2,614 research outputs found

    Fixed-point free circle actions on 4-manifolds

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    This paper is concerned with fixed-point free S1S^1-actions (smooth or locally linear) on orientable 4-manifolds. We show that the fundamental group plays a predominant role in the equivariant classification of such 4-manifolds. In particular, it is shown that for any finitely presented group with infinite center, there are at most finitely many distinct smooth (resp. topological) 4-manifolds which support a fixed-point free smooth (resp. locally linear) S1S^1-action and realize the given group as the fundamental group. A similar statement holds for the number of equivalence classes of fixed-point free S1S^1-actions under some further conditions on the fundamental group. The connection between the classification of the S1S^1-manifolds and the fundamental group is given by a certain decomposition, called fiber-sum decomposition, of the S1S^1-manifolds. More concretely, each fiber-sum decomposition naturally gives rise to a Z-splitting of the fundamental group. There are two technical results in this paper which play a central role in our considerations. One states that the Z-splitting is a canonical JSJ decomposition of the fundamental group in the sense of Rips and Sela. Another asserts that if the fundamental group has infinite center, then the homotopy class of principal orbits of any fixed-point free S1S^1-action on the 4-manifold must be infinite, unless the 4-manifold is the mapping torus of a periodic diffeomorphism of some elliptic 3-manifold. The paper ends with two questions concerning the topological nature of the smooth classification and the Seiberg-Witten invariants of 4-manifolds admitting a smooth fixed-point free S1S^1-action.Comment: 42 pages, no figures, Algebraic and Geometric Topolog

    On the orders of periodic diffeomorphisms of 4-manifolds

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    This paper initiated an investigation on the following question: Suppose a smooth 4-manifold does not admit any smooth circle actions. Does there exist a constant C>0C>0 such that the manifold support no smooth Zp\Z_p-actions of prime order for p>Cp>C? We gave affirmative results to this question for the case of holomorphic and symplectic actions, with an interesting finding that the constant CC in the holomorphic case is topological in nature while in the symplectic case it involves also the smooth structure of the manifold.Comment: 30 pages, no figures, final version, with a slightly changed title, to appear in Duke Math.

    A Homotopy Theory of Orbispaces

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    In 1985, physicists Dixon, Harvey, Vafa and Witten studied string theories on Calabi-Yau orbifolds (cf. [DHVW]). An interesting discovery in their paper was the prediction that a certain physicist's Euler number of the orbifold must be equal to the Euler number of any of its crepant resolutions. This was soon related to the so called McKay correspondence in mathematics (cf. [McK]). Later developments include stringy Hodge numbers (cf. [Z], [BD]), mirror symmetry of Calabi-Yau orbifolds (cf. [Ro]), and most recently the Gromov-Witten invariants of symplectic orbifolds (cf. [CR1-2]). One common feature of these studies is that certain contributions from singularities, which are called ``twisted sectors'' in physics, have to be properly incorporated. This is called the ``stringy aspect'' of an orbifold (cf. [R]). This paper makes an effort to understand the stringy aspect of orbifolds in the realm of ``traditional mathematics''.Comment: latex, 59 pages, minor mistakes corrected, more references adde

    Group actions on 4-manifolds: some recent results and open questions

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    A survey of finite group actions on symplectic 4-manifolds is given with a special emphasis on results and questions concerning smooth or symplectic classification of group actions, group actions and exotic smooth structures, and homological rigidity and boundedness of group actions. We also take this opportunity to include several results and questions which did not appear elsewhere.Comment: 21 pages, no figures, expanded version of author's talk at the Gokova conference 2009, appeared in the proceeding
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