Автор: Novikov S.P.   Zieschang H.   Ponomarev V.I.   Shamolin M.V.  

Теги: mathematics   topology  

ISBN: 5-7036-0017-0

Год: 1996

Текст
                    TOPOLOGY
and
APPLICATIONS
International Topological Conference
Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday
Moscow
May 27-31,1996


TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS International Topological Conference Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow May 27- 31,1996 Φ PHASIS Moscow
UDC 515.1 -|- 514.7 The book is published under financial support τ>Λτ*τ* °f Russian Foundation for Basic Research, JJ Project No 96-01-10048 Topology and Applications International Topological Conference, Dedicated to P. S. AlexandrofTs 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 The papers appear as they were presented by the authors without editing The picture of P. S. Alexandroff is due to Constantin P. Radimov and reproduced here by permission of Maria P. Radimova ISBN 5-7036-0017-0 © PHASIS, 1996
International Topological Conference Dedicated to P.S. AlexandrofTs 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Organized by Lomonosov Moscow State University and Steklov Mathematical Institute Russian Academy of Sciences Supported by Russian Foundation for Basic Research Organizing Committee A.V.Arhangel'skff (Lomonosov Moscow State University) R.Engelking (Warsaw University, Poland) V.V.Fedorchuk (Lomonosov Moscow State University), Vice-Chairman A.T.Fomenko (Lomonosov Moscow State University), Vice-Chairman S.D.Iliadis (University of Patras, Greece) A.A.Maltsev (International Institute for System Research, Austria) A.S.Mishchenko (Lomonosov Moscow State University) S.P.Novikov (Lomonosov Moscow State University), Chairman B.A.Pasynkov (Lomonosov Moscow State University) V.I.Ponomarev (Lomonosov Moscow State University) M. V.Shamolin (Lomonosov Moscow State University) E.V.Shchepin (Steklov Mathematical Institute), Vice-Chairman Yu.M.Smirnov (Lomonosov Moscow State University) V.M.Tikhomirov (Lomonosov Moscow State University) J.E.Vaughan (University of North Carolina, USA) A.N. Yakivchik (Lomonosov Moscow State University), Secretary H.Zieschang (Ruhr University of Bochum, Germany)
Cpntents Yu.M. Smirnov. On P.S. Alexandroff's main results XI G. Fret, U. Stammbach. Correspondence between Aleksandrov and Hopf 1926-1971 xxni Plenary Lectures 1 S. C. Ferry. Homology manifolds and the topological characterization of manifolds 3 A.N. Dranishnikov. Cohomological dimension theory and applications 11 S. V. Matveev. Algorithmic classification of sufficiently large 3-manifolds 17 A. Bak. Foundations of algebraic homotopy theory and dimension theory 25 A.V. Bolsinov. Fomenko's invariants in the theory of integrable Hamiltonian systems 27 B.N. Apanasov. Geometry and topology of geometrically finite negatively curved and Carnot-Caratheodory manifolds 35 Session 1. General and Geometric Topology '43 S.M. Ageev. Absolute extensors of spaces with countable filtration 45 F.D. Ancelj C.R. Guilbault. Topological and geometric structures on compact contractible manifolds 47 S.A. Antonian. Extension properties of the orbit space 49 A. Bella, I.V. Yaschenko. Embeddings preserving character and cardinal invariants 51 R. Cauty. Locally connected subgroups of the Hubert space and ANR-spaces 53 M.M. Cioban. Isomorphism problems for Banach spaces of measurable functions on compact spaces 55 P. Fabel. The Banach-Mazur compactum Q(2) is an absolute retract 57 V. V. Fedorchuk. On completeness of spaces of r-additive measures 59 P.M. Gartside. Permutation groups 61 A.A. Gryzlov. Some points of compactifications 63
VII Υ. Hattori, Η. Ohta. Dugundji extension theorems for ordered spaces and their products 65 V.M. Karaulov. On the monotonicity of dimension dim of continuous mappings 67 U.H. Karimov, D. Repovs. On #n-bubble in n-dimensional compacta '. 69 A. P. Kombarov. Weak norrgality, exp (X) and powers 71 S.A. Logunov. Butterfly points in separable spaces with π-weight ω\ 73 V.L Malykhin. Resolvability of A-, CA- and PCA-sets in compacta 75 Μ. Κ Matveev. Covers by stars of discrete subspaces 77 A.V. Mironov. Some contribution to the theory of partially ordered locally compact groups 81 Yu.N. Mukhin. On compact elements of locally compact groups .... 83 S.E. Nokhrin. Local compactness of C\{X) 85 A. Okuyama. Note on hereditary normality of product spaces 87 D.S. Ohezin. Descriptive theory and discontinuity points of Baire I functions 89 A. V. Osipov. F-closed spaces 91 S.A. Peregudov. On some covering properties 93 E.G. Pytkeev. On σ-additive covers of /f-analytic spaces 95 D. Repovs. Cell-like mappings and their applications in Geometric Topology 97 E.A. Reznichenko. On stratifiable subspaces of spaces of continuous functions with the compact-open topology 99 L.B. Shapiro. On simultaneous extension of continuous partial functions 101 E. V. Shchepin. On selections of multivalued mappings 103 A.B. Skopenkov. On the deleted product criterion for embeddability of manifolds in Em : 105 A.P. Sostak, J. Steprans. On some compactness-type properties defined by special open covers 107 V.V. Uspenskii. On the dimension of the Higson corona Ill V.L Varankina. On semirings of continuous nonnegative functions on F-spaces 113 EM. Vechtomov. On the lattice of subalgebras of a ring of continuous functions 115 N.V. Velichko. On sequential completeness of C\{X) 117 A.Yu. Zoubov. Partial coverings and fibrewise uniformities 119
VIII Session 2. Algebraic Topology 121 A.M. Aslanyan. Asymptotically flat solutions of Bogomolny equations with solvable gauge group 123 D. V. Berzin. The orbits of the coadjoint representation for Lie groups which have some special structure 125 V.M. Buchstaber, N. Ray. Double cobordism, flag manifolds, and quantum doubles 127 Yu.T. Lisica. Strong excision property for coherent homology 131 M.J. Chasco, E. Martin-Peinador. Reflexivity of convergence Abelian groups 133 T.L. Melekhina. On the orbit topology for со-adjoint representation of tensor extensions of Lie groups 137 A.S. Mishchenko. Metric approach to constructing Fredholm representations 141 N. Mramor-Kosta. Parametrized Borsuk-Ulam theorems for Banach bundles 143 Yu.V. Muranov. Splitting along one-sided submanifolds 145 H. Nencka. Generalization of the Markov theorem and Cantorian-like braid groups 147 A.Yu. Neronov, A.M. Boyarskii. General Relativity as a construction of the formal theory of Lie pseudogroups 149 V. Yu. Ovsienko. Space of linear differential operators as a module over the Lie algebra of vector fields 153 N. Ray. Umbral and Schubert calculi 155 N.N. Saveliev. Invariants of homology 4-cobordisms from gauge theory 157 K. Shimomura. The homotopy of 1,2-local finite spectra 159 V. V. Trofimov. On the topology of the path space for a symplectic manifold 161 A.V. Zarelua. Equivariant exterior algebra of finite groups 163 Session 3· Applications of Topology and Geometry 165 S.A. Bogatyi. The Knaster problem, the Borsuk theorem and cyclic systems 167 Yu.G. Borisovich. Multivalued vector fields with Fredholm and monotone components 171 G. Burdet, P. Combe, H. Nencka. Statistical manifolds, a-geodesics and λ-Jacobi fields 173 A.S. Denisiuk. On a problem of integral geometry in spaces of constant curvature 177
IX N.P. Dolbilin, Μ.A. Stan'ko, M.I. Stogrin. Extremality of the Bricard Octahedra 179 V. V. Filippov. Basic topological structures of the theory of ordinary differential equations 181 A. Gray. Costa's minimal surface 183 B.S. Klebanov. Convergence in the space of solution spaces of ordinary differential equations and its applications 185 B.S. Kruglikov. Exact smooth classification of divergence-free vector fields on surfaces of small genus 187 A.T. Lipkovski. Serret's curves 191 M.A. MalakhaUtsev. On cohomology of a sheaf over foliation with tangential (X, G)-structure 193 J. Malesic. The standard Cantor set is Lipschitz ambient homogeneous on the plane 195 O.E. Orel Orbital classification of integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom in a neighborhood of equilibrium 199 R. V. Plykin. On topological distinction of Waza continua in the theory of smooth dynamical systems 201 Z.G. Psiola. Realization of geodesic flow within the monopolistic framework 203 P. V. Semenov. Local paraconvexity and local selection theorem . . . 205 M. V. Shamolin. Relative structural stability and relative structural instability of different degrees in Topological Dynamics 207 E. V. Shchepin. Hausdorff dimension and dynamics of diffeomorphisms 209 V. V. Shurygin. On the bigraduated cohomology of manifolds over local algebras and its applications 211 Yu.M. Smirnov. Minimal topologies on acting groups 213 M. V. Sokolov. Summands of the Turaev-Viro invariants 215 D. Y. Suh. Entire rational approximation of G-maps 217 A.Yu. Volovikov. Cohomological sphere bundles and parametrized Borsuk-Ulam theorems 219 V.G. Zvyagin. On some variant of the degree theory and its applications to problems of Hydrodynamics 223
Dedicated to the memory of Pavel Sergeevich Alexandroff
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS International Topological Conference Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On P.S. AlexandrofTs main results* Yuri M. Smirnov Professor, Chair of Higher Geometry and Topology, Lomonosov Moscow State University Pavel Sergeevich has written about 82 original mathematical works (the total number with new editions exceeds 170). With a few exceptions they are devoted to topology, set theory and the theory of functions in Luzin's sense. Of course, not all of them are of equal value, but each of them features his always interesting creative thought, starting with "On the sets complement to A-sets" [6] and concluding with "Principal points in the development of set-theoretic topology" [125] (with V.V. Fedorchuk). Pavel Sergeevich obtained his first significant mathematical result in 1915, being still a student at N.N. Luzin's seminar and answering one of his questions: any uncountable Borel set contains a perfect subset and therefore has the cardinality of continuum [6]. The tool for the proof was a special operation on sets introduced by Pavel Sergeevich and named "A-operation" in his honor, which had an essential influence upon the development of set-theoretic topology. It greatly impressed Lebesgue, young Souslin and Luzin himself. The following theorem on absolute Gs-sets proved later is relevant to this result. It states: Лп the class of separable spaces, every absolute Gs-set is homeomorphic to a complete metric space [7]. After that, as one knows, Pavel Sergeevich had a rather long pause in his mathematical activity since 1917 when N.N. Luzin had suggested him to solve the continuum problem which was insoluble, as we know today, by the methods available at that time. After a strong nervous overstrain (or stress) he decided to give up mathematics, leave Moscow and turn to a quite different — literary and theatrical — activity. He returned to Moscow and the Moscow University only in 1920. The same year, when passing his Master degree exams, he got acquainted with Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 Pages XI-XXI * Translated from Russian by Andrew N. Yakivchik.
XII Pavel Samuilovich Urysohn, and they became friends forever. He was a very extraordinary man and a well-educated mathematician. Conversations with him gradually revealed a new research area — topology, to which Pavel Sergeevich devoted all his life. Since the summer of 1922, Pavel Sergeevich had felt a new wave of enthusiasm and passion for mathematics. Together with Pavel Samuilovich he proved a metrizability theorem [3] which many years later engaged such eminent set-theoretic topologists as R. Bing and K. Nagata. At the same time Pavel Sergeevich and Pavel Samuilovich wrote their famous work "Memoir on compact topological spaces" [1, 35]. First of all, a new axiomatics of a topological space (with the help of open sets) which is most commonly used nowadays was given there. But, certainly, the most important was the creation of a sufficiently extensive general theory of compact (called bicompact by Pavel Sergeevich, to emphasize the role of two types of compactness involved implicitly in this notion) and locally compact spaces. They examined and "introduced into practice" a whole series of important properties of compact and locally compact spaces and constructed many interesting examples. In this work they also proved that the compactness property is equivalent, in the class of Hausdorff spaces, to the property of absolute closedness, and the local compactness property is equivalent, in the class of compacta, to the property of absolute openness. Besides, in this memoir Pavel Sergeevich introduced the well-known one-point Alexandroff 's compactification that further led him to the theory of compactifications (compact extensions of topological spaces) [66] and gave a strong impulse for A.N. Tychonoff 's theorem on the compactness of the product of compact spaces and for the notion of a completely regular, or Tychonoff, space. One should add, that in 1924, long before Dieudonne, in connection with the metrization problem always being of interest for Pavel Sergeevich, he defined the notion of a locally finite cover and showed that every open cover of a separable metric space can be refined by a locally finite open cover (paracompactness!). A little bit earlier, in 1923, Pavel Sergeevich and Pavel Samuilovich left abroad where by delivering public lectures on Relativity Theory (the poster has been preserved) they earned recently invented convertible "pure gold" Russian currency. They were the first Soviet mathematicians who came abroad from Soviet Russia. They worked under the auspices of the world-famous Gottingen University where they became familiar with German mathematical school of that time and with its remarkable representatives such as Klein, Hubert, Landau, Kurant, Emmy Noether and others.
XIII This was the reason for Pavel Sergeevich's interest in algebra and algebraic methods in topology. In the spring of 1924, they decided to organize their topological seminar in the Moscow University, but held only one first session together. Actually this seminar started its work only in September, after Pavel Samuilovich's tragic death. This seminar still continues its great work nowadays, after Pavel Sergeevich's death, and is called the Alexandroff seminar. Already during their visits to Gottingen (there were some of them) Pavel Sergeevich and Pavel Samuilovich began studying combinatorial topology in connection with some works of Poincare. Among many its aspects, they were interested in the theory of approximations. In the French town of Batz at the Atlantic coast where they spent vacation in the summer of 1924, Pavel Sergeevich introduced the notion of a nerve of a cover, the main one — by words of Pavel Sergeevich — in all his works on topology, being of a great value nowadays. He understood that nerves of infinitely developing covers of a compactum approximate this compact arbitrarily exactly and permit to reduce the study of its topology to the study of the combinatorial structure of any sequence of finite simplicial complexes approximating the given compactum. In 1925 he introduced these ideas in the work [17] which was very highly estimated by Brouwer. The first application of the concept of a nerve of a cover was the theorem on ε-translations of compact subsets of Euclidean spaces to polyhedra proved by him in 1926 [12]: for any compactum X from Kn there exists a map f : X -» Ρ, Ρ С Rn, such that the distance d(x, fx) < ε for each χ in X. These were remarkable discoveries: the former gave a possibility to construct the so-called spectral homology groups for a rather wide class of spaces, and the latter formed a basis for the famous Nobeling-Pontrjagin theorem on embedding η-dimensional compacta into the (2ra + 1)-dimensional Euclidean space. In the twenties Pavel Sergeevich often visited Germany, Holland and France, communicated with Brouwer, Neugebauer and Hopf. In 1927, together with Hopf, he came to the United States where they established close contacts with topological schools of Veblen, Alexander and Lefschetz. As a result, Pavel Sergeevich began to study homological dimension theory. Its main idea is that if in a compactum X there is a non-trivial cycle of dimension η — 1, homological to zero on this compactum, then the dimension of the compactum X is not less than n. Pavel Sergeevich considered the theorem on essential maps to spheres to be the key to this theory. The matter is that earlier definitions of dimen-
XIV sion, given by Brouwer, Menger and Urysohn, provide actually only upper estimates for dimension of compacta whereas Pavel Sergeevich's theorem on essential maps of compacta to spheres permits to estimate the least possible dimension of mapped compacta [41]. As a result, in this period of communication with Pavel Sergeevich, already by correspondence, Hopf came to his famous classification theorem. At the same time, Pavel Sergeevich worked on the position problem and the problem of the "shape" of closed sets of arbitrary dimension in Euclidean spaces. The work [34] with the similar title appeared in 1929 and was, in essence, devoted to duality laws. The dimension of a compactum X is characterized there by homological properties of the complementary open set En \ X. Moreover, as it is commonly accepted, the duality for compacta in Euclidean spaces is actually proved for the first time. But it is not formulated — and could not have been formulated — in its natural form, as there were neither Pontrjagin characters nor adequate algebraic formalism. But nevertheless under Pavel Sergeevich's influence quite different duality theorems were obtained by Kolmogorov. These results led Pavel Sergeevich's student — L.S. Pontrjagin — to his famous duality theorem and enabled him to solve a complicated problem on the dimension of the product of compacta. Both of these problems were posed by Pavel Sergeevich. Later, in 1947, Pavel Sergeevich generalized Pontrjagin's duality theorem to arbitrary (not only closed) subsets of Euclidean spaces [79]. Further strong generalizations of duality theorems were obtained by another Pavel Sergeevich's student — K.A. Sitnikov. In 1928 Kurant, being one of Springer's editors, suggested that Hopf and Pavel Sergeevich should write a book on topology. They agreed. This was a very great work! The work on this book, mainly by correspondence, continued till 1935 when the first volume "Topology" [53] (which happened to be the last of the three planned volumes and was dedicated to Brouwer) was published. It served a handbook of topology for many generations of mathematicians. It consisted of four parts: 1) foundations of set-theoretic topology; 2) topology of complexes; 3) theorems on topological invariance and relevant notions; 4) linkages in a Euclidean space and mappings of polyhedra. In the first chapter, written by Pavel Sergeevich alone, besides necessary and already known facts, the new important concept of a continuous decomposition leading to theorems on factorization of compacta is contained. The rest of the chapters include both Pavel Sergeevich's results already described and results of Alexander, Brouwer, Jordan, and, of course, Hopf (but with-
XV out his classification theorem). Before that book there were many other books on topology (by Schoenflies, Hausdorff, Frechet, Menger, Kuratowski, Dehn-Heegaard, Veblen, Lefschetz, Seifert-Threlfall), but, as the authors of "Topology" said, "none of these books considers topology as a whole, each of them represents only one branch of this science". The next book was "An introduction to the theory of functions in a real variable" [64], actually a textbook, written together with Kolmogorov in 1938. It was followed by "Combinatorial topology" [84] in 1947. In this great work he describes the status of algebraic topology up to 1941, starting with necessary facts from set-theoretic topology up to Alexander's and Pontrjagin's duality theorems and Hopf's classification theorem. I remember this book very well, because I participated directly in its creation, in preparing the final text and some drawings — mainly the drawings were made by Kolmogorov. After that he thoroughly remade his book "An introduction to Group Theory", 2nd edition [93] and wrote a new book "An introduction to the general set theory and theory of functions" [88], which was, in essence, published anew in 1977 and entitled "An introduction to Set Theory and General Topology" [124]. The latter book filled the gap existing at that time and up to-day does remain a remarkable modern handbook on General Topology (before that, the only book on General Topology in Russian was a widely known excellent book by Hausdorff, but it was almost unavailable and, of course, a bit obsolete). The last Pavel Sergeevich's book "An introduction to dimension theory" [123] was written together with B.A. Pasynkov. It contains the latest results of that time: the theorems of Dowker, Katetov, Sitnikov and, certainly, Pasynkov. This work is still of great importance for topologists. Beside that, Pavel Sergeevich wrote many surveys, among which we mention only the most remarkable ones, that have influenced the development of topology greatly. Firstly, a plenary lecture at the АН-Union Mathematical Congress of 1934 "Algebraic methods in topology" [47], secondly — a plenary lecture at the Prague Topological Symposium of 1961 "On some results concerning topological spaces and their continuous mappings" [117], and, thirdly -^ an article in "Uspekhi Matematicheskikh Nauk" (1964) "On some principal trends in General Topology" [119]. Pavel Sergeevich Alexandroff was not only an outstanding mathematician, but also a wonderful personality. He was a brilliant speaker, with
XVI excellent knowledge of literature, music, theatre. He was an active public figure, but primarily the university's one. For many years he was the President of Moscow Mathematical Society, the Head of the Department of Mathematics of the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics, he delivered various lectures with enthusiasm and his usual emotional-power. Many years have passed since 1982 when Pavel Secgeevich Alexandroff left us. I am sure, however, that many modern topologists, and the young ones as well, still are being influenced by his great creative power. List of P.S. Alexandroff's principal scientific works1 1. On compact topological spaces, Bull. Acad. Pol. Sci. (A) (1923), 5-8 (in French) — with P.S. Urysohn. 2. On local properties of sets and the notion of compactness, Bull. Acad. Pol. Sci. (A) (1923), 9-12 (in French). 3. A necessary and sufficient condition for a class (L) being a class (D), Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 177 (1923), 1274-1276 (in French) — with P.S. Urysohn. 4. On the topological invariance of the sets complement to sets (A), Mat. Sbornik 31 (1924), 310-318 (in French). 5. Integration in M. Denjoy's sense considered as investigation of primitive functions, Mat. Sbornik 31 (1924), 465-476 (in French). 6. On the sets complement to Л-sets, Fund. Math. 5 (1924), 160-165 (in French). 7. On the first class sets and abstract spaces, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 178 (1924), 185-187 (in French). 8. On the theory of topological spaces, Math. Ann. 92 (1924), 258-266 (in German) — with P.S. Urysohn. 9. On the structure of bicompact topological spaces, Math. Ann. 92 (1924), 267-274 (in German). 10. On the metrization of compact topological spaces in the small, Math. Ann. 92 (1924), 294-301 (in German). 11. On the basis of η-dimensional set-theoretic topology, Math. Ann. 94 (1925), 296-308 (in German). 12. On the dimension of closed sets, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 183 (1926), 640-643 (in French). 13. On Cantorian manifolds and generalizations of the Phragmen-Brouwer theorem, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 183 (1926), 722-724 (in French). 14. Additional notes to "Memoir on Cantorian manifolds", from P.S. Urysohn's posthumous records, Fund. Math. 8 (1926), 352-359 (in French). ^he list is taken from the books "Mathematics in the USSR within the forty years. 1917-1957" (Moscow, 1959) and "Mathematics in the USSR. 1958-1967" (Moscow, 1969), with the exception of the most recent works [122]-[125].
XVII 15. On continuous mappings of compact spaces, Proc. Amst. Akad. 28 (1926), 997 (in German). 16. On principal trends of modern topology, in: Proc. All-Russian Math. Congr., 1927, 64-89 (in Russian). 17. Simplicial approximations in General Topology, Math. Ann. 96 (1927), 489-511 (in German). 18. On combinatorial properties of generalized curves, Math. Ann. 96 (1927), 512-554 (in German). 19. On continuous mappings of compact spaces, Math. Ann. 96 (1927), 555-571 (in German). 20. On the duality between connectedness indices of a closed set and its complement space, Gott. Nachr. (1927), 323-329 (in German). 21. A definition of Betti numbers for arbitrary closed sets, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 184 (1927), 317-320 (in French). 22. On a decomposition of a space into closed sets, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 184 (1927), 425-427 (in French). 23. On a new generalization of the Phragmen-Brouwer theorem, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 184 (1927), 575-578 (in French). 24. A sketch of main courses of Urysohn's dimension theory, Math. Ann. 98 (1928), 31-63 (in German). 25. On zero-dimensional punctiform sets, Math. Ann. 98 (1928), 86-106 (in German) — with P.S. Urysohn. 26. The proof of the theorem "every closed set of positive dimension is topologically contained in a locally connected continuum of the same dimension", Fund. Math. 11 (1928), 141-144 (in German) — with L.A. Tumarkin. 27. On a space with vanishing first Brouwer number, Proc. Amst. Akad. 31 (1928) (in German) — with P.S. Urysohn. 28. On the general concept of dimension and its relationship with the elementary geometric representation·, Math. Ann. 98 (1928), 617-636 (in German). 29. On the generalized Phragmen-Brouwer theorem, Fund. Math. 11 (1928), 222-227 (in German)'. 30. On the general dimension problem, Gott. Nachr. (1928), 25-44 (in German). 31. On the homeomorphism of closed sets, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 186 (1928), 1340-1342 (in French). 32. On the boundaries of connected domains in the η-dimensional space, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 186 (1928), 1696-1698 (in French). 33. On finitely connected continuous curves, Fund. Math. 13 (1929), 34-41 (in German). 34. Observations on the shape and position of closed sets of arbitrary dimension, Ann. Math. 30 (1929), 101-187 (in German). 35. Memoir on compact topological spaces, Verh. Kon. Akad. Wet. 14(1) (1929) (in French) — with P.S. Urysohn. 36. On closed Cantorian manifolds, Gott. Nachr. (1930), 211-219 (in German).
XVIII 37. On the dimension theory, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 190 (1930), 1102-1104 (in French). 38. Geometric analysis of dimension of closed sets, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 191 (1930), 475-477 (in French). 39. The simplest concepts of Topology, Berlin, 1932 (in German). 40. On the notion of dimension of closed sets, J. Math. Pur. et Appl. 11 (1932), 283-298 (in French). 41. Dimension theory. Applications to the geometry of closed sets, Math. Ann. 106 (1932), 161-238 (in German). 42. On Urysohn's constants, Fund. Math. 20 (1933), 140-150 (in German). 43. On a theorem by K. Borsuk, Monatsh. fur Math, und Phys. 40 (1933), 127 (in German). 44. Betti numbers and ε-mappings, Fund. Math. 22 (1934), 17-20 (in German). 45. On local properties of closed sets, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 198 (1934), 227-229 (in French). 46. On Betti groups at a point, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 198 (1934), 315-317 (in French). 47. Algebraic methods in topology, in: Proc. 2nd АН-Union Math. Congr., v. 1, Leningrad, 1934, 89-108 (in Russian). 48. On the simplest notions of modern topology, Moscow-Leningrad, 1935 (in Russian) — with V.A. Efremovich. 49. The Л-sets and topological convergence, Fund. Math. 25 (1935), 561-567 (in German). 50. On discrete spaces, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 200 (1935), 1649-1651 (in French). 51. On sequences of topological spaces, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 200 (1935), 1708-1711 (in French). 52. On local properties of closed sets, Ann. Math. 36 (1935), 1-35. 53. Topology, v. 1, Berlin, 1935 (in German) — with H. Hopf. 54. On some questions on the topology of closed sets, in: Proc. 2nd Ail-Union Math. Congr., v. 2, Leningrad, 1935, 123 (in Russian). 55. η-dimensional generalized manifolds, Cont. R. Acad. Sci. 202 (1936), 1327-1329 (in French) — with L.S. Pontrjagin. 56. Finite covers of topological spaces, Fund. Math. 26 (1936), 267-271 (in German) — with A.N. Kolmogorov. 57. A sketch of basic notions in topology, Moscow-Leningrad, 1936 (in Russian) — with V.A. Efremovich. 58. On countably multiple open mappings, Dokl. AN SSSR 4 (1936), 283-288 (in Russian). 59. Some problems in set-theoretic topology, Mat. Sbornik 1 (43) (1936), 619-634 (in German). 60. On the theory of topological spaces, Dokl. AN SSSR 2 (1936), 51-54 (in Russian). 61. Discrete spaces, Mat. Sbornik 2 (44) (1937), 501-520 (in German).
XIX 62. On Brouwer's notion of dimension, Сотр. Math. 4 (1937), 239-255 (in German) — with L.S. Pontrjagin and H. Hopf. 63. On the homology theory of compacta, Сотр. Math. 4 (1937), 256-270 (in German). 64. An introduction to the theory of functions in a real variable, 3rd ed., Moscow-Leningrad, 1938 (in Russian)4— with A.N. Kolmogorov. 65. Conditions for metrizability of topological spaces and the symmetry axiom, Mat. Sbornik 3 (45) (1938), 663-672; 8 (50) (1940), 519 (in Russian) — with V.V. Niemytzki. 66. On bicompact extensions of topological spaces, Mat. Sbornik 5 (47) (1939), 403-424 (in Russian). 67. On the dimension of bicompact spaces, Dokl. AN SSSR 26 (1940), 627-630 (in Russian). 68. Betti groups and homology rings of locally bicompact spaces Dokl. AN SSSR 26 (1940), 631-634 (in Russian). 69. General homology theory, Uchen. Zap. Mosk. Univ. 45 (1940), 3-60 (in Russian). 70. Deriving Alexander-Pontrjagin's duality law from Kolmogorov's duality law, Soobshch. Gruz. Fil. AN 1 (1940), 401-410 (in Russian). 71. The addition theorem in dimension theory for bicompact spaces, Soobshch. Gruz. Fil. AN 2 (1941), 1-6 (in Russian). 72. Basic homology constructions for general projection spectra, Soobshch. Gruz. Fil. AN 2 (1941), 213-219 (in Russian). 73. The duality law for projection spectra and locally bicompact spaces, Soobshch. Gruz. Fil. AN 2 (1941), 315-319 (in Russian). 74. General combinatorial topology, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 49 (1941), 41-105. 75. On reducible sets, Izv. AN SSSR, Ser. Mat. 5 (1941), 217-224 (in Russian) — with I.V. Proskuryakov. 76. On homological situation properties of complexes and closed sets, Izv. AN SSSR, Ser. Mat. 6 (1942), 227-282 (in Russian). 77. On homological situation properties of complexes and closed sets, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 54 (1943), 286-339. 78. On the approximation of bicompact spaces by finite ones, Uspekhi. Mat. Nauk 1(5-6/15-16) (1946), 234 (in Russian). 79. The general duality law for non-closed sets, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 2(4/20) (1947), 166-167 (in Russian). 80. Elementary duality domains, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 2(4/20) (1947), 168-169 (in Russian). 81. On the notion of a space in topology, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 2(1/17) (1947), 5-57 (in Russian). 82. The general duality law for non-closed sets in the η-dimensional space, Dokl. AN SSSR 57 (1947), 107-110 (in Russian). 83. Homological relations in duality domains, Dokl. AN SSSR 57 (1947), 211-214 (in Russian).
XX 84. Combinatorial topology, Moscow-Leningrad, 1947 (in Russian). 85. Duality theorems in combinatorial topology, in: Jub. Collect, to 30th Anniv. of October Revol., Moscow-Leningrad, 1947, 134-180 (in Russian). 86. Main duality theorems for non-closed sets in the η-dimensional space, Mat. Sbornik 21 (63) (1947), 161-231 (in Russian). 87. On the dimension of normal spaces, Proc. Royal Soc. 189 (1947), 11-39. 88. An introduction to the general set theory and theory of functions, Moscow- Leningrad, 1948 (in Russian). 89. On the so-called quasi-uniform convergence, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 3(1/23) (1948), 213-215 (in Russian). 90. On the dimension of closed sets, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 4(6/34) (1949), 17-88 (in Russian). 91. On ordered systems of closed and open sets, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 5(2/36) (1950), 178-179 (in Russian). 92. On continuous mappings of closed manifolds, Dokl. AN SSSR 71 (1950), 821-823 (in Russian) — with K.A. Sitnikov. 93. An introduction to Group Theory, 2nd ed., Moscow, 1951 (in Russian). 94. On components of maximal bicompact extensions, Uchen. Zap. Mosk. Univ. 148(Mat. 4) (1951), 216-218 (in Russian). 95. Pontrjagin's topological duality law, Uchen. Zap. Mosk. Univ., 163(Mat. 6) (1952), 3-29 (in Russian). 96. On the combinatorial topology of non-closed sets, Mat. Sbornik 33 (75) (1953), 241-260 (in Russian). 97. On some corollaries to Sitnikov's second duality law, Dokl. AN SSSR 96 (1954), 885-887 (in Russian). 98. On the notion of a space in topology, Acta Math. Hung. 5 (1954), 43-60 (in Russian). 99. On the homeomorphism of punctiform sets, Dokl. AN SSSR 97 (1954), 757-760 (in Russian). 100. From the set-theoretic topology of twenties, Lecture at Amst. Intern. Math. Conf., 1954 (in German). 101. On some new achievements in the combinatorial topology of non-closed sets, Fund. Math. 41 (1954), 68-88 (in Russian). 102. On the homeomorphism of punctiform sets, Trudy Mosk. Mat. Obshch. 4 (1955), 405-420 (in Russian). 103. Non-dualizability of Betti groups based on finite covers, Dokl. AN SSSR 105 (1955), 5-6; 107 (1956), 357 (in Russian). 104. Topological duality theorems, Part 1. Closed sets, Trudy Mat. Inst. AN 48, Moscow, 1955 (in Russian). 105. On Cantorian manifolds, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 11(5/71) (1956), 233-234 (in Russian). 106. The combinatorial topology of non-closed sets, in: Proc. 3rd All-Union Math. Congr., v. 2, Moscow, 1956, 49-51 (in Russian) — with K.A. Sitnikov.
XXI 107. On two Yu. Smirnov's theorems in the theory of bicompact extensions, Fund. Math. 43 (1956), 394-398 (in Russian). 108. Continua (Vp) — a strengthening of Cantorian manifolds, Monatsh. fur Math. 61(1) (1957), 67-76 (in German). 109. An elementary proof that the identity mapping on a simplex is essential, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 12(5/77) (1957), 175-179 (in Russian) — with B.A. Pasynkov. 110. On bicompact extensions of topological spaces, Dokl. AN SSSR 121(4) (1958), 575-578 (in Russian) — with V.I. Ponomarev. 111. On bicompact extensions of topological spaces, Vestn. Mosk. Univ., Ser. Mat., No 5 (1959), 93-108 (in Russian) — with V.I. Ponomarev. 112. Topological duality theorems, Part 2. Non-closed sets, Trudy Mat. Inst. AN 54, Moscow, 1959 (in Russian). 113. On the metrization of topological spaces, Bull. Acad. Pol. Sci., Ser. Math. 8(3) (1960), 135-140 (in Russian). 114. On some classes of η-dimensional spaces, Sib. Mat. Zh. 1(1) (1960), 3—13 (in Russian) — with V.I. Ponomarev. 115. On completely regular spaces and their bicompact extensions, Vestn. Mosk. Univ., Ser. Mat., No 2 (1962), 37-43 (in Russian) — with V.I. Ponomarev. 116. On dyadic bicompacta, Fund. Math. 50(4) (1962), 419-429 (in Russian) — with V.I. Ponomarev. 117. On some results concerning topological spaces and their continuous mappings, in: General Topology and its Relations to Modern Analysis and Algebra, Prague, 1962, 41-54. 118. Projection spectra and canonical covers, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 18(5) (1963), 125-132 (in Russian) — with V.I. Ponomarev. 119. On some principal trends in General Topology, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 19(6) (1964), 3-46; 20(1) (1965), 253-254 (in Russian). 120. On Ponomarev's theory of absolutes of topological spaces, Dokl. AN SSSR 161(2) (1965), 263-266 (in Russian). 121. On the theory of projection spectra, in: Abstr. Intern. Math. Congr., Moscow, 1966, 15 (in Russian) — with V.I. Zaitsev. 122. On the main theorem of homological dimension theory, Dokl. AN SSSR 180(3) (1968), 519-522 (in Russian). 123. An introduction to dimension theory, Moscow, 1973 (in Russian) — with B.A. Pasynkov. 124. An introduction to Set Theory and General Topology, Moscow, 1977 (in Russian). 125. Principal points in the development of set-theoretic topology, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 33(3) (1978), 3-48 (in Russian) — with V.V. Fedorchuk.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages XXIII-XXXVIII Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Correspondence between Aleksandrov and Hopf 1926-1971 * Gunther Prei Universite Laval, Quebec, PQ, Canada Urs Stammbach ETH-Zentrum, Zurich, Switzerland 1. Introduction The scientific estate of Heinz Hopf is in the possession of the Wissen- schaftshistorische Sammlungen of the ΕΤΗ Library in Zurich. This includes amongst other objects 132 letters which Pavel Sergeevich Aleksandrov wrote to Heinz Hopf and which carry the signature Hs. 621:15-146. Thanks to the mediation of Professor A. Shiryaev, copies of Hopf's letters to Aleksandrov were acquired by the ΕΤΗ Library in the summer of 1995. These carry the signature Hs. 160 and consist of 50 letters. They had been taken as lost for a long time, but were found by Shiryaev in the attic of a dacha in which Aleksandrov had lived from 1935 and which, after his death came first into the possession of Kolmogorov and afterwards of Shiryaev. Aleksandrov had a nearly perfect mastery of both oral and written German and with only two exceptions, all the letters are written in this language. Aleksandrov had learnt German as a child from a German governess and perfected his knowledge during stays in Germany. Only occasionally do his letters to Hopf contain short remarks in Russian — part of an exchange between him and Hopf's wife, Anja Mickwitz, who had learnt Russian at the teacher's training college in St. Petersburg. * The present paper originated from the initiative of Albert N. Shiryaev who asked Professor U. Stammbach and Professor G. Frei to write a paper on the extensive, almost half a century long, correspondence between P.S. AlexandrofF and H. Hopf. Publisher's remark: We preserve here the spelling of Pavel Sergeevich's name preferred by the authors of the present paper.
