (2) there
is no monogon; (3) there is no Reeb component; (4) there is no sink disk (after
eliminating trivial bubbles in the branched surface). The first three
conditions are standard in the theory of branched surfaces, and a sink disk is
a disk branch of the branched surface with all branch directions of its
boundary arcs pointing inwards. We will show in this paper that every laminar
branched surface carries an essential lamination, and any essential lamination
that is not a lamination by planes is carried by a laminar branched surface.
This implies that a 3-manifold contains an essential lamination if and only if
it contains a laminar branched surface.Comment: Published by Geometry and Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol6/paper6.abs.htm
The sutured Floer homology polytope
In this paper, we extend the theory of sutured Floer homology developed by
the author. We first prove an adjunction inequality, and then define a polytope
P(M,g) in H^2(M,\partial M; R) that is spanned by the Spin^c-structures which
support non-zero Floer homology groups. If (M,g) --> (M',g') is a taut surface
decomposition, then a natural map projects P(M',g') onto a face of P(M,g);
moreover, if H_2(M) = 0, then every face of P(M,g) can be obtained in this way
for some surface decomposition. We show that if (M,g) is reduced, horizontally
prime, and H_2(M) = 0, then P(M,g) is maximal dimensional in H^2(M,\partial M;
R). This implies that if rk(SFH(M,g)) < 2^{k+1} then (M,g) has depth at most
2k. Moreover, SFH acts as a complexity for balanced sutured manifolds. In
particular, the rank of the top term of knot Floer homology bounds the
topological complexity of the knot complement, in addition to simply detecting
fibred knots.Comment: 37 pages, 4 figures, improved expositio
Link Floer homology detects the Thurston norm
We prove that, for a link in a rational homology 3--sphere, the link
Floer homology detects the Thurston norm of its complement. This generalizes
the previous results due to Ozsv\'ath, Szab\'o and the author.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur
Holomorphic discs and sutured manifolds
In this paper we construct a Floer-homology invariant for a natural and wide
class of sutured manifolds that we call balanced. This generalizes the Heegaard
Floer hat theory of closed three-manifolds and links. Our invariant is
unchanged under product decompositions and is zero for nontaut sutured
manifolds. As an application, an invariant of Seifert surfaces is given and is
computed in a few interesting cases.Comment: This is the version published by Algebraic & Geometric Topology on 4
October 200
An algorithm to detect laminar 3-manifolds
We show that there are algorithms to determine if a 3-manifold contains an
essential lamination or a Reebless foliation.Comment: Published by Geometry and Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol7/paper8.abs.htm
Sutured Heegaard diagrams for knots
We define sutured Heegaard diagrams for null-homologous knots in 3-manifolds.
These diagrams are useful for computing the knot Floer homology at the top
filtration level. As an application, we give a formula for the knot Floer
homology of a Murasugi sum. Our result echoes Gabai's earlier works. We also
show that for so-called 'semifibred' satellite knots, the top filtration term
of the knot Floer homology is isomorphic to the counterpart of the companion.Comment: This is the version published by Algebraic & Geometric Topology on 2
April 200
Bounds on exceptional Dehn filling
We show that for a hyperbolic knot complement, all but at most 12 Dehn
fillings are irreducible with infinite word-hyperbolic fundamental group.Comment: Published in Geometry and Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol4/paper15.abs.htm
Taut ideal triangulations of 3-manifolds
A taut ideal triangulation of a 3-manifold is a topological ideal
triangulation with extra combinatorial structure: a choice of transverse
orientation on each ideal 2-simplex, satisfying two simple conditions. The aim
of this paper is to demonstrate that taut ideal triangulations are very common,
and that their behaviour is very similar to that of a taut foliation. For
example, by studying normal surfaces in taut ideal triangulations, we give a
new proof of Gabai's result that the singular genus of a knot in the 3-sphere
is equal to its genus.Comment: Published in Geometry and Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/gt/GTVol4/paper12.abs.htm
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