All Study Guides Morse Theory Unit 13
🗺️ Morse Theory Unit 13 – The h–Cobordism TheoremThe h-Cobordism Theorem is a cornerstone of high-dimensional topology. It states that certain cobordisms between manifolds are trivial, meaning they're essentially just a product of one manifold with an interval.
This theorem has far-reaching implications, including proving the Poincaré conjecture in higher dimensions. It uses Morse theory to analyze the structure of manifolds, providing a powerful tool for classifying and understanding high-dimensional spaces.
Key Concepts and Definitions
Morse function f : M → R f: M \to \mathbb{R} f : M → R smooth function on a smooth manifold M M M whose critical points are non-degenerate
Critical point p ∈ M p \in M p ∈ M point where the differential d f p = 0 df_p = 0 d f p = 0
Non-degenerate critical point has non-singular Hessian matrix
Index of a critical point number of negative eigenvalues of the Hessian matrix at that point
Cobordism ( W ; M 0 , M 1 ) (W; M_0, M_1) ( W ; M 0 , M 1 ) compact manifold W W W with boundary ∂ W = M 0 ⊔ M 1 \partial W = M_0 \sqcup M_1 ∂ W = M 0 ⊔ M 1
h h h -cobordism has M 0 , M 1 M_0, M_1 M 0 , M 1 homotopy equivalent to W W W
Morse lemma local form of a Morse function near a non-degenerate critical point
Gradient vector field ∇ f \nabla f ∇ f assigns each point the direction of steepest ascent of f f f
Stable and unstable manifolds submanifolds consisting of points that flow to/from a critical point under − ∇ f -\nabla f − ∇ f
Historical Context and Development
Marston Morse (1892-1977) American mathematician, pioneer of Morse theory
Morse theory originated in 1920s as a tool in calculus of variations
Key early result Morse inequalities relating critical points to homology (1930s)
Raoul Bott (1923-2005) made significant contributions, including Bott periodicity (1950s)
Stephen Smale proved the h-cobordism theorem using Morse theory (1960)
Fundamental result in high-dimensional topology
Morse theory has since found wide-ranging applications in different areas of mathematics
Floer homology, Witten's approach to Morse theory, applications in physics
Fundamental Principles of Morse Theory
Study of smooth manifolds using critical points of smooth functions
Non-degenerate critical points isolated, classified by their index
Morse functions admit nice local coordinates (Morse lemma)
Quadratic form ± x 1 2 ± ⋯ ± x n 2 \pm x_1^2 \pm \cdots \pm x_n^2 ± x 1 2 ± ⋯ ± x n 2
Gradient vector field ∇ f \nabla f ∇ f encodes dynamics of the function
Stable/unstable manifolds of a critical point diffeomorphic to R k , R n − k \mathbb{R}^k, \mathbb{R}^{n-k} R k , R n − k
k k k index of the critical point, n n n dimension of the manifold
Changes in topology occur only at critical points
Morse inequalities relate number of critical points to Betti numbers
m k ≥ b k m_k \geq b_k m k ≥ b k , m k m_k m k number of critical points of index k k k
The h-Cobordism Theorem Statement
Let ( W ; M 0 , M 1 ) (W; M_0, M_1) ( W ; M 0 , M 1 ) be a compact h h h -cobordism of dimension n ≥ 6 n \geq 6 n ≥ 6
W , M 0 , M 1 W, M_0, M_1 W , M 0 , M 1 simply connected
Then W W W is diffeomorphic to M 0 × [ 0 , 1 ] M_0 \times [0,1] M 0 × [ 0 , 1 ]
Cobordism is trivial, M 0 M_0 M 0 and M 1 M_1 M 1 are diffeomorphic
Equivalently, if M 0 , M 1 M_0, M_1 M 0 , M 1 are homotopy equivalent, high-dimensional, simply connected closed manifolds
Then any h h h -cobordism between them is trivial
Theorem does not hold in dimensions n ≤ 3 n \leq 3 n ≤ 3
Counterexamples exist in dimension 4 (E8 manifold) and 5