XXIV Unfortunately, the correspondence between Aleksandrov and Hopf is no longer extant in its entirety. Many letters were apparently not kept but are referred to in those we have. Nevertheless, the existing correspondence is large enough to present us with a lively impression of the personalities of these two great mathematicians, and of their respect and friendship for one another. Indeed, many letters bubble over with charm and humor. Apart from this, they also contain a considerable amount of mathematics which provides important source material in understanding the development of algebraic topology. With only a short time at our disposal, we regrettably have to renounce dealing with the mathematical contents of the letters in this paper. 2. The beginning of the friendship — 1926 The correspondence between Aleksandrov and Hopf covers a period from 1926 to 1970 with an interruption during the war from 1940 to 1946. At times the exchange was very intensive with four or five letters in a single month, while at others there were long pauses of which Aleksandrov complained bitterly. He was, without a doubt, the keener writer and the more communicative of the two. Aleksandrov and Hopf met for the first time in the summer of 1926 in Gottingen. Hopf was 32 and Aleksandrov 30 years old. Aleksandrov talks of this meeting in his article Einige Erinnerungen an Heinz Hopfx (cf. [3]): My first meeting with Heinz Hopf took place in the summer of 1926. After his final exams in Berlin under the supervision of Erhard Schmidt, Hopf had arrived in Gottingen and this summer term completed his stay of one year. In his memories of Heinz Hopf (cf. also [2]) Aleksandrov goes on: Our acquaintance developed into close friendship during this summer. We both formed part of the group of mathematicians around Courant and Emmy Noether and thus belonged to this unforgettable society with its musical evenings, boat trips with Courant, its "topological walks" under the direction of Noether, and last, but not least, its frequent and regular swimming parties and entertainment which took place at the baths of the university. In his memories Hopf himself describes his meeting with Aleksandrov as the one most important event of his stay in Gottingen (cf. [6]): 1 Some Memories of Heinz Hopf
XXV This meeting soon led to close friendship; topology and mathematics were not our only topics of conversation; it was a very happy and also merry time which was not confined to Gottingen but continued during our many mutual travels. At the time I met him, Aleksandrov was already one of the great men in pure set theoretic topology, but he was also on the point of introducing the concept of "nerves", which was to bring down the wall separating set theoretic and algebraic topology. Aleksandrov's connection to Gottingen had already begun in the summer of 1923, when he first came to Gottingen together with his friend Pavel Samuilovich Urysohn (1898-1924) ? From that time onwards, until 1928, Aleksandrov was a regular visitor to Gottingen. He spent the academic year 1925/26 in Blaricum in Holland and returned yet again to Gottingen the following summer of 1926 where he first met Hopf. Their common interest in the work of Poincare and Brouwer immediately led to a strong attachment. As a consequence, Hopf was led into the inner circle around Emmy Noether and Courant. Aleksandrov continues in his memories of Hopf (cf. [3]): The friendly relationship which existed between Hopf and myself soon extended to include Otto Neugebauer. Thus a triad was formed consisting of Hopf, Neugebauer and myself, the so-called (two-dimensional) "Simplex" that maintained close and friendly relations to both Courant and Emmy Noether. The Simplex mentioned here came to be something of a connecting thread in their deep friendship. The members of the group had nicknames for one another and among themselves used a special, sometimes quite ribald, language which was not afraid to call a spade a spade. Nearly all subsequent letters make reference to these nicknames and evoke memories of the happy times they spent in one another's company. At the end of this eventful summer term Aleksandrov, Hopf and Neugebauer left for France. This is what Aleksandrov had to say about this long holiday in his memories on Hopf (cf. [3]): First of all we went to Brittany to Bourg de Batz, a small village on the south coast of Brittany where Urysohn had lost his life two years previously. After staying a few days, we left for the Pyrenees and there we undertook a long hike on foot which eventually brought us to Collioure. Collioure is (or at least was, in those days) 2 Urysohn drowned in Brittany near Bourg de Batz.
XXVI a tiny fishing village on the coast near the French-Spanish border. There was a small and unpretentious, but to all extents and purposes clean, guesthouse which was named Hotel Bougnol after the proprietor. The clientele was mostly made up of young artists from Paris, many of whom later became well known. The modest dining room of the house was embellished with pictures which departing guests had given to their hostess as tokens of their gratitude. Despite the simplicity of the house, which bordered on the primitive, these paintings — together with the pleasant atmosphere of the house — and not least, the personality of Madame Bougnol, who combined affectionate hospitality with dignity and a fine feeling for propriety, left us all with the best of memories of our stay. [... ] From Collioure our journey continued through Marseille to Ajac- cio and ended after a sojourn of about 8 days near Ajaccio with a wonderful round trip of the Corsican coast (with a short excursion into Corte, the ancient capital of the island). The week spent near Ajaccio was marvellous. At no small distance from the shore there was an isolated rock in the sea which was only generally visited by sea-gulls. Our swimming skills were such that we swam out to this rock every day and after a certain time, swam back again. We had no watches and so only an intuitive idea of how long we stayed on the rock. But in all, one of these excursions lasted about 4 hours, from 10 o'clock in the morning until 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Despite their duration these swims were not dangerous because, apart from the fact that we were all three good swimmers, the weather was settled, the sea quiet and calm and — perhaps most important of all — there were three of us, so there were always two who could help the third in an emergency. Altogether, Corsica was the climax of this, in all respects, wonderful journey. 3. Contents of the letters from 1926-1928 After this journey Hopf returned to Berlin where he obtained his final qualifications as an academic lecturer with the submission of the Habilitations- schrift consisting of two papers on mapping classes and vector fields on га-dimensional manifolds. In the first of the letters in our possession, Aleksandrov congratulates Hopf (7.11.26): Sibi congratulentur Docentes universitatis Berolinensis talem tantumque Hopfum sibi adjungisse. Hopf was now qualified to read as a lecturer. Already in the winter term of 1926 he announced a four-hour lecture course on topology. He regularly
XXVII sent copies of the manuscript of these lectures to Aleksandrov in Moscow, where they were avidly greeted with great interest by Aleksandrov and his colleagues. After having visited Brouwer in Bourg de Batz in mid-August, Aleksandrov had returned to Moscow in October 1926 and resumed his extensive course of lectures there at two universities. He too sent his own lectural manuscripts on topology and Euclidean spaces to Hopf in Berlin. Aleksandrov tells in his letters of how every Wednesday he held advanced tutorial seminars on topology in his private apartment from 7 p.m. to 8.30 p.m. and during which the works of Brouwer and Menger and the recently published work of Hopf were discussed. It was within this context that Aleksandrov first mentioned the name of a young student, Pontryagin. It was only incidentally that Aleksandrov gave any account of his private life: his marriage was dissolved and he resigned from his position at the II University of Moscow in order to take on a well-paid full professorship in Smolensk. During this term of 1926/27 Aleksandrov and Hopf submitted an application for a Rockefeller grant which would enable them to pass the winter term of 1927/28 in Princeton. Aleksandrov, whose experience in these affairs was greater than Hopf's, concerned himself with obtaining the necessary letters of recommendation. He had already personally spoken to Lefschetz about this matter in the summer of 1926 in Paris. In his detailed letter of 23.12.26 Aleksandrov expresses his fear that Brouwer might be opposed to a simultaneous stay of himself and Hopf at Princeton and that therefore Brouwer must not find out that they were planning to visit at the same time. Brouwer had at one time in the past critically remarked that Aleksandrov was taking advantage of poor Hopf because Hopf went over Aleksandrov's work with regard to the German. Paradoxically, Brouwer had himself proposed this, but had apparently forgotten that he had done so. In direct preparation for the journey to the United States Aleksandrov was busy learning English from his sister. He had a great aptitude for languages and already spoke nearly perfect German. He could also converse fluently in French and Dutch. By the end of the summer term 1927 which he again spent in Gottingen, he was already able to talk effortlessly to Newman in English when they met at a reception. As can be deduced from the exchange of letters, the "vertices" of the "two-dimensional Simplex" met fairly often during this summer term. Journeys were undertaken by Hopf to Gottingen as well as by Aleksandrov and Neugebauer to Berlin. A pleasure trip for the entire Simplex was planned to southern Bavaria for the Whitsun weekend.
XXVIII The meetings not only served as venues for the exchange of mathematical thoughts but also brought welcome opportunities to cultivate common interests. For Aleksandrov, his visits to Berlin were welcome opportunities to go to concerts. He was very interested in music — one of his two brothers was a well-known concert violinist — and he possessed a wide knowledge of music. He managed to keep himself informed of Berlin's concert life in far away Moscow with the help of the Vossische Zeitung, and in his letters he was able to draw Hopf's attention to outstanding performances. In later years, when Hopf was working and living in Zurich, Aleksandrov often asked him to procure certain gramophone records and send them to Moscow. Hopf's own cultural interests tended more towards the theatre and literature. Nevertheless, the two friends shared much in common, above all long swimming and ski excursions and mountain hikes. When in Gottingen, a visit to the baths, which were surveyed by bath-master Klie, was mandatory and lots of members of the Gottingen circle gathered together there. Aleksandrov gives a detailed account of these bathing parties in his memories (cf. [3]): The Kliesche baths were hot just used by students but were also visited by many members of the university's teaching staff, amongst others Hubert, Courant, Emmy Noether, Prandtl, Friedrichs, Deur- ing, Hans Lewy, Neugebauer and many others. From the non-local mathematicians, Jakob Nielsen, Harald Bohr, van der Waerden, von Neumann, Andre Weil must also be mentioned. Brouwer also visited during the summer of 1926, which he spent in Gottingen. The baths were decidedly a male domain; womanhood was only represented by Miss Emmy Noether and Mrs Nina Courant. Both ladies made daily use of their exceptional right of entry regardless of the weather. Towards the end of the summer of 1927 Aleksandrov, Hopf and Neugebauer, as in the previous year, left on their travels, this time to the Dauphine, to Cassis near Marseille and from there to Portofino on the Italian riviera. In mid-September Aleksandrov and Hopf left for Princeton to commence a stay that had been made possible by a Rockefeller grant. A year later in his final report to the Rockefeller Foundation, Hopf gave an account of the visit which lasted from 1.10.27 until the 1.6.28. He wrote that he had attended the lectures of professors Lefschetz and Alexander on "Analysis situs" and had been asked by the Princeton mathematicians to give a number of talks
XXIX himself about his own work and other topological works from J. Nielsen. He continues in this report (cf. [5] 620:47): However, I did not judge these incidents to be the most important occurrences during my stay at Princeton. These I saw rather in the informal discussions with the professors Alexander, Lefschetz and Veblen as well as with Professor P. Aleksandrov from Moscow, with whom I was together every day in Princeton and with whom I was able to discuss thoroughly and immediately all new impressions and thoughts. In his memories in 1966 Hopf gives a somewhat more personal account of this stay in Princeton (cf. [6]): At the time Princeton was still an idyllic little university town. The famous institute had not yet been founded, not even the "Fine Hall" existed and in the "French restaurant" Aleksandrov and I were the only foreign regulars (and as such, and because of the prohibition, were served wine on Sundays in coffee cups). But at the university there were lectures from O. Veblen, S. Lefschetz and J.W. Alexander with all of whom we had interesting discussions. Lefschetz was probably the most important for us — on the one hand because he was Aleksandrov's ally in his struggle for the use of algebraic methods in set theoretical topology and on the other, because my work on fixpoints was closely related to his own basic work. In many of his later letters Aleksandrov reminds Hopf in a nostalgic way of their time in Princeton, especially of the Christmas they had spent there and celebrated with a small fir tree and goose liver which Hopf's parents had sent from Breslau, and of their subsequent trip to Florida. In the summer of 1928 Aleksandrov and Hopf were both back in Gottingen. They each gave lectures on their special fields and together they organized tutorial evenings on various questions of topology. It was around this time that Courant suggested they write a book on topology for the Grundlehren series of Springer. The two agreed with this suggestion and thus took a heavy burden upon themselves which would keep them intensively occupied for the next seven years. They envisaged a comprehensive work in which the entire field of set theoretic and algebraic topology would be introduced. They quickly came to realize that one volume would not be sufficient and therefore planned a second, and eventually a third. However, only the first volume was ever published, and that not until 1935. The difficulties arising from the times which led to the outbreak of the Second
XXX World War colluded to delay the project. A further reason for the delays are to be found in the changes to which algebraic topology was subjected in these years. In October 1928 Hopf married Anja Mickwitz (1891-1967) whom he had met in Berlin in 1927 and to whom he had become engaged before his visit to Princeton. Anja Mickwitz came from a German-Baltic pastor's family and had concluded her training as a teacher at the college in St. Petersburg, where she also learnt Russian. The marriage was alluded to in a letter; Alek- sandrov wrote: "The beneficial effect of KT's3 marriage is already visible. On photographs he already looks less audacious than in his bachelor days". Following their wedding, the Hopfs spent a few weeks in a holiday house which belonged to Hopfs parents in Hain in the Riesengebirge region. At Aleksandrov's invitation, Emmy Noether and Otto Neugebauer spent some time in Moscow the following year. Emmy Noether gave an advanced lecture on algebra. The course was in German, and it is thus perhaps not surprising that the number of attendants dwindled from 70 to 15 after the first lectures. Aleksandrov writes about visits to the Egyptian museum where Neugebauer impressed him by his profound knowledge of the ancient Egyptian culture. On 3.5.29 he also writes of a theatre visit with Emmy Noether and remarks that the latter "... does not care very much for art, for hardly had the curtain descended than he (sic) was already talking again about mathematics". 4. From 1929-1941 In his memories of Heinz Hopf, Aleksandrov has this to say about the following period (cf. [3]): In the years between 1928 and 1932 we met frequently — so that during this period we really settled down to work, as it were — the last time in autumn 1932, which for the main part we spent together in Zurich. Then however there was an interruption until the end of August 1935. Unfortunately, we did not meet one single time in between. Although we corresponded regularly during this period, here also there were interruptions, lost or late deliveries and such like. In the summer of 1929 Aleksandrov was not able to travel to Germany for the first time in many years. To be sure, neither did he stay in Moscow but 3KT for "kleines Tier" (little animal), Hopfs common nickname within the Simplex.
XXXI instead undertook a long journey to the Caucasian coast on the Black Sea. In later years he repeated such journeys regularly and told Hopf about them in his letters. As one example of them, the first is described here in some detail. Aleksandrov left Moscow on 15th June together with Kolmogorov. They started out on a 22-day rowing excursion on the Volga which took them from Yaroslavl' to Samara. The journey then continued by steam boat to the Astrakhan estuary. From Astrakhan they travelled by steamer over the Caspian Sea to Baku and then on to Armenia. Here Aleksandrov spent three weeks in a monastery dating from the 9th century at an altitude of 1900 m on the Gotschka Lake and from there climbed the 4000 m high Mount Alag near Mount Ararat. Finally, he spent a month with his mother and sister on the Black Sea coast. Aleksandrov was back in Gottingen in the autumn of 1929 where he lectured during the winter term. After giving talks in Hamburg in February 1930 he boarded ship for New York in order to spend some time in Princeton with Alexander and Veblen. 1930 was to be a decisive year for Hopf s destiny. In December 1929 he was offered an assistant professorship at Princeton University, and in the following year calls for two vocational appointments reached him — one from the University of Freiburg i. B. as successor to the emeritus Paul Heffter, and the other from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ΕΤΗ) in Zurich as successor to Hermann Weyl. Weyl himself had been called to succeed to Hubert's chair in Gottingen in the autumn of 1930 (cf. [4]). Hopf accepted the offer from ΕΤΗ and took up the appointment of Professor of Hohere Mathematik on 1st April 1931. Both Aleksandrov and Hopf were working very hard on the manuscript of their topology book, and in his letter of 18.2.31 Aleksandrov writes that the book "will be finished by the end of June". This was a huge miscalculation and work on the manuscript dragged on for many years. Aleksandrov was in Zurich for a good part of summer 1932. Sadly, he fell ill with phlebitis which restricted his freedom of movement considerably, but he was able to join the Hopfs for a few weeks on the shores of Lago Maggiore in the southern part of Switzerland and he returned to Zurich in September for the International Congress of Mathematicians. From there he went to Gottingen where he stayed with Emmy Noether and he wrote letters to "both Hopfs" in Zurich thanking them for their hospitality. He writes, amongst other things, about the lectures Weyl was giving on topology and comments: "I fear he is becoming somewhat old-fashioned". He also mentions an invitation to Landau's and highly praises the good food and, especially, Nina
XXXII Courant's violin recital "it was really exceptionally good". With regard to the projected book he notes that Courant was "frightfully angry" at the overdue deadline and that he had "seldom seen [Courant] so enraged". From Gottingen Aleksandrov returned to Moscow by way of Berlin and Warsaw. The work on the book continued at a painstaking pace. Time and time again — mostly as a result of Aleksandrov's intervention — whole chapters had to be revised, even newly drafted and the material newly arranged. When however, in 1934, Kuratowski's book on set theoretic topology was published and the book from Seifert and Threlfall on algebraic topology was nearing its completion, Aleksandrov pushed for a speedy winding-up of the first volume of their work. The bulk of the manuscript was sent to Springer in autumn 1934. In the event there were still many occasions during 1935 when the authors put in more changes. Aleksandrov and Kolmogorov had invited the leading topologists of the day to a congress which took place from the 4th to the 10th of September in Moscow. Aleksandrov carefully planned and arranged the journey for Hopf and his wife. He had hoped that Hopf would stay on after the congress and give a course of lectures, however Hopf preferred another plan. Immediately after the end of the congress Aleksandrov, Kolmogorov and Hopf and his wife left for the Crimea. Their route took them by train to Moscow, on to Sevastopol and then further east to Gaspra, a place about 30 km from Yalta. Here by the shores of the Black Sea, in a convalescent home in Baty Liman, was a place where Aleksandrov regularly passed part of his vacations, often together with Kolmogorov. Hopf and Aleksandrov got down to work on the preface and on the final corrections of their book which among themselves they called the "Unicum". The visit lasted until mid-October. Unhappily, Aleksandrov was ill for part of the time and sometimes even bed-bound and he often had to leave the swimming parties and walking excursions up to Hopf and Kolmogorov. The latter was an extremely capable walker and climber and had conquered, amongst other peaks, the 5,047 m Kazbek summit in the Caucasus. In 1935 Markoff in Moscow and Stiefel in Zurich proof-read the galleys of the book. Several times Hopf found himself forced to remonstrate with Aleksandrov for making, corrections which he said were too many and too big. This is what he had to say in a letter of 3.11.35: What the deuce! Confound it! Devil take you! Now one has to sit and rack one's head and put everything in order!
XXXIII The editors at Springer were also worried, indeed thrown into confusion by the many changes to the manuscript that were being sent in. In the end, however, Hopf was able to report: "Today on the 18.12.35 the first copy of "Unicum" arrived with the morning mail. It looks splendid! I found the first mistake straight away." The conference in Moscow steered the development of topology in a new direction and furnished many new impulses. Hopf tells us about this in his memories (cf. [6]): The year of 1935 was very important for the developments in topology for several reasons. The first International Conference on Topology took place in Moscow in September. The completely independent talks given at this conference by J.W. Alexander, I. Gordon and A.N. Kolmogorov can be seen as the beginning of cohomology theory — of which Lefschetz had already been the precursor with his "pseudo-cycles" in 1930. What completely surprised me — and probably numerous other topologists — was not the cohomology groups — these were nothing other than character groups of homology groups — as much as the fact that one can, for an arbitrary complex and for a more general space, define a multiplication between them, in other words the cohomology ring, which generalizes the intersection ring of a manifold. We had thought that this was only possible in manifolds owing to local Euclidicity. Coming back to the book which they had concluded in Crimea, Alek- sandrov writes in his memories of Heinz Hopf (cf. Щ): This marked the end of our work on this book and also the end of the seven year period 1928-1935 which for both Hopf and myself was mainly devoted to our collaboration writing the book. Sadly, our trip to Crimea was also the beginning of a long period which was to stretch over 15 years when we would not see each other one single time: 5 pre-war years, 5 war years and 5 post-war years. Shortly after the conference in Moscow, Aleksandrov and Kolmogorov bought an apartment in a spacious house which Aleksandrov refers to in his letters as "Castle Muckenau"4. The house had seven big rooms, kitchen and bathroom. Later, in 1938, Aleksandrov and Kolmogorov became sole proprietors. Aleksandrov looked after the yard and garden. At the same time, the two of them worked closely together on mathematical issues. Aleksandrov was suffering more and more with his eyes; his myopia became steadily 4 It was in the attic of this selfsame house that Shiryaev found Hopf's letters.
XXXIV worse and he writes more than once of the "serious prognosis" of his doctors. It was made clear to him that he must desist from writing by hand, which was a great strain on the eyes, and he asked Hopf in Zurich to send him a typewriter with Cyrillic keys. The import into the Soviet Union proved to be extremely difficult and finally the Moscow Academy of Science had to intervene. The typewriter did however arrive eventually and served Aleksandrov to the end of his life. The plans for further volumes of their topology book were not abandoned but never got beyond the stages of preparatory work. Political circumstances played their part in this, for as Aleksandrov says in his letter of 21.11.38, alluding to the forced resignation of Otto Neugebauer as editor-in-chief of Zentralblatt: Naturally, there can be no question now of a book of mine being published by Springer, especially after Neugebauer's resignation as editor of Zentralblatt. The political situation in Germany was seldom mentioned in the letters. Through their direct contacts in Gottingen, both were fully aware of how serious the situation had become after the NSDAP's rise to power in January 1933. But in their correspondence they hardly touched upon the subject, and if so, only in a very general manner; an analysis of the situation is not to be found in the letters.5 They both seem to have underestimated the gravity of the events at first, as did so many others. Hopf writes in a letter of 30.10.35 concerning, amongst other things, the Nuremberg Laws: What we hear from Germany is not gratifying: butter rationing and anti-semitism, and anti-semitism really seems [...] to be on the rise amongst the population and not merely within legislation. [...] The laws, by the way, are not as severe as we believed them to be a few weeks ago; existing marriages will remain untouched. Both Hopf in Zurich and Aleksandrov in Moscow tried in the event to help Jewish emigrants from Germany by finding and sometimes even creating jobs for them. On 16.12.35 Hopf wrote anxiously to Aleksandrov: "The problem with the German emigrants is becoming increasingly difficult". Aleksandrov used all his influence in Moscow to obtain a position for Emmy Noether, but the obstacles could not be overcome in time, and Emmy Noether was finally driven to taking up a position at Bryn Mawr College in the United States. Thanks to Hopf's efforts, many Jewish emigrants found 5 It is possible that part of the reason for this was the fear of censorship.
XXXV refuge of short or long duration in Zurich. Amongst those he was able to help were his cousin Ludwig Hopf and Paul Bernays. Issai Schur also spent a semester in Zurich after he had lost his position in Berlin and before he emigrated to Palestine. In his letters, Hopf often writes about his parents in Breslau, whom Aleksandrov knew personally, and who were not getting on well (10.9.38). They were lonely and suffering from depression (3.3.40). Hopf had visited them in Breslau as late as Christmas 1939. He had been in touch with the immigration authorities and submitted an application to bring them to Switzerland. The necessary permit had been obtained in the end but his plans were thwarted by the outbreak of the Second World War.6 The exchange of letters which had become more rare since the start of the war was totally interrupted for several years after the German invasion of the Soviet Union. 5· The Period 1941-1970 On 20.3.1946 diplomatic relations between Switzerland and the Soviet Union were established. Hopf immediately took the opportunity of getting in touch with Aleksandrov. To be on the safe side, he wrote in French (21.3.46) and Aleksandrov promptly replied three weeks later, also in French, telling him part of what he had lived through in 1941-42 with his family and Kolmogorov in Kazan. The roof of his house had been slightly damaged by a shell splinter in autumn 1941 but apart from that all was well. In his memories of Heinz Hopf Aleksandrov tells of the period following the war (cf. [3]): We did not meet up again until the last days of April 1950 and that happened in Rome on the occasion of Severi's 70th birthday, which was celebrated with splendid festivity. Hopf arrived from Zurich and I from Moscow to take part. I cannot — nor need I — describe the agitation and excitement we both felt at this reunion, coming as it did after so many years. The Severi celebrations lasted for some time because they were one part of an international (geometrical-topological) symposium. During the whole stay we naturally spent a lot of time together and mathematics formed a 6 Hopf s father died in 1942 in Breslau. After the war his mother succeeded, despite her bewildered state, in making her way from Breslau to Erfurt where her daughter was living. — In 1943 Hopf was informed by the German administration that his assets in Germany had been confiscated. Subsequently, he also lost his German nationality. He had, however, already applied for Swiss citizenship and this was granted in 1943 after a short process.
XXXVI good part of our discussions because the Severi symposium was scientifically very interesting and something of a compulsory venue for the exchange of mathematical thoughts. The correspondence between the two picked up again after this, but it was not as regular as it had been and the letters consist mostly of short messages and information on personal matters. Nevertheless, there was the occasional reflection on things mathematical, as in Aleksandrov's letter of 15.11.54 in which he congratulates Hopf on his 60th birthday and goes on: "I am still feeling the strong influence of the last congress: how difficult to understand mathematics has become, even in those fields where one, as a so-called specialist, should be able to understand". A year later in a letter of 10.10.55 he addresses this theme again by citing first of all Serenus Zeitblom from Thomas Mann's "Doctor Faustus": "I am an old-fashioned being, come to a halt at certain romantic notions, which I cherish" and then continues: "My own passion belongs to a period and a direction in mathematics which began with Dedekind and Cantor and which probably comes to an end with Emmy Noether". Again in a letter of 8.12.62 he reverts to the subject: [...] how beautiful the old Brouwer-Alexander-Hopf-Lefschetz (in my thoughts, I modestly add the HausdorfF-Urysohn-Aleksandrov) topology was. And how beautiful the whole of mathematics in the days of Poincare-Hilbert-E.Schmidt-Weyl-E. Noether is, or was. Such mathematics are a thing of the past, and this was of course always the case. The style of mathematical thought has changed — perhaps more radically than at any other time in the past hundred years (which is quite understandable because during this period, the whole of human life has undergone so many weighty changes). Hopf was also passing through a similar phase. In a letter dated 19.11.57 he writes that "mathematical production [is] the business of the young. [...] What is worse is that one has great difficulty (and often no success) when one tries to understand the new things of the young people". We will let Pavel Aleksandrov's own words describe the closing years of this long friendship between himself and Heinz and Anja Hopf (cf. [3]): After 1950 I saw Hopf the next time in Amsterdam at the International Congress of Mathematicians in August in 1954, then again in 1958 at the congress in Edinburgh, in 1962 in Stockholm and in 1966 in Moscow. At these congresses we were usually together for 8-10 days and they were always very gratifying days, even though
not to be compared to our early journeys before the war. Anja Hopf accompanied her husband to the congresses in Amsterdam, Edinburgh and Stockholm, although she was already ill at the time and could only walk a little. She was not able to come to Moscow in 1966. Apart from these regular encounters at congresses, Hopf and I also met at all the meetings of the Executive Committee of the International Mathematical Union. We were both on the board of the Executive Committee and this enabled us to meet regularly and with shorter intervals in between meetings. These encounters occurred in many different places. I was also with Hopfs in Zurich a few times for extended visits. Our last unclouded gathering was in and around Moscow in August 1966. At the time, even though Anja Hopf had been unable to undertake the journey, her state of health was at least satisfactory, and Hopf was tranquil and in good humor. The meeting of the International Mathematical Union took place before the congress started in a beautiful little place called Dubna, on the banks of the Volga. We spent a few wonderful days there. My young pupil Victor Zaicev was with us; some years later he fell seriously ill, but for now he was young, healthy and full of zest for life, and he left out no chance to organize rowing and swimming parties and to help us wherever he could. It was superb, just like the olden days, and Hopf especially was very happy during these days, indeed almost youthful again. But this was to be the last time. After his return from Moscow, Anja's health began to deteriorate rapidly. After a few slight fluctuations, her strength declined continuously and she died in February of the following year (1967). Hopfs own life curve now began to sink. An emptiness formed in him, a vacuum which, once it exists, can only grow until finally, it becomes interlaced with the whole life of a person and destroys it. We were together again for a last time in June 1970. We were both in Frankfurt a. M. and spent about a week there together. We stayed at a small hotel near Palmengarten. Hopf was accompanied by his niece, Elisabeth Ettlinger. His health was no longer good. He had difficulties with walking, sometimes also with talking; it was hard to imagine that this was the same man who, less than four years before, had swam so joyously in the river Volga. But yet it was the same Heinz Hopf whom I had known so well for 44 years, since the summer of 1926, and with whom I had shared a close and affectionate friendship all those years. His essential being, his character had not changed. In Frankfurt we shared once again a few fine — even though not especially merry — days. Despite the difficult outward circumstances, we had many very good discussions and understood one another as completely as we always had during the years of our friendship. We made plans
XXXVIII for future meetings in the coming years in Switzerland or Germany. In spite of this, the overriding mood of this Frankfurt meeting was one of farewell. Perhaps we both sensed in our subconscious minds that this was to be our last. This feeling of parting was especially strong — even overpowering — as we watched the train for Zurich pull into the station. In the end, Hopf got into the carriage and I looked at his face for the last time. In April 1971 Hopf's health became very bad and I prepared myself for the journey to Zurich. At the end of April, after I had completed all the formalities that had to be dealt with and fixed the date for my departure, I fell ill myself and was taken (still in April) to a clinic, where I had to stay for more than a month. It was here that word reached me that Hopf had died on 3rd June. I did not travel to Zurich until 19th November, Hopf's birthday. On this day a Hopf-Gedenkfeter was held at ΕΤΗ. References [1] Aleksandrov, Paul: In Memory of Emmy Noether. In Emmy Noether, Gesam- melte Abhandlungen, Springer Verlag, Heidelberg, 1983. [2] Aleksandrov, Paul: Die Topologie in und um Holland in den Jahren 1920-1930. Nieuw Archief voor Wiskunde 3, 17 (1969), 109-127. [3] Aleksandrov, Paul: Einige Erinnerungen an Heinz Hopf. Jahresbericht der Deutschen Mathematiker Vereinigung 78 (1976), 113-146. [4] Frei, Gunther und Stammbach, Urs: Hermann Weyl und die Mathematik an der ΕΤΗ Zurich, 1913-1930. Birkhauser Verlag, Basel-Boston-Berlin, Marz 1992, XVI + 181 Seiten. [5] Hopf, Heinz: Nachlass. Wissenschaftshistorische Sammlungen der ETH-Biblio- thek, Hs. 620-623. [6] Hopf, Heinz: Einige personliche Erinnerungen aus der Vorgeschichte der heuti- gen Topologie. CBRM Bruxelles (1966), 9-20. Acknowledgement The authors would like to thank Mrs. A. Rast-Margerison for the careful translation of the manuscript into English.
Plenary Lectures
The enlarged abstracts of the plenary lectures are presented in the same order as they were delivered at the Conference
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 3-9 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Homology manifolds and the topological characterization of manifolds * Steven C. Ferry State University of New York at Binghamton, Binghamton, NY, USA 1. Background Definition 1.1. A locally compact metric space X is an integral homology η-manifold if for each xGlwe have *'(jf,x-w;4-i i fzlil: { We will refer to a locally contractible finite-dimensional homology manifold as an ENR homology manifold. Notice that a finite polyhedron is a homology manifold if and only if the link of every vertex is a homology sphere. ENR homology manifolds have the same duality properties as topological manifolds of the same dimension. The suspension of an integral homology sphere is an example of a homology manifold which is not a topological manifold. Definition 1.2. We will say that a metric space X has the disjoint 2-disk property if for every ε > 0 and every pair of maps /, g : D2 —l· X, there are maps /,0 : D2 -+ X so that d(f(z),f(z)) < ε, d(g(z),g(z)) < ε. In 1978, James Cannon [2] conjectured a characterization of topological manifolds: Conjecture 1.3. If X is a compact ENR homology η-manifold, η > 5, and X has the disjoint 2-disk property, then X is a topological manifold. * Partially supported by NSF Grant DMS-9305758.
4 This remarkable conjecture was an outgrowth of Cannon's work on double suspension. To see the relation, let H3 be a homology 3-sphere. Then the double suspension of Η is 51 * Η. This space is a homology manifold which is locally Euclidean everywhere except possibly along the suspension circle. We show that H*SX has the disjoint disk property. If / : D2 —> 5**# is a map, we can approximate / arbitrarily closely by a map which meets this 51 in a O-dimensional set: take a fine triangulation of D2 and use Alexander Duality to approximate by a map such that the image of the 1-skeleton of D2 misses 51. Retriangulate and choose an approximation so that the new 1-skeleton misses 51, and continue. In the limit, we get a map of D2 into Sl * Η so that the image meets 51 in a O-dimensional set. If /, g : D2 —>· 51 * Η are maps we wish to push apart, we can perturb so that each meets Sl in a O-dimensional set and then slide the O-dimensional sets off of each other in the 51-direction. After using these moves to make the intersections of the two D2,s with 51 disjoint, we can use ordinary general position to make the images disjoint from each other in the rest of the manifold. Soon after Cannon made his conjecture, Edwards and Quinn [3, 7, 8] confirmed the conjecture for any connected homology manifold X which contains a Euclidean neighborhood. Theorem 1.4. // Xn, η > 5, is a closed, connected ENR homology η-manifold which satisfies the disjoint disk property and which contains a subset homeomorphic to Rn, then X is a topological manifold. The proof is a concatenation of results of Edwards and Quinn. We begin the statement of Edwards' theorem with a definition. Definition 1.5. (i) A compact separable metric space X is cell-like if there is an embedding X —> Q = ГЩ^О, 1] so that for every neighborhood U of X there is a neighborhood V of X so that V contracts to a point in U. If X is cell-like, then an easy argument using the Tietze extension theorem shows that if X —> Ζ is any embedding of X into an ANR Z, then for every neighborhood U of X in Ζ there is a neighborhood V of X in U so that V contracts in U. A similar argument, again using Tietze, shows that compact separable contractible metric spaces are cell-like. Thus, it is reasonable to think of cell-like spaces as being "Cech contractible". (ii) A map / : X -> Υ between metric spaces is said to be cell-like if it is proper (i.e. if f~x(K) is compact for each compact К С X) and if the inverse image of every у £ Υ is cell-like.
