Lens space

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A lens space is an example of a topological space, considered in mathematics. The term often refers to a specific class of 3-manifolds, but in general can be defined for higher dimensions.

In the 3-manifold case, a picturesque description of a lens space is that of a space resulting from gluing two solid tori together by a homeomorphism of their boundaries. Of course, to be consistent, we should exclude the 3-sphere and S^2 \times S^1, both of which can be obtained as just described; some mathematicians include these two manifolds in the class of lens spaces.

The three-dimensional lens spaces L(p,q) were introduced by Tietze in 1908. They were the first known examples of 3-manifolds which were not determined by their homology and fundamental group alone. J.W. Alexander in 1919 showed that the lens spaces L(5;1) and L(5;2) were not homeomorphic even though they have isomorphic fundamental groups and the same homology.

There is a complete classification of three-dimensional lens spaces.

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[edit] Definition

Sit the 2n − 1-sphere S2n − 1 inside \mathbb C^n as the set of all n-tuples of unit absolute value. Let ω be a primitive pth root of unity and let q_1,\ldots,q_n be integers coprime to p. Let the set of powers \zeta_p=\{1,\omega,\ldots,\omega^{p-1}\} act on the sphere by

\omega\cdot(z_1,\ldots,z_n)=(\omega^{q_1}z_1,\ldots,\omega^{q_n}z_n).

The resulting orbit space is a lens space, written as L(p;q_1,\ldots,q_n).

We can also define the infinite-dimensional lens spaces as follows. These are the spaces L(p;q_1,q_2,\ldots) formed from the union of the increasing sequence of spaces L(p;q_1,\ldots,q_n) for n=1,2,\ldots. As before, the q_1,q_2,\ldots must be coprime to p.

[edit] Three-dimensional lens spaces

Three-dimensional lens spaces arise as quotients of S^3 \subset \mathbb{C}^2 by the action of the group that is generated by elements of the form \begin{pmatrix}\omega&0\\0&\omega^q\end{pmatrix}.

Such a lens space L(p;q) has fundamental group \mathbb{Z}/p\mathbb{Z} for all q, so spaces with different p are not homotopy equivalent. Moreover, classifications up to homeomorphism and homotopy equivalence are known, as follows. The three-dimensional spaces L(p;q1) and L(p;q2) are:

  1. homotopy equivalent if and only if q_1 q_2 \equiv \pm n^2 \pmod{p} for some n \in \mathbb{N};
  2. homeomorphic if and only if q_1 \equiv \pm q_2^{\pm1} \pmod{p}.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • G. Bredon, Topology and Geometry, Springer Graduate Texts in Mathematics 139, 1993.
  • A. Hatcher, Algebraic Topology available online, Cambridge University Press, 2002.
  • A. Hatcher, Notes on basic 3-manifold topology, available online (explains classification of L(p,q) up to homeomorphism)
  • H. Tietze, Ueber die topologischen Invarianten mehrdimensionaler Mannigfaltigkeiten [1], Monatsh. fuer Math. und Phys. 19, 1-118 (1908) (\S20)
  • M. Watkins, "A Short Survey of Lens Spaces" (1990 undergraduate dissertation)
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