Proof Outline and Key Steps
Choose Morse function f : W → [ 0 , 1 ] f: W \to [0,1] f : W → [ 0 , 1 ] with f − 1 ( 0 ) = M 0 , f − 1 ( 1 ) = M 1 f^{-1}(0) = M_0, f^{-1}(1) = M_1 f − 1 ( 0 ) = M 0 , f − 1 ( 1 ) = M 1
Rearrange critical values to be distinct in ( 0 , 1 ) (0,1) ( 0 , 1 )
Analyze changes in level sets W t = f − 1 ( [ 0 , t ] ) W_t = f^{-1}([0,t]) W t = f − 1 ([ 0 , t ]) as t t t increases
Crossing a critical point of index k k k attaches a k k k -handle
Use homotopy equivalences to show all critical points have index 0 or n n n
0-handles and n n n -handles correspond to M 0 × D n M_0 \times D^n M 0 × D n and D n × M 1 D^n \times M_1 D n × M 1
Introduce a partial order on the set of critical points
Smale's cancellation theorem allows canceling pairs of handles
Rearrange and cancel handles until only one 0-handle and one n n n -handle remain
Requires dimension n ≥ 6 n \geq 6 n ≥ 6 for sufficient room to maneuver
Resulting cobordism is trivial, diffeomorphic to M 0 × [ 0 , 1 ] M_0 \times [0,1] M 0 × [ 0 , 1 ]
Applications and Implications
Provides classification of simply connected, high-dimensional manifolds
Up to h-cobordism, determined by homotopy type
Implies generalized Poincaré conjecture in dimensions n ≥ 6 n \geq 6 n ≥ 6
Every homotopy n n n -sphere is homeomorphic to the n n n -sphere S n S^n S n
Used in the proof of the topological invariance of Whitehead torsion
Fundamental tool in surgery theory and classification of exotic spheres
Donaldson's disproof of the h-cobordism theorem in dimension 4
Smooth structures on 4-manifolds more complicated than higher dimensions
Inspired development of Morse-Floer theory and topological quantum field theories
Morse homology, Floer homology, Morse-Witten complex
s-cobordism theorem strengthens h-cobordism theorem with extra conditions
Whitehead torsion of the inclusion maps vanishes
Barden-Mazur-Stallings theorem classifies h-cobordisms in dimension 5
Not all h-cobordisms are trivial, obstructions lie in certain nilpotent groups
Kervaire-Milnor classification of exotic spheres in dimensions n ≥ 5 n \geq 5 n ≥ 5
Uses h-cobordism theorem and surgery theory
Smale's proof of the generalized Poincaré conjecture in dimensions n ≥ 5 n \geq 5 n ≥ 5
Consequence of the h-cobordism theorem
Morse homology a powerful generalization of Morse theory
Chain complex generated by critical points, differential counts gradient trajectories
Cerf theory studies families of Morse functions and their singularities
Important in the study of diffeomorphism groups of manifolds
Exercises and Problem-Solving Techniques
Compute the Morse homology of the torus T 2 T^2 T 2 with different Morse functions
Relate to the standard cell decomposition and homology groups
Show that the Morse inequalities are sharp for complex projective spaces C P n \mathbb{CP}^n CP n
Find a Morse function with the minimum number of critical points
Prove the Reeb theorem using Morse theory
Every compact manifold admits a Morse function with exactly two critical points
Analyze the topology of sublevel sets for the height function on the 2-sphere
Describe the attachment of handles and changes in homology
Construct an exotic 7-sphere using the h-cobordism theorem and surgery
Start with a homotopy 7-sphere and perform suitable surgeries
Prove the h-cobordism theorem in dimension 6 using Smale's cancellation theorem
Rearrange and cancel handles to trivialize the cobordism
Find a Morse function on the 3-torus T 3 T^3 T 3 with the minimum number of critical points
Relate the critical points to a cell decomposition of T 3 T^3 T 3