5 Here is the statement of Edwards' theorem: Theorem 1.6 (Edwards [3]). If Mn, η > 5, is a topological manifold with- out boundary and f : Μ -* X is a cell-like map, then X is a topological manifold if and only if X has the disjoint disk property. By the Vietoris-Begle Theorem, the cell-like image of a topological manifold without boundary is a homology manifold. Thus, Edwards' theorem guarantees that Cannon's conjecture is true for homology manifolds which are cell-like images of topological manifolds. Quinn's theorem supplies a necessary and sufficient condition for a homology η-manifold to be the cell-like image of a topological manifold of the same dimension. Here is the statement of Quinn's theorem: Theorem 1.7 (Quinn [7]). If Xn is a connected ENR homology manifold, η > 4, then there is an index I(X) G 8Z + 1 which is equal to 1 if and only if there exist a topological manifold Mn and a cell-like map f : Μ -> X. The invariant I(X) is multiplicative in the sense that I(X xY) = I(X) X I(Y) and it is local in the sense that if U is an open subset of X, then I(X) = I(U). The statement of the Edwards-Quinn theorem given above follows immediately from these two results: the existence of a euclidean neighborhood implies that I(X) = 1 and, therefore, that there is a cell-like map from a topological manifold to X. It then follows from Edwards' theorem and the disjoint disk hypothesis that X is a topological manifold. Thus, counterexamples to Cannon's conjecture must be ENR homology manifolds which are everywhere noneuclidean. Indeed, they must be stably bad in the sense that if X is a counterexample to Cannon's conjecture and Υ is any other ENR homology manifold, then Χ χ Υ is also a counterexample to Cannon's conjecture. By contrast, when the Edwards-Quinn theorem appeared, every known locally contractible finite-dimensional homology manifold X had the property that XxR1 was a genuine manifold. 2. Counterexamples to Cannon's Conjecture There are, in fact, counterexamples to Cannon's Conjecture. Theorem 2.1 (Bryant, Ferry, Mio, and Weinberger [1]). If Mn, η > 6, is a closed simply-connected topological manifold, then for every к £ Ζ there
6 is a finite-dimensional locally contractible homology manifold Mk homotopy equivalent to Μ with I(Mk) = 8k + 1. In order to give a more precise statement of this result in the simply- connected case, we recall the definition of the homotopy structure set Definition 2.2. (i) If Mn is a closed topological manifold, we define the structure set S(M) to be the set of homotopy equivalences f : Ν —ϊ Μ, where N is another closed π-manifold, subject to the equivalence relation (TV, /) ~ (Λ/7, /') if there is a homotopy equivalence φ : N —> Ν' so that /' ο φ is homotopic to /. (ii) We define the homology manifold structure set SH(M) to be the set of homotopy equivalences f : X —l· Μ where X is an n-dimensional closed homology manifold and (A", /) ~ (X', /') if there is an s-cobordism (Z, X, X') of homology manifolds and a map F : Ζ —ϊ Μ extending / and /'. A classical result in surgery theory says that for Μ simply connected, S(M) = [punc(M), G/Top], where punc(M) is a punctured copy of M. The corresponding classification theorem for ENR homology manifolds says that S(M) = [punc(M), G/Top X Z]. These are unpointed homotopy classes and Quinn's index 8k +1 corresponds to к in the Z-factor. Rationally, G/Top is just BTop and the map S(M) —>· G/Top measures the difference between the L-polynomials of punc(M) and рипс(./У). It is therefore reasonable to think of Quinn's index as measuring the 0th Pontr- jagin class of a homology manifold X. In the nonsimply connected case, the classification is by a surgery exact sequence ...-> £η+ι(Ζττι(Μ)) -+ SH{M) -> [M,G/Top χ Ζ] -> Ьп(Хпг(М)). For orientable Μ, we can rewrite the next-to-last term dually to obtain ... -+ Ιη+1(Ζτη(Μ)) -+ 5Я(М) -+ ЯП(М; L(e)) -+ Ln(Zm(M)). This sequence extends to the right, so for any closed orientable homology manifold Mn, η > 6, for which the assembly map Ffc(M;L(e))-^Lfc(Z7r1(M)) is an isomorphism for all k) we have SH(M) — 1. This isomorphism is conjectured to hold for all aspherical manifolds and is known (by work of Farrell-Jones) to hold for all nonpositively curved manifolds.
7 This shows that for closed aspherical manifolds the general pattern is "one Quinn index per homotopy type". This contrasts sharply with the simply-connected world, where every Quinn index appears in every homotopy type. Question 2.3. Is there a closed aspherical ENR homology manifold X with Quinn invariant I(X) not equal to 1? Such an X would give a counterexample to one of two old conjectures. Either π\{Χ) would be a Poincare Duality group which is not the fundamental group of a closed aspherical topological manifold or X would have the homotopy type of an aspherical polyhedron К for which the assembly map Hn(K; L(e)) —>- Ln(Zni(K)) is not an isomorphism. It is natural to wonder whether these new homology manifolds have geometric properties similar to those of topological manifolds. In particular, one wonders if they are manifolds modelled on spaces R£, where /(R£) = 8A: + 1. If this is true, then R£+1 = EJ X R, since the homology manifold on the right has the disjoint disk property and the correct Quinn index. This would mean that homology manifolds with nontrivial Quinn index appear first in some dimension between 3 and 6 and that the model spaces in higher dimensions are products of their lower-dimensional ancestors with Kl for some /. Here is a unified conjecture which expresses our current "(conjectural) world view". Conjecture 2.4 (Lost Tribes Conjecture (BFMW)). There exist spaces R|, к £ Ζ, so that every connected ENR homology manifold Xn, η > 5, with the DDP and I(X) = 8k + 1 is locally homeomorphic to R% χ Εη"4. These ENR homology manifolds are classified up to homeomorphism by Ranicki's algebraic surgery theory. In particular·, we conjecture that high-dimensional ENR homology manifolds with the DDP are homogeneous, that the s-cobordism theorem holds for ENR homology manifolds with the DDP and that such homology manifolds are classified up to homeomorphism by a surgery exact sequence ...^Hn+l(X;L)-+L°n+l(Znl(X))-+SH(X) This conjecture consists of a guess that ENR homology manifolds with nontrivial Quinn index begin in dimension 4 together with the closely related conjectures that such ENR homology manifolds are homogeneous and that
8 the s-cobordism theorem holds in the category of ENR homology manifolds with the disjoint disk property. 3. Non-ENR homology manifolds A.N. Dranishnikov [4] has shown that there are cell-like maps f : Μ —ϊ Χ so that X is an infinite-dimensional homology manifold with finite coho- mological dimension but infinite covering dimension. These spaces occur naturally as limits of topological manifolds in certain topological moduli spaces defined by Gromov. This makes a topological characterization desirable. We begin by stating a characterization of compact metric spaces which are cell-like images of finite polyhedra. Theorem 3.1. Let X be a compact metric space which is LCn and which has cohomological dimension < n. Then X is the cell-like image of a finite polyhedron. Moreover, this finite polyhedron is unique in the sense that if / : Κ —ϊ Χ and /' : К' —» X are cell-like maps, then for every ε > 0 there is a simple homotopy equivalence φ : Κ —ϊ Kf such that /' ο φ is ε-close to /. The situation for manifolds is, however, not quite so simple. Theorem 3.2 (Dranishnikov-Ferry [5]). There exist high-dimensional nonhomeomorphic closed topological manifolds Μ and M' and a space X so that there are cell-like maps f : Μ —> X and ff:M'-+X. For any given X there are, however, only finitely many homeomorphism types of possible manifolds M. Since uniqueness fails, one expects a corresponding failure of existence: Theorem 3.3. Let X be a closed weakly locally contractible homology manifold with finite cohomological dimension and formal dimension η > 6. Let К be a finite polyhedron which admits a cell-like map onto X. There is a fibration sequence of spectra (к) and an obstruction (a controlled version of Ranicki's total surgery obstruc- tion) Θ(Χ) € 7rn_i<S I -I- I which vanishes if and only if X is the cell-like
9 image of a closed ENR homology η-manifold. Here, L(e) is the periodic L-theory spectrum of the trivial group. Since К is homotopically n-dimen- sional, кп-ХЩКМе)) - Vn-гЩК, G/TOP x Z) £ Ή(Χ, G/TOP χ Ζ). This last uses the fact that the Vietoris-Begle theorem is true for homology theories which are bounded below. Thus, the obstruction lives in the (n— l)st homotopy group of the fiber of the map ЩХ, G/TOP xZ)4 ЩХ, L(e)) and vanishes if and only if X can be resolved to a closed ANR homology manifold. At the moment, we can only realize some of the obstructions in this theory. In particular, we can construct examples of homology manifolds Xn so that the obstruction Θ(Χ) maps nontrivially to Hn-\{M\ L(e)). The (K\ construction of examples coming from the image of Hn(X; L(e)) in S I I J should be similar to the construction of the nonresolvable ENR homology manifolds of Section 2, provided that there is no nontrivial lim1 term in Hn(X; L(e)). We are uncertain as to whether nontrivial lim1 terms exist and as to their geometric effect on our obstruction theory in case they do exist. References [1] J. Bryant, S. Ferry, W. Mio and S. Weinberger, The topology of homology manifolds, Ann. Math., to appear. [2] J. Cannon, The characterization of topological manifolds of dimension η > 5, in: Proceedings of the ICM (1978), 449-454. [3] R. Daverman, Decompositions of manifolds, Academic Press, 1986. [4] A.N. Dranishnikov, On a problem of P.S. Alexandroff, Mathematics of the USSR — Sbornik 63 (1989), 539-545. [5] A.N. Dranishnikov and S. Ferry, Cell-like images of topological manifolds and limits of manifolds in Gromov-Hausdorff space, Preprint. [6] S. Ferry, Limits of polyhedra in Gromov-Hausdorff space, Preprint (available via http://math. binghamton. edu/steve/). [7] F. Quinn, Resolutions of homology manifolds, and the topological characterization of manifolds, Invent. Math. 72 (1983), 267-284. [8] F. Quinn, An obstruction to the resolution of homology manifolds, Michigan Math. J. 301 (1987), 285-292.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 11—15 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Cohomological dimension theory and applications Alexander N. Dranishnikov University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA 1. Alexandroff's problem The definition of the covering dimension dim is due to Lebesgue: dim X < η if and only if there exist arbitrarily small covers of X of order < η + 1. We consider only compact spaces here. P.S. Alexandroff made a major contribution to Dimension Theory. In late twenties he found a remarkable characterization of dimension in terms of essential mappings onto n-cubes /n. An equivalent formulation of his characterization of dimension can be given via the following extension property: dim X < η if and only if for every continuous map / : A —» Sn of a closed subset А С X to the n-sphere there is a continuous extension /: X —>- 5n. Another his contribution to Dimension Theory is the introduction of the notion of cohomological dimension. The definition of cohomological dimension dim^ X can also be given in terms of extensions: dimz X < τι if and only if for every continuous map f : A —l· K(Z,n) of a closed subset А С X to the Eilenberg-MacLane space there is a continuous extension. Alexandroff's theorem. The cohomological dimension dim^X agrees with the covering dimension dim X for compact metric spaces provided that dim X < oo. This theorem was proven in early thirties and the formulation was different since there was no notion of cohomology that time. From then, there was an open problem: Alexandroff's problem. Is it true that dim X = dim^ X for all compact metric spaces ΧΊ
12 2. Bockstein-Boltjanskij's problem At the beginning RS. AlexandrofF was too optimistic about cohomologi- cal dimension. He assumed that the cohomological dimension did not depend on the choice of coefficients. In 1930 L.S. Pontrjagin constructed his 2-dimensional "surfaces" Up having the property dim Up X Uq = 3 for (p,q) = 1. The rational dimension dimQUp of his surfaces equals one. So, coefficients came into the picture and in thirties Alexandroff posed a problem about the existence of a countable basis of Abelian groups for the cohomological dimension. This problem was solved by F.M. Bockstein who proved the following Bockstein's theorem. Let σ be the family of Abelian groups consisting of the rationals Q, localizations Z(p), cyclic groups of prime order Zp and Zpoo = DirLimZp*. Then the dimension dim#X with respect to any Abelian group Η can be computed via dimensions dim^X, G 6 σ. For example, for Η = Ζ Bockstein's algorithm gives the following formula: dim^X = max{dimz(p) X}. There are relations between cohomological dimensions with respect to coefficient groups from Bockstein's basis σ which were discovered by Bockstein in terms of inequalities (Bockstein's inequalities). Here we formulate the relations in a different way. For every prime number ρ a com- pactum X can be p-regular or p-singular. In the first case we have dimz(p) X = a\m%pX = a\mip00 X = dim<Q)A\ In the second case dimz(p) X = max{dimQ X, dim^poo X + 1} and dimzp00 X equals dim^p X or dimzp X — 1. Realization Problem. Let {uq : G 6 σ} be a set of natural numbers satisfying the above conditions. Does there exist a compactum X with dimG X — uq for all G £ σ? 3. Cell-like maps A map between compacta / : X —» Υ is called cell-like if the preimage f~l of each point has trivial shape. In other words, f~l is cell-like, i.e. it can be embedded into En or into the Hilbert cube as the intersection of a nested sequence of topological cells. In dimension greater than 3 the Siebenmann-Quinn theorem states that a cell-like map / : Μ —)> N between
13 closed manifolds forces the manifolds to be homeomorphic. R. Edwards has significantly generalized the above theorem. In his assumption he did not use that the image TV was a manifold. He assumed only that N had the disjoint disk property and dim N < oo. A natural question arose: is always dim N < oo? This question is equivalent to the following Cell-like Mapping Problem. Can cell-like maps between compacta raise the dimension? The Cell-like Mapping Problem first time appeared in works of R.H. Bing. In seventies R. Edwards proved (see [10]) that the Cell-like Mapping Problem is equivalent to Alexandroff 's problem. 4. Solutions The Cell-like Mapping Problem was solved in [3] by a counter-example for all η-dimensional manifolds, η > 7, and later J. Dydak and J. Walsh extended that for η > 5. Recently we proved the following Theorem 1. There is a cell-like map f : S7 —ϊ Χ of the 7-dimensional sphere such that X does not admit a map of degree one onto 57. Due to the standard lifting property of cell-like maps it follows that dim X = oo in Theorem 1. In fact our map / kills some element in homology A'-theory. The Realization Problem was solved positively in [2]. 5. Applications There are various applications of Dimension Theory to different areas of Topology. Here we discuss some of applications related to the Novikov Conjecture. Definition 1. An open η-manifold Μ is called hyperspherical if it admits a Lipschitz map / : Μ —ϊ Rn of degree one onto the Euclidean space. The Gromov-Lawson-Rosenberg conjecture states that an aspherical manifold cannot carry a metric of a positive scalar curvature. This conjecture is a partial case of the Novikov Conjecture about the homotopy
14 invariance of the higher signatures. Gromov and Lawson [8] proved that if the universal covering space Μ for an aspherical manifold N is hyperspher- ical (for the metric induced from N) then the Gromov-Lawson-Rosenberg conjecture holds for N. The universal cover of an aspherical manifold N is contractible. If N is a closed manifold then the universal cover is uniformly contractible, i.e. for every R > 0 there is S > 0 such that every ball J5(x, R) of radius R is contractible to a point in the ball B(x,S) of radius S. In view of Gromov-Lawson's result it is natural to conjecture [7] that every uniformly contractible manifold is hyperspherical. It turns out that it is not the case. Using Theorem 1 we have constructed [5] a uniformly contractible Riemannian metric on R8 which is not hyperspherical. To construct that we took a geodesic uniformly 8-connected metric on the open cone OX over X. Then using the cell-like map cone(/) : R8 —> OX we constructed a Riemannian metric on R8 which is on a finite distance from OX in the Gromov-Hausdorff space. It implies that OX and the metric on R8 have the same Higson corona. The Higson corona vOX of the cone space OX is closely related to X. It is possible to show that, like X, the space vOX does not admit a map of degree one onto S7. Then the following theorem of J. Roe complete the argument. Roe's theorem. An η-manifold Μ is hyperspherical if and only if the Higson corona vM admits a map of degree one onto 5n_1. By definition the Higson corona vM is the remainder of the compactifi- cation of Μ generated by the algebra consisting of all bounded functions / on Μ with the property lim diam /(J3(x, R)) = 0 for every R > 0. x—>oo According to Gromov, the asymptotic dimension asdim Μ of a metric space Μ is the smallest number η such that for every L > 0 there exists an open cover of Μ by uniformly bounded sets with the Lebesgue number > L. Theorem 2 ([6]). For every proper metric space Μ the inequality dim vM < asdim Μ holds. We recall that a metric space is called proper if the closure of every bounded set is compact. Conjecture 1. Let Γ be a group with finite complex /f (Γ, 1) supplied with a word metric, then dim vY < oo. Conjecture 2. //dim vY < oo for an above Γ then the Novikov Conjecture holds for Γ.
15 Clearly Conjectures 1, 2 imply the Novikov Conjecture. Conjecture 2 is more plausible because of the following theorem of Yu. Theorem 3 ([11]). 7/asdim Γ < oo for an above Γ then the Novikov Con- jecture holds for Γ. References [1] V.I. Kuzminov, Homological dimension theory, Russian Math. Surveys (1968). [2] A.N. Dranishnikov, Homological dimension theory, Russian Math. Surveys 43 (1988), 11-63. [3] A.N. Dranishnikov, On the problem of P.S. Alexandroff, Mat. Sbornik 135 (1988). [4] A.N. Dranishnikov and S. Ferry, Cell-like images of topological manifolds and limits in Gromov-Hausdorff space. Preprint, 1994. [5] A.N. Dranishnikov, S. Ferry and S. Weinberger, Large Riemanman manifolds which are flexible, Preprint, 1994. [6] A.N. Dranishnikov. J. Keesling and V.V. Uspenskii, On the Higson corona, Preprint, 1996. [7] M. Gromov, Large Riemanman manifolds, Lecture Notes in Mathematics 1201 (1985), 108-122. [8] M. Gromov and H.B. Lawson, Positive scalar curvature and the Dirac operator, Publ. IHES 58 (1983), 83-196. [9] J. Roe, Coarse cohomology and index theory for complete Riemanman manifolds, Memoirs Amer. Math. Soc. 497 (1993). [10] J.J. Walsh, Dimension, cohomological dimension, and cell-like mappings, Springer-Verlag, 1981, SLN 870, 105-118. [11] G. Yu, The Novikov Conjecture and groups with finite asymptotic dimension, Preprint, 1995.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 17-24 Dedicated to P. S. Alexandroff 's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Algorithmic classification of sufficiently large 3-manifolds Sergei V. Matveev Chelyabinsk State University, Chelyabinsk, Russia 1. Introduction The aim of the talk is to sketch a modified proof of the following Haken- Waldhausen-Johannson-Hemion theorem [3, 11, 6, 4]. Theorem 1· There is an algorithm to decide whether two given Haken 3-manifolds are homeomorphic or not Recall that a compact 3-manifold Μ is called Haken if: 1. Μ is irreducible (every 2-sphere in Μ bounds a ball); 2. Μ is boundary irreducible (every proper 2-disc in Μ cuts off a ball); 3. Μ is sufficiently large (there is a proper incompressible surface F φ 52, D2 in M; recall that a two-sided surface FcMis incompressible if the kernel of the induced homomorphism i* : n\(F) —> πχ(Μ) is trivial). Let us explain the reasons why Theorem 1 should be considered as a classification theorem for Haken manifolds. There is an algorithm that enumerates all compact 3-manifolds (possibly with duplicates). For example, one can successively enumerate all finite 3-dimensional simplicial complexes and select manifolds by checking whether the links of all vertices are spheres and discs or not. The algorithm can be modified for producing Haken manifolds only. There are two problems here: how to recognize irreducibility of a manifold, and how to check algorithmically whether the manifold is sufficiently large. The solution of the first problem is based on Rubinstein-Thompson algorithm for recognition of S3 [9, 8]. The second problem was solved in [5].
18 Having constructed the enumeration algorithm for Haken manifolds, we can apply Theorem 1 for creating a list Mi, M2, ... of all Haken manifolds without duplicates by inquiring if each next manifold has been listed before. It is the list that is considered as classifying list of Haken manifolds. Certainly, this is a classification in a very weak sense; the existence of the classifying list does not help to answer questions on Haken manifolds. It is the proof of Theorem 1 that allows one to grasp the intrinsic structure of Haken manifolds. Remark that the recognition algorithm for Haken manifolds is highly unefficient like all other algorithms based on Haken's theory. The only practical recognition algorithm for a class of 3-manifolds was suggested in [1]. 2. Simple polyhedra and simple skeletons Definition 1. A compact 2-dimensional polyhedron Ρ is called simple if the link of any point of Ρ is homeomorphic to a circle, a circle with a diameter, or a circle with three radii. Simple polyhedra are known also as fake surfaces or generic polyhedra and, under minor additional assumptions, as standard or special polyhedra. The set of singular points (i.e. vertices and triple lines) of a simple polyhedron Ρ is called a singular graph of Ρ and denoted by SP. Connected components of Ρ — SP are called 2-components of P. Definition 2. A simple subpolyhedron Ρ of a 3-manifold Μ is called a simple skeleton of Μ if Μ — Ρ is a collection of open 3-balls and any 2-component of Ρ is a 2-cell. Particularly, if dM φ 0, then Ρ must contain dM. Proposition 1. Let Рь Р2 be simple subpolyhedra of 3-manifolds Μχ, M2 respectively. Assume that the boundaries of Μχ, M2 contain no 2-spheres. Then any homeomorphism h : Ρχ —» P2 can be extended to a homeomor- phism Η : M\ -* M2. PROOF. A circle with a diameter as well as a circle with three radii can be embedded into 52 in a unique way up to homeomorphisms of S2. It follows that h can be extended to a homeomorphism #' between regular neighborhoods of the singular graphs. Since the rest of Ρ and the rest of Μ — Ρ consist of 2- and 3-cells, one can extend Hf to a homeomorphism between M\ and M2. D
19 Definition 3. A simple subpolyhedron Ρ of a 3-manifold Μ is called ad- missible if every 2-component α of Ρ is injective and either а С дМ or a separates two different components of Μ — P. The closures of connected components of Μ — Ρ are called 3-components of Μ — P. Note that each 3-component Q of Μ — Ρ is a compact 3-manifold such thatQnP = dQ. Let us describe a general way for constructing admissible subpolyhedra of manifolds. Let Ρ С Μ be an admissible subpolyhedron, and let F С М be an embedded surface. Suppose that F Π Ρ = #F and dF is in general position with respect to 5P, that is dF contains no vertices of Ρ and intersects the edges transversally. If F does not decompose the 3-component of Μ - Ρ it is contained in, replace F by the boundary of its relative regular neighborhood. Then PUP is a simple admissible subpolyhedron of M. 3. Proof of Theorem 1 (modulo extension moves) Let Ρ be an admissible subpolyhedron of M. Below we will describe a sort of transformations of Ρ called extension moves. Each extension move transforms Ρ to another admissible subpolyhedron P\ С М. The following properties should be satisfied: 1. The number of different extensions of Ρ is finite up to homeomor- phisms of the pair (Μ, Ρ); 2. There is an algorithm to construct all possible extensions of P; 3. Any sequence Ρ С P\ С Рг..., where each Рг+1 is an extension of Рг, is finite; 4. If Ρ has no extensions, then Ρ is a simple skeleton. Theorem 2. There is an algorithm that assigns to any Haken Ъ-manijold Μ a finite set V(M) of simple skeletons of Μ such that Haken manifolds M\, M2 are homeomorphic if and only if a skeleton Pi £ V(Mi) is homeo- morphic to a skeleton P2 G P(M2). Proof. (Under assumption that extension moves have been described.) Suppose Μ is given. Denote by Po the boundary of Μ if дМ ф 0 and an injective surface in Μ if Μ is closed. Let us apply to P0 all extension moves while it is possible. Properties (3) and (2) ensure us that this branched
20 process stops and that it is algorithmic. It follows from conditions (1) and (4) that we get a finite set V(M) of simple skeletons. Suppose now that Μχ, M2 are two Haken manifolds. According to property (1), the result of our branched process depends only on the homeomor- phism type of M. Therefore V{M\) and V(M2) should consist actually of the same polyhedra. On the other hand, if V(M\) and V(M2) contain at least one pair of homeomorphic polyhedra, then M\ and M2 are homeomor- phic by Proposition 1. D Note that Theorem 2 reduces the recognition problem for Haken manifolds to the corresponding problem for 2-dimensional polyhedra and that the latter admits an evident algorithmic solution. Therefore Theorem 2 implies Theorem 1. 4. Extension moves Let Ρ be an admissible simple subpolyhedron of Μ and Q a 3-component of Μ - P. 4.1. Addition of an incompressible torus Move E\\ Suppose that there is a non-boundary parallel incompressible torus T2 С IntQ. Then we replace Ρ by PUT2. 4.2. Addition of a longitudinal annulus A proper annulus A in Q is called clean if A is incompressible and dAC)SP = 0. Definition 4. A non-boundary parallel clean annulus А С Q is called longitudinal if any other non-boundary parallel clean annulus A\ С Q can be isotoped mod SP so that afterwards дА П дА\ = 0. Otherwise A is called transverse. Move E2: Suppose that Q contains an longitudinal annulus A. Then we replace Ρ by PU A. 4.3. Addition of an annular belt Definition 5. A clean annulus А С Q is called a non-trivial annular belt if A is boundary parallel and the annulus bounded by dA in dQ contains at least one vertex of SP.
21 Move E3: Suppose that Q φ D2 χ Sl, all clean annuli in Q are boundary parallel, and there exists a non-trivial annular belt А С Q. Then we replace Ρ by PUA. 4.4. Addition of a minimal non-trivial disc Move E\\ Suppose that Q is reducible, not homeomorphic to D2 Χ 51, and all clean annuli in Q are trivial belts. Then we replace Ρ by Ρ U D, where D is a non-trivial disc in Q such that the number of points in DOS Ρ is minimal. 4.5. Addition of a minimal incompressible surface Move E\\ Suppose that Q is irreducible, all clean annuli in Q are trivial belts, and there is a proper surface F С Q such that F is incompressible and dF determines a non-trivial element of H\(dQ). Among all such surfaces choose a surface F0 such that the complexity w{Fq) = #(dFoC\SP) — χ(Ρο) takes the smallest possible value (here #(dFoC\SP) is the number of points in dF0DSP and χ(Ρο) is the Euler characteristic. Replace Ρ by PUF0- 4.6. Subdivision of an /-bundle Move E$\ Let iV = Fx/cMbean /-bundle over a surface such that the following holds: 1. N C)P = dNU Fx K, where К is a finite set in Int /; 2. NDdM = FxdI. Let Pjv be a simple skeleton of N having the smallest possible number of vertices. Then we replace Ρ by (P-Int F X K){JPn. 4.7. Subdivision of a Stallings manifold Move E5: Let N — Sl X F С М be a Stallings manifold, that is a surface bundle over the circle. Suppose that Ν Π Ρ = 97V U К X F, where /i is a finite set in 51. Let Pn be a simple skeleton of N having the smallest possible number of vertices. Then we replace Ρ by (P-K χ Int F)UPyv. 4.8. Subdivision of a quasi-Stallings manifold Let α, β : F —l· F be two free involutions on a surface. Denote by ~ the equivalence relation on F X / generated by equalities (я,1) =
22 (α(χ),1) and (χ,Ο) = (/?(x),0). Then the manifold (F X /)/„ is called a quasi-Stallings manifold. Move E6: Let N С Μ be a quasi-Stallings manifold. Suppose that NOP = ON U (F X K)/~, where /f is a finite set in /. Let P^v be a simple skeleton of N having the smallest possible number of vertices. Then we replace Ρ hy(P-{lntFxK)/„)[JPN. 4.9. Addition of meridional discs for genus one handlebodies Move Εγ: Suppose that all 3-components of Μ - Ρ are 3-balls and genus one handlebodies. Then we add to Ρ meridional discs of the handlebodies. Some care is needed to make this process canonical up to a finite number of possibilities. (We omit details.) 5. Why do extension moves possess the properties (1)—(4)? The main instrument here is the normal surface theory of W. Haken [2]. Let ξ be a handle decomposition for a 3-manifold M. Recall that a surface F in Μ is normal (with respect to ξ) if, roughly speaking, F intersects all handles in a very nice way. Each incompressible and boundary incompressible surface in Μ is isotopic to a normal one. A key result of Haken's theory can be formulated as follows: There is a finite set of fundamental normal surfaces in Μ such that any normal surface can be presented as a geometric sum of fundamental ones. Moreover, the set of fundamental surfaces can be constructed algo- rithmically. Proposition 2. For any Haken manifold Μ there exists an algorithmically computable number n(M) such that any set of disjoint non-parallel incompressible and boundary incompressible surfaces in Μ consists of no more than n(M) surfaces. Proof. Let Τ = {Fi,..., F&} be a set of disjoint non-parallel incompressible and boundary incompressible surfaces in M. We can assume that all surfaces are normal. They decompose every index 1 handle onto "paral- lelity" and "non-parallelity" regions. The number of non-parallelity regions is less than the valency of the handle. Since every component of Μ - Ц' Fi must contain at least one non-parallelity region, one can easily find an upper bound for k. D
23 Proposition 3. For any Haken manifold Μ and for any number g there exists an algorithmically constructible finite set F\,.. .,Fk of surfaces in Μ such that every incompressible and boundary incompressible genus g surface in Μ can be transformed to some F{ by a homeomorphism of Μ isotopic to a superposition of twists along incompressible annuli and tori. An idea OF the proof. It follows from Haken's theory that any incompressible and boundary incompressible surface in Μ can be isotoped into a regular neighborhood N of the union of some fundamental surfaces Si,...,5m such that Ц 5« contains no triple points. Since N has a very simple structure, the proof of the theorem for N instead Μ is easy. The set of all fundamental surfaces is finite, so we have only a finite number of different N. This finishes the proof. D It is easy to see that the properties (1), (2) and (3) for the moves E\ and £?2 follow from Propositions 2 and 3. For the move E$ these properties are evident. The properties (1) and (2) for the moves £4, E5 also follow from Propositions 2 and 3, since we apply the moves only under assumption that there are no non-trivial annuli and tori in Q. Note also that the moves £4, E5 decrease the Waldhausen complexity (see [10]) of Q. It follows that the property (3) for them also holds. There are no problems with the move E5. To get the desired properties for the move J56, it is sufficient to use Hemion's solution of conjugacy problem for surface homeomorphisms [4]. The solution provides an algorithm to decide whether or not two Stallings manifolds are homeomorphic, and an algorithm to enumerate the (finite up to an isotopy) set of all autohomeo- morphisms of a Stallings manifold. The situation with th>e move Εγ is more complicated. One can reduce the problem to the following theorem: There is an algorithm that for given autohomeomorphisms w, w : F —l· F of a compact surface determines whether un is isotopic to w for some η or not. One can also reduce the problem to Thurston's hyperbolization theorem for sufficiently large 3-manifolds or to Thurston's classification theorem for surface homeomorphisms. I do not know whether proofs of the theorems have been published in any form. In conclusion, we explain why after applying all possible extension moves we get a simple skeleton. Assume that a simple polyhedron Ρ С М does not admit any extension move. Suppose that a 3-component Q of Ρ is not a ball or a genus 1 handlebody. Then Q does not contain incompressible tori
24 and longitudinal annuli and contains a transverse annulus, since otherwise we could apply either the moves Εϊ) E2 or the moves E3) E4. It follows that Q is homeomorphic to an /-bundle over a surface, and, since we can not apply the move £5, Q lies in the interior of M. Unions of such bundles form Stallings or quasi-Stallings manifolds, which is impossible since we can not apply the moves Ее and Εγ. It follows that all 3-components of Μ - Ρ should be balls or genus 1 handlebodies, but all genus 1 handlebodies had been killed by the move Εγ. References [1] A. Fomenko, V. Kusnezov and I. Volodin, On the algorithmic recognition problem for the standard 3-dimensional sphere, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 29(5) (1974), 71-168 (in Russian). [2] W. Haken, Theorie der Normalflachen. Em Isotopiekriterium fur der Kreisknoten, Acta Math. 105 (1961), 245-375. [3] W. Haken, Uber das Homoomorphieproblem der 3-Mannigfaltigkeiten, I. Math. Z. 80 (1962), 89-120. [4] G. Hemion, On the classification of homeomorphisms of 2-manifolds and the classification of 3-manifolds, Acta Math. 142 (1979), 123-155. [5] W. Jaco and U. Oertel, An algorithm to decide if a Ъ-manifold is a Haken manifold, Topology 23 (1984), 195-209. [6] K. Johannson, Topologie und Geometrie von 3-Mannigfaltigkeiten, Jahresber. Deutsch. Math.-Ver. 86 (1984), 37-68. [7] K. Johannson, Topology and combinatorics of Ъ-mamfolds, Springer LNM 1599, 1995. [8] S. Matveev, A recognition algorithm for the Z-dimensional sphere [after A. Thompson), Mat. Sbornik 186(5) (1995), 69-84 (in Russian). [9] A. Thompson, Thin position and the recognition problem for S3, Preprint, 1994. [10] F. Waldhausen, On irreducible Z-manifolds which are sufficiently large, Ann. Math. 87(2) (1968), 56-88. [11] F. Waldhausen, Recent results on sufficiently large Ъ-manifolds, Proc. Symp. in Pure Math., Amer. Math. Soc. 32 (1978), 21-38.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 25-26 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Foundations of algebraic homotopy theory and dimension theory Anthony Bak University of Bielefeld, Bielefeld, Germany For a century, the notion of homotopy had been confined to the realm of topological spaces or abstractions thereof such as simplicial complexes. This talk describes notions of homotopy and homotopy groups for certain algebraic objects and establishes fundamental results for these objects such as infinite relative exact sequences of homotopy groups. Even though the foundational results in the algebraic setting parallel their topological counterparts, the algebraic constructions differ profoundly from the corresponding topological ones in several ways. One important difference is that all higher homotopy groups can be non-abelian. Certain algebraic objects called standard objects have only abelian higher homotopy groups and the subcategory they define is adjoint to the category of topological spaces. Thus algebraic homotopy theory can be viewed as a non-abelian generalization of topological homotopy theory. An important application of the algebraic theory is an algebraic construction of all higher Volodin algebraic A'-theory groups. This construction provides complete justification of the expression algebraic A'-theory. The algebraic objects which form the basis of algebraic homotopy theory are constructed in 2 steps. First we fit together according to a few simple rules group actions of usually distinct groups acting on usually distinct sets to form a new object called a global action. A global action is in spirit similar to that of a sheaf of groups, but the underlying sets are not related to open sets of topological space. The second step is the crucial one and defines the notion of a complex of global actions. The homotopy groups of a complex are constructed using the local group actions of the global actions making up the complex. Thus homotopy groups in the algebraic setting are internally defined and do not depend as in the topological setting on certain external objects, namely spheres, for their definition. This is another significant difference between the algebraic and topological theories.
As in topological homotopy theory, one wants to prove results concerning the basic objects of the theory and concerning functors taking values in the basic objects of the theory. The latter arises for example in algebraic A'-theory. Here one considers functors from various categories such as rings or schemes to topological spaces or complexes of global actions and defines A'-groups of source objects as homotopy groups of target objects. In either the traditional or algebraic setting of homotopy theory, it would be useful for tackling problems above to have a general theory of dimension which provides a uniform conceptualization of notions of dimension found in diverse mathematical specialties, such as Krull dimension in ring theory and CW-dimension in topology. The last part of the talk describes such a dimension theory in terms of concepts of structure and infrastructure for arbitrary categories. As an application of the theory, we obtain a sweeping generalization of the Eilenberg-Steenrod axioms for homology functors to very general systems of (not necessarily abelian) group valued functors defined on categories with dimension. Examples of such systems of group valued functors include the A'-groups of various algebraic A'-theories.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 27-33 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Fomenko's invariants in the theory of integrable Hamiltonian systems Alexei V. Bolsinov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia The purpose of this article is to present some recent results in topology of integrable Hamiltonian systems which are based on the approach suggested by Fomenko about ten years ago [3, 4] and allowing to describe topological properties of such systems. We consider an even-dimensional symplectic manifold (Μ2η,ω) and the Hamiltonian system on it generated by a smooth Hamiltonian Η : Μ —ϊ R where Хц is uniquely defined by u>(X#, v) = v(H) for any vector field v. Definition 1. The system (X#, M2n) is called Liouville integrable if it admits η pairwise commuting integrals /i, /2, ... , fn which are functionally independent almost everywhere on M2n. Liouville theorem. If a common level surface L = {f\ = c\, ... , fn = cn} is regular, compact and connected then L is an η-dimensional torus (called a Liouville torus) and, moreover, in some neighborhood U(L) = Tn χ Dn there exists a canonical coordinate system (φ\)..., φη, s\,..., sn) such that where a{ = a{{s\%..., sn). As a result on the manifold there appears a very interesting structure, namely, the structure of the so-called Liouville foliation С whose leaves, by definition, are connected components of common level surfaces of the integrals /i, ... , /n.
