In the mathematical area of topology, the term Generalized Poincaré conjecture refers to a statement that a manifold which is a homotopy sphere 'is' a sphere. More precisely, one fixes a category of manifolds: topological (Top), differentiable (Diff), or piecewise linear (PL). Then the statement is
The name derives from the Poincaré conjecture, which was made for (topological or PL) manifolds of dimension 3, where being a homotopy sphere is equivalent to being simply connected. The Generalized Poincaré conjecture is known to be true or false in a number of instances, due to the work of many distinguished topologists, including the Fields medal recipients John Milnor, Steve Smale, Michael Freedman and Grigori Perelman.[1]
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Here is a summary of the status of the Generalized Poincaré conjecture in various settings.
A fundamental fact of differential topology is that the notion of isomorphism in Top, PL, and Diff is the same in dimension 3 and below; in dimension 4 PL and Diff agree, but Top differs. In dimension above 6 they all differ. In dimensions 5 and 6 every PL manifold admits an infinitely differentiable structure that is so-called Whitehead compatible.[2]
The case n = 1 and 2 has long been known, by classification of manifolds in those dimensions.
For a PL or smooth homotopy n-sphere, in 1960 Stephen Smale proved for n ≥ 7 that it was homeomorphic to the n-sphere and subsequently extended his proof to n ≥ 5;[3] he received a Fields Medal for his work in 1966. Shortly after Smale's announcement of a proof, John Stallings gave a different proof for dimensions at least 7 that a PL homotopy n-sphere was homeomorphic to the n-sphere using the notion of "engulfing".[4] E. C. Zeeman modified Stalling's construction to work in dimensions 5 and 6. In 1962, Smale proved a PL homotopy n-sphere was PL-isomorphic to the standard PL n-sphere for n at least 5.[5] In 1966, M.H.A. Newman extended PL engulfing to the topological situation and proved that for n ≥ 5 a topological homotopy n-sphere is homeomorphic to the n-sphere.[6]
Michael Freedman solved the case n = 4 (in TOP) in 1982 and received a Fields Medal in 1986.
Grigori Perelman solved the last case n = 3 (where TOP, PL, and DIFF all coincide) in 2003 and was awarded a Fields Medal in August 2006 and the Millenium Prize from the Clay Mathematics Institute in March 2010.[1]
The Generalized Poincaré conjecture is true topologically, but false smoothly in some dimensions. This results in constructions of manifolds that are homeomorphic, but not diffeomorphic, to the standard sphere, the exotic spheres: you can interpret these as non-standard smooth structures on the standard (topological) sphere.
Thus the homotopy spheres that Milnor produced are homeomorphic (Top-isomorphic, and indeed piecewise linear homeomorphic) to the standard sphere Sn, but are not diffeomorphic (Diff-isomorphic) to it, and thus are exotic spheres: they can be interpreted as non-standard differentiable structures on the standard sphere.
Michel Kervaire and John Milnor showed that the oriented 7-sphere has 28 different smooth structures (or 15 ignoring orientations), and in higher dimensions there are usually many different smooth structures on a sphere.[7] It is suspected that certain differentiable structures on the 4-sphere, called Gluck twists, are not isomorphic to the standard one, but at the moment there are no known invariants capable of distinguishing different smooth structures on a 4-sphere. [8]
For piecewise linear manifolds, the Poincaré conjecture is true except possibly in 4 dimensions, where the answer is unknown, and equivalent to the smooth case. In other words, every compact PL manifold of dimension not equal to 4 that is homotopy equivalent to a sphere is PL isomorphic to a sphere. [2]