Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Names of Participants
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- PART 1 SYMPLECTIC GEOMETRY
- Introduction
- Rational and ruled symplectic 4-manifolds
- Symplectic capacities
- The nonlinear Maslov index
- Filling by holomorphic discs and its applications
- PART 2 JONES/WITTEN THEORY
- PART 3 THREE-DIMENSIONAL MANIFOLDS
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Names of Participants
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- PART 1 SYMPLECTIC GEOMETRY
- Introduction
- Rational and ruled symplectic 4-manifolds
- Symplectic capacities
- The nonlinear Maslov index
- Filling by holomorphic discs and its applications
- PART 2 JONES/WITTEN THEORY
- PART 3 THREE-DIMENSIONAL MANIFOLDS
Summary
In this section we gather together papers on symplectic and contact geometry. Recall that a symplectic manifold (M,ω) is a smooth manifold M of even dimension 2n with a closed, nondegenerate, 2-form ω i.e dω = 0 and ωn is nowhere zero. A contact structure is an odd-dimensional analogue; a contact manifold (V,H) is a pair consisting of a manifold V of odd dimension 2n + 1 with a field H of 2n-dimensional subspaces of the tangent bundle TV which is maximally non-integrable, in the sense that if α is a 1-form defining H, then dαn ∧ α is non-zero (i.e. dα is non-degenerate on H).
In their different ways, all the articles in this section are motivated by the work of M. Gromov, and in particular by his paper [G2] on pseudo-holomorphic curves. Here the idea is to replace a complex manifold by an almost-complex manifold with a compatible symplectic structure, and to study the generalisations of the complex curves–defined by this almost-complex structure. The paper of McDuff below gives a direct application of this method by showing that a minimal 4-dimensional symplectic manifold containing an embedded, symplectic, copy of S2 = CP1 is either CP2 or an S2 bundle over a Riemann surface, with the symplectic form being non-degenerate on fibres. The uniqueness of the structure in the minimal case can be thought of as an example of rigidity.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Geometry of Low-Dimensional ManifoldsSymplectic Manifolds and Jones-Witten Theory, pp. 3 - 6Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991