28 Remark 1. We will assume that the momentum mapping F=(/b...,/n):M2n-+Rn is proper (in the sense that the preimage of a compact set is compact). Thus, almost all leaves of the Liouville foliation are Liouville tori, but there exist some singular leaves corresponding to the critical values of F. In terms of this foliation we can say that the Liouville theorem completely describes its structure near non-singular leaves. One of the most important problems in topology of integrable Hamilto- nian systems is to describe the structure of Liouville foliations and classify them up to the usual equivalence. Definition 2. Two Liouville foliations C\ and £2 corresponding to integrable systems (Χ#η M\) and (X#2, M2) respectively are called isomorphic if there exists a fiberwise homeomorphism (or a diffeomorphism, it depends on what we want) ξ : M\ —l· M2. In this situation we also say that the systems (Χ#ηΜι) and (X#2,M2) are topologically equivalent Remark 2. In this definition instead of the whole symplectic manifolds M\ and M2 we may consider their parts invariant with respect to the Hamilto- nian flows, for example, isoenergy surfaces Qi = {Нг = const} or saturated neighborhoods of singular values. There is another problem (and maybe even more interesting), namely the problem of topological obstructions to integrability. In other words, the question is what symplectic manifolds (or isoenergy surfaces) admit an integrable Hamiltonian system? (To be more precise, we are speaking about integrable systems with nice integrals in the sense that the structure of singularities of the momentum mapping F is not too complicated.) Of course, to begin working with these general questions we should first of all describe the structure of singularities of Liouville foliations. Questions of this kind arose in many papers dealing both with pure mathematical things and applications. In particular, I would like to mention the famous paper "Topology and Mechanics" by S. Smale [11] and M.P. Kharlamov's works (see [7]) where he investigated the properties of Liouville foliations for classical integrable cases in rigid body dynamics.
29 A new approach (and, I would say, a new language) allowing to describe and classify Liouville foliations was suggested by Fomenko in 1985 [3, 4, 5]. In particular, two problems were solved. 1. Description of non-degenerate singularities of codimension one (semi- local classification). 2. Global classification of Liouville foliations on isoenergy surfaces for non-degenerate integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom. To explain the main points of this approach, we begin with a very simple example. Consider a Hamiltonian system with one degree of freedom. In this case the structure of the Liouville foliation on M2 is given by a smooth function / : M2 —>· Ε which is the Hamiltonian of the system. More precisely, the Liouville foliation is just the foliation into level lines of /. Non-degeneracy in this case means that / is a Morse function. Consider a regular saturated neighborhood P2 = U(L) of a singular level L of this foliation. It is clear that in general case a singular level can be of two types, either an isolated point or a graph with vertices of degree four (in the simplest case this graph is just an eight-figure). Definition 3. The neighborhood P2 of a singular leaf L with the structure of the Liouville foliation on it is called an atom. There are several methods allowing to classify and, in principal, to obtain the complete list of atoms (see [2, 10]). Consider now non-degenerate singularities of codimension one. "Codimension one" means that such a singularity has points for which rkciF = η — 1, but has no points for which rkdF < n — 1. It was shown by A.T. Fomenko that the semi-local structure of a singular leaf can be of two types. The first type is just a direct product. To describe it, consider an atom P2 and a trivial Liouville foliation of dimension η — 1, that is, Tn~l χ Dn~l. Then the direct product M2n = Ρ2 χ Tn~l X Dn~l has a natural structure of an η-dimensional Liouville foliation. The second type (called almost direct product) can be obtained in the following way. Let us assume that an atom P2 admits an involution τ : Ρ2 —ϊ Ρ2 which preserves the Liouville foliation structure. Then this involution can be extended to the direct product M2n = Ρ2 χ Τη_1 χ Dn~l by the formula Ф, ¥>ь · · ·, ¥>η-ι, *i, · · ·, sn-i) = (r(x), φι + тг, φ2,..., <ρΛ-ι, *ι, · · ·, *η-ι),
30 where χ e Ρ2, {<pu · · ·> ¥>η-ι) € Τ71""1, (*i,...,sn) € Ζ?"-1. It is easy to see that τ is an involution without fixed points and preserves the Liouville foliation structure. Thus the quotient space M2n = M2n/f obtains a natural structure of a Liouville foliation (of almost direct product type). As a result, the classification of non-degenerate singularities of codimension one is, in essence, the classification of atoms. Consider now the case of two degrees of freedom. Let Q3 = {H = const} be a regular isoenergy surface of an integrable Hamiltonian system Хц on (Μ4,ω), and С the corresponding Liouville foliation on it. The problem of classification of such foliations was solved in [2, 10]. The complete invariant allowing to do it is the so-called marked molecule (or Fomenko-Zieschang invariant). The molecule W* = W*(Q3,C) can be considered as a graph, namely, the Reeb graph (or the base) of the foliation. The vertices of the molecule (atoms) correspond to the singular levels. In other words, for every singular level we indicate its semi-local structure. This invariant also includes some numerical marks which show how the molecule should be glued from single atoms. There appears a natural question whether it is possible to apply the same invariants (i.e., atoms and molecules) to describe and classify more complicated singularities (degenerate ones or singularities of arbitrary codimension). It turns out that this can be done. To explain the main idea consider the case of two degrees of freedom. Let Η be the Hamiltonian of an integrable Hamiltonian system, / an additional integral and F = (#, /) : M4 —»· R2 the corresponding momentum mapping. Consider the set of critical points of F K = {x eM4 :rkdF(x) < 2} and the bifurcation diagram Σ = F(K) С Е2. Usually the bifurcation diagram Σ is a union of smooth curves (which correspond to one-parameter families of non-degenerate singularities of codimension one) and some singular points of the bifurcation diagram (which correspond to more complicated singularities). Definition 4. A singular point j/ G Σ С R2 is called isolated if for any sufficiently small ε > 0 the circle y€ with the center у and radius ε intersects Σ transversally at non-singular points. Consider the preimage Q3e = F~~l(ye) and the corresponding marked molecule W*(y) which describes the Liouville foliation structure on Q3e. It is easily seen that W*(y) does not depend on ε.
31 Definition 5. W*(y) is called a circle molecule (associated with the singularity of С corresponding to the isolated singular point у 6 Σ). Fomenko's conjecture. The circle molecule of a singularity is its complete topological invariant. This construction can be generalized to the case of many degrees of freedom. The molecule in this case should be replaced by the so-called marked net showing the types of singularities of codimension one in a neighborhood of a singular point of arbitrary codimension. First general results describing non-degenerate singularities of codimension two were obtained by Lerman and Umanskii [8]. Then we tried to look at these singularities following Fomenko's approach. As a result we have obtained the classification of non-degenerate singularities for two degrees of freedom (center-center, center-saddle, and focus type) and a complete list of saddle-saddle singularities of complexity one and two (the complexity is the number of singular points in a singular level) [1] and calculated the corresponding circle molecules for these singularities (V.S. Matveev [9]). It turns out that Fomenko's conjecture is valid for these cases. Recently V.S. Matveev has shown that the restriction to the complexity of a singularity is not important. Theorem 1. In the case of two degrees of freedom Fomenko's conjecture is valid for non-degenerate singularities of codimension two (that is, center-center, center-saddle, saddle-saddle and focus type singularities). Moreover for systems with two degrees of freedom this conjecture turns out to be true for degenerate topologically stable singularities. The list of such singularities has been recently obtained by V. Kalashnikov [6]. Topological stability means the following. Let С be the Liouville foliation corresponding to a pair of commuting functions Η and /. Let #e, fe be a smooth family of commuting functions (in other words, a smooth perturbation of the initial system). For every ε we have, consequently, an integrable Hamiltonian system with Hamiltonian H€ and additional integral fe) and can consider the corresponding Liouville foliation Ce. The singularity of С = Со is called topologically stable if it does not change its topological type under such perturbations, that is, Ce is isomorphic to С for small ε. Theorem 2. In the case of two degrees of freedom Fomenko's conjecture is valid for topologically stable singularities.
32 Consider finally the case of η degrees of freedom and multidimensional singularities of Liouville foliations. How can we construct them? The simplest way to do it is just to consider the direct product of the simplest singularities, i.e., atoms. We also can, of course, construct multidimensional singularities of almost direct product type. To do this consider the direct product of several atoms Μ = P\ Χ Ρ2 X ... X Pk and assume that on this direct product there is an action of a finite group G which is 1) free, 2) symplectic, 3) component-wise. In addition we assume that the action preserves the Liouville foliation structure on each component. If all these conditions are satisfied then the quotient space Μ = M/G is a symplectic manifold with the natural structure of a Liouville foliation C. Let us note that in this construction among the atoms Pi, ... , Pn there can be trivial atoms (without singularities), that is, 51 X D1, and some new four-dimensional atoms corresponding to focus type singularities. It is clear that Μ is a regular neighborhood of a singular level of С We say that such singularities are of almost direct product type. The following theorem by N.T. Zung [12] can be considered as a topological singular analog of the classical Liouville theorem. Theorem (N.T. Zung). Any non-degenerate singularity is isomorphic to a singularity of almost direct product type. Remark 3. In this statement "isomorphic" means isomorphic in the sense of Definition 2. In other words, such a decomposition into atoms is not necessarily symplectic. Thus, this theorem shows that, from the viewpoint of Liouville foliations, the structure of non-degenerate singularities can be completely described in very simple terms, namely, in terms of atoms. In [12] N.T. Zung also announced a corollary to his theorem which can be reformulated as follows. Corollary· Fomenho's conjecture is valid for non-degenerate multidimensional singularities of Liouville foliations. An open question is whether Fomenko's conjecture remains true for topo- logically stable multidimensional singularities.
33 In conclusion, we would like to explain how Fomenko's conjecture can be applied to specific integrable systems. In applications sometimes it is not clear how to describe singularities of codimension greater than one. On the other hand, usually it is much easier to find out and describe the codimension of singularities. If we can do it, then Fomenko's conjecture states that we already know in essence everything about the Liouville foliation and, in particular, can reconstruct the structure of the other singularities. References [1] A.V. Bolsinov, Methods of calculation of the Fomenko-Zieschang invariant, in: Topological classification of integrable systems, Advances in Soviet Math. 6 (A.T. Fomenko, ed.), Amer. Math. Soc, Providence, RI, 1991. [2] A.V. Bolsinov, S.V. Matveev and A.T. Fomenko, Topological classification of integrable Hamiltoman systems with two degrees of freedom. A list of systems with small complexity, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 45(2) (1990), 49-77. [3] A.T. Fomenko, Morse theory of integrable Hamiltonian systems, Doklady AN SSSR287 (1986), 1071-1075. [4] A.T. Fomenko, The topology of constant energy in integrable Hamiltonian systems and obstructions to mtegrabihty, Izv. AN SSSR 50 (1986), 1276-1307. [5] A.T. Fomenko, Topological classification of all integrable Hamiltonian differential equations of general type with two degrees of freedom, in: The geometry of Hamiltonian systems (Proc. Workshop, Berkeley, CA, 1989; T. Ratiu, ed.), Math. Sci. Res. Inst. Publ. 22, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1991, 131-139. [6] V. Kalashnikov, A class of generic integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom, Preprint No 907, March 1995, University of Utrecht, Dept. of Mathematics. [7] M.P. Kharlamov, Topological analysis of integrable cases in dynamics of rigid body, Leningrad Univ. Press, Leningrad, 1988. [8] L.M. Lerman and Ya.L. Umanskii, Structure of the Poisson action ofR2 on a four-dimensional symplectic manifold, Selecta Math. Sovi-et. 7 (1988), 39-48. [9] V.S. Matveev, The calculation of the Fomenko invariant for a "saddle-saddle" point of an integrable Hamiltonian system, in: Trudy Sem. po Vekt. i Tenz. Analizu 25, Moscow Univ. Press, Moscow, 1993, 75-104. [10] A.A. Oshemkov, Morse functions on two-dimensional surfaces. Coding singularities, Trudy MIRAN 205 (1994), 131-140. [11] S. Smale, Topology and Mechanics, Invent. Math. 10 (1970), 305-331. [12] Nguen Tien Zung, Symplectic topology of integrable Hamiltonian systems I: Arnold-Liouville xuith singularities, Compos. Math., to appear.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 35-42 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Geometry and topology of geometrically finite negatively curved and Carnot-Caratheodory manifolds Boris N. Apanasov* University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA 1. Here we sketch a recent progress in studying noncompact negatively curved manifolds, their boundaries at infinity having Carnot-Caratheodory structures, as well as deformations of such manifolds induced by equivariant quasiconformal homeomorphisms. Here the most interesting are complex hyperbolic manifolds with Cauchy-Riemannian structure at infinity, which occupy a distinguished niche. The problems there have a unique appeal both for the amount of similarity with the model situation of interactions between real hyperbolic manifolds, their boundaries with natural conformal structures and their quasiconformal deformations (see [1, 6]), and for the interesting ways in which the similarity breaks down. We study the basic class of such manifolds, which consists of geometrically finite ones. To deform such manifolds, we use maps which are quasiconformal (with bounded distortion) with respect to negatively curved geometries and the corresponding sub-Riemannian structures which appear at their infinity. One of inspiring ideas here came from a well known theorem of D. Sullivan (see [26, 17]) that homeomorphisms of quasiconformal (in Euclidean sense) η-manifolds, η φ 4, can be approximated by quasiconformal ones. In Carnot-Caratheodory spaces, due to M. Gromov [20], continuous maps can be approximated as well by maps that are Lipschitz with respect to the Carnot-Caratheodory metric. However, there are additional constrains for such quasiconformal maps in Carnot-Caratheodory spaces because, due to P. Pansu [25] and G. Margulis and G. Mostow [22], these (always a.e. differentiable) maps should preserve their contact structures (horizontal vector fields). This makes deformations of manifolds with * Supported in part by the NSF.
36 negative variable curvature more rigid, as well as questions about their Te- ichmiiller spaces, geometric realization of isomorphisms of their fundamental groups and their stability more interesting (cf. Sullivan's stability theorem for Kleinian groups [27, 6]). 2. The main assumption on a negatively curved π-manifold Μ is its geometrical finiteness, which implies that the fundamental group 7Γι(Μ) = G С Isom X acting in a simply connected space X — Μ is finitely generated. An important role here is played by parabolic subgroups of G. Parabolicity in the variable curvature case is not as easy a condition to deal with as it is in the constant curvature space. However the results below simplify the situation. Due to the absence of totally geodesic hypersurfaces in a space X of variable negative curvature, we cannot use the original Ahlfors definition of geometrical finiteness which came from an assumption that the corresponding real hyperbolic manifold Μ = Hn/G may be decomposed into a cell by cutting along a finite number of its totally geodesic hypersurfaces, that is the group G should possess a finite-sided fundamental polyhedron. Another obstacle for such "polyhedral" approach is due to our result on parabolic groups in the complex hyperbolic space X — Hc where Isom0 X = PU(2,1). In the punctured sphere at infinity дШс \ {ρ} « Ε , the Kahler geometry of He induces the nilpotent geometry of the Heisenberg group % = CxE, where the parabolic stabilizer Gp С G of ρ acts discontinuously by isometries (the discontinuity set &{GP) — %2 and the limit set A(GP) = {p}). In contrast to real hyperbolic geometry, geometry of Dirichlet polyhedra of such parabolic (even unipotent) discrete groups has no finiteness property [11]: Theorem 1. Let G С PU(2,1) be a discrete parabolic group conjugate to the subgroup Г = {(га, π) Ε С X Ε : га, η Ε Ζ} of the Heisenberg group Ή2 = С X R. Then any Dirichlet polyhedron Dy{G) centered at an arbitrary point у G He has infinitely many sides. However, in spaces of variable negative curvature, one can give another definition of geometrically finite groups G С IsomX as those ones whose limit sets A(G) С дХ consist of only conical limit points and parabolic cusp points p. The last cusp points ρ have parabolic stabilizers Gv С G such that the quotients of the limit set (A(G) \ {p})/Gp are compact (see another equivalent definitions later and in [1, 15]). To study parabolic ends of negatively curved manifolds, we prove the following theorem [11, 12, 13] (similar claim for finite index subgroups see in [14]).
37 Theorem 2· Let N be a connected, simply connected nilpotent Lie group, С a compact group of automorphisms of N, and Г a discrete subgroup of the semidirect product Ν Ά С. Then there exist a connected Lie subgroup V of N and a finite index normal subgroup Г* of Г with the following properties: 1. There exists b G N such that 6Г6"1 preserves V. 2. V/bTb~l is compact. 3. ЬГ*Ь-1 acts on V by left translations and this action is free. 3. Now we apply Theorem 2 to complex hyperbolic manifolds (quotients of the complex ball B^ С Cn with the Bergman metric by discrete groups G С AutB^ = PU(n, 1)) and Cauchy-Riemannian manifolds at their infinity. First we have [11]: Lemma 1. Let ρ £ дШ^ be a parabolic fixed point of a discrete group G С PU(n, 1). Then ρ is a cusp point if and only if it has a cusp neighbor- hood UPir. Assuming for simplicity ρ — oo, we take the subspace 7^oo С %п given by Theorem 2 for a discrete stabilizer G^ С G and define a cusp r-neighborhood Ur of oo as the set Ur = {x G H£ U %n : pc{x, Woo) > Vr}· Here pc is the Cygan metric in H^U^n (identified with Cn~ Χ Ε χ [0, oo)) induced by the norm: ||(£, v, u)\\c = \ \\ξ\\2 + u- H1/2, (£, v, u) G Cn_1 χ Ε χ [0, oo). The key condition is that Ur should be precisely invariant under Goo С G, i.e. G\Goo(Ur)nUr = 0. This allows us to prove that a complex manifold M(G) = [MqL\Q(G)]/G is geometrically finite if and only if it has finitely many ends, and each of them is a cusp end, that is an end whose neighborhood can be taken as Up,r/Gp « (Sp,r0/Gp) X (0,1], where 5p>ro is the boundary of UPiro in H^. So we have [11]: Theorem 3. Let Г С 7ίη Ά U(n — 1) be a torsion-free discrete group acting on the Heisenberg group %n = С Χ Ε with non-compact quotient. Then the quotient %n/T has zero Euler characteristic and is a vector bundle over a compact manifold. Furthermore, this compact manifold is finitely covered by a nil-manifold which is either a torus or the total space of a circle bundle over a torus.
38 Corollary 1. The fundamental groups of Heisenberg manifolds and geometrically finite complex hyperbolic manifolds are finitely presented. Due to Theorem 2, any Heisenberg manifold Ν = Ήη/Γ is the vector bundle Wn/r —>· 7/г/'Г where %γ CHn\s г, minimal Γ-invariant subspace. Although such vector bundles are non-trivial in general, we have [11]: Theorem 4. Let Г С %п * U(n - 1) be a discrete group and Hr С %п a connected Γ-invariant Lie subgroup on which Г acts co-compactly. Then there exists a finite index subgroup Го С Г such that the vector bundle %η/Γο —> ^г/Го is trivial In particular, any Heisenberg orbifold ?ίη/Γ is finitely covered by the product of a compact nil-manifold %r/To and an Euclidean space. Such finite covering property holds not only for Heisenberg manifolds alone but for geometrically finite complex hyperbolic manifolds as well [11]: Theorem 5. Let G С PU(n, 1) be a geometrically finite discrete group. Then G has a subgroup Go of finite index such that every parabolic subgroup of Go is isomorphic to a discrete subgroup of the Heisenberg group %n = С χ Κ. In particular, each parabolic subgroup of Go is free Abelian or 2-step nilpotent. 4. Studying Carnot-Caratheodory manifolds at infinity of negatively curved non-compact manifolds, we have a sharp contrast to the real hyperbolic case. In fact, the Kahler structure of a complex manifold M{G) — (Hc U Q(G))/G is so rigid that existence of a compact component of its boundary (a closed Cauchy-Riemannian manifold) implies connectedness of the boundary [18, 24]. In the non-compact case, we have nevertheless an absolutely different situation [11]: Theorem 6. For any integers к, ко, к > к0 >0, and η > 2, there exists a complex hyperbolic η-manifold Μ = Ш^/G, G С PU(n, 1), whose boundary at infinity splits up into к connected (n— l)-manifolds, dooM = N\U.. .UTVfc. Moreover, for each boundary component Nj, j < ко, the inclusion ij : Nj С M(G) induces a homotopy equivalence of Nj to M(G). However, we show that such a wild situation is impossible for geometrically finite complex hyperbolic manifold M. Namely, if the manifold M(G)
39 has non-compact boundary dM = Q,(G)/G with a component No С дМ ho- motopy equivalent to M{G), then there exists a compact homology cobor- dism Mc С M(G) homotopy equivalent to M(G)) and M(G) can be easily reconstructed from Mc by gluing up a finite number of standard open "Heisenberg collars" [11, Theorem 7.7]. 5. Here we study deformations of negatively curved manifolds and geometric realizations of isomorphisms of discrete groups G, Я С IsomX. This is closely related to Mostow rigidity and Sullivan stability theorems (see [23, 27]). Problem 1. Given an isomorphism φ : G —ϊ Η of geometrically finite groups G, Я С IsomX, find subsets Xq,Xh С X invariant for the action of groups G and H, respectivelyf and an equivariant homeomorphism ίφ : Xg —> Xh which induces the isomorphism φ. Determine metric properties of /φ, in particular, whether it is quasi-symmetric (q-conformal) with respect to the given negatively curved metric d in X and in the induced sub-Riemannian structure on the Carnot-Caratheodory space at infinity Υ = Τ \ {oo}). As the first result in this direction, we have an isomorphism theorem [7]: Theorem 7. Let φ : G —>· Η be a type preserving isomorphism of two поп-elementary geometrically finite discrete subgroups G, Η С Pt/(n, 1). Then there exists a unique equivariant homeomorphism /φ : A(G) —>· Л(Я) of their limit sets that induces the isomorphism φ. However, in contrast to the conformal case, homeomorphic CR-mani- folds dM{G) and dM(H) may be not quasiconformally equivalent, see [23]. Also, besides the metrical obstructions, some topological obstructions for extensions of equivariant homeomorphisms /φ : A(G) —>- Л(Я) may exist. Namely, let G С Pt/(1,1) С Pt/(2,1) and Η С РО(2,1) С Ρί/(2,1) be two geometrically finite (loxodromic) groups isomorphic to the fundamental group K\(Sg) of a compact oriented surface Sg of genus g > 1. Then the equivariant homeomorphism /^ : A(G) —>· Л(Я) cannot be homeomor- phically extended to the whole sphere дШ^ « 53. The obstruction here is о о due to the fact that the quotient manifolds Hc/G and Нс/Я have different Toledo [28] invariants: r(m2c/G) = 2g-2 and t(Eq/H) = 0. Very often, manifolds with variable curvature К < 0 are more rigid than real hyperbolic ones [25, 16]. In particular, a complex hyperbolic manifold
40 Μ homotopy equivalent to its closed totally geodesic complex hypersurface is rigid [19]. We show however that complex hyperbolic Stein manifolds Μ homotopy equivalent to their closed totally real geodesic hypersurfaces are not rigid. Our construction of deformations is somehow influenced by well know bending deformations of real hyperbolic manifolds along totally geodesic hypersurfaces, see [2, 1]. In the case of complex hyperbolic (and Cauchy-Riemannian) structures, it works however in a different way involving simultaneous bending of the base of the fibration of the complex surface Μ as well as bendings of each of its totally geodesic fibers. Moreover, our bendings are induced by equivariant homeomorphisms, which are in addition quasiconformal with respect to the corresponding metrics [9]: о Theorem 8. Let Sp = HR/G be a closed totally real geodesic surface of genus ρ > 1 in a given complex hyperbolic surface Μ = H^/G, G С PO(2,1) С PC/(2,1). Then there is an embedding π о В : В2?-2 <-+ Τ (Μ) of a real (2p — 2)-ball into the Teichmuller space of Mf defined by quasiconformal bending deformations along disjoint closed geodesies in Μ and the projection π : U(G) -> T(G) = TZ{G)/PU(2) 1). Applying bendings, we answer a well known question on the Teichmuller space boundary dT(M) of a complex surface Μ fibered over a surface of genus ρ [10]: Theorem 9. LetG С PO(2,1) С Pt/(2,1) be a uniform lattice isomorphic to the fundamental group of a closed surface Sg of genus ρ > 2. Then, for any simple closed geodesic а С Sp = H^/G, there is a continuous deformation pt = /* induced by G-equivariant quasiconformal homeomorphisms 2 2 ft : H<c —>· H<c whose limit representation p^ corresponds to a boundary cusp point of the Teichmuller space T{G), that is the boundary group poo(G) has an accidental parabolic element Poo(ga) where ga £ G represents the geodesic а С Sp. Moreover, there is a continuous quasiconformal deformation R :RP —> T(G) whose boundary group Gqq = R(oo)(G) has 2p - 2 non-conjugate accidental parabolic subgroups. References [1] B.N. Apanasov, Geometry of discrete groups and manifolds, Nauka, Moscow, 1991.
41 B.N. Apanasov, Nontriviality* of Teichmuller space for Kleiman group in space, Ann. of Math. St. 97, Princeton Univ. Press, 1981, 21-31. B.N. Apanasov, Geometrically finite hyperbolic structures on manifolds, Ann. of Glob. Analysis and Geom. 1:3 (1983), 1-22. B.N. Apanasov, Nonstandard uniformized conformal structures on hyperbolic manifolds, Invent. Math. 105 (1991), 137-152. B.N. Apanasov, Deformations of conformal structures on hyperbolic manifolds, J. Diff. Geom. 35 (1992), 1-20. B.N. Apanasov, Conformal geometry of discrete groups and manifolds, W. de Gruyter, Berlin-New York, 1996, to appear. B.N. Apanasov, Canonical homeomorphisms in Heisenberg group induced by isomorphisms of discrete subgroups of PU(n,l), Russian Acad. Sci. Dokl. Math., to appear. B.N. Apanasov, Quasiconformality and geometrical finiteness in Carnot- Caratheodory and negatively curved spaces, Preprint Μ SRI at Berkeley, 1996-019. B. Apanasov and N. Gusevskii, Bending deformations of complex hyperbolic surfaces, Preprint, Univ. of Oklahoma, 1996. B. Apanasov and N. Gusevskii, The boundary of Teichmuller space of complex hyperbolic surfaces, in preparation. B. Apanasov and X. Xie, Geometrically finite complex hyperbolic manifolds, Preprint, Univ. of Oklahoma, 1995. B. Apanasov and X. Xie, Manifolds of negative curvature and nilpotent groups, Preprint, Univ. of Oklahoma, 1995. B. Apanasov and X. Xie, Discrete isometry groups of nilpotent Lie groups, Preprint, 1995. L. Auslander, Bieberbach's theorem on space groups and discrete uniform subgroups of Lie groups, II, Amer. J. Math. 83 (1961), 276-280. B. Bowditch, Geometrical finiteness with variable negative curvature, Duke J. Math. 77 (1995), 229-274. K. Corlette, Archimedian superrigidity and hyperbolic geometry, Ann. Math. 135 (1992), 165-182. S.K. Donaldson and D. Sullivan, Quasiconformal 4-Tnanifolds, Acta Math. 163 (1989), 181-252. C. Epstein, R. Melrose and G. Mendoza, Resolvent of the Laplacian on strictly pseudoconvex domains, Acta Math. 167 (1991), 1-106. W. Goldman and J. Millson, Local rigidity of discrete groups acting on complex hyperbolic space, Invent. Math. 88 (1987), 495-520. M. Gromov, Carnot-Caratheodory spaces seen from within, Preprint IHES, Bures-sur-Yvette, 1994. A. Koranyi and M. Reimann, Quasiconformal mappings on the Heisenberg group, Invent. Math. 80 (1985), 309-338.
42 [22] G.A. Margulis and G.D. Mostow, The differential of a quasiconformal mapping of a Carnot-Caratheodory space, Geom. Funct. Anal. 5 (1995), 402-433. [23] R. Miner, Qc-equivalence of spherical CR-manifolds, Ann. Acad. Sci. Fenn. Ser. A I Math. 19 (1994), 83-93. [24] T. Napier and M. Ramachandran, Structure theorems for complete Kahler manifolds and applications to Lefschetz type theorems, Geom. Funct. Anal. 5 (1995), 807-851. [25] P. Pansu, Metriques de Carnot-Caratheodory et quasiisometries des espaces symmetries de rang un, Ann. Math. 129 (1989), 1-60. [26] D. Sullivan, Hyperbolic geometry and homeomorphisms, Geometric Topology, Acad. Press, 1979. [27] D. Sullivan, Quasiconformal homeomorphisms and dynamics, II: Structural stability implies hyperbolicity for Kleinian groups, Acta Math. 155 (1985), 243-260. [28] D. Toledo, Representations of surface groups on complex hyperbolic space, J. Diff. Geom. 29 (1989), 125-133. [29] S.K. Vodop'yanov, Quasiconformal mappings on Carnot groups, Doklady RAN, to appear. [30] C.T. Wall, Geometric structures on compact complex analytic surfaces, Topol. 25 (1986), 119-153.
Session 1 General and Geometric Topology
The abstracts are presented in the alphabetical order of the authors' names
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 45-46 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Absolute extensors of spaces with countable filtration Sergei M. Ageev Brest State University, Brest, Belarus Yu.M. Smirnov posed the problem of describing absolute retracts and extensors in the category of metric spaces with finite filtration. The answer was simple and natural: they are exactly those spaces whose all filtration elements are absolute retracts. The transition from finite to countable filtration features a qualitative saltus. Although the notions of absolute retracts and extensors coincide here, not every countable increasing sequence of closed linear subspaces in a linear normed space L is an absolute extensor (AE/). Theorem 1. Any CW-complex (Ot, L) in the Whitehead weak topology with a countable increasing sequence of subpolyhedra with respect to the triangu- lation L is AEj. Every normal functor F in the category of metric compacta generates a countable filtration oo F1(X)CF2(X)CF3(X)C. in Foo(X) = (J Fk(X) k=l where Fk(X) is the subset of F(X) consisting of all points of finite degree not greater than k. Theorem 2· Let a functor F be the exponent exp or the functor of probability measures P. // a metric space X is an AE then F\(X) С F2(X) С Fz(X) С ... С Foo(X) is AEj in the category of spaces with countable filtration. The last theorem implies that there exist closed embeddings h\ :exp00(X) —> L and h2 : Pqo(X) -» L into a linear normed space L
46 and retractions r\ : L —>· exp00(X) and r2 : L —» Poo(X) such that expfc(X) and Paj(A') are images of retractions r\ and r2 restricted to some closed linear subspaces Lk С L. From a theorem of N.T. Nhu (Fund. Math. 124(3) (1984), 243-253) follows only that expk(X) and Pk{X) are images of retractions r\ and r2 without any relationship between the latter. Without certain formality, this strengthening of Nhu's theorem may be formulated as follows: extensor properties of the families of closed subsets {expk(X)} and {Pk(X)} are as good as those of the family of closed linear subspaces in a linear normed space. Question. For what other functors F does the analogous result take place?
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 47 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Topological and geometric structures on compact contractible manifolds Fredric D. Ancel University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA Craig R. Guilbault University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA For η > 4, every compact contractible π-manifold С has a wild arc spine. In other words, С is homeomorphic to the mapping cylinder of a map from its boundary BdryC to [0,1]. Let К < 0. The mapping cylinder structure on С implies that IntC admits a complete CAT(K) metric. Hence, every homology (n — l)-sphere is the visual boundary of a contractible open CAT(K) manifold. Some compact contractible 4-manifolds С have wild arc pseudo-spines. In other words, there is a wild arc J in Int С such that С—J is homeomorphic to BdryC X [0,1). Questions: (1) Do all compact contractible 4-manifolds have wild arc pseudo-spines? (2) For К < 0, do the interiors of some (all) compact contractible 4-manifolds admit complete CAT(K) metrics?
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 49 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Extension properties of the orbit space Sergey A. Antonian Yerevan State University, Yerevan, Armenia Throughout G will denote a compact Hausdorff group. By a G-A(N)E (resp., G-A(N)E(fc)) where к > 0 is an integer)-space we mean a G-space (not necessarily metric), which is a G-equivariant absolute (neighborhood) extensor for the class of all metric G-spaces Μ (resp. with dim M/G < k). Theorem 1· Let N < G be a closed normal subgroup and suppose that all the orbits of a G-space are metric. Then: 1. // X is a G-A(N)E-space, then the N-orbit space X/N is a G-A(N)E-space. In particular, the G-orbit space X/G is an A(N)E-space. 2. For any k>0, if X is a G-A(N)E(k)-space, then X/N is a G-A(N)E(k)-space. In particular, X/G is an A(N)E(k)-space. Corollary· Let Η be a subgroup of the symmetric group Sn, η > 1. Then the functor SPfi of symmetric n-th power associated with Η preserves the properties of a G-space to be a G-A(N)E (resp. G-A(N)E(k), к > 0)-space. In particular, SPfi preserves the properties of a topological space to be an A(N)E (resp. A(N)E(k), к > 0)-space. Theorem 2. Let G be a compact Lie group and 2G be its hyperspace of closed subsets with the Hausdorff metric. Let G act on 2G by left translations and let X = 2G \ {G}. Then the orbit space X/G is a Q-manifold. Theorem 3· Let L be a locally convex linear G-space and V be an invariant convex subset of L. Suppose also that for any point χ £ V with metric orbit G(x), there is a sequence {xn} С V such that xn —>- x, Gx С GXn and GXn e G-A(N)E Vn > 1. Then V <E G-A(N)E. If, in addition, V contains a G-fixed point then V € G-AE.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 51-52 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Embeddings preserving character and cardinal invariants Angelo Bella Catania University, Catania, Italy Ivan V. Yaschenko Moscow Center of Continuous Mathematical Education, Moscow, Russia In 1924 Alexandroff and Urysohn asked if every space can be embedded into an Я-closed space. In 1930 Tychonoff answered this in affirmative, and later Katetov proved that every space can be embedded as a dense subset into an Я-closed space. We introduce a construction of Я-closed-like extensions of a space which preserves character. This provides counterexamples to the following questions [1]. Question A. Does the inequality \X\ < 2χ(χ) hold for every almost Lindelof Hausdorff space XI Question B. Does \X\ < 2χ(γ) hold whenever X is an Η-set of a Hausdorff space У? These questions were motivated by an attempt to generalize the cardinal inequality \X\ < 2X^X\ proved for every Я-closed space X by A. Dow and J.R. Porter [3]. In fact, the notion of an Я-closed space may be weakened either to the notion of almost Lindelof space — X is almost Lindelof if every open cover 7 has a countable subfamily γ' such that X = \J{c\x(U) : U 6 γ'} — or to the notion of an Я-set — X is an Я-set in У if every family γ of open subsets of У satisfying X С U7 has a finite subfamily γ' such that XC\J{clY{U):UeY}. The first question has a positive answer if a space has a dense subset of isolated points (see [3]) and both questions have a positive answer if restricted to the class of Urysohn spaces (see [2] and [1]).
