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Morse Theory and the topology of holomorphic foliations near an isolated singularity

Abstract

Let F\mathcal{F} be the germ at 0Cn\mathbf{0} \in \mathbb{C}^n of a holomorphic foliation of dimension dd, 1d<n1 \leq d < n, with an isolated singularity at 0\mathbf{0}. We study its geometry and topology using ideas that originate in the work of Thom concerning Morse theory for foliated manifolds. Given F\mathcal{F} and a real analytic function gg on Cn\mathbb{C}^n with a Morse critical point of index 0 at 0\mathbf{0}, we look at the corresponding polar variety M=M(F,g)M= M(\mathcal{F},g). These are the points of contact of the two foliations, where F\mathcal{F} is tangent to the fibres of gg. This is analogous to the usual theory of polar varieties in algebraic geometry, where holomorphic functions are studied by looking at the intersection of their fibers with those of a linear form. Here we replace the linear form by a real quadratic map, the Morse function gg. We then study F\mathcal{F} by looking at the intersection of its leaves with the level sets of gg, and the way how these intersections change as the sphere gets smaller.Comment: Accepted for publication by the Journal of Topolog

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