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Contact surgery

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A special type of surgery on a (strict) contact manifold (i.e. a smooth manifold admitting a (strict) contact structure , where is a -form satisfying ), which results in a new contact manifold.

In topological terms, surgery on denotes the replacement of an embedded copy of , a tubular neighbourhood of an embedded -sphere with trivial normal bundle, by a copy of , with the obvious identification along the boundary . Alternatively, one can attach a -handle along to a manifold with boundary , and the new boundary will be the result of performing surgery on .

As shown by Y. Eliashberg [a2] and A. Weinstein [a11], contact surgery is possible along spheres which are isotropic submanifolds (cf. also Isotropic submanifold) of and have trivial normal bundle. The choice of framing, i.e. trivialization of the normal bundle, for which contact surgery is possible is restricted.

A contact manifold may be regarded as the strictly pseudo-convex boundary of an almost-complex (in fact, symplectic) manifold such that is given by the -invariant subspace of the tangent bundle . Contact surgery on can then be interpreted as the attaching of an almost-complex or symplectic handle to along , and the framing condition for is given by requiring the almost-complex structure on to extend over the handle. For the situation is more subtle, see [a2], [a5]. Weinstein formulates his construction in terms of symplectic handle-bodies, Eliashberg (whose results are somewhat stronger) in terms of -convex Morse functions on almost-complex manifolds (cf. also Almost-complex structure; Morse function).

A Stein manifold of real dimension has the homotopy type of an -dimensional CW-complex, cf. [a8], p. 39. Eliashberg uses his construction to show that for this is indeed the only topological restriction on a Stein manifold, that is, if is a -dimensional smooth manifold with an almost-complex structure and a proper Morse function with critical points of Morse index at most , then is homotopic to a genuine complex structure such that is -convex and, in particular, is Stein.

The usefulness of contact surgery in this and other applications rests on the fact that there is an -principle for isotropic spheres. This allows one to replace a given embedding by an isotropic embedding (for ) that is isotopic to the initial one, provided only an obvious necessary bundle condition is satisfied: If is an isotropic embedding, then its differential extends to a complex bundle monomorphism , where inherits a complex structure from the (conformal) symplectic structure . The relevant -principle says that, conversely, the existence of such a bundle mapping covering is sufficient for to be isotopic to an isotropic embedding .

This allows one to use topological structure theorems, such as Barden's classification of simply-connected -manifolds [a1], to construct contact structures on a wide class of higher-dimensional manifolds, see [a3].

In dimension () there is a different notion of contact surgery, due to R. Lutz and J. Martinet [a7]; it allows surgery along -spheres embedded transversely to a contact structure . This was used by Lutz and Martinet to show the existence of a contact structure on any closed, orientable -manifold and in any homotopy class of -plane fields. For applications of other topological structure theorems (such as branched coverings or open book decompositions, cf. also Open book decomposition) to the construction of contact manifolds, see [a4] and references therein.

Other types of surgery compatible with some geometric structure include surgery on manifolds of positive scalar curvature ([a6], [a9]) and surgery on manifolds of positive Ricci curvature ([a10], [a12]).

References

[a1] D. Barden, "Simply connected five-manifolds" Ann. of Math. , 82 (1965) pp. 365–385
[a2] Y. Eliashberg, "Topological characterization of Stein manifolds of dimension " Internat. J. Math. , 1 (1990) pp. 29–46
[a3] H. Geiges, "Applications of contact surgery" Topology , 36 (1997) pp. 1193–1220
[a4] H. Geiges, "Constructions of contact manifolds" Math. Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. , 121 (1997) pp. 455–464
[a5] R.E. Gompf, "Handlebody construction of Stein surfaces" Ann. of Math. , 148 (1998) pp. 619–693
[a6] M. Gromov, H.B. Lawson Jr., "The classification of simply connected manifolds of positive scalar curvature" Ann. of Math. , 111 (1980) pp. 423–434
[a7] J. Martinet, "Formes de contact sur les variétés de dimension" , Proc. Liverpool Singularities Sympos. II , Lecture Notes Math. , 209 , Springer (1971) pp. 142–163
[a8] J. Milnor, "Morse theory" , Princeton Univ. Press (1963)
[a9] R. Schoen, S.T. Yau, "On the structure of manifolds with positive scalar curvature" Manuscripta Math. , 28 (1979) pp. 159–183
[a10] J.-P. Sha, D.-G. Yang, "Positive Ricci curvature on the connected sum of " J. Diff. Geom. , 33 (1991) pp. 127–137
[a11] A. Weinstein, "Contact surgery and symplectic handlebodies" Hokkaido Math. J. , 20 (1991) pp. 241–251
[a12] D. Wraith, "Surgery on Ricci positive manifolds" J. Reine Angew. Math. , 501 (1998) pp. 99–113
How to Cite This Entry:
Contact surgery. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Contact_surgery&oldid=24403
This article was adapted from an original article by H. Geiges (originator), which appeared in Encyclopedia of Mathematics - ISBN 1402006098. See original article