52 A subset X of the space Υ is relatively Η-closed in Υ if for every open cover γ of У there is a finite subfamily γ' С γ satisfying X С U{cly({/) : [/ G 7'}. Given a space X, We say that a filter U С т(^0 has the weak countable intersection property (W.C.I.P.) if, for every countable W С W, p|{clx(t/) : U € ZY'} ^ 0. We call a space X weakly realcompact iff every ultrafilter И С r(X) having the weak countable intersection property has a nonempty adherence. Theorem 1. Every first countable weakly realcompact Hausdorff space X can be embedded as a closed relatively Η-closed subspace into a first countable Hausdorff space Υ in such a way that there is an extender φ : τ(Χ) -+ t{Y) satisfying: a) <p{U)HX = U; b) <p(UnV) = <p(U)n<p{V). Theorem 2. For any non-measurable cardinal a there exists a first count- able Hausdorff space which contains a discrete Η-set of size at least a. Theorem 3. Every weakly realcompact first countable space can be embedded as a closed subset into an almost Lindelof first countable space. References [1] A. Bella, A couple of questions concerning cardinal invariants^ Q L· A in General Topology, to appear. [2] A. Bella and F. Cammaroto, On the cardinality of Urysohn spaces, Can ad. Math. Bull. 31 (1988), 153-158. [3] A. Dow and J.R. Porter, Cardinalities of Η-closed spaces, Topol. Proc. 7 (1982), 27-50. [4] J.R. Porter and R.G. Woods, Extensions and absolutes of Hausdorff spaces, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1988.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 53 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Locally connected subgroups of the Hubert space and ANR-spaces Robert Cauty University Paris 6> Paris, France We study the following problem of Dobrowolski ([3, Question LS18] and [1, Question 5.9]: is every closed locally connected subgroup of the Hubert space an ANR-space? The following result shows that the answer is negative. Theorem. There exists a σ-compact subgroup G of the Hilbert space such that G and its completion G are locally pathwise connected but are not LC1 -spaces. Let X = VSi S} be a bundle of 1-spheres with marked point *. We construct an embedding φ of the compactum X into /2 such that <^_1(0) = {*} and that φ(Χ \ {*}) is a linearly independent subset. Let G be a subgroup generated by the set <p(X). We choose φ so that for any г the restriction (p\S{ : S{ —l· G is essential. To this end, let A(Sl) be the free Abelian group over the 1-sphere 51 (with marked point *). First we construct an embedding ψ : S1 —l· I2 such that the natural homomorphism ψ : A(Sl) —>- G extending ф is a weak homotopic equivalence, this permits us to use a special case of a result by Dold and Thorn [2] by which the embedding of 51 into A(Sl) is essential. References [1] F.D. Ancel, T. Dobrowolski and J. Grabowski, Closed subgroups in Barfach spaces, Studio Math. 169 (1994), 977-990. [2] A. Dold and R. Thorn, Quasifaserungen und unendliche symmetrische Pro- dukte, Ann. Math. 67 (1958), 239-281. [3] J. West, Open problems in infinite-dimensional topology, in: Open Problems in Topology (J. van Mill and G.M. Reed, editors), Elsevier, 1990, 524-597.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 55 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Isomorphism problems for Banach spaces of measurable functions on compact spaces Mitrofan M. Cioban Tiraspol State University, Tiraspol, Moldova Let X be a compact space. Denote by B(X) the Banach space of all bounded functions on X, C(X) = {/ 6 B(X) : f is continuous}, Ba(X) = {/ € B(X) : / is Baire measurable of class a}, where 0 < a < Ω, Ω is the first uncountable ordinal number. Consider two functors Φι, Φ2 of the category of compact spaces into the category of Banach spaces with the properties: 1. C{X) С Фг(Х) С Ф2{Х) С В{Х). 2. If д : X —> Υ is a continuous mapping and / 6 Φ* (У) then ί·9€Φ*(Χ). 3. Ф%(Х) are subrings of the ring B(X). The functor Ф« is a Baire functor if Φ{(Χ) = Ba{X) for some a < Ω, For Baire functors we examine the following questions: 1. Under which conditions are the rings Ф{(Х) and Φί(Υ) isomorphic? 2. Under which conditions are the rings Φί{Χ) and Φj(Y) isomorphic? 3. Under which conditions is the Banach space Φ\(Χ) complemented in Φ2(Χ)? . In particular, it is proved that for a non-scattered compact space X and 0 < a < β the space Ba(X) is not complemented in Ββ(Χ).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 57 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 The Banach-Mazur compactum Q(2) is an absolute retract Paul Fabel Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS, USA The Banach-Mazur compactum Q(n) is a space of equivalence classes of norms on Rn. Two norms on En are equivalent if they determine isometri- cally isomorphic Banach spaces. We prove that Q(2) is an ANR by embedding Q(2) as a retract of a certain quotient space of analytic mappings of the unit disk.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 59 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On completeness of spaces of τ-additive measures Vitaly V. Fedorchuk Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Let us recall that a probability measure μ on a Tychonoff space X is said to be τ-additive if μ(ϋ) = lim^(Ga) for any upward directed family of open in X sets Ga with G — \JaGa- The set PT(X) of all r-additive probability measures on X can be identified with the set of all probability measures μ on βΧ such that μ(Κ) = 0 for any compact set К С βΧ\Χ. For a uniform space (X,U) let R{U) be the family of all uniformly continuous bounded pseudometrics on X. Every pseudometric ρ £ R{U) generates the Kantorovich pseudometric PT(p) on PT(X). The family {PT(p) : ρ € R{U)} generates a uniformity PT(M) on PT(X) which extends the uniformity U. T. Banakh asked whether the functor PT preserves completeness of uniform spaces. In general, the answer is "no". Theorem 1. The space PT(RC) is not complete. On the other hand, the next statement holds. Theorem 2 (MA). If uw(X,U) < c, then the space (PT(X),PT(U)) is complete. Here uwX is the uniform weight of the uniform space X.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 61 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Permutation groups Paul M. Gartside * Oxford University, United Kingdom The symmetric group on ω, denoted Sym(u>), when considered as a subspace of the irrationals ωω, is a separable completely metrizable topological group. We investigate topological and set descriptive properties of subgroups of Sym(u>). Our results are applied to the theory of infinite groups and to model theory. Joint work with R. Knight, Oxford University, United Kingdom, and D. Mclntyre, Auckland University, New Zealand.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 63 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Some points of compactifications Anatoli A. Gryzlov Udmurtia State University, Izhevsk, Russia We regard some types of points of Cech-Stone compactification βτ of a discrete space r. The first theorem gives the way of obtaining different points of compactifications of a discrete space. Other theorems give examples of these points. Let U(t) be the set of uniform ultrafilters and R(r) — the set of regular ultrafilters on r. Theorem 1. For every linked 2T—τ matrix there is a matrix point in U(r). Theorem 2. For every discrete set D С U(t), \D\ — r, such that [D] Π R(t) φ 0, there is a point ξ G [D] Π R(r) with χ(ξ) = 2T. Let MfT = []{Щ : γ < r} be a union of disjoint subsets of r, |(/7| = r, MT = []{υΊ = [Щ]\т : γ < r}, and let MT = [MT]\MT. Theorem 3· In r*, ω < τ, there are: (a) a matrix point ξ € Мт П U(r) of r* such that ξ £ [LK^y : 7 € τ}] if F7 С t/7, c(Fy) < ω; (b) a matrix point 'ξ € Мт П U(r) of r* such that ξ G [U{F7 : γ G τ}] for some \J{F^ : γ G г}, tu/iere F7 С t/7 and c(F7) = ω, bu£ £ £ [U{£>7 : 7 € τ}] ifDy С f/7 and |D7| = ω; (c) a matrix point ξ G Μτ Π {/(r) o/ r* such that ξ G [LK^y : Ύ € τ}] /or some U{F7 : γ G г} sucA J/ш* F7 С t/7 and |F7| = ω, but ζ i [U{^7 : 7 € r}] if D7 С ί/7 and |D7| < ω; (d) a matrix point ξ G Μτ Π i/(r) sucA Йа£ ξ G [U{^7 : 7 € τ}] where |D7D[/7| = 1.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 65-66 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Dugundji extension theorems for ordered spaces and their products Yasunao Hattori Shimane University, Shimane, Japan Haruto Ohta Shizuoka University, Shizuoka, Japan For a space X, let C(X) denote the linear space of real-valued continuous functions on X. Let Л be a subspace of a space X. Then, a map e : C(A) —> C(X) is called a Dugundji extender if: (i) e is linear, and (ii) e(/) is an extension of/ and e(f)[X] is included in the closed convex hull of f[A] for each / £ С (A). We say that A is continuously D-embedded in X if there is a continuous Dugundji extender e : С (A) —>- C(X) with respect to both the pointwise convergence topology and the compact open topology. Moreover, we say that A is continuously π ρ-embedded in X if A X Υ is continuously D-embedded in Χ Χ Υ for each space Y. A generalized ordered space (= GO-space) is a subspace of a linearly ordered space. It is known that a space X with an order < is a GO-space if and only if: (i) the topology of X is finer than its order topology, and (ii) X has a base consisting of convex sets. For a subset Л of a GO-space X, let 1(A) = max{x € X : Va 6 Л (х < a)} and r(A) = min{x GX: Va 6 Л (я > a)} if they exist. We have: Theorem 1. Let X be a GO-space, A a closed subspace of X, and X \ A = (Jγ, where γ is a family of convex components of X \A. Assume that Υ = {U £ γ : t/ /ms neither l(U) nor r(U)} is discrete in X. TAen, Л is continuously πd-embedded in X. Corollary 1. Let X be one о/ Йе following spaces: (i) α locally compact GO-space; (ii) α GO-space such that the underlying order is well-ordered] (iii) the Sorgenfrey line. Then, every closed subspace A of X is continuously π D-embedded in X.
ев Corollary 2. Let X{ be one of the spaces (i)-(iii) in Corollary 1 and A{ a closed subspace of X{ for each г — 1,..., η. Then, Пг<пЛг is continuously D-embedded in Пг<пХ;. For aGO-space X, let E(X) = {x £ X : (f-, x] or [x, —>·) is open in X}. Theorem 2. Let X be a perfectly normal, GO-space such that E(X) is σ-discrete in X. Then, every closed subspace of X is continuously K£)-embedded in X.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 67-68 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On the monotonicity of dimension dim of continuous mappings Vasily M. Karaulov Vyatka State Pedagogical University, Kirov, Russia Let / : X —> Υ be a fixed continuous mapping of topological spaces and (7 = /:Z—^ТСУЬеа fixed submapping of /. Let a set U be open in У, у £ U and Ω be a finite functionally open cover of f~lU. We put (following Pasynkov) dim / < к, к = 0,1,2,..., if there exists a neighborhood V С U of у and a finite functionally open cover ω of f~lV refining Ω of order < к for every open set U and у £ U. We shall say that a submapping g of f is: a) approximatively С J-embed' ded over T; b) z-embedded over Τ, if: a) for every у £ Τ, open neighborhood U of у, continuous function φ : g~~1(UC)T) —l· [0,1] and ε > 0 there exists an open neighborhood V С U of у and a continuous function ψ : f~lV —)> [0,1] satisfying the condition \φ(χ) — ψ(χ)\ < ε for every χ £ g~l{V Π Τ); b) for every у £ Τ, open neighborhood U of у and functionally open set О in ^T1?/ Π Τ there exists an open neighborhood V С U of у and a functionally open set G in f"lV satisfying the condition f~lV Π Ζ = 5_1(У Π Τ), respectively. Lemma 1. Let α mapping f be functionally normal (in the sense of Pasynkov), a set Τ be open in Υ and a set Ζ be closed in f~lT. Then the submapping g is approximatively C*j-embedded. Lemma 2. Let a mapping f be Tychonoff and a submapping g be compact (= perfect). Then the submapping g is z-embedded over T. Theorem 1. Let a submapping g be approximatively CJ-embedded over T. Then dim <7 < dim /. This theorem and the property of approximative Ci-embedding of mappings itself give the possibility of establishing the finite sum theorem and a
68 specific case of the countable sum theorem for continuous mappings. The countable sum theorem and Theorem 1 imply the following properties of dimension of mappings. Theorem 2. Let a set Τ be open in Υ and a set Ζ be functionally open in f~lT. Then dim g < dim/. Theorem 3. Suppose that a submapping g is z-embedded over T. Then dim <7 < dim/. Remark. All the results for continuous mappings generalize dimension properties of topological spaces, and coincide with that properties if
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 69 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On Нп-ЪиЪЫе in η-dimensional compacta Umed H. Karimov Institute of Mathematics, Academy of Sciences of Tadjikistan, Dushanbe, Tadjikistan Dusan Repovs University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia A topological space X is called a Hn-bubble (n is a fixed natural number, Hn is a Cech cohomology group with integer coefficients) if its n-dimensional cohomology Hn(X) is nontrivial and the η-dimensional cohomology of every its proper subspace is trivial. The main results are: 1. Any compact metrizable #n-bubble is locally connected; 2. There exists a 2-dimensional 2-cyclic compact metrizable ANR which does not contain any #2-bubbles; 3. Every η-cyclic finite-dimensional L//n-trivial metrizable compactum contains an Яп-ЬиЬЫе.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 71-72 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Weak normality, exp (X) and powers Anatoli P. Kombarov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia A Τι-space Χ is said to be weakly normal [1, 2] if for every two disjoint closed subsets A and В of X there exists a continuous mapping / of X into R" such that the images of A and В are disjoint. Clearly, every normal space is weakly normal. If there exists a one-to-one continuous mapping of X onto a separable metrizable space, then the space X is weakly normal. Can one use weak normality instead of normality in Velicko's theorem [5]: if exp(X) is normal, then X is compact? It is easy to see that this is not the case. Indeed, there exists a one-to-one continuous mapping of exp(u;) onto £>", so exp (ω) is hereditary weakly normal, but the space ω is not compact. Theorem 1. If X is a countably compact space and if exp(X) is weakly normal, then X is compact Theorem 2. If X is a countably compact space and if exp(X) is hereditarily weakly normal, then X is a perfectly normal hereditarily separable compact space. Corollary. If X is countably compact and exp(exp(X)) or exp(X χ Χ) is hereditarily weakly normal, then X is a metrizable compact space. M.M. Coban [3] proved that if exp(X) is hereditarily normal, then X is a metrizable compact space. So the next problem seems to be natural. Problem. Is a compact space X metrizable, ifexp(X) is hereditarily weakly normal? The next theorem is a slight generalization of Noble's theorem from [4]. Theorem 3. All powers of a Τχ-space Χ are weakly normal if and only if X is compact T2.
72 References [1] A.V. ArhangePskii, Divisibility and cleavability of spaces, in: Recent Developments of General Topology and its Applications, Math. Research 67, Berlin, 1992, 13-26. [2] A.V. Arhangel'skii, A survey of cleavability, Topol. Appl. 54 (1993), 141-163. [3] M.M. Coban, Note sur topologie exponentielle, Fund. Math. 171 (1971), 27-41. [4] N. Noble, Products with closed projections II, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 160 (1971), 169-183. [5] N.V. Velicko, On the space of closed subsets, Sib. Mat. Zh. 16 (1975), 484-486 (in Russian).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 73 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Butterfly points in separable spaces with π-weight ω\ Sergey A. Logunov Udmurtia State University, Izhevsk, Russia B.E. Shapirovskii has introduced the notion of a Ь-point (or a butterfly point). We shall say that ρ £ X* is a b-point if it is a limit point for some sets F,GC X* \ {p} which are closed in βΧ \ {p} and disjoint. In spite of strong efforts, in ω* it has been proved for very special types of points only, that they are Ь-points. It still remains unknown whether each non-isolated point in an extremally disconnected compactum is a b-point. Theorem 1. Let X be a locally compact Lindelof separable space without isolated points and nw(X) < ωχ. Then each remote point ρ of X* is a b-point. Therefore the space βΧ \ {p} is not normal. Theorem 2. Let X be a locally compact Lindelof space with nw(X) < ωχ. Let TZ be the set of all remote points of X*. Then each remote point ρ is a b-point in TZ.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 75-76 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Resolvability of А-, С A- and PCA-sets in compacta Vyacheslav I. Malykhin State Academy of Management, Moscow, Russia The Α-operation was discovered by P.S. Alexandroffin 1915. In 1943, E. Hewitt [2] called a space resolvable if it has two disjoint dense subsets, and irresolvable otherwise. In 1994, W.W. Comfort (see [1]) proved the resolvability of every Tychonoff countably compact space. We prove the resolvability of any Α-set of uncountable dispersion character, CA- and PCA-sets without isolated points in compacta and construct examples of Hausdorff countably compact irresolvable space and HausdorfFa-compact irresolvable space. Theorem 1. An uncountable Α-set in a countably compact T\-space contains an infinite subset which is closed in the entire space. Theorem 2. A regular subspace of uncountable dispersion character which is an Α-set in a countably compact Τχ-space is resolvable. Corollary 1. An Α-set of uncountable dispersion character in a regular countably compact space is resolvable. Corollary 2. An Α-set of uncountable dispersion character in a compactum is resolvable. Corollary 3. A regular σ-compact space of uncountable dispersion character is resolvable. Theorem 3. Every non-isolated point of the complement to a Lindelof sub- space of a regular countably compact space is a limit point of some infinite subset of this complement which is closed in the entire space.
76 Theorem 4. The complement to a Lindelof subspace in a regular countably compact space is resolvable. Recall that every Α-set in a compact space is Lindelof. Corollary 4. A CA-set in a compactum is resolvable. Theorem 5. Let Ε be a Lindelof subspace in a regular countably com- pact product X\ χ X2 of some two spaces, π\ be the projection from this product onto X\. Then every non-isolated point of the subspace Τ — 7Γι(ΛΊ χ X2 \ Ε) is a limit point of some infinite subset of Τ which is closed in the entire space X\. Theorem 6. Let Ε be a Lindelof subspace in a regular countably compact product X\ χ Χ2 of some two spaces, πχ be the projection from this product onto Χχ. Then the subspace π\(Χ\ χ X2 \ E) is resolvable. Corollary 5. A PCA-set in compacta is resolvable. Example 1. There exists a Hausdorff countably compact irresolvable space.1 Example 2. There exists a Hausdorff σ-compact irresolvable space of uncountable dispersion character. References [1] W.W. Comfort and S. Garcia-Ferreira, On the resolvability of countably compact spaces, to appear. [2] E. Hewitt, A problem of set-theoretic topology, Duke Math. J. 10 (1943), 309-333. 1A similar example was constructed some earlier by O. Pavlov. He used another idea.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 77-80 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Covers by stars of discrete subspaces Mikhail V. Matveev Bauman Moscow State University of Technology, Moscow, Russia A topological space is absolutely countably compact (ace) [5], [7] provided that for every open cover U of X and every dense subspace D С X there exists a finite subset F С D such that St(F,ZY) = X. This definition was motivated by a characterization of countable compactness (see [3]): a space X is countably compact iff for every open cover U of X there exists a finite subset F С X such that St(F, U) = X. After a series of papers on ace spaces [5]-[7], [14]-[17], [4], [l]-[2] it seems natural to find out, so to say, what is absolute countable compactness minus countable compactness. Thus we came to the following definition. Definition 1. A space X has the property (a) provided that for every open cover U of X and every dense subspace D С X there exists a subset F С D such that F is closed and discrete in X and St(F,ZY) = X. Indeed, for a countably compact X) "closed and discrete in X" means "finite", and we obtain the definition of ace. Though it is not clear straightforward from the definition, the property (a) is rather close to normality. One of the reasons to say so is that it turns out to be very difficult to distinguish the property (a) and normality in the class of countably compact spaces. On the one hand, examples of (a), countably compact (that is, ace), non-normal spaces can be found in [13] (these examples are countably compact and first countable, hence by [7] they are (a)). But the construction of these examples needs special efforts, one can say that "usually" an ace space is normal. On the other hand, the question whether there exists a normal, countably compact, non-acc space (asked by A.V. Arhangel'skii, see [7]) remains open. It is interesting to note that the following property, obtained by removing "dense subspace D" from the definition of the property (a), is a property of every T\ -space:
78 (ao) for every open cover U of X there exists a subset F С X such that F is closed and discrete in X and St(F,ZY) = X. It is easy to see that every paracompact space is (a). Moreover, we do not need the whole strength of paracompactness; for example, the following weaker property (pp) suffices: (pp) every open cover U of X has an open refinement V such that for every choice of points py 6 V for all V 6 V the set {py : V 6 V} is closed and discrete in X. There are, however, some properties that, though do not imply (a) in general, do imply it in the class of countably compact spaces where (a) means ace. These properties are: countable tightness [7], orthocompactness [15], radialness [12]. It is not clear if the same is true when countable compactness is replaced by countable paracompactness. The following lemma is the (a)-analog of the classical Jones' lemma. Lemma 1. If a separable space X contains a closed discrete subspace of cardinality с then X is not (a). By this lemma, such spaces as Niemytzki plane, Kofner plane, the square of the Sorgenfrey line etc. are not (a). It is natural to call a space X (ъ)-Dowker provided that X is an (a)-space while Χ χ (ω + 1) is not an (a)-space. I do not know if (a)-Dowker spaces exist, but the following theorem implies that a normal (a)-Dowker space must be a Dowker space. Theorem 1. If X is a normal, countably paracompact, (a) -space, then the space Υ — Χ χ (ω + 1) is an (a)-space. Certain classes of spaces cannot contain (a)-Dowker spaces: perfect spaces (by [3] they are normal, by [11] they cannot be Dowker); mono tonically normal spaces (by [12] they are (a), by [11] they are countably paracompact); paracompact spaces (paracompactness implies (a) and is preserved by products with compact spaces). The existence of normal, Moore, non-metrizable spaces was the subject of a long-term study in General Topology. Since the property (a) behaves in many aspects like normality, it is natural to ask whether every Moore (a)-space is metrizable.
79 Theorem 2. (CH) Every separable Moore (a)-space is metrizable. It is well known that every normal, feebly compact space is countably compact. So, it is natural to ask whether every (a), feebly compact space is countably compact. In the class of Hausdorff spaces the answer is negative [9]. For regular or Tychonoff spaces the question is open (recall that feeble compactness is equivalent to pseudocompactness for Tychonoff spaces). Most of the facts mentioned above demonstrate similarity between normality and the property (a). Yet in one way they are quite different: unlike normality, the property (a) is not closed-hereditary. Theorem 3· Every Tychonoff space can be represented as a closed subspace of a Tychonoff (г)-space. Theorem 4. Every Tychonoff countably compact space can be represented as a closed Gs-subspace of a Tychonoff ace space. Theorem 5· Every Tychonoff countably paracompact space can be rep- resented as a closed Gs-subspace of a Tychonoff countably paracompact (a)-space. This abstract contains a brief exposition of the results from [8]-[10]. References [1] M. Bonanzinga, Preservation and reflection of ace and hacc spaces, Comment. Math. Univ. Carol., to appear. [2] M. Bonanzinga, On the product of a compact space with an hereditarily absolutely compact space, submitted. [3] R. Engelking, General Topology, PWN, Warsaw, 1977. [4] J. van Mill and J.E. Vaughan, /5 ω* \ {u} accl, Annals New York Acad. Sci. 767 (1995), 161-164. [5] M.V. Matveev, On absolutely countably compact spaces, Abstracts of IX Intern. Conf. on Topol. and its Appl., Kiev, 1992, 99. [6] M.V. Matveev, A countably compact topological group which is not absolutely countably compact,.Q к A in Gen. Topol. 11 (1993), 173-176. [7] M.V. Matveev, Absolutely countably compact spaces, Topol. Appl. 58 (1994), 81-92. [8] M.V. Matveev, Some questions on property (a), Preprint. [9] M.V. Matveev, On feebly compact spaces with property (a), Preprint. [10] M.V. Matveev, Embeddings into (a)-spaces and ace spaces, Preprint.
80 [11] Μ.Ε. Rudin, Dowker spaces, Handbook of Set-theoretic Topology (K. Kunen and J.E. Vaughan, eds.), North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1984, 761-780. [12] M.E. Rudin, I.S. Stares and J.E. Vaughan, From countable compactness to absolute countable compactness, Preprint, 1995. [13] J.E. Vaughan, A countably compact, first countable nonnormal space, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 75 (1979), 339-342. [14] J.E. Vaughan, On X xY where Υ is a compact space with countable tightness and X is a countably compact GO-space, Abstracts of Tenth Summer Conf. on Gen. Topol., Amsterdam, 1994, 165. [15] J.E. Vaughan, On the product of a compact space with an absolutely countably compact space, to appear in Proc. Vrije Univ. Topol. Conf., Amsterdam, 1994. [16] J.E. Vaughan, A countably compact, separable space which is not absolutely countably compact, Comment. Math. Univ. Carol. 36(1) (1995), 197-201. [17] J.E. Vaughan, On X xY where Υ is a compact space with countable tightness and X is an absolutely countably compact space, Preprint.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 81-82 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Some contribution to the theory of partially ordered locally compact groups Alexander V. Mironov Amur State University, Blagoveshchensk, Russia Below there are given some theorems on partially ordered (po) locally compact groups. Theorem 1. Let G be a po-locally compact group with closed positive cone. If every closed interval [0, χ], χ > 0, is connected, then the group G is locally o-convex. The cone of a po-topological group G is non-degenerating iff for every neighborhood U of the unity element there exists a subset A of positive elements of U such that the union of all closed intervals [—a, a] where a £ A is the neighborhood of the unity element. Theorem 2. LetG be a po-topological group with non-degenerating positive cone and isolated directed order. If, in addition, the positive cone is closed or the group G is locally o-convex, then every element of the group G is discrete and therefore no nontrivial compact subgroup is contained in G. In particular, nontrivial compact elements are not contained in G. From B.A. Pasynkov's results on almost metrizable locally compact groups and the preceding theorem one can deduce the following useful metrizability theorem. Theorem 3. The po-almost metrizable (in particular, locally compact) group satisfying the conditions of the preceding theorem is metrizable. Theorem 4. LetG be a lattice-ordered topological group with non-degenerating positive cone and with relatively compact generative solid neighborhood of the unity element. If, in addition, the positive cone is closed or the group G is locally o-convex, then the group G is finite-dimensional.
82 The notions of the bipolar cone in a po-LCA group and the self-adjoint cone in the real conjugate group of real characters of the annihilator of a given cone will be defined. Theorem 5. The category of po-LCA groups will bipolar cones is dual with the category of direct products of LCA groups quasi-ordered by closed subgroups, and associated with it discrete conjugate groups of real characters ordered by self-adjoint cones. In particular, this theorem contains the Pontryagin self-adjoint duality of LCA group with discrete order.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 83 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On compact elements of locally compact groups Yuri N. Mukhin Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics, Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Ekaterinburg, Russia \ subgroup of a locally compact topological group is called compactly covered if it is a union of compact subgroups. Willis (1995) proved that if G is zero-dimensional then the union of all compact subgroups of G is closed. This result implies an affirmative answer to Question 9.38 from "Kourovka notebook of unsolved problems of the group theory": Theorem 1. Maximal compactly covered subgroups of a zero-dimensional group are closed. The condition of zero-dimensionality is essential here. However, we have Theorem 2. The closure of a normal compactly covered subgroup in G is a compactly covered normal subgroup. Theorem 3. If N is a closed normal subgroup in G and N and G/N are compactly covered then G is also compactly covered. Theorem 4· There exists a maximal compactly covered ^rmal subgroup in G, and it is closed.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 85 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Local compactness of C\(X) Sergei E. Nokhrin Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics, Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Ekaterinburg, Russia We consider the λ-open topology on the space of all continuous functions on a Tychonoff space Χ (λ is a family of subsets of X), i.e. the topology with a prebase consisting of all sets of the form (F, (/) = {/ 6 C(X) : f(F) С U} where F £ λ, U is an arbitrary open set in E. The space C(X) endowed with the λ-open topology is denoted by C\{X). It is known that the space C(X) in the topology of pointwise convergence is locally compact iff X is finite. This result proves to be valid for the λ-open topology. More precisely, the following theorem holds. Theorem. C\(X) is a locally compact Hausdorff space iffX is finite and λ contains all points of X.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 87—88 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Note on hereditary normality of product spaces Akihiro Okuyama Kobe University, Kobe, Japan In 1964 K. Morita introduced the concept of P-spaces which characterized the normality of products with any metric space. We introduce the concept of weak P(No)-spaces which concern the paracompactness of products with any /f-analytic space. Definition. We say that a completely regular Hausdorff space is a weak P(R0)-space, if for any family {G(ni,..., щ) : щ,..., щ € TV, г € Ν} of open subsets of X such that G(rab...,n;) с G(nb...,n;,n;+i) for nb...,n;,n;+i e N,i e N, (1) oo [J G(ni,..., щ) = X for any sequence {пг·} in N, (2) t=l there exists a family {F{nu...,ni) :пь...,пг· e N, ie N} of closed subsets of X satisfying two conditions below: F(ni,..., щ) С G(nx,..., щ) for щ,..., щ e Ν, г e Ν, (3) oo [J F(ni,..., щ) = X for any sequence {щ} in N. (4) «=i It is a slight modification of a P(No)-space and a P(No)-space is always a weak Ρ (Ко)-space. As for the difference between two concepts, we use the idea of the Michael line; that is, for a space X and its subset Л we denote by L(X, A) the space which re-topologize each point of Л being open in L(X,A). Then we have the following theorem:
88 Theorem 1. Let X be an uncountable Polish space and A a Bernstein subset of X. Then L(X,A) is a paracompact weak P(#o)-space but not a P(No)-space. This is due to S. Watson's suggestion. Our main result is: Theorem 2. For a separable metric space X, if Χ χ Υ is hereditarily normal for any normal weak P(No)-space У, then X is a countable space. The proof of Theorem 2 deeply depends on the technique of E. Michael's proof which showed the non-normality of the product of the Michael line with the space of all irrationals.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 89 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Descriptive theory and discontinuity points of Baire I functions * Dmitrii S. Ohezin Ural State University, Ekaterinburg, Russia Relations between properties of a topological space X and spaces of functions defined on X are interesting from the topological point of view. Let us consider the first Baire class B\(X) — real-valued limits of convergent sequences of continuous functions. The aim of this work is to describe in intrinsic terms Tychonoff spaces for which all functions from B\(X) have small (in topological sense) set of discontinuity points. It is well known that this set is empty if and only if X is a P-space. When is the set of discontinuity points finite? Compact? Countably compact? Discrete? σ-Discrete? Nowhere dense? These problems compose the contents of the paper. * This work is a part of the project "Positional Control in Distributed Parameter Systems" No 95-01-01130a of Russian Foundation for Basic Research.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 91 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 F-closed spaces Alexander V. Osipov Ural State University, Ekaterinburg, Russia We consider spaces with the functional separation property. We call a space F-closed if it is closed in any embracing space with functional separation. One may assign to any space X its completely regular leader X endowed with the weak topology with respect to the family C(X). Proposition 1. X is F-closed iff its leader X is compact Proposition 2. There exist F-closed but not Η-closed spaces. Proposition 3· An F-closed regular space is compact. Proposition 4. If any closed subspace of X is F-closed then X is compact.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 93-94 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On some covering properties Stanislav A. Peregudov State Academy of Management, Moscow, Russia A base (π-base) В for a Τχ-space Χ is a weakly uniform base (π-base) if no two points of X belong to infinitely many members of β [3]. We assume that all spaces are Hausdorff. Proposition 1. A space X with a weakly uniform base is hereditarily s(X)-Lindelof Using an example from [1] we can prove the following assertion. Example (MA + u>2 < 2ω). There exists a normal Moore space X with a weakly uniform base that is not meta-Lindelof and such that for each separable Μ С X and each open covering % of X there is a refinement Kof% only countably many members of which intersect M. This example partially answers a question raised in [2]. It is shown in [3] that the property of having a weakly uniform base is not preserved by perfect mappings. But it is easy to see that the image of a space with a uniform base under a perfect mapping has a weakly uniform 7r-base. A survey of results and questions about spaces with weakly uniform bases and π-bases will be given. A family of subsets of a set X is said to be a b-family if any its centered subfamily is finite. A space X is said to be b-paracompact if every open cover of X has an open Ь-refinement. These notions were defined by A.V. ArhangePskii and were studied by the author in a series of papers. Proposition 2· A regular metacompact, basically compact, locally normal, locally b-paracompact space is b-paracompact. Proposition 3· A regular metacompact, basically compact space which has countable Souslin number is Lindelof
94 A family S of subsets of a set X is an sb-family if V5 £ <S sup{|C| : С is a centered subfamily of S and 5 € C} < ω. A space is sb-paracompact space if every its open cover has an open sb-refinement. Proposition 4· A normal, locally compact, sb-paracompact space is para- compact Some other properties and results will be considered. References [1] S.W. Davis, G.M. Reed and M.L. Wage, Further results on weakly uniform bases, Houston J. Math. 2(1) (1976), 57-63. [2] E.E. Grace and R.W. Heath, Separability and metrizability in pointwise para- compact Moore spaces, Duke Math. J. 31 (1964), 603-610. [3] R.W. Heath and W.F. Lindgren, Weakly uniform bases, Houston J. Math. 2(1) (1976), 85-90.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 95 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On σ-additive covers of if-analytic spaces Evgenii G. Pytkeev Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics, Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Ekaterinburg, Russia A family of subsets is σ-additive [σ-multiplicative) if it is closed under countable unions (intersections). One of N.N. Luzin's results can be formulated as follows: if γ is a σ-additive family of G$-sets in an analytic space then (J 7 £ 7· The conclusion become false when analytic spaces are replaced by /ί-analytic ones (even by compacta). However, we have the following Theorem· Let у be a σ-additive cover of а К-analytic space X consisting of Gs-sets. Then X £ γ, i.e. γ contains a countable subcover. Recall that a map / : X —> Υ is called an Fa-map if the preimage of any F^-set in Υ is an F^-set in X. Corollary 1. Let f : X —> Υ be an Fa-map of а К-analytic space X onto Y. Then the space Υ is Lindelof Corollary 2· Let Τ be α σ-multiplicative family of Fa-sets in a regular K-analytic space. Then fj{i4 : A e T) = f]{A :AeT}^0.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 97 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Cell-like mappings and their applications in Geometric Topology Dusan Repovs University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia Cell-like mappings are a very important class of maps. For example, when they map between closed manifolds of the same dimension (> 4), they are limits of homeomorphisms (Armentrout-Quinn-Siebenmann theorem). In this survey we shall first briefly describe their history and their various applications and in the sequel, we shall concentrate on the following problem: The recognition problem for topological manifolds asks for a short list of topological properties which characterize topological manifolds among topological spaces and are relatively easy to verify. It splits into two separate questions each one of which is of interest by itself: 1. Resolution problem. Given a generalized n-mani)old X (i.e. an Euclidean neighborhood retract which is also a Z-homology n-manifold), is there a cell-like resolution (i.e. a topological η-manifold Μ and a cell-like onto mapping f : Μ —> X). 2. General position problem. Given a resolvable generalized n-manifold X, is there a general position property for X which implies that the resolution map / : Μ —>- X is approximable by homeomorphisms. We shall analyze the current status of the recognition problem. In higher dimensions (> 4) it is pretty much resolved — the general position problem was resolved by R.D. Edwards in 1977 while the resolution problem was resolved, modulo a local surgery obstruction, by F.S. Quinn in 1983 whereas the obstruction was effectively realized by J. Bryant-S. Ferry-W. Mio-S. Weinberger only recently. On the other hand, in dimension 3 the existence of resolutions remains for the most part an open question (closely entangled with the Poincare conjecture). The status of the 3-dimensional general position problem is more satisfactory.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference - Page 99 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On stratifiable subspaces of spaces of continuous functions with the compact-open topology Evgenii A. Reznichenko * Sternberg State Astronomical Institute, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia For a Tychonoff space X, let Ck(X) be the space of real-valued continuous functions on X with the compact-open topology. We prove the following theorems. Theorem 1. If X is a second countable space, then Ck(X) is cometrizable and any countable subspace of Ck{X) is stratifiable. Theorem 2· If X is a Polish space, then Ck{X) is stratifiable. This result implies the following assertions. If X is an No-space, then Ck(X) is cometrizable and any countable subspace of Ck{X) is stratifiable. If X is a Lindelof p-space, then any separable subspace of Ck(X) is cometrizable and any countable subspace of Ck{X) is stratifiable. If X is a Lindelof Cech-complete space, then any separable subspace of Ck{X) is stratifiable. * Joint work with P.M. Gartside, Oxford, United Kingdom.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 101 Dedicated to P.S.AlexandrofTs 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On simultaneous extension of continuous partial functions Leonid B. Shapiro * Academy of Labor and Social Relations, Moscow, Russia For a metric space X let CVC(X) (that is the set of all graphs of real-valued continuous functions with a compact domain in X) be equipped with the Hausdorff metric induced by the hyperspace of nonempty closed subsets of IxR. It is shown that there exists a continuous mapping Φ : CVC(X) —>· Сь(Х) satisfying the following conditions: (i) Φ(/)| dom/ = / for all partial functions /. (ii) For every nonempty compact subset К of X, the restriction Ф\Сь(К) : Сь(К) -> Сь(Х) is a linear positive operator of norm 1, and * This is a joint work with H.-P. Kunzi, University of Berne, Switzerland.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 103 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On selections of multivalued mappings Evgenii V. Shchepin Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia A multivalued map F : X —> У is called a submap of a map G : X —>- У if for every point χ € X one has F(x) С G(z). A sequence of multivalued maps {Ffc}£=0 is called a filtration of length η if Ffc is a submap of F^+i for each к < n. A filtration {Fk} is called open if the graph of Fk is open in the graph of Fk+ι for all к < η. A filtration {F&} is called connected if for any к < η and хбХ the inclusion of Ffc(a;) into Fk+\(x) induces zero homomorphism of ^-dimensional homotopy group. A multivalued mapping F : X —>· Υ is called complete if there is a G$-subset G of the product Χ χ Υ containing the graph of F with the following property: for each χ e X the product {χ} χ F(z) is closed in G. At last, a mapping F : X —>Y is called equi-LCn if for every χ £ X and every open U £ У there exist a neighborhood Ож and open V С U such that the inclusion F(y)C\V С F(y)C\U induces zero homomorphisms for all homotopy groups of dimensions < η for у £ Ox. The main result is the following theorem of the author and N. Brodsky generalizing the well-known Michael selection theorem [1,2]. Filtered Selection Theorem· If F : X —l· Υ is a lower semicontinuous equi-LCn mapping of a paracompact space X of dimension dim X < η + 1 into a complete metric space Υ such that F is complete and there exists an open, connected filtration {Fk} of submaps of F of length η -f 1 with Fn+i = F, then there exists a continuous function f : X —> Υ such that f{x) e F(x) for all χ e X. References [1] E. Michael, Continuous selections II, Ann. Math. 64 (1956), 562-580. [2] E. Michael, A generalization of a theorem on continuous selections, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 105 (1989), 236-243.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 105 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On the deleted product criterion for embeddability of manifolds in Rm Arkadii B. Skopenkov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia We prove the strengthening of Haefliger's theorem: Theorem. Suppose that N is a closed PL η-manifold. Then N is embed- dable in Rm if and only if there exists an equivariant map F : N —l· Sm~l, ., , 3n »r . . ι . 3n +1 ^ л provided m— — + 1 or N ts simply connected and m = > 8. Here N = {(ж, у) e Ν χ Ν : χ φ у}. The group Z2 acts on N and on 5m_1 by exchanging factors and antipodes respectively. Many corollaries of Haefliger's theorem are thus also strengthened. Our proof is based on the extensions of the same theorem for an n-polyhedron N and m > — (proved by Weber), of the Penrose-Whitehead-Zeeman-Irwin theorem and of engulfings.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 107-109 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On some compactness-type properties defined by special open covers Alexander P. Sostak University of Latvia, Riga, Latvia Juris Steprans " York University, North York,* Canada Given a topological space (X,T), let 7dp (resp. 7fb> 7cb) denote the topology on X generated by the family CLP(T) (resp. FB(T), CB(T)) of all clopen sets U € Τ (resp. of all sets U € Τ with finite boundaries, with compact boundaries). A space (Χ,Τ) is called С LP-compact (resp. FB-compact, CB-compact) if the space (X, Tc\p) (resp. (X, 7fb), (^>7cb)) is compact. A space (X) T) is called CLP-Hausdorff (resp. FB-Hausdorff, CB-Hausdorff) if the space {X,TC\P) (resp. (X,7fb), (AT,7cb)) is Haus- dorff. Obviously, • compact => СБ-compact => FB-compact => CLP-compact; • CLP-compactness, FB-compactness and CB-compactness are preserved by continuous images; • Hausdorff <= CB-Hausdorff <= FB-Hausdorff <= CLP-Hausdorff. In the sequel we are mainly interested in the behavior of CLP-, FB- and CB-compactness under products. Example. There exists an FB-compact CLP-Hausdorff space whose square is not even CLP-compact As an example one can take the space constructed by Stephenson [6]. Theorem 1. Let X\, Xi be CLP-compact (resp. FB-compact, CB-compact) spaces. Then the following statements are equivalent:
108 (i) the product X\ χ X2 is CLP-cornpact (resp. FB-compact, С В-compact)] (ii) the product Χχ χ X2 is С LP-rectangular (i.e. the family {U\ x U2 : Ui e 7$, i = 1, 2} is a base for the topology TcfplxX2); (iii) the projection(s) p\ : X\ X X2 ->- ^i or/and p2 : Χχ χ Χ2 —>> X2 ώ/αΓβ c/open. (Л mapping is called clopen if the image of each clopen set is clopen.) Corollary· LetX\, X2 be С LP-compact (resp. FB-compact, CB-compact) spaces. The product X\ χ X2 is CLP-compact (resp. FB-compact, CB-compact) in any one of the following cases: (a) when all quasi-components in X\ are open; (b) if Χχ is compact; (c) if the product X\ X X2 is pseudocompact. Theorem 2. The product of finitely many second countable CLP-compact spaces is CLP-compact. The proof ia based on the following auxiliary statement: Lemma. Let (Хг·, Тг), г = 1, 2, be CLP-compact spaces of countable weight. If U С X\ X X2 is a clopen set and (a\,a2) € U then there are sets A{ € 73p, i = 1, 2, such that the interior of the set Αχ χ Α2 \ U with respect to the topology 7^}p X 72p is empty. Questions. Is the product of two second countable FB-compact (CB-compact) spaces again FB-compact (resp. CB-compact)? Does the statement of Theorem 2 hold for countably many factors? Is the product of two first countable CLP-compact spaces CLP-compact? Does there exist a pseudo- compact space X such that its square X2 is CLP-compact but fails to be pseudocompact? Remark. CLP-compact spaces were introduced in [3] under the name clustered spaces. Later such spaces were studied and used in [1, 4, 5] etc. In particular, in [1] it was proved that a space is compact iff it is simultaneously CLP-compact and superparacompact. Note also that implicitly the property of CLP-compactness appears already in [2] (in the definition of a Λ-mapping).
109 References [1] D.K. Musaev and B.A. Pasynkov, On compactness and completeness properties of topological spaces and continuous mappings, FAN Publ. Company, Tashkent, 1994 (in Russian). [2] V.I. Ponomarev, On star-finite covers and clopen sets, Doklady AN SSSR 186(5) (1969) 1016-1019, (in Russian). [3] A. Sostak, On a class of spaces containing all compact and all connected spaces, Proc. 4th Prague Topol. Symp., Part B, Prague, 1976, 445-451. [4] A. Sondore and A. Sostak, On cip-compact and countably dp-compact spaces, Acta Univ. Latv. 595 (1994), 129-142. [5] A. Sondore, On dp-Lindelof spaces, Acta. Univ. Latv. 595 (1994), 143-156. [6] R.M. Stephenson, Product spaces and Stone-Weierstrass theorem, General Topol. Appl. 3 (1973), 77-79.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 111-112 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On the dimension of the Higson corona Vladimir V. Uspenskii International Institute for Earthquake Prediction Theory and Mathematical Geophysics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia A metric on a space X is proper if every closed bounded set in X is compact. A topological space X has a compatible proper metric if and only if X is locally compact and has a countable base. Let X be a metric space with a proper metric. For χ £ X and r > 0 denote by Br(x) the closed ball with center χ and radius r. If У is a metric space, we say that a function / : X —> Υ is slowly oscillating if for any r > 0 the diameter of the set f(Br(x)) tends to zero when χ £ X tends to infinity. The set Η of all slowly oscillating bounded complex functions on X is a closed C*-subalgebra of the C*-algebra C*(X) of all continuous bounded complex functions on X and thus corresponds to a compactification X of X which is called the Higson compactification. The compactification X is characterized by the following property: if К is a compact metric space, then a continuous function f : X —> К extends over X if and only if / is slowly oscillating. The Higson corona of X is the compact space vX = X\X. Novikov's conjecture and some other important open problems can be reformulated in terms of topological properties of the Higson compactification and its corona. This justifies our interest in the following question: what is the dimension of the Higson corona? When is the corona finite-dimensional? We prove that if X is a Euclidean space with the usual metric, then the corona i/X is finite-dimensional. Theorem 1. For the Euclidean space Rn with the usual metric the dimension of the Higson corona vRn equals n. The inequality dimi/Rn > η is due to J, Keesling, and the opposite inequality was proved by the author. A.N. Dranishnikov noted that the proof can be modified to yield a more general result: the dimension of the Higson corona vX does not exceed the asymptotic dimension asdim+ X of X.
112 To motivate the definition of the asymptotic dimension, recall that the dimension of a paracompact space Υ does not exceed η if and only if for any open cover α of У there exist disjoint families λχ,..., λη+ι of open sets such that λ = Ur^i1 ^* covers У and refines a. Now let X be a metric space with a proper metric. We say that a family μ of subsets of X is uniformly bounded if there is a constant С such that the diameters of all members of μ are < C. The asymptotic dimension asdim+ X of X does not exceed η if and only if for any positive number R there exist uniformly bounded families μ\,..., μη+ι of subsets of X such that for every г = 1, ..., η + 1 all the pairwise distances between members of μ{ are > β and μ = (J^/ M« covers X. This definition is due to M. Gromov. If X is the n-dimensional Euclidean space En with the usual metric, then asdim+ X = n. Theorem 2 (A.N. Dranishnikov-V.V. Uspenskii). Let X be a metric space with a proper metric. Then the dimension dim vX of the Higson corona does not exceed the asymptotic dimension asdim+ X of X.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 113-114 Dedicated to P.S.AlexandrofTs 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On semirings of continuous nonnegative functions on F-spaces Vera I. Varankina Vyatka State Pedagogical University, Kirov, Russia Let X be an arbitrary topological space, R+ be the space of all nonnegative real numbers with the usual topology and C+ = C(X,R+) (C = C(X,R)) be the semiring of all continuous Revalued (real-valued) functions defined on X with the ordinary operations of addition and multiplication of functions. The greatest common divisor (GCD) and the least common multiple of elements in C+ are defined as usually. A semiring is called a GCD-semiring (LCM-semiring) if any two its elements have a GCD (an LCM); a Bezout-semiring if every finitely generated ideal is principal; distributive if the lattice of all ideals is distributive. We shall say that a set Л С I is a cozero-set if there exists a function / £ C+ for which A = {x £ X | f(x) ^ 0}. A space X is called an F-space (Gillman, Henrik- sen) if for any two disjoint cozero-sets A and В in X there exists / £ C+ such that f(A) = {0} and f{B) = {1}. Theorem. For every topological space X the following conditions are equivalent: (1) C+ is a Bezout-semiring] (2) C+ is a GCD-semiring; (3) C+ is an LCM-semiring; (4) C+ is a distributive semiring; (5) there exists a canonical isomorphism between the lattice of all ideals of the semiring C+ and the lattice of all ideals of the ring C; (6) X is an F-space.
114 Corollary ([1]). For every X the following are equivalent: (1) С is a GCD-ring; (2) С is an LCM-ring; (3) X is an F-space. Remark. The formulated theorem will be true if the addition is replaced by the maximum. References [1] A.G. Povyshev, On divisibility in rings of continuous functions, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk49(3) (1994), 185-186.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 115-116 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On the lattice of subalgebras of a ring of continuous functions Evgenii M. Vechtomov Vyatka State Pedagogical University, Kirov, Russia Let F be a Hausdorff topological field, C(X, F) be the ring of all continuous F-valued functions on a topological space X, and A(X)F) be the lattice of all subalgebras of the F-algebra C(X)F). A Τχ-space Χ is called an F-Туchonoff space if for every point χ £ X and every closed set А С Х\{я} there exists a function / £ C(X,F) for which f(x) = 1 and f{A) = {0}. An F-TychonofF space X is called an F-Hewitt space if for every ideal Μ of the ring C(X) F) with the condition Μ + F = C(X, F) there exists a point χ € X such that f(x) = 0 for all f e M. Theorem 1. Any F-Hewitt spaces X and Υ are homeomorphic if and only if the lattices A(X,F) and A(Y,F) are isomorphic (we can say also that each F-Hewitt space X is determined by the lattice A(X) F)). The classes of F-Hewitt spaces and F-compact spaces coincide for many topological fields F. In this case Theorem 1 implies Corollary 1. For any topological spaces X and Υ the following are equivalent: (1) the lattices A(X) F) and Л(У, F) are isomorphic; (2) the F-algebras C(X) F) and C(Y) F) are isomorphic; (3) the rings C(X) F) and C(Y) F) are isomorphic. Corollary 2· Every R-Hewitt space X (named also real-complete or functionally closed) is determined by the lattice А(Х,Щ, hence by the ring C(X,R) too. In the case of the ring this result was proved by E. Hewitt [1].
116 Theorem 2. Let F be an arbitrary field with discrete topology. Then every totally disconnected locally compact space X is determined by the lattice of all F-subalgebras of the ring of all continuous F'-valued functions on X with a compact support In addition each totally disconnected compact space X is determined by the lattice of all subalgebras with 1 of the F-algebra C(X, F). Corollary 3. Every Boolean ring is determined by the lattice of all its subrings. Corollary 4 ([2])· Every Boolean algebra is determined by the lattice of all its subalgebras. The original technique of minimal and maximal subalgebras was used for proofs of formulated results. Theorem 3. For any F - Ту chonojf space X the lattice A(X, F) is modular (is distributive) if and only if the cardinality \X\ < 2 (\X\ — 1). References [1] E. Hewitt, Rings of real-valued continuous functions I, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 64(1) (1948), 45-99. [2] D. Sachs, The lattice of subalgebras of a Boolean algebra, Canad. J. Math, 14(3) (1962), 451-460.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 117 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On sequential completeness of C\(X) Nikolai V. Velichko Institute of Mathematics and Mechanics, Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Ekaterinburg, Russia We consider the space C\(X) of all real-valued continuous functions on a completely regular space X in the topology of uniform convergence on elements of λ — a family of bounded subsets of X. A criterion of sequential completeness of CP(X) was established in [1]. It cannot serve as a sample for a more general case of C\(X). Therefore another criterion was obtained which says the following. Theorem· CP(X) is sequentially complete iff for any point-finite sequence {Уп) of open sets in X and a sequence {Wn} refining {Vn} functionally (Wn < Vn) we have \JW^ С U Vn. On the basis of the last criterion, the following condition was established: (B) Let a sequence σ = {Vn} of open sets in X have the property Vn = \J{V* : i € N} where V{n are open and V* < VJ+1 < Vn. Let every A £ λ irftersect only finitely many members of the family У = {Vn : η e N}. Then (Jy7 С \Ja. This condition appears to be necessary for sequential completeness of C\{X) but its sufficiency has not been proved. A both necessary and sufficient condition was obtained, but its formulation is too complicated to be placed here. References [1] H. Bushwalter and J. Schmets, Sur quelques proprietes de Vespace^ J. Math. Pures et Appl. 52 (1973), 337-352.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 119-120 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Partial coverings and fibrewise uniformities Alexei Yu. Zoubov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia For each set Μ and family of sets A we denote A\M — {Α Π Μ : A 6 A}. Let β be a topological space. For each set X and a mapping / : X —>» В (also regarded as & fibrewise set over B) let T(/) be a family of all f-partial coverings, i.e. all pairs (A, V), where V is an open subset of В and A is a covering of the set f~lV consisting of its subsets. For С С Т(/) and (A, V) в T(/) we write С < (A, V) if there exists a family {{As, Vs) : s e 5} of elements of С such that V С \J{VS : s <E 5} and A8 refines A\f"l{V f\V8) for each sG5. A family С С Т(/) is said to be a fibrewise uniformity (called F.U. below) on / if it has the following properties: (UCO) ({ДВ)6С; (uci) if с < μ, ν) for μ, ν) e τ(/), then μ, ν) e c, (UC2) for each (Ль V), (A2, V) e С there exists (A, V) e С such that A refines both A\ and Аъ\ (UC3) if (Л, V) € С then for each beV there exists (β, W) <E С such that b € W С V and В is a star-refinement of A\f~lW; (UC4) for each b € В and different points ж, у 6 /_1Ь there exists (Л, У) € С such that 6 € V and no element of A contains both χ and y. If £ consists of a single point then a F.U. on / is equivalent to a uniformity on the set X. Each F.U. С С T(/) induces a topology on X: U С X is open iff for each χ £ U there exists μ, V) € С such that /(ж) G V and St(x,A) С £/. A F.U. on a continuous mapping / of a topological space X is said to be uniformizing f if it induces the topology of X. The classical results of uniform topology (concerning completion, precompactness, Samuel compactifications etc.) may be expanded to mappings. The following result
120 at that way supplements the generalization of Smirnov's theorem given by Norin and Pasynkov [2]: Theorem. For a continuous mapping f there exists a canonical 1-1 correspondence between three sets: all Hausdorff compactifications of f, all proximities {in the sense of [2]) on f and all precompact F.U.'s on f that uniformize it The mapping f is uniformizable by a F. U. iff it is Hausdorff-compactifiable. The proposed notion of a F.U. generalizes the concepts introduced by Pasynkov [3] and James [1]. Namely, it is equivalent to Pasynkov's definition ("completely regular F.U.") if we substitute the (UC3) by a stronger property, and equivalent to James' one if В is regular. Considering a F.U. also allows to define a metrizable continuous mapping as a mapping that can be uniformized by a F.U. having a countable base. The last definition seems to be a rather appropriate answer to the question about a definition of such kind stated by Pasynkov and James [1]. References [1] I.M. James, Fibrewise topology, Cambridge Univ. Press, 1989. [2] V.P. Norin and B.A. Pasynkov, Proximities on mappings, bicompactifications of mappings, in: General Topology. Spaces, mappings and functors, Moscow Univ. Press, 1992, 93-111 (in Russian). [3] B.A. Pasynkov, Uniformities on mappings, Int. Rep. Prague Topol. Symp. 3, Prague, 1988, 23-24.
Session 2 Algebraic Topology
The abstracts are presented in the alphabetical order of the authors' names
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 123 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Asymptotically flat solutions of Bogomolny equations with solvable gauge group Arthur M. Aslanyan Kazan State University, Kazan, Russia In a standard domain of the Euclidean space R , consider a pair (φ, Aa) composed of a scalar function φ and a gauge field Aa assigned to a gauge group G. The hat φ denotes the matrix representation of the Lie algebra of the group G. A special type of solutions of Bogomolny equations is studied: Όαφ = Ba, where Όαφ = даф + [Aa, φ] is the gauge derivative of the scalar function φ, Ba = \eabcFbc, Fab = даАъ - дьАа + [Λα, Ль] is the curvature tensor of the field Aa. In what follows we use as a gauge algebra the Lie algebra of a harmonic oscillator ho(N, E) which is quasi-nilpotent and admits an invariant nondegenerate bilinear form. Let {ei, ea, e^} be a basis of the algebra ho(N, R) where a — 2, N — 1, and its dimension N = dim ho(N, R) be even. The structural constants: [euep] = 0, [ep,eq] ^u)pqei, [eN,ex] = 0, [eN,eq]=uPe^ where upq is a nondegenerate skew-symmetric matrix. Definition 1. The value of the integral Ε = / з(£а<£, Ба) d3x is called the enerflfy. Definition 2. The pair (<£, Aa) is called a monopole if the functions £ and л О Аа are regular in the entire space R and the energy Ε < oo. Theorem. Every asymptotically flat monopole solution of Bogomolny equations with gauge group HO(N, R) is trivial, i.e. φ = const and A = 0 in an appropriate gauge.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 125-126 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 The orbits of the coadjoint representation for Lie groups which have some special structure Dmitrii V. Berzin Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Let us define for a Lie algebra G (dimG = n) the bilinear and skew- symmetric form in the following way. The structural constants C^ is a Jordan box such that λ is on the diagonal and units above the diagonal, C* =0ifi5tn(j=lf 2, ..., n-1). Under all the above assumptions we can write out the functionally independent sets of the invariants in the cases λ = 0 and λ φ 0 (see [1]): F\ = xu Г~2 r_kz\z\-k-lZk+2 ,_, * = ^Утфщ^У1) V^w-^1^ *=1 r = 3, 4, ..., η - 2, G\ = x\ exp(-Ax2/zi), Gi = —Fh / = 2, 3, ..., n-2. x[ In the above expressions F{ are the invariants for the case λ = 0, Gi are the invariants for the case λ φ 0 (г — 1, 2, ..., η-2). Consider the tensor extension Q(G) which corresponds to the ring R(x)/(x2) (see [2]). It turns out that the dimension of the general position orbits is four. We can write out the invariants of the coadjoint representation for the Lie algebra Ω(Θ) and consider a general position orbit as a symplectic manifold. Using the method of argument translation, we can construct involute
126 sets of functions on the orbits. Couples of functions from the involute set give us a mapping of the moment. Bifurcation diagrams for these cases are trivial from the topological viewpoint. References [1] D.V. Berzin, The invariants of the coadjomt representation for Lie algebras which have some special structure, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 51(1) (1996), 141. [2] V.V. Trofimov and A.T. Fomenko, Algebra and geometry of mtegrable Hamil- toman differential equations, Moscow, 1995.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 127-129 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Double cobordism, flag manifolds, and quantum doubles Victor M. Buchstaber Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Nigel Ray University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom In 1978 the first author and Shokurov expressed the Landweber-Novikov algebra £* as an algebra of differential operators on a certain algebraic group. Inspired by this work, S.R Novikov more recently described the algebra Ац of cohomology operations in complex cobordism as the operator double of 5* and its action on the complex cobordism ring Ω^. This in turn led the first author to construct the quantum double D(5*) of 5* (the quantum group of complex cobordism) as a subalgebra of cohomology operations in double complex cobordism theory β^ί/(')> which had been introduced (for very different purposes) by the second author in the 1960s. Our aim here is to develop and extend these results in the contexts of homotopy theory, algebra, geometry, and combinatorics. From the point of view of homotopy theory, we construct the double complex cobordism functor in terms of the doubly indexed spectrum MUAMU. We employ May's setting of coordinate-free spectra to ensure that the defining maps, including the product and bimodule structure maps over Μ [/, are suitably coherent. Geometrically, we describe double [/-structures in terms of manifolds whose stable normal bundle carries a specific splitting v\ 0 vr as a sum of left and right [/-bundles; this construction also follows standard lines, except that we must again take care with the necessary double indexing. The homotopy theoretic and geometric approaches are linked by an appropriately refined version of the Pontryagin-Thom construction, which identifies n*(MUAMU) with the double complex cobordism ring By definition, double complex cobordism is the universal example of a doubly complex oriented cohomology theory, and we discuss its properties
128 with this viewpoint in mind. The two orientations are related by a canonical formal power series, whose coefficients define a polynomial subalgebra G* of Ωζυ. The orientations correspond to the bimodule structure over β^7, and lead to left, right, and adjoint actions of 5* on Ωζυ, with respect to which we may readily show that G* is invariant. Since the work of Adams it has also been possible to interpret n*(MU Λ MU) as Ajf, the Hopf algebroid of homology cooperations dual to AJ), and therefore to identify 5*, the integral dual of 5*, as a sub Hopf algebra. One of our central observations is that the Pontryagin-Thom construction provides a canonical isomorphism between 5* and G*. Using this isomorphism, it is important to relate the three actions of 5* on G* with the actions and coactions which arise from the standard theory of complex oriented cohomology theories (of which i2jj/(·) is the universal example) and their Hopf algebroids of cooperations. We carry out this algebraic part of our programme in terms,of Boardman's eightfold way, which provides a systematic and unified framework within which to work. As an immediate consequence, we recover the first author's realization of D(5*) as a subalgebra of A*DU. At this juncture we return to the geometry, and investigate the algebraic structures in the context of Ωζυ. Our starting point is the construction of double {/-manifolds to represent generators gi of the subring G*, for which we use certain iterated two-sphere bundles introduced by the second author to study splittings of normal bundles in complex cobordism. These manifolds are actually special cases of Bott-Samelson desingularizations of Schubert varieties, although we interpret them here in terms of restricted (or bounded) manifolds of flags, and invest them with double {/-structures which differ from those induced as complex varieties. We first describe the complex bordism and cobordism of our bounded flag manifolds Bn) deducing the action of Poincare duality from the appropriate intersection theory. We are led to subvarieties Xq and Yq of Bn, indexed by subsets Q С {1, 2,..., η} (with X{\,2,...,n} = Bn), which underlie a combinatorial calculus based on the Boolean algebra of subsets of an η-element set. The Xq are the closures of the cells in a natural CW decomposition of Bn and are always nonsingular; in this sense our calculus is related to the Schubert calculus of Bressler and Evens for the complex cobordism of generalized flag manifolds, and some of our computations replicate theirs. In particular, we may work with any complex oriented spectrum E. We extend our calculus to cover the double complex bordism and cobordism of the Bn, taking special care over Poincare duality, which lies at the
129 core of several formulae. The Xq, Yq, and Bn all carry many natural double [/-structures, whose interplay with the algebra is especially fascinating; for example, the Xq may be used to represent monomials in the generators </,·. Once this geometry is fully documented, we have a sufficiently rich environment to realize our algebra. Our final result therefore records the geometric description for the structure maps of the Hopf algebroid Л^, together with the left, right and adjoint actions of 5* on G*, in terms of the Xq and appropriate double [/-structures. As a corollary, we obtain a geometrical interpretation of the commutation law which describes the quantum double. By way of illustration, we note that the diagonal of A^ may be evaluated on X[i,2,...,n} a·8 YLq xQ ®Yq·, and the antipode may be obtained by interchanging left and right summands of the normal bundle (up to double [/-cobordism class and suitable double [/-structures, in both cases). We shall explain in future the generalizations available by passing to η-fold [/-structures for η > 2; they admit corresponding realizations of operators doubles, and have applications to the Adams-Novikov spectral sequence.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 131-132 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Strong excision property for coherent homology Yuri T. Lisica Russian Peoples' Friendship University, Moscow, Russia In papers [1], coherent homologies for inverse systems of topological spaces and pairs of topological spaces were defined. O-resolutions of pairs of topological spaces make possible to define strong homology groups Hp(X)A;G) for any pair (X, A) of topological spaces with coefficients in an Abelian group G. These homologies have the following strong excision property. Theorem. Let (X) A) and (У, В) be closed normal pairs such that for any neighborhoods U and V of the sets A and B, open in X and Υ respectively, the complements X\U and Υ \ V are normally located in X and Υ respectively. Further, let f : (X, A) —l· (У, В) be a closed continuous map of pairs inducing a one-to-one map of the sets X\A and Y\B. Then for any ρ £ Ζ and any Abelian group G the induced homomorphism UiHp{X,A\G)^Hp{Y,B\G) is an isomorphism. Corollary 1. Let (X) A) be a closed normal pair such that for any open in X neighborhood U of the set A, X \U is normally located in X. Then the natural projection π:(Χ,Α)->(Χ/Α,*) induces an isomorphism π* : HP(X, A; G) -> HP(X/A, *; G) for any ρ £ Ζ and any Abelian group G.
132 Corollary 2. For every collectionwise normal countably paracompact space X, for each ρ and every Abelian group G there is an isomorphism HP{X,*;G)*HP+1{SX,*;G), where SX is the suspension over X. References [1] Yu.T. Lisica and S. Mardesic, Strong homology of inverse systems of spaces I; II; III, Topol. Appl. 19(1) (1985), 29-43; 19(1) (1985), 44-64; 20(1) (1985), 29-37.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 133-135 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Reflexivity of convergence Abelian groups M. Jesus Chasco Universidad de Vigo, Vigo, Spain Elena Martin-Peinador * Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain A number of attempts to extend Pontryagin duality theory to categories of groups larger than that of locally compact Abelian groups have been made using different approaches. The extension to the category of topological Abelian groups created the concept of reflexive group. We deal now with the extension of Pontryagin duality to the category of convergence Abelian groups. Reflexivity in this category was defined and studied by E. Binz and H. Butzmann. A convergence group is reflexive (subsequently called BB-reflexive by us in our work) if the canonical embedding into the bidual is a convergence isomorphism. We denote by TG the set of all continuous homomorphisms (i.e. continuous characters) from an Abelian topological group G into the circle group T. If addition in TG is defined pointwise, then TG endowed with the compact-open topology is a topological Abelian group, which will be called GA. The group G is called reflexive if the natural embedding olq from G into the bidual GAA := (GA)A is a topological isomorphism. The classical Pontryagin duality theorem states that every locally compact topological Abelian group (LCA) is reflexive. Examples of reflexive groups which are not locally compact are known from the late forties. In [7] it is proved that arbitrary products of LCA-groups are reflexive, whilst they may not be locally compact, like Κω or Rc. In [9] it is proved that any infinite dimensional Banach space considered in its additive structure is a reflexive group. * Some of the results mentioned have been obtained jointly with W. Banaszczyk and M. Bruguera.
134 We include here the definition of a convergent <* structure, and of a convergence group. Let X be a set and suppose that to each χ in X is associated a collection Ξ(χ) of filters on X satisfying: i) the ultrafilter {А С X : x £ ^4} is in Ξ(χ), ii) if ^ G Ξ(χ) and Q £ Ξ(χ), then the filter /0? = {FUG: FG f, Gg6} also belongs to Ξ(χ), iii) if Τ £ Ξ(χ) and £ Э .F then £ £ Ξ(χ). The totality Ξ of filters Ξ(χ) for χ in X is called a convergence structure for X, the pair (Χ, Ξ) a convergence space and the filters ^* in Ξ(χ) will be called convergent to x. We write Τ —ϊ χ instead of Τ £ Ξ(χ). A mapping f : X —l· Υ between two convergence spaces X and Υ is continuous if /(.F) —>- /(a?) in У whenever Τ —>- χ in X. A convergence group (G, Ξ), or briefly G, is a group for which the convergence structure Ξ is compatible with addition. If G is a convergence group, we also call TG the set of all continuous homj.norphisms (in the sense of convergence) from G into Τ and the continuous convergence structure A, in TG, is defined in the following way: a filter Τ in TG converges in A to an element ξ £ TG if for every χ £ G and every filter 7^ in G, convergent to x, w[T X W) converges to £(x) in Τ. (Τ Χ Ή, denotes the filter generated by the products F X G, F £ ^* and Я £ П, and w(F X Я) := {/(x) : / £ F and χ £ Я}). Thus A is the coarsest convergence structure in TG for which the evaluation mapping w is continuous. E. Binz and H. Butzmann have succeeded to extend Pontryagin duality theory to the category of convergence Abelian groups and continuous homo- morphisms, CONABGRP. They first define the "convergence dual" TCG of a group G £ CONABGRP, as the set of all continuous characters endowed with the "continuous convergence structure". If G is a LCA group, the continuous convergence structure in TG is precisely the convergence given by the compact open topology [3], thus, the "convergence dual" and the ordinary dual are identical. They call G reflexive if the natural embedding kg - G —>- rcrcG is an isomorphism in the category CONABGRP. They have studied many features of this concept of reflexivity. To mention one, a topological vector space, regarded as an Abelian group, is BB-reflexive if and only if it is locally convex and complete [4]. Topological Abelian groups are, in an obvious way, convergence groups, therefore it is natural to compare reflexivity and ВВ-reflexivity for them.
135 We have proved that these two notions are in general independent although they coincide for some classes of topological groups. A natural question is to study properties of reflexive groups shared also by BB-reflexive groups. In previous work [2] we proved the following: 1) If A is an open subgroup of a topological group G, then G is reflexive if and only if A is reflexive. 2) If К is a compact subgroup of a group G with sufficiently many continuous characters, then G is reflexive \f[G/K is reflexive. We have seen that analogous statements hold for BB-reflexivity. It is well known the existence of convergences compatible with a group structure which do not derive from a topology. Thus, the natural forgetful functor from TOPABGRP into CONABGRP is not surjective. The above results have been obtained for the image of this functor; we do not know yet how to extend our proofs to the whole category CONABGRP. Finally we have used the continuous convergence structure to prove that every reflexive admissible topological group must be locally compact. References [1] W. Banaszczyk, On the existence of Exotic Banach-Lie Groups, Math. Ann. 264 (1983), 485-493. [2] W. Banaszczyk, M.J. Chasco, and E. Martin-Peinador, Open Subgroups and Pontryagtn Duality, Mathematische Zeitschrift 215 (1994), 195-204. [3] E. Binz, Continuous Convergence in C(X), Lecture Notes in Mathematics 469, Springer-Verlag, Berlin-Heidelberg-New York, 1975. [4] H.P. Butzmann, Pontrjagin-Dualitat fur topologische Vektorraume, Archiv der Math. 28 (1977), 632-637. [5] M.J. Chasco and E. Martin-Peinador, Binz-Butzmann duality versus Pontryagtn Duality, Archiv der Math. 63(3) (1994), 264-270. [6] H.R. Fischer, Limesraume, Math. Ann. 137 (1959), 269-303. [7] S. Kaplan, Extension of the Pontryagtn Duality. I: Infinite Products, Duke Math. J. 15 (1948), 649-658. [8] E. Martin-Peinador, A reflexive admissible topological group must be locally compact, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 123 (1995), 3563-3566. [9] M. Smith Freundlich, The Pontryagtn duality theorem in linear spaces, Ann. Math. 56(2) (1952), 248-253.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 137-139 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On the orbit topology for co-adjoint representation of tensor extensions of Lie groups Tatiana L. Melekhina Moscow State Pedagogical University, Moscow, Russia It is known that there exist topological obstacles for the existence of global canonical coordinates on a symplectic manifold. In the present work we show a large class of symplectic manifolds such that there is a system of canonical coordinates for one. Let Л be a commutative ring and G be a Lie algebra. Then the tensor product G ® A is a Lie algebra with respect to the product \g ® a, h ® b] = [<7, h] ® ob, where g,h £ G, a,b € A. Let us suppose that К = Щж]/(жп) is the quotient ring of the polynomial ring R[x] by the ideal generated by жп, and G is an arbitrary Lie algebra. If €i,..., er is a basis of the Lie algebra G, r = dim G, then €\j . .., 6r, ei ® ε, ..., er ® ε,' ex ®εη~χ, ..., er®en~l is a basis of the Lie algebra G ® K, where ε = π (χ), and π : R[x] ->■ /ί is the canonical projection. Let us denote the coordinates in the space (G ® K)* with respect to the dual basis of the space G (8) К by а?«1(0),ж1-2(1),...,а:»п(п — 1), where жг1(0) is related to the basis e*1 € G*, and »i2(l) is related to the basis e*2 ®ε € (G®e)*, ..., Xin{n- 1) is related to the basis etn ® ε71*"1 e (G ® ε71*"1)*, where e1,..., en is the dual basis in G*,i.e. β·'(β,) = *}· Now we give a generalization of Trofimov's algorithm (t) [1] to the case of arbitrary smooth functions. We shall assume that the algorithm (t) transforms a function F defined on the space G* into the following set of functions
138 F<0\...,Fln-1), defined on the space (G<g>K)*, where ыт\, ^ 1 dmF(xAm)) h . l4 F(m)<2> = Шаж„ ..^Π-(»-ΐ) + 7 ™ 7S я~^ Π ** т " χ χ«—ι т " 2 »т-3 Π xi(m - l)xim_2{m - 3) 1 am-2F(xt(m)) (т-4)!#хг1 ...0s,-TO_2 tm-4 г=г\ 1 *m—4 + (та-2)! В Ж'^т ~ ^ж<—8^го ~ 2^*'—г(т ~ 2^ С/Ж* Theorem 1. Let G be an indecomposable real Lie algebra, dim G = 3, 4, 5, G ψ. so(3), or G be an indecomposable real nilpotent Lie algebra, dim G — 6. Using the algorithm (t) we can construct global canonical coordinate systems in an explicit form simultaneously on all orbits of general position for the co-adjoint representation Ad* of the Lie group corresponding to the Lie algebra ((G <g> Κχ) <g> K2)... ® KS) where Ki = R[x]/(xni). The proof of this statement is based on the following theorem. Theorem 2. Let us suppose that functions p\f ... , ps, q\f ... , qS) defined on the space G*f are giving canonical coordinate system on all generally positioned orbits of the co-adjoint representation Ad* of the Lie group corresponding to the Lie algebra G, i.e. {Pi>Pj} = {ft,ij} = 0, {puqj} = Sij. Then the functions Pl __ Jo) ρ _ jo) ρ _ (ι) ρ _ (l) ρ , ч _ J71-1) ρ _ J71""1) ' *(n-l)+l — Pl > · · ч ίβη — Ps , and ^ (n-l) ^ (n-1) ^ (0)
139 on the space (G ® K)* are giving canonical coordinates on all generally positioned orbits of the co-adjoint representation Ad* of the Lie group corresponding to the Lie algebra G ® K, i.e. {P» Pj} = {Qi, Qi) = о. {К, Qj) = *i· References [1] V.V. Trofimov and A.T. Fomenko, Algebra and Geometry of integrable Hamil- tonian systems of differential equations, Factorial, Moscow, 1995 (in Russian).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 141-142 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Metric approach to constructing Fredholm representations Alexander S. Mishchenko Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia The Fredholm representation theory of discrete groups is useful for constructing homotopy invariants of non-simply connected manifolds on the basis of generalized Hirzebruch formula [σ(Μ)] = (L(M) &A /4, [M]> € K^(pt) <g> Q (1) where A = C*[n] is the group C*-algebra of the group π, π = 7Γι(Μ), ξ € Κ^(βπ) is the canonical Α-bundle which is generated by the natural representation π —> А, / : Μ —> Βπ is the map which is induced isomorphism of fundamental groups; [σ(Μ)] € K^(pt) is the image of symmetric signature of the manifold Μ generated by change of rings Ζ j [?r]cA. Let ρ = (Γι, F, Γ2) be a Fredholm representation of the group π, that is a pair of unitary representations Γι,Γ2 : π —> B(H) and a Fredholm operator F : Η -+ Η such that Fr^-r^FECompitf), g € тт. (2) Changing the bounded operator algebra £(#) for the Kalkin algebra /C = J3(#)/Comp(#), one comes to the representation ρ of the group π Χ Ζ in the Kalkin algebra. The latter induces the homomorphism p. : KA(X) -^ KAbc(sl)(X χ S1) Λ **:(* x S1). (3) Here /3 £ Kc(Sl)($l) ls the canonical element generated by the regular representation of the group Z. Using (3) to (1) one has homotopy invariance of the corresponding higher signature. Thus let Γ be a finite sum of copies of the regular representation of the group π, let F be a blockwise diagonal operator which can be defined as a matrix function U(g)) g € π. F is Fredholm if W(g)\\<C, \\U-l(g)\\<C
142 for any g £ π excepting a finite family. The condition (2) means that ton \\U(g)-U(hg)\\ = Q. Consider the universal covering Βπ of Βπ with right action of the group 7Γ. Consider a metric on Βπ such that г{хд,уд)->Ъ, \g\ -xx>. Let Βπ be the completion of Βπ. Then any continuous mapping f : (Ш,Ж\В^) ^ (B(V),U(V)) (4) defines a Fredholm representation p, and (4) defines an element [/\€К°(Ш,Ш\Вп). (5) The direct image of [/] coincides with the canonical element p(£a) € Κ°(Βπ) generated by (3). Hence the problem of constructing a sufficient family of Fredholm representations is reduced to the study of the homotopy type of the pair (4). For example, in the case when Βπ is a compact manifold and Βπ can be compactified to a disc with an action of the group π, one has a new proof of the Novikov conjecture in the case [1]. This result can be generalized over the case of a noncompact manifold Βπ if Βπ is compactified to a disc with an action of the group π. References [1] F.T. Farrell and W.C. Hsiang, On Novikov's conjecture for non-positively curved manifolds I, Ann. Math. 113 (1981), 199-209.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 143 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Parametrized Borsuk-Ulam theorems for Banach bundles Neza Mramor-Kosta University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia Let G be the group of elements of length 1 in a field F 6 {R,C, H}. If Ε and E' are F-vector bundles over a paracompact connected base В with an orthogonal action of G in the fibers and / : S(E) —> E1 is an equivariant map from the sphere bundle S(E) of Ε then, under the assumption that the action in S(E) is free (or under various other slightly less restrictive assumptions), the size of the set Af = Γ1 (£q), К = 0-section of E' can be estimated by dim Aj > dim В + (m — η + 1), where m and η are the dimensions of the fibers of Ε and E\ and dim denotes the cohomological dimension. This estimate can be viewed as a parametrized verion of the Borsuk-Ulam theorem. An analogous estimate is valid for complex bundles with G equal to Zp or, more generally, Zpa, where ρ is a prime and α € N. A generalization to maps / : V(E) —>- £', where V(E) is the associated bundle of Stiefel varieties to the vector bundle Ε with an action of the orthogonal, unitary or symplectic (depending on F) group in the fibers, was proved by Jaworowski. The object of this contribution is to discuss possible generalizations of these results to the case where the bundles are infinite-dimensional Banach bundles. In the simpler situation of a map f : S —ϊ Ε from the unit sphere 5 С Ε of an oo-dimensional Banach space Ε to Ε there exists a generalization of the Borsuk-Ulam theorem which was originally proved by Granas and which is valid for maps / that are compact perturbations of the identity with image in a subspace of Ε of finite nonzero codimension. This result is extended to Banach bundles over a compact base for all groups mentioned above.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 145 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Splitting along one-sided submanifolds Yuri V. Muranov Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia Let / : Μ —> Υ be a simple homotopy equivalence of smooth (PL) manifolds of dimension n, X С Υ be a submanifold of codimension q. In this case the splitting obstruction groups LSn-q(F) are defined. These groups do not depend on specific manifolds' pair and depend only on pushout square F of fundamental groups (with orientation) πιφιη _> πι(γ\χ) πι(Χ) —► m(Y) and η — q mod 4. All maps in the square F are induced by natural inclusions. In what follows we will consider the case of a one-sided submanifold. If the horizontal maps in the square F are isomorphisms then the groups LSn(F) coincide with Browder-Livesay groups LNn(n\{Y \ X) —> π\(Υ)). We consider L5-groups for the case of a one-sided submanifold when the horizontal maps in the square F are epimorphisms. We obtain new connections between groups LS(F) and ^-groups of the manifold У, L-groups of its submanifold X, and Browder-Livesay groups LNn(K\(Y\X) —> π\(Υ))) mdLNn(ni(dU)->ni{X)). In the present talk new results about the relationship between splitting obstruction groups Novikov-Wall groups for the case of a one-sided submanifold are presented.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 147-148 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Generalization of the Markov theorem and Cantorian-like braid groups Hanna Nencka Center of Mathematical Sciences, University of Madeira, Funchal, Portugal In 1935 A.A. Markov [4] announced a fundamental theorem relating knot theory with braid group theory. Theorem 1 ([4])· Let β and β1 be two braids respectively from braid groups Bn and Bm with η φ m. The links β, β' [1] are ambient isotopically if β' can be obtained from β by a series of equivalences in a given group, conjugations in a given group, and Markov moves. In 1974 Birman [2] gave a proof of the above combinatorial equivalence theorem. In this paper we present some generalization of the Markov theorem. We need to remark that: Definition. Two braids /?, β' £ Bqq are Markov equivalent if the corresponding links /?, β' represent the same link. We consider the Markov theorem in the following form [2, 3] as well: Theorem 2 ([2, 3]). The Markov equivalence is generated by a conju- gacy in each Bn and a map fn : Bn —>- Bn+i which takes a word Η^(σι,...,ση_ι) e Bn to a wordW(ai,...,an-i)a£ 6 Bn+X. In order to establish a generalization of the Markov theorem, we introduce some new natural representation of braids in terms of interwoved strings. This new calculus allows us to generalize the Markov theorem. The generalization of Markov theorem consists of the following three theorems.
148 Theorem 3· Let B2%, B2i+i be two braid groups, then for any г £ N there exists a map fi : B2% —l· B2i+i such that fo is a natural induction map. Theorem 4· There exists a braid group B2n of rank 2N with N being the natural number set, having an uncountable set of generators σ, such that any infinite disjoint union of braid groups Boo С В2ъ. Theorem 5. The Markov generalized equivalence is generated by a conju- gacy in each B2n and a natural induction map fn : B2n —> B2n+i, which takes a word W(a\, σ2,..., σ2η_ι) to a word W(a\)a2,.. .,σ2η^1)σ2ησ2η+1 .. .^2Λ+1-ι € ®2η+ι where η £ N. References [1] E. Artin, Theorie der Zopfe, Hamburg Abh. 4 (1925), 47-72. [2] J.S. Birman, The braids, links and mapping class groups, Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, 1974. [3] J.S. Birman, New points of view in Knot Theory, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 28 (1993), 253-288. [4] A.A. Markov, Uber die freie Aquivalenz geschlossener Zopfe, Recueil Mathe- matique Moscou 1 (1935), 73-78.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 149-151 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 General Relativity as a construction of the formal theory of Lie pseudogroups Andrew Yu. Neronov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Alexei M. Boyarskii Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia General Relativity can be described in the framework of the formal theory of Lie pseudogroups. Recently description of continuum mechanics, electromagnetism and thermodynamics has been obtained in terms of the construction of non-linear Spenser sequence for the groups of Euclidean motions of 3-d space (for non-relativistic electrostatics), Poincare (for rel- ativistic dynamics), and conformal (for electricity). The dynamics of General Relativity arises as diffeomorphism-invariant dynamics in terms of the non-linear Spenser sequence in accordance with the general scheme of this theory. The pairing of matter with gravity is obtained in a unique way, because the form of the invariant dynamic equations depends only on the group chosen for the construction (diffeomorphisms in the case of General Relativity). The dynamics must be interpreted as a dynamics of deformations of space-time as far as full analogy with continuum mechanics is reached (the construction of General Relativity is obtained when replacing Poincare group by diffeomorphisms). So one gets the possibility to use the notions of "Lagrange variables", "Euler variables", "nondeformed state" and other notions of continuum mechanics. The topology of the space-time manifold should not be fixed while solving Einstein's equations, because gluing functions of the manifold (a special type of transformations or deformations of space-time in this framework) are determined dynamically. This formalism is closely related to the tetrad formalism of General Relativity and is in fact an extension of the latter with the aid of the so-called Jet Theory to all geometrical objects of Riemannian geometry. Let Μ be a Riemannian manifold, Jq(M χ Μ) a bundle of 9-jets of the direct product Μ Χ Μ with local co-ordinates (x^y^). Here
150 μ = (μι,μ2,.. .,μη), where μι = О, 1, 2,..., is a multi-index such that 3μ = (#ι)μι(#2)μ2 ... (9η)μη- The operations of composition and taking the inverse element could be defined on the invertible jets (dety* φ 0) in Jq(M X M). The corresponding expressions can be found using the rule of the derivation of a composite function: J к Jk\ К/,^)о(у',Л4) = (ЛЛ^) χ1 = χ; ζ1 = z\ ~lk __ ~к „т. zi — zmiJi J ι y/fc — yk »/7n7/n ι rA; ».ra (i) (2) The inversion is defined naturally as /g о /~* = jg(id). In this way the set of invertible sections of Jq(M X M) is equipped with the structure of groupoid Пд(М, Μ) С Jg(M χ Μ). Surfaces &д С Jg(M χ Μ) defining different groups of transformations possess the "group" property: they are closed with respect to composition and inversion. Generally, the equations which define the surfaces with this property are called Lie equations. Let us construct the initial part of the non-linear Spenser sequence: 0 г ^ тгд+1 Лг®й?Д л2т* ® #,_! Γ being the pseudogroup of solutions of the non-linear system 1Zq, D(fq+i) = f~+x oji(fq) - idg+i and D(jq+i(f)) = 0. The composition law for 1Zq+i gives rise to gauge transformations for the sections \q of Τ* ® Rq. If /g+1 = flfg+i о Лд+1 then A/*+i = hql\ ° £>9q+\ oji(hq) + Dhq+X. If q = 2: £>: < ^(uyj-^y<5) Ι χ*/,·· = *£(ui# ^ vljxb - vlixli) If 5g+i = Jg+i(fiO ("rigid motion"), £>(/g+i) = D(hq+i) = xg and so Xg are gauge invariant. Dynamics of continuous media, invariant under the pseudogroup Г, can be described by the action 5= / L(x)xq(x)) dxl.. .dxn.
151 For the calculus of variations we need "infinitesimal transformations": y'q = yq° hq or y'q = gq о yg, where hq = (x\ xk + ίξ*, Sf + t#, t£§,...), gq = («S^ + iC^^^ + 'C^iiC*»···)» £g»Cg € #g. An infinitesimal gauge transformation takes the form δχ4(θ) = ί(θ)ϋξ<ι+ι-{χ(θ),ξ<1+ι} where £>£,+1 = fti* -£j+i, f, = £«+Xe(0 and {&+b fy+i) is the algebraic bracket on Rq. We can obtain equations of motion over the source (Lagrange variables x) and over the target (Euler variables y) using 5S = j'Xq.5Xqdx1...dxn = jXq · (y-^DCq+1ji(y,)) dx1...dxn = Jyq.(DCq+l)dyl...dyn, where *, = Ц· and Д(Э£.'ф = (**#) fty', Δ = det(fty*). Theorem 1. Riemannian curvature in Lagrange variables can be expressed in terms of sections of the first Spenser bundle for the groupoid Π2(Μ, Μ). So we can describe generally covariant dynamics for continuous media and gravity in terms of the Spenser sequence for Π2(Μ, Μ) = 9ftg, choosing the action in the form " = ^matter ι *bgrav Theorem 2. With the choice of Einstein action for gravity Sg™ = const I R,/^dx = const I Anab(XcaCjm(A-l)t - ^(Α-')Γ)ώ Einstein equations appear as invariant equations of motion at first order jets. The above construction gives a natural way for describing generally co- variant dynamics of particles with spin. In this case the equations of motion are automatically modified. We obtain in a unique way the necessity of using torsion. The invariance under local translations produces the energy-momentum tensor of matter, and the invariance under local rotations produces the spin angular momentum of matter.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 153-154 Dedicated to P.S.AlexandrofTs 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Space of linear differential operators as a module over the Lie algebra of vector fields Valentin Yu. Ovsienko Center of Theoretical Physics — Luminy, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Marseille, France One of the basic structures on the space of linear differential operators is a natural family of module structures over the group of diffeomorphisms Diff(M) (and of the Lie algebra of vector fields Vect(M)). These Diff(M)- (and Vect(M))-module structures are defined if one considers the arguments of differential operators as tensor-densities of degree λ on M. The action of a vector field X = Xх (x) д/дхх on a differential operator is given by the commutator with the operator of Lie derivative: ad X(A) = LXA-ALX, where Lx = Xi д/дхг - λ дХг/дх\ The problem of isomorphism of Diff(M)- (and Vect(M))-module structures for different values of λ Was stated in [1] and solved in a series of papers [1, 3, 2]: 1. dim Μ > 2. (a) In the case of second order differential operators, different Diff(M )-module structures are isomorphic to each other for every λ except 3 critical values: λ = 0, — j, — 1 (corresponding to differential operators on: functions, ^-densities and volume forms respectively). (b) In the case of differential operators of order > 3, Diff (M)-mod- ules corresponding to λ- and λ'-densities are isomorphic if and only if λ + λ' = 1 (see [3]). The unique isomorphism in this case is given by conjugation of differential operators.
154 2. The case dim Μ = 1 (Μ = R or 51) is particular. (a) The modules of 3-order differential operators are isomorphic to each other for all values of λ except 5 critical values: |o,-l,-i-i±^} (see [1,2]). (b) The Diff(R)-modules on the space of differential operators of order > 4 corresponding to λ- and λ'-densities are isomorphic if and only if λ + λ' = -1 (see [2]). The problem leads to the notion of SLn+1-equivariant symbol of differential operators and is related to cohomology of Vect(M) with nontrivial operator coefficients. References [1] C. Duval and V. Ovsienko, Space of second order linear differential operators as a module over the Lie algebra of vector fields, Advances in Math., to appear. [2] H. Gargoubi and V. Ovsienko, Space of linear differential operators on the real line as a module over the Lie algebra of vector fields, Int. Math. Res. Notices, No 5 (1996). [3] P.B.A. Lecomte, P. Mathonet and E. Tousset, Comparison of some modules of the Lie algebra of vector fields, Indag. Math., to appear.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 155 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Umbral and Schubert calculi Nigel Ray University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom The talk includes joint work with Victor Buchstaber and William Schmitt. The Roman-Rota umbral calculus is concerned with sequences of polynomials which behave well with respect to a coproduct map (or generalized shift). These sequences are especially useful in the study of complex oriented cohomology theories applied to projective space, and allow symbolic manipulation of invariants associated with stable homotopy elements in the image of the J-homomorphism. We discuss how such a calculus may be formulated in terms of combinatorial Hopf algebras, freely generated by equivalence classes of intervals in certain partially ordered sets. Such examples tend to be cocommutative, so we extend our description to the noncocommutative situation by considering an appropriate Boolean algebra B. We obtain a structure which may be used to compose and revert formal power series in one variable. The associated Hopf algebra is a realization of the dual of the Landweber-Novikov algebra of operations in complex cobordism. We also describe certain Schubert varieties, interpreting them as manifolds of bounded flags and explaining how they admit their own Schubert calculus, in which the cells are indexed by subsets of a finite set (rather than permutations or sequences of integers). The closures of these cells are non- singular subvarieties, which make up a lattice which is isomorphic to В and therefore closely related to the dual of the Landweber-Novikov algebra. We enhance this connection by explaining how the bounded flag manifolds may be invested with a double complex structure, with respect to which they play an important role in double complex cobordism. In this context they admit an adjoint action by the Landweber-Novikov algebra, and therefore provide a geometric realization of the adjoint action of the Landweber-Novikov algebra on its dual. Applying results of Novikov and Buchstaber, we interpret this action as an embedding of the Drinfeld (or quantum) double of the Landweber-Novikov algebra into the ring of cohomology operations in double complex cobordism.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 157-158 Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Invariants of homology 4-cobordisms from gauge theory Nikolai N. Saveliev University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA The homology cobordism group 0| of the oriented integral homology 3-spheres is of central importance in the manifold topology. The result of D. Galewski and R. Stern [1], for instance, relates the problem of simplicial triangulability of higher dimensional topological manifolds to the existence of an element of order two in ©| having non-trivial Rohlin invariant. The latter problem is well known as one of the famous "Kirby problems". There has not been much progress in describing the structure of this group since classical Rohlin's theorems [3] and until introduction of gauge- theoretical methods in low-dimensional topology in early 80's. We use these methods, including invariants by S. Donaldson, N. Seiberg and E. Witten, to detect elements of infinite order in ®% and to show that for homology spheres from certain classes the infinite order is implied by non-triviality of the Rohlin invariant. Among others, there are the following results. • Let a homology sphere Σ be a link of an algebraic surface singularity — for instance, every Seifert fibered homology sphere is such a link. We prove that if μ(Σ) < 0, where μ is the Neumann-Siebenmann invariant, see [2] and [4], then Σ has an infinite order in the group (5)3 • • Let Σ be the homology sphere obtained by 1/m-surgery on a torus knot with odd m £ Z. Then it is of infinite order in 0|. This result cannot be improved to cover the case of even m — it is well known that Seifert fibered homology sphere Σ(2,3,13) which is the result of ( — l/2)-surgery on a (2, 3)-torus knot is homology cobordant to zero. The μ-invariant is only defined for the so-called plumbed homology spheres. We use Floer homology to extend the definition over arbitrary homology spheres and get a new invariant. We investigate its
158 behaviour with respect to homology cobordisms, as well as its relations with the Д-invariant and the Jones polynomial. • We compute Floer homology for a variety of homology spheres including Casson-Harer, Stern, and Mazur homology spheres, some plumbed and hyperbolic homology spheres. References [1] D. Galewski and Ft. Stern, Classification of simplicial triangulations of topological manifolds, Ann. Math. Ill (1980), 1-34. [2] W. Neumann, An invariant of plumbed homology spheres, Lecture Notes in Math. 788 (1980), 125-144. [3] V. Rohlin, New results in the theory of four-dimensional manifolds, Doklady Akad. Nauk SSSR 84 (1952), 221-224 (in Russian). [4] L. Siebenmann, On vanishing of the Rohlin invariant and nonfinitely am- phicheiral homology ^-spheres, Lecture Notes in Math. 788 (1980), 172-222.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow:, PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 159 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 The homotopy of Z/2-local finite spectra Katsumi Shimomura Tottori University, Tottori, Japan Let Ln denote the Bousfield localization functor from the category of p-local CW-spectra to itself with respect to K(0) V K(l) V ... V K{n), where K(i) denotes the г-th Morava /f-theory. Then L$X = ρ"1Χ = ΧΛ SQ for the Moore spectrum SQ with n*(SQ) = Q, the field of rational numbers, and L\X = LkX) the /f-theory localization of X. These have much information on the homotopy theory and so we can expect more by /^-localization. For example, 7r*(Li5°) gives full information on Im J and n*(L2S°) would give some information on Coker J. Furthermore, the homotopy groups of LnS° include the most of information on the category of Ln-local spectra. Under this situation, we obtain n*(L2S°) for ρ > 3. At the prime 3, n*(L2V(l)) is computed, where V(l) = (5° U3 e1) Ua (e5 U3 e6) is the Toda-Smith spectrum for the Adams map a. At the prime 2, there is no V(l). We instead compute nm(L2D(A\) Λ М2) for the cofiber D(A\) of the essential map у : Σ5Αίη Λ Μν -> Μη Λ Μ„. Here Mx for χ € Kj(S°) denotes a cofiber of / : S^ —f 5° representing x. These results give us some information on Coker J as we expected.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 161-162 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On the topology of the path space for a symplectic manifold Valerii V. Trofimov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Let Xй be a smooth manifold, on which an affine connection Γ^· is defined, and let Lm be an arbitrary submanifold of Xn. In this situation we can define unstable characteristic classes of Lm, which are an analog of the Maslov classes in symplectic geometry, see [1]. We choose and fix a point x0 e Xй and introduce the notation [Xй, Lm] = {a : [0,1] -* Xn \ a is a piecewise-smooth map of the interval [0,1] into Xn such that a(0) = xq and a(l) 6 Lm}. This space and its geometry play an important role in the calculus of variations. We define a map / : [Xn) Lm] —> Gm(TXoXn) of the space [Xn) Lm] into the Grassmannian Gm(TXoXn) generated by the tangent space TXQXn) where m = dim Lm. If a £ [Xn) £m], then the tangent space Ta(i)Lm is parallel-transported relative to the connection Г* to the point x0 = a(0) along the path a. Let f(a) denote the image of Ta^Lm under this parallel transport. The subspace f(a) С TXQXn is by definition the image of the path a under /. A map /* : h*(Gm(TXoXn)) -* Λ*([Χη, Lm]) is induced in a generalized cohomology theory h*. Let a € h*(Gm(TXoXn)) be an arbitrary cohomology class of the Grassmannian Gm(TXoXn). The cohomology classes of the form /*(a) £ h*([Xn) Lm]) are called generalized Maslov classes of the submanifold Lm С Хп. Let {Μ2η,ω) be a symplectic manifold and Ln be its Lagrangian sub- manifold, where a; is a non-degenerate 2-form. Then, the previous construction gives us the map / : [M2n, Ln] -* K{TXoM2n), where A(TXQM2n) is a Lagrangian Grassmannian. In order to do this we must choose a symplectic connection on the symplectic manifold M2n. It is known (see [1]), that for the entire symplectic manifold {Μ2η,ω) there exists a symplectic connection, i.e. the connection Γ*·Λ such that Vk^ij = 0, where Vfc is the covariant derivative with respect to Тг-к.
162 If α € h*(A(TXoM2n)) is an arbitrary cohomology class of the Lagrangian Grassmannian Λ(Γΐ0Μ2η), then a cohomology class of the form /*(a) € h*([M2n) Ln]) is called generalized Maslov class of the Lagrangian submanifold Ln С M2n. These classes do not depend on the choice of the symplectic connection and possess the properties of the usual Maslov classes. References [1] V.V. Trofimov and A.T. Fomenko, Algebra and Geometry of integrable Hamil- toman systems of differential equations. Factorial, Moscow, 1995 (in Russian).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 163-164 Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Equivariant exterior algebra of finite groups Alexander V· Zarelua Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia The theory of G-invariant multivectors on the augmentation ideal JK[G] of the group algebra of a finite group G has been developed using methods of representation theory of finite groups and algebraic number theory. A special attention is paid to the construction of a biinvariant decomposable non-degenerated integer-valued 2-vector and to the Lefschetz decomposition of invariant multivectors connected with such a 2-vector. In constructing a 2-vector possessing the first three properties essential is the information about the structure of irreducible representations of finite groups, while the integer-valuedness involves the action of the Galois group of an appropriate cyclotomic field on the group G and on its irreducible representations. In the estimation of the volume of such a 2-vector some divisibility properties of algebraic numbers are used. Main results obtained in this direction are the following. 1. The space of biinvariant 2-vectors is isomorphic to the space of central functions {b(g)} which are skew-symmetric in the sense that big-1) = -b(g). 2. The space of biinvariant 2-vectors is isomorphic to the subspace of the space of central functions generated by the complex irreducible characters. In particular, if all irreducible characters of a group G are real then in its group algebra there are no non-trivial biinvariant 2-vectors. 3. With any irreducible complex character of a group G, a decomposable biinvariant 2-vector Qr is connected which is non-degenerated on the direct sum of the corresponding two-sided ideal and its complex conjugated ideal. In particular, if the group G has an odd order then any sum of 2-vectors ΩΓ with coefficients cr different from zero forms a decomposable non-degenerated 2-vector.
164 4. The set of decomposable non-degenerate biinvariant integer-valued 2-vectors is in a 1-1 correspondence with the skew-symmetric elements of the center of the group ring Z[G] which are invertible in the augmentation ideal JC[G\. These results give a possibility to calculate the volume of non-degenerated decomposable biinvariant integer-valued 2-vectors by means of determinants of the corresponding multiplication operators and to deduce the formulae for the coefficients of the Lefschetz decomposition of invariant 2-vectors. Using these formulae a homomorphism of 2-dimensional exterior homology group in some residue group is constructed. This homomorphism turns out to be non-trivial in the case, for instance, when the determinant under consideration does not exceed the order of the group G. The last result allows to prove the solvability of some groups and to estimate the quotient group of a finite group of odd order by its commutator-group. For the investigation of actions of finite groups on a topological space a skew-symmetrical analog of homology (cohomology) groups of a group has been introduced and studied. The formulae mentioned above have been used to calculate these groups of exterior homology (cohomology) in some important cases. The study of connections of the introduced cohomology classes with the characteristic classes of vector bundles induced by representations of groups is initiated. At present such connections are established for the first Chern classes using a diffeomorphism of the space of minimal ideals of the complex matrix group with the complex projective space.
Session 3 Applications of Topology and Geometry
The abstracts are presented in the alphabetical order of the authors' names
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 167-169 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 The Knaster problem, the Borsuk theorem and cyclic systems Semeon A. Bogatyi Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Let f : Sn —l· Rm be a fixed continuous mapping of the standard ra-sphere Sn into the Euclidean m-space Rm. K. Borsuk proved that for η > m there exists a point ж £ Sn such that /(a) = /(—ж). The Borsuk theorem has many generalizations. One direction of generalizations was initiated in 1944 by H. Hopf. If η > m then for every angle a, 0 < a < π, there are two points X\,X2 € Sn such that the angle between these points is equal to a and f{x\) = /(a^)* G. Skordev estimated the dimension of the set of all collapsing pairs. In 1947, B. Knaster proposed the following Problem· Given к = η — m + 2 distinct points αχ,..., Xk 6 Sn, does there exist a rotation r 6 SO(n+ 1) such that f{rx\) = f(rx2) — ... = /(га*)? Special cases of the Knaster problem have been studied by many mathematicians. In 1986, V.V. Makeev*proposed a method for constructing noncollapsing configurations and mappings for the Knaster problem. For a finite configuration αχ,..., Xk of points on 5n, let /C be the space of all configurations congruent to the given one. And let / be the dimension of the smallest linear subspace of En+1 containing a copy of the configuration αχ,..., α* and the point 0. V.V. Makeev proved that the inequality dim /C = dim Vn+1>/ = In - 1(1 - l)/2 > m(k - 1) is necessary for the configuration to be a Knaster configuration. He conjectured that the validity of this inequality is also sufficient. We show that for all configurations, lying in small enough neighborhood of a configuration on a circle of large radius (with arbitrary big number I), the stronger inequality 2n - 1 > m(k - 1)
168 is also necessary. So we show that in general the Makeev problem has negative solution. Using the general position method we prove a "noncollapsing" result. Theorem 1. Let σ\,..., aq : Ρ —ϊ Ρ be continuous piecewise smooth mappings without points of pairwise coincidence of an η-dimensional polyhedron. Let the numbers n, m, q and к satisfy the inequality η + 1 < m(q — k). Then there exists a map f : Ρ —>- Rm such that for every point χ € Ρ the set {f{<Ti{x)) : г = 1,... ,ρα} has cardinality > к + 1. From Theorem 1 and a result by S.I. Bogataya and the author it follows that for every continuous piecewise smooth free Zp-action on n-dimensional polyhedron Ρ and every number m satisfying the inequality ra+1 < m(p— 1), there exists a map f : Ρ —ϊ ]Rm+(Pi"1)/2 which is 1-to-l on every orbit. Another direction of generalizations is related to works by many authors (A.S. Schwarz, H.J. Munkholm, H. Steinlein) who considered a free action of the group Zp on the sphere Sn. Namely, let σ : Sn —l· Sn be a free periodic homeomorphism of period ρ for some prime integer ρ > 2. If η > m(p — 1) then there exists a point χ £ Sn such that f(x) = /(σχ) = ... = f(ap~lx). More precisely, the set B(f) = {x € Sn : f(x) = f(ax) = ... = }{σ*-ιχ)} has dimension > η — m. E. Lusk obtained a generalization of the Borsuk theorem with a partial orbit collapsing: If η > (m— l)(p— 1) +1, then there exists a point χ € Sn such that f(x) = ί(σχ). We prove analogs of Munkholm's theorem where the assertion about the coincidence of points from an orbit image is replaced by the assertion that an orbit image is contained in a certain subspace of (Rm)p. The corresponding subspace is specified by a homogeneous system of linear equations. We prove such theorems for the base of some inductive process and first two steps. Let ί anyi + auy2 + ... + aiqyq = 0 I a2\y\ + а22У2 + · · · + a2qyq = 0 { о>к\У\ + ак2у2 + ... + akqyq = 0 be any system with q variables such that the sum of the coefficients in each equation is zero.
169 Theorem 2. Let the number q be prime, the given system be a cyclically invariant system of rank r and η > mr. Then there exists a point χ £ Sn such that the vector у = (/(χ), /(σ(χ)),..., f(aq~l(x))) satisfies the given system. If the number q is a power of some odd prime number, Munkholm's theorem on Zg-actions enables us to obtain some weaker form of a similar theorem. We show that any cyclically invariant system with q = 1 (mod 2) variables such that the sum of the coefficients in each equation is zero has even rank. All systems of this type with rank 2 are described. Theorem 3. Let the number q be prime, the given system be not cyclically invariant, the rank of cyclic symmetrization be r and η > mr — 1. Then there exists a point χ £ Sn such that the vector у = (/(χ), /(σ(ζ)),..., f(aq~l(x))) satisfies the given system. As a corollary of this result we obtain that if η > m(p — 1) — 1, then for every decomposition of the group Ър into two nonempty subsets Ър = AUB, there exists a point χ £ Sn such that ί{σιχ) = f{a3x) for г and j both lying either in A or in B. Theorem 4. Let the number q be prime, the system consisting of the given equations and one time shifted equations be not cyclically invariant, the rank of cyclic symmetrization be r and η > mr — 2. Then there exists a point χ £ Sn such that the vector у = (/(ж), /(σ(χ)),..., f(aq~l(x))) satisfies the given system. All three element decompositions of the group Zp which satisfy the conditions of Theorem 4 are described. As a corollary we obtain a partial positive solution of the Makeev conjecture — about collapsing given ρ — 2 elements of the group in the image of the orbit of some point. We also give a partial answer to a question of Cohen and Lusk, which generalizes the Lusk theorem. Theorem 5· Let in X > (m - l)(p - 1) + k, where 1 < к < ρ - 1. Then for every continuous mapping f : X —> Rm there exists a point χ € X and a decomposition Zp = Αχ U ... U Ap-k into nonempty subsets, such that Aj consists of consecutive elements (p and 1 are consecutive), and f(a4x) = f{a%2x) for i\ and i2 both lying in either of Aj. Actually, in the conditions of Theorems 2-5, we estimate the dimension of the set of points with a "suitable" orbit image from above and prove multivalued variants of these theorems.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference, Pages 171-172 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Multivalued vector fields with Fredholm and monotone components Yuri G. Borisovich Voronezh State University, Voronezh, Russia In this lecture we consider proper Fredholm operators A G ФЯСГ(Х, Е), A : {Х,дХ) -> (£, £\0), where X is a Banach Cr-manifold with the boundary dX, Ε is a Banach space, г > 1, q is an analytic index and f(x) = A(x) — g(x) are multivalued vector fields where g : X —» Ε is a multivalued upper semicontinuous map with convex compact images. The author's and Yu.G. Sapronov's [1] principle of compact restriction is generalized. The pair {Л, g} is called completely fundamentally restricted if the multivalued map F = g о A"1 : (AX) —>- Ε is completely fundamentally restricted in generalized sense (concerning [2]); the corresponding vector field / for the condition / : (X,dX) —l· (E,E\ 0) is called a completely fundamentally restricted field (or CFR-field). Also, all CFR-fields constitute the class ФдСгМв, r > 1. For q > 0 topological characteristics d(f) € Fq, d'(f) € F' are defined where F9, Fg' are classes of K. Elworthy's and A. Tromba's g-bordisms, characterizing the set of coincidences S(A,g) of inclusions A(x) 6 g(x)· The condition d(f) φ 0 or d'(f) φ 0 is sufficient for the existence of a solution of the inclusion. For a single-valued map g and for certain conditions of smoothness and transversality the set S(A,g) = Nq is a compact ^-dimensional manifold if the topological characteristics are nontrivial. The definition of characteristics d(/), d'(f) is generalized for the case q < 0 as an index of coincidence γ(/, к) where к : Lm —> Ε belongs to the class C°, m + q > 0, where Lm is a compact bounded manifold, and for the case a priori nonfixed index 9, — 00 < q < 00. Another type of generalization concerns I.V. Skrypnik's (ao)-°Perators. Connections of mentioned constructions with a problem of singular in J.-L. Lions' sense problems of optimization are discussed; applications to controllable dynamical systems and to nonlinear boundary problems are given.
172 References [1] Yu.G. Borisovich, Modern approach in the theory of topological characteristics of nonlinear operators 1; 2, Lect. Notes in Math. 1334 (1988), 199-220; 1453 (1990), 21-50. [2] Yu.G. Borisovich, B.D. Gelman, A.D. Myshkis and V.V. Obukhovskii, Topological methods in a fixed point theory of multivalued maps, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 35(1) (1980), 1-84. [3] Yu.G. Borisovich, Global analysis of operator equations arising in singular problems of optimization, Dokl. Akad. Nauk, to appear.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 173-175 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Statistical manifolds, a-geodesics and λ-Jacobi fields Guy Burdet Center of Theoretical Physics — Luminy, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Marseille, France Philippe Combe Center of Theoretical Physics — Luminy, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Marseille, France Hanna Nencka Center of Mathematical Sciences, University of Madeira, Funchal, Portugal Let {Ω,.77, m} be a measure space, with Ω a sample space, Τ a σ-algebra and m a measure. Choose a family of probability measures {Ρζ}ζζΜ labeled by M) absolutely continuous with respect to the measure m. Let ρζ be a random variable related to Ρζ. The condition of absolute continuity is fulfilled if ρζ is a Radon-Nikodym derivative and άΡζ = ρζ dm. Theorem 1. Let {5, g,i) be a triplet with S = {{Ρζ}ζ^Μ}} 9 the Fisher metric with g^ = E\d{ In ρ dj lnp], t a completely symmetric tensor of order 3 such that Ujk = [d{ lnp dj lnp dk lnp]; then {5, g,t} is a statistical manifold. Theorem 2· Let a G R, there exists a 1-parameter family of torsionless affine connections V such that Vg = ott and having the following compo- nents: Г\ = г\-^. For any a £ R, α-geodesics и —^ Ca, w 6 / С R, are such that the vector oe field Сa = dCa/du is transported in parallel along Ca with respect to V.
174 Let Сa = {χι (и)}, С а = {х*(и) + &{и)} be two α-geodesics, and ξ a parting vector field. Let a — a = 2λ £ R, then the vector field ξ satisfies a a Proposition 1. The (a, a)-geodesies' deviation ξ = V^V^f, or \-Jacobi field, fulfills ik - Ιήά1χψχι = Af*i'V. Proposition 2· Each component of a \-Jacobi field is the sum of any particular solution of the above differential equation and any arbitrary linear combination of the corresponding components of two Jacobi fields. λ-Jacobi fields are such that: • for any a £ R they are never tangent to any Ca; • they are not isocline; • they do not constitute any infinitesimal 1-parameter variation of Ca by other α-geodesics, contrary to usual Jacobi fields; • perpendicularity is not conserved. Example 1. Let {Ω, T, m} be such that ρ = (ay/2n)~1/2 exp {-(Щ is almost continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure, let 5 = {{i^}}, where dP = ρ dm. The Fisher metric and the totally symmetric tensor of order 3 are respectively 1 2 gij = —=■ (άμ ® άμ + da ® da), i*· = — (άμ ® άμ ® άμ + 4 da ® da ® da). az αό The {5, g,i) triplet is a statistical manifold called the Gaussian manifold having as a privileged coordinate system (μ/\/2,a). This Gaussian manifold is the Poincare half-plane, α-geodesics are half-conics generalizing the Riemannian half-circles. It turns out that the λ-Jacobi fields satisfying e = 2-(/ia), Γ = -(Α2+4σ2) a a are explicitly obtained for a = ±1. Usual Jacobi fields are such that £ = Au+ B.
175 Example 2. Let us take now {Ω, Τ, m} such that Ω = {x\,..., xn+i} < oo, the probability Р[{жа;}] being almost continuous with respect to the uniform measure m on Ω. Then 5 = {Р[{ж*;}]} is an open simplex in Rn+1. The corresponding statistical manifold is the triple {5, #,£}, where Sij 1 , l SijSjk 9Ц = -± + ЪГ- and *« = *УМ + ^-- Pl Σ κ Pl There exists a 1-parameter torsionless affine connection such that the α-geodesics, satisfying the equations P· = —^— S — - Pi ι—^— ( > 2 t« i-EjPiJ Pi are given by: pi(ti) = p%(0) +p«(0)ti, for α = —1, and exp гг/ij Pi(u) =pt(0) l + EiPiWiexpti/Ci-l)' for α = +1, where tf,; = £ « + ^«il. The corresponding λ-Jacobi fields fulfilling the equations £* = Xpi are as follows: ξ* = Xpi - р»(0) - Pi(0)u. The problem is motivated by works of Rao [3], Chentsov [2] and Amari [1]. References [1] S.I. Amari, Differential geometrical methods in statistics, Lecture Notes in Statistics 28, Springer-Verlag, 1985. [2] N.N. Chentsov, Statistical decision and optimal inference, Nauka, Moscow, 1972 (in Russian); English translation in: Amer. Math. Soc. 53, Providence, RI, 1982. [3] C.R. Rao, Information and accuracy attainable in the estimation of statistical parameters, Bull. Calcutta Math. Soc. 37 (1945), 81-91.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 177-178 Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On a problem of integral geometry in spaces of constant curvature Alexander S. Denisiuk Brest State University, Brest, Belarus In [4] V.P. Palamodov formulated the following principle. Theorem· Any inversion formula for Radon transform Rg in the Euclidean space En can be translated to an inversion formula for Radon transform Rp in the elliptic space Pn and to an inversion formula for Radon transform R^ in the hyperbolic space Hn and vice versa. By Radon transform Rk we mean the transformation mapping function / into its integrals over ^-dimensional totally geodesic manifolds. Rl is called X-ray transform. In [4] the principle was proved for the elliptic space. We will prove it for the hyperbolic space and apply it to inversion problem for X-ray transform in elliptic and hyperbolic spaces. Inversion formulae for complete manifold of geodesies in Pn and Hn are known [2]. We obtain formulae for the η-dimensional family of all geodesies which intersect a given curve 7 С Рп(Нп). That is one of contact families. We define contactness as the following (cf. admissibility in [3]). Let К be an η-dimensional family of curves in a space X of dimension η and Kx a set of curves of К which meet a point χ £ X. Let Cx = U/e/fx l С X. For generic ж, Cx is two-dimensional conoid with vertex in the point x. Definition. An η-dimensional family К of curves in space X of dimension η is called contact if for almost any curve I € K, for almost any pair of points Х\) Х2 € / conoids CXl and CX2 have the same tangent two-dimensional plane at any point t G /, t φ Χ\, x2. This property is invariant under action of a diffeomorphism. So, one can apply this principle to obtain inversion formulae for any contact family
178 of geodesies in Pn and #n, if there is a formula for the corresponding family in En. We translate formulae from [1]. References [1] A.S. Denisiuk, Inversion of generalized Radon transform, Amer. Math. Soc. Translations 162(2) (1994), 19-32. [2] I.M. GePfand and M.I. Graev, Complexes of lines in the space, Funkts. Anal, i Prilozh. 2 (1968), 219-229 (in Russian). [3] S. Helgason, Geometric analysis on symmetric spaces, Math. Surveys and Monographs 39, Amer. Math. Soc, Providence, RI, 1994. [4] V.P. Palamodov, Selected topics in integral geometry, pure and applied, Lecture for F. Klein Colloquium, Dusseldorf Universitat, 1994.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 179-180 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Extremality of the Bricard Octahedra * Nikolai P. Dolbilin Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia Mikhail A. Stan'ко Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia Mikhail I. Stogrin Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia Let S2 be an abstract 2jD-polyhedral sphere S2 whose all faces are Euclidean convex polygons. Let also / be a continuous mapping / : S2 —>· E3 such that 1) / maps each face of S2 onto a flat polygon of f(S2) С К3; 2) / is an isometric mapping of each face of 52; 3) / is an immersion of the 1-dimensional skeleton of 52. Let F = /(S*2) admit a continuous non-trivial (i.e. at least one dihedral angle changes) flexure φ that leaves any face of F flat Then F is called a flexor (see [1]). Let Τ denote the set of all flexors that are /-images of polyhedral spheres (/ being required to fulfil conditions l)-3) above). Denote by V\ (by ei, f\ respectively) the minimal number such that there is a flexor in Τ with щ vertices (with e\ edges or f\ faces respectively) and denote by ΛΊ, 3^, Z\ subsets of flexors from Τ that have minimal numbers of vertices, edges and faces respectively. With the help of the flexure graph Γφ introduced and used in [2, 3, 4] here we prove The work is supported in part by Russian Foundation for Basic Research, No 96-01-00166.
180 Theorem· щ = 6, в\ = 12, f\ =8; Х\ = У\ = i?i are families of the Bricard octahedra. Thus, given a polyhedron homeomorphic to the sphere and with immersed edge skeleton, then it has less than 6 vertices, or less than 12 edges, or less than 8 faces. References [1] R. Bricard, Memoires sur la theorie de Voctaedre articular, J. Math. Pures Appl. 5 (1897), 113-148. [2] R. Connelly, Conjectures and open questions in rigidity, Preprint supported by an NSF grant. [3] N.P. Dolbilin, M.A. Stan'ko and M.I. Stogrin, Rigidity of quadrillages of the sphere, International Conference on Geometry "in global", Cherkassy, 1995, 22-23. [4] N.P. Dolbilin, M.A. Stan'ko and M.I. Stogrin, Rigidity of a quadrillage of the sphere, Russian Doklady, to appear. [5] N.P. Dolbilin, M.A. Stan'ko and M.I. Stogrin, Rigidity of Zonohedra, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk, to appear.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 181-182 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Basic topological structures of the theory of ordinary differential equations Vladimir V. Filippov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia In [1, 2] we studied a topological structure which is adequate to the question about the continuity of the dependence of a solution of the Cauchy problem on parameters of the right-hand side. The levels of the TODE (the theory of ordinary differential equations) correspond to the levels of the theory of integration. The TODE with continuous right-hand side corresponds to the integral of Riemann. The TODE under the conditions of Caratheodory corresponds to the integral of Lebesgue. The application of our theory gives us a level corresponding to the integral of Denjoy. One of main tools of this approach is a new topological space RC(U), which can be named "space of solution spaces". Each equation and inclusion with the right-hand side defined on the set U С Ε χ Εη is represented here by a point. To display the position of this notion, let us consider an equation where the right-hand side depends on a parameter α £ A. Then the continuity of the mapping A —> RC(U) which associates with a parameter a the solution space of the equation yf = /(£, y, a), is equivalent to the continuity of the dependence of solutions of the equation on parameter a (in a form which does not involve the uniqueness of solutions in general case and in a strict form under the supposition of the uniqueness), Properties of this topology are important for investigation of equations. The existence of the topological space RC(U) allows us to word easily fundamental properties and relations of solution spaces. Such topological structures give tools to study equations with singularities in right-hand sides. Properties of this structures may be taken as axioms for some geometric chapters of the TODE. This allows us to introduce most general concepts
182 of some notions related to properties of equations and their solutions and use them in practical investigation of equations. We have new tools to investigate equations and inclusions and to make this approach to work in situations which are not covered by the classical theory. The author is able to show how these tools work is the domain around the Poincare-Bendixson theorem and in other geometric sections of the TODE, in the investigation of asymptotically autonomous equations, in the study of stationary points, in the asymptotic integration etc. Last results are related with homological properties of a solution set. Applications of the Leray-Schauder theory in the TODE are based on estimates of homological properties of the corresponding integral operators. But if the right-hand side of the equation under consideration is discontinuous, the integral operator need not exist. Our possibility of description of topological properties at the level of solution spaces allows us to construct an equivalent of the Leray-Schauder theory which can be applied to equations with discontinuous right-hand sides without any supplementary considerations. References [1] V.V. Filippov, Topological structure of solution spaces of ordinary differential equations, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 48(1) (1993), 103-154. [2] V.V. Filippov, Solution spaces of ordinary differential equations, Moscow Univ. Press, Moscow, 1993.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 19Э6 International Topological Conference F*age 183 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Costa's minimal surface Alfred Gray University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA I will give an explicit parametrization of Costa's minimal surface and show how to create the surface using Mathematica. More generally I will explain the Mathematica implementation of the differential geometry of curves and surfaces using my book "Modern Differential Geometry of Curves and Surfaces".
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 185 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Convergence in the space of solution spaces of ordinary differential equations and its applications Boris S. Klebanov Institute of New Education Technologies, Moscow, Russia A key concept in V.V. Filippov's axiomatic theory of solution spaces of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) is the notion of convergence in the space of solution spaces of these equations. On the basis of this concept appropriate topological structures were introduced in the framework of this theory for the study of fundamental properties of solutions of ODEs. Our talk is concerned with applications of these topological structures to the investigation of limit sets of trajectories of solutions of ODEs (in particular, to the Poincare-Bendixson theory), as well as stability and dis- sipativity of the solutions.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 187-190 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Exact smooth classification of divergence-free vector fields on surfaces of small genus Boris S. Kruglikov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia Let us consider a compact two-dimensional manifold P2 and a smooth measure μ on it, i.e. a symplectic form ω if P2 is oriented and an anti-invariant symplectic form on the double covering otherwise. Let us call a vector field υ divergence-free if the corresponding generated flow preserves the measure μ. We assume all the fields considered complete and Morse nondegenerate. We present two classifications, each for the category of C^-diffeomorphisms, к = l,....,oo. Two divergence-free vector fields are called conjugated if each can be transformed into the other by a diffeomorphism which needs not preserve the measure. At first we give a classification up to conjugation of divergence-free vector fields υ with all trajectories but a finite number closed. Let us stress that the study of periodic divergence-free vector fields is based on the following reasons: 1) the set of such fields is dense in the set of all divergence-free fields; 2) the set of periodic fields is easy to study, and then they may approximate arbitrary dynamical divergence-free systems like rational numbers approximate irrational ones and polynomials do with functions, see an example in [4]; 3) they arise from the theory of trajectory classification of integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom [2], and that is also the motive we do allow to intersect for separatrix. Next we consider a classification of arbitrary divergence-free vector fields on the surfaces S2, EP2, Κ2, Τ2, K2#RP2 with some (possibly none) holes — deleted disks D2. The first problem on oriented surfaces goes closely to the classification of globally Hamiltonian vector fields. The latter is of much importance for the theory of trajectory classification of Bott integrable Hamiltonian vector fields with two degrees of freedom and was completely solved for the category C° in [2], for the smooth categories Ck, к = 1,..., oo — in [1, 3]. In short the results are as follows.
188 Let С be the foliation of P2 by trajectories all but a finite number of which are closed. The quotient space P2 /C is a graph Г whose vertices correspond to singularities and are called letter-atoms. Each point of the edge is a quotient of the periodic trajectory. So we have a period function on every edge, and we take the conjunction class of this function since there is no natural parametrization of the edge. To every vertex there is associated a number of invariants: Invfc = {Ak <E Co(V2;Rfc), Ak <E B2(V2;Rk), Zk £ #1 [V2; R*1)}, where V2 is a com pact ification of the singular leaf neighborhood in the surface P2, and chains and cochains are considered with respect to the accepted cell decomposition for the letter-atom compact- ifications. Theorem 1 ([3]). Two Hamiltonian vector fields are equivalent in the category Ск, к > 1, if their graphs, period functions on edges and invariants Invfc coincide. For divergence-free vector fields the picture is similar. There are only two differences. At first, there can appear Mobius bands instead of annuli as edges. But we take the period functions anyway. Secondly, neighborhoods of the singularities may turn out to be nonorientable. We also define the invariants Л*, Ak) Zk, but this time the homology spaces are considered with twisted coefficients. Theorem 2. Two divergence-free vector fields with all trajectories except a finite number being closed are equivalent in the category Ск, к > 1, if their graphs Г, period functions on edges and invariants Inv*. coincide. Let us turn to the second classification problem. Theorem 3. For any divergence-free vector field on 52, RP2, K2 with holes only a finite number of trajectories may be nonclosed. So the classification on these surfaces is given by Theorem 2. Now consider the case of the torus. Let us introduce the notion of "mean length" for a divergence-free vector field ν on the torus T2 (with holes). Let us glue holes by disks and extend arbitrarily the field υ and the symplectic form ω representing the measure μ with the only demand that υ is divergence-free. Define v0 — ||5||, S — — \%νω\ € tf^T^jR), \ω\ = fa, ω. Here || · || is the norm in the space
189 Я1 induced by the norm in H\ with an orthonormal basis of (any) basis cycles. We call Hamiltonian vector fields with Hamiltonians taking values in the circle also Hamiltonian. Proposition 1. For a non-Hamiltonian vector field ν the ((mean length" v0 φ 0. For almost every winding number λ of the flow ν the "mean length" vo can be defined as follows. Let u(t) be a regular nonclosed trajectory other than separatrix. Let и*0 = {u(s) : s € [0, t]}. Let (71,72) be a basis of transversals and the winding number in it equal λ = tana. Let Ti(t) be the number of intersections of иг0 with ji. Then vo = ρ hm —r-^- = Q lim , t-юо t sin a f-юо t cos a \ώ\ where ρ is the relative volume of the "wandering domain", i.e. ρ = -—-, where ώ = 0 for all points of periodic trajectories and ώ = ω otherwise. The invariant S ( "winding class") is expressed via v0 by the formula: S = v0 cos «[72] - v0 sin a[yi] € Hl(T2\ R). The trajectory portrait of a non-Hamiltonian divergence-free vector field is easily presented by means of the notions of a 1-marked letter-atom and equipped transversal. A 1-marked letter-atom is a letter-atom with one edge being cut. These may be classified in a manner as noncut (Hamiltonian) letter-atoms. In the interior of 1-marked letter-atoms there can lie (usual) letter-atoms. We associate all C^-invariants to the first intersection point of incoming wandering separatrix with a fixed transversal. Such a transversal with several marked points is called k-equipped. Theorem 4. For a.e. irrational winding number λ a non-Hamiltonian divergence-free vector field on the torus T2 (with holes) is classified up to C°° -conjugation by the invariant S and oo-equipped transversal. If for two systems with winding numbers λ of the type (Κ,σ) the S-invariants and (k + r)-equipped transversals coincide, where r = 3 + [σ], then the systems are Ck-conjugated (k > 1). Under a change of the transversal the (k + r)-equipment on the marked points is preserved but their order on the transverse circle might become different. Let us now consider the last case of the surface P2 = #?RP2 = T2#RP2.
190 Theorem 5. If almost all trajectories of a divergence-free vector field on P2 (with holes) are closed then such a system is classified by Theorem 2. Otherwise two cases are possible: M\ — the existence of both periodic trajectories nontrivial in Н\(Р2;Ъ) and nonclosed (wandering) trajectories other than separatrix, and M2 — the absence of nontrivial periodic trajectories but the existence of a separatrix connection nontrivial in H\(P2\ Z). In either case the system is C°°-classified by the invariant S £ Н1(Р2;Ж) and oo-equipped transversal For the winding numbers λ of the type (Κ, σ) the coincidence for two systems of their S-invariants and (k + r)-equipment implies their Ck-conjugation, where r = 3 + [σ]. For the surface P2 there already appear interval exchange transformations (which are usual for Euler characteristics χ < — 2) but they are nonori- entable and always periodic: Proposition 2. Let us consider the Poincare map on the transversal: ф/ж\ = J (?-aO + 0modl, if χ 6(0,?), У } \ x + 0mod 1, if x G (9,1). It is periodic for all q, Θ, and moreover the number of minimal periods equals 6. References [1] A.V. Bolsinov, Smooth trajectory equivalence of integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom, Mat. Sbornik, No 1 (1995). [2] A.V. Bolsinov and A.T. Fomenko, Trajectory equivalence of integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom. Classification theorem. Parts I, II, Mat. Sbornik 185(4, 5) (1994), 27-80, 27-78. [3] B.S. Kruglikov, Exact smooth classification of Hamiltonian vector fields on 2-manifolds, Preprint of ICTP, Trieste, November 1994, IC/94/314; Math. Notices, to appear. [4] A.B. Katok and A.M. Stepin, On the approximation of ergodic dynamical systems by periodic transformation, Dokl. AN SSSR 171(6) (1966).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 191-192 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Serret's curves Aleksandar T. Lipkovski University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Yugoslavia In his famous calculus course [1] J.-A. Serret discovered a family of plane algebraic curves, in response to a problem posed by Legendre, to find all algebraic curves with their arc length expressed by elliptic integrals of the first kind. Following the suggestion of Ju.R Solovjev in 1994, the author studied the family of Serret's curves extensively using the "Mathematica" computer package, and surprisingly discovered their very nice properties. Serret's definition of his curves was mechanical (see [2]). The loose end M(x,y) of two hinged rods of length y/p and y/p + 1, fixed at the point 0(0,0), is being moved according to the rule cosu; = cos(pa — (p + 1)/?). Here a and β are angles of AOPM. In this way one obtains the curve 5p. For ρ £ Q it is possible to express cos(pa — (ρ + 1)β) as a polynomial in sin a, sin/?, cos a, cos β. Clearly, there exist polynomial relations between χ and r, and у and r respectively: P(x,r) = 0, Q(y,r) = 0 (I) Eliminating r one obtains a polynomial relation F(x,y) = 0 (2) and the curve Sp (for ρ € Q) is algebraic. Let ρ = k/l be the irreducible representation (fc, / 6 N). Using the package "Mathematica", the author has computed several equations. The analysis of computational results shows that the relations (1) have the form ao + air2 + ... + anr2n 2 2 2 X = ; , X + У — Г , brm where η = к + I and m = 2k + (I - 1). Also, a0 = (-i)*, an = kk. The polynomial (2) is F(X, y) = ЬХ(Х2 + у2)Л+(/-1)/2 _ α() _ βι(χ2 + y2} _ _ аш{х2 + y2)k+l
192 for odd / = 2t +1 (t = 0,1,...). If / is even, the expression contains a radical y/x2 + y2 and should be squared once more. For odd /, the degree of the curve equals d — 2n = 2k + 21, Surprisingly, not only the lemniscate (for ρ — 1), but all Serret's curves for integer ρ are rational: Proposition 1. The curve Sv has genus g = 0 for ρ £ N. The proof is based on the calculation of the genus by resolution of singularities at infinity and in the finite plane. Serret showed that the arc length of these curves is expressed by elliptic differential. The author calculated the explicit equation of the corresponding elliptic curve: Proposition 2· The associated elliptic curve for Sp has the equation y2 — χ(χ - 1) ( χ ) and the j-invariant j = 28 Цт r^-. V ρ J p2(p+l)2 Therefore, the lemniscate is the only Serret's curve with complex multiplication. References [1] J.-A. Serret, Cours de calcul differentiel et integral^ 2nd French ed., Gauthier- Villars, Paris, 1879; Lehrbuch der Differential- und Integralrechnung, 2nd German ed., Teubner, Leipzig, 1899. [2] V.V. Prasolov and Ju.P. Solovjev, Elliptic functions. A special course, Ed. Math. College of Independent Moscow University, Moscow, 1993 (in Russian).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 193-194 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On cohomology of a sheaf over foliation with tangential (X, G)-structure Mikhail A. Malakhal'tsev Kazan State University, Kazan, Russia Let X be a smooth manifold endowed with a quasi-analytic left G-action, where G is a Lie group. A foliation with tangential (X, G)-structure on a smooth manifold Μ is a maximal atlas on Μ whose coordinate transforms have the form (u, x) <E U X V -> {φ{ν), Lg(u){x)) <E Rq X X, where U С R9, V С X are open sets and φ : U —>- R9, g : U —>· G are smooth mappings. The class of foliations with tangential (X, G)-structure naturally arises in various geometrical situations, and, in particular, contains foliations given by locally free actions of Lie groups, foliations determined by a structure of manifold over local algebra [2, 5], affine foliations [1,4]. The leaves of a foliation with tangential (X, G)-structure are Thurston's (X, G)-manifolds [3]. The action of the Lie group G on X induces the fundamental homo- morphism σ : g —> X(X) of Lie algebras, where X(X) is the Lie algebra of vector fields on X. Given an (X,G)-manifold L, we denote by X$(L) the sheaf (over L) of germs of fundamental vector fields σ(α), a £ g. Then for an (X, G)-foliation (Μ, Τ) we denote by Xq ' ' the sheaf of vector fields tangent to Τ whose restrictions to any leaf L are sections of XQ(L). Theorem 1. The cohomology group Ηι(Μ;Χ^ ' ') represents the space of essential infinitesimal deformations of tangential (X^G)-structure of{M,T). References [1] T. Inaba and K. Masuda, Tangentially affine foliations and ieafwise affine functions on the torus, Kodai Math. J. 16 (1993), 32-43. [2] V.V. Shurygin, Jet bundles as manifolds over algebras, Itogi Nauki i Tekhniki 19. Problemy geometrii, VINITI, Moscow, 1987, 3-22 (in Russian).
194 [3] W.P. Thurston, The geometry and topology of 3-manifolds, Mimeographed Lecture Notes, Princeton Univ., 1978/79, 1980. [4] I. Vaisman, dj-cohomologies of Lagrangtan foliations, Monatsh. fur Math. 106 (1988), 221-244. [5] V.V. Vishnevskii, A.P. Shirokov and V.V. Shurygin, Spaces over algebras, Kazan University, Kazan, 1985 (in Russian).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 195-197 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 The standard Cantor set is Lipschitz ambient homogeneous on the plane Joze Malesic * University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia A map h : Rn —> Rn is said to be bi-Lipschitz if there exists a positive constant С such that £ ρ(χ, у) < р(Чх), Чу)) < ср{х, у) for each pair of points ж, у £ Rn. A Cantor set С С Rn is said to be Lipschitz ambient homogeneous if for each pair of points c, d £ С there exists a bi-Lipschitz homeomorphism /*:(Rn,C,d)-+(Rn,C,c). Theorem· Let С be the standard ternary Cantor set lying in the interval [0,1] of the Ox-axis on the plane R2. Then С is Lipschitz ambient homogeneous in R2. Proof. The Cantor set С is self-similar: C = 50(C)U52(C) where So and £2 are similitudes acting as follows: So(x, У) = (§, |) , 52(z, V) = (f + |, |) , (x, У) e R2. Let J3 be a disk centered at the point f-,0j £ R2, with radius r £ i-,1]. Denote *bciC2...Cn = *bci ° bC2 О ... О »ЬСп * Research supported in part by the Ministry for Science and Technology of the Republic of Slovenia, grant No J1-7039-0101-95. The author would like to thank D. Repovs and E.V. Shchepin for useful suggestions.
196 and where cb c2,..., cn € {0, 2}. For example, B0 and B2 are disjoint congruent disks lying in B, B0o and B02 are disjoint congruent disks lying in B0 etc. For each point с £ С its first co-ordinate, written in triadic number system, has the form Qx\c2c^ ... where Ci, c2, С3,... £ {0,2}. Therefore, {c} = f| BC1C2.. n=l and in special case, {Ο} = Π B0» «=1 where 0n = 00.. .0 (the sequence of η zeroes). Now construct bi-Lipschitz homeomorphism h : (E2,C, d) —» (E2,C, c) for an arbitrary pair of points c,rf e С Without loss of generality we can assume that d — O. It is easy to construct a diffeomorphism / : E2 —>- E2 such that f(B) - В, /\я2\в = idR2\S> f(B0) = B2, f(B2) = B0 and /|в0, /|в2 are translations parallel to the Ox-axis. Because of the above properties, / is bi-Lipschitz. Now construct a sequence of homeomorphisms 9\, 52,5з? · · · given by the following definition: 9\ _ f id, ci = 0, \/, c1 = 2f Γ id, cn+1 = 0, 5n+1 " 1 5clC2..,n ο / ο 5"ΐ2_η, cn+1 = 2, for every natural number n. Obviously, each homeomorphism </n is bi-Lipschitz having the same Lipschitz constant С as /. Furthermore, 5n+i|R2\BCiC2 .Cn = id|R2\BciC2 cn, 5п+1(-Ос1С2...спо) — "cic2...cncn+i j
197 and gn+i\Bc c Cn0 is a translation. Now define K=gno gn-i o...og2ogu η <E N. The key fact is that there exists a constant D such that Jjp(x,y) < p{hn(x),hn(y)) < Dp{x,y) for every natural number η and for each pair of points x, у £ R2. To prove this fact two cases should be observed: (1) x, у e B0k \ B0k+2 for some k; (2) χ £ B0k \ B0k+i for some к and у £ 2?0*+2 ог у^се versa. In the second case the similarity of disks BClC2.„Cn should be used. It is easy to prove (directly or by means of the Arzela-Ascoli lemma) that the sequence of homeomorphisms Λι, Λ2, ^з, · · · converges pointwise to a map h. Therefore -рр{х,У) < p(h{x),h{y)) < Dp(x,y). By construction, h is onto, hence Л is a bi-Lipschitz homeomorphism. Obviously, h(0) = с and h(C) = C. D Remark 1. This result is a counterexample to the conjecture "Lipschitz homogeneous compacta in Mn are Lipschitz submanifolds ofRn" raised in the paper D. Repovs, A.B. Skopenkov and E.V. Shchepin, Cl-homogeneous compacta in Шп are Cl-submanifolds of Rn, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 124 (1996), 1219-1226. Remark 2. The homeomorphism h constructed above obviously is smooth at all points with eventually except of the center О of coordinate system. But h cannot be smooth at that point since it cannot be smooth everywhere, by a result of the cited paper.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 199-200 Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Orbital classification of integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom in a neighborhood of equilibrium Olga E. Orel Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia In this paper, we study the problem on orbital classification of integrable Hamiltonian systems (IHS) in a neighborhood of nondegenerate elliptic singular points. The work is based on the new theory of orbital classification of IHS with two degrees of freedom created by Bolsinov and Fomenko in [3]. Two integrable Hamiltonian systems ν and v' on manifolds Μ and M', respectively, are called continuously (smoothly) orbitally equivalent at elliptic singular points x0 6 Μ and x'0 6 M' if there exist neighborhoods U(xo) С Μ and U'(x'0) С Μ' of these singular points and a homeomor- phism (diffeomorphism) φ : U —» U' that takes the trajectories of the first system to the trajectories of the second one preserving the orientation. We note that the transformation need not preserve the time parameter on the trajectories. Let F : M4 —l· R2, F(x) = (h(x),f(x)) be a momentum mapping. We have rkdF(xo) — 0 at the elliptic singular point xq. We consider the Hamiltonian system ν = sgrad h and the functions Λ, /, and F to be restricted to some small four-dimensional neighborhood U of the singular point. The function h is assumed to be from C2 for the problem on continuous orbital invariant and from C4 for the problem on smooth invariant. Let Σ = F(K), where К — {χ £ Μ4 : rkdF(x) < 2}, be a bifurcation diagram. The image of a neighborhood of x0 under the momentum mapping has the form of a curvilinear angle. Its two sides are transversal curves that are belong to the bifurcation diagram and the vertex is the image of the elliptic point F(xo) (see [2]). The continuous (smooth in the case h £ C4) rotation function ρ is defined in the domain U \ K. It is equal to the ratio of frequencies of quasiperiodic motion on Liouville tori. It can be extended by continuity on the whole domain U.
200 Theorem. Two IHS ν and v' are continuously {smoothly) orbitally equivalent at nondegenerate elliptic singular points y0 and y'0 if and only if there exists a homeomorphism (diffeomorphism) φ : (Λ, /) —>· (Λ', /') from some neighborhood V of the point t/o to a neighborhood V of the point y'0 that possesses the following properties: (1) <p(yo) — y'o, ψ{Σ) = Σ'> where Σ, Σ' are the bifurcation diagrams, (2) φ preserves the rotation function. To prove Theorem, we use the representation of IHS near elliptic singular points obtained by Eliasson in [4]. Corollary. Orbital invariant of a nondegenerate elliptic singular point xq of IHS in general position is a triple (p(xo))sign(p\(xo)))sign(p2{xo))> where p(xo) is the limit of the rotation function at the point xq, and pi(xo) are the partial derivatives of the function ρ at the point xo with respect to directions of two lines tangent to the bifurcation diagram. The corollary makes it possible to calculate elliptic orbital invariants for most of classical integrable problems and compare them (from orbital point of view) at nondegenerate elliptic singular points. The invariants can be calculated using Birkhoff's theory of normal forms [1]. The author would like to express her gratitude to Prof. A.T. Fomenko and A.V. Bolsinov for setting the problem and for attention to this work. The work was performed under the auspices of Soros and INTAS. References [1] G.D. BirkhofF, Dynamical systems, Amer. Math. Soc, Providence, RI, 1927. [2] A.V. Bolsinov, Methods of calculation of the Fomenko-Zieschang invariant, Advances in Soviet Math. 4 (1991), 147-184. [3] A.V. Bolsinov and A.T. Fomenko, Orbital equivalence of integrable Hamiltonian systems with two degrees of freedom. Classification theorem I, II, Mat. Sbornik 185(4, 5) (1994), 27-80, 27-78 (in Russian). [4] L.H. Eliasson, Normal form for Hamiltonian systems with Poisson commuting integrals — elliptic case, Comm. Math. Helv. 65 (1990), 4-35.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 201 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On topological distinction of Waza continua in the theory of smooth dynamical systems Roman V. Ply kin Obninsk Institute of Atomic Energy, Obninsk, Kaluga region, Russia Waza continua are the most familiar examples of irreducible continua and have shapes (and both AlexandrofF-Cech homologies) as a distinguishing invariant. However, in the theory of smooth dynamical systems Waza continua with local structure of the direct product of a closed interval by the Cantor discontinuum do naturally appear as attractors of codimension 1 of smooth cascades. For these continua, appearing in applications, a complete classification can be given, by adding reals and rotation functionals of natural fibrations of codimension 1 to groups of AlexandrofF-Cech homologies.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 203-204 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Realization of geodesic flow within the monopolistic framework Zinaida G. Psiola Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Consider the complete monopolist who produces and sells к goods. His optimal strategy is confined in the choice of the prices (or amounts of output goods) which provides his maximal profit. Let V be a linear space, dim V = k) V* be the space dual to V. The commodity space is a submanifold X of the space V, all prices are from a submanifold Μ С V* called the price manifold. Let the demand function be a smooth map D : T*M —> X on the cotangent bundle T*M, the cost function be a smooth map С : X —» R [1]. The price dynamics for monopoly is defined by the Lagrangian /(p,p) = (D(p,p),p) - C(D(p,p)) [4], where (·, ·) is the natural pairing of V and V*. Note that the corresponding Euler-Lagrange equation fdl(p,p)\ _ dlfap) _ \ dp. )- dps ' s-1'···'*' has the energy integral ρ(ρΌφ-Οϋφ) -pD + C. Theorem. Consider а к-product monopoly on a price manifold Μ = {(pi,...,p*) | p. > λ5, 5= l,...,fc, 3tpt > At} with local coordinates (p\,..., рь). Let functions D(p,p) = (xl,..., xk), С = C(D{Pip)) = Хгх1 + .. . + \кхк, where xs{p) =0(p)pipjf 5=1,...,*, are amounts of output goods, smooth functions (β%8*(ρ)) define Riemannian metrics on Μ and λι,..., λ* are arbitrary nonegative constants corresponding to the cost of the unit output Then: 1. The price dynamics for this model coincides with the motion along geodesic lines on the Riemannian manifold Μ with the metric 9ij = lib(Pt-*tW(p).
204 2. If M is already a Riemannian manifold with metric gij(p\)..., Pk) then there exist parameters β^(ρ) such that price dynamics of the corresponding model of the к-product monopoly coincides with the geodesic flow on M. Note that this approach reduces the study of the monopolist's decisionmaking process to the tracing of geodesic flows on a Riemannian manifold [2, 3] as well as provides the solution for the problem of optimal synthesis concerned-with the affect of the current state on the general price strategy. The author gratefully acknowledges important comments and advice of Prof. V.V. Trofimov. References [1] A.T. Fomenko and T.L. Kunui, Topological Modelling for Visualization, Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford, 1995, V.V.Trofimov, Appendix F. [2] Z.G. Psiola, Topological aspects of the monopolist model, Adv. Math. Sc. 4 (1995), 167-168. [3] Z.G. Psiola, E.R. Rozendorn and V.V. Trofimov, Nonlinear economic dynamics, Fund, and Appl. Math., to appear. [4] A. Takayama, Mathematical Economics, Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, N.Y., 1985.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 205-206 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Local paraconvexity and local selection theorem Pavel V. Semenov Moscow State Pedagogical University, Moscow, Russia For a Banach space Υ and for its nonempty subsets A and В denote [A] the convex hull of A, R(A) the Chebyshev radius of A and dist(A : B) the supremum of all distances dist(a, B), a € A. Definition. A family С of nonempty closed subsets of a Banach space Υ is said to be equi-locally paraconvex at a point у G Υ if there exist r = r (y) > 0 and a = ot(y) € [0,1) such that for every L € С which intersects the open ball D(y)r) and for every А С D(y,r) f]L the following inequality holds: dist([A]:L) <a-R(A). The global version of paraconvexity was proposed by E. Michael [2]. In such global notion the quantifier 3a stands on the first place and the inequality above transforms into the inequality л di$t{[DnL]:L) < a R{D) for every open ball D. So, the (global) selection theorem was proved in [2] for a lower semicontinuous α-paraconvex-valued mappings over paracompacta. For examples and generalizations, see [3, 4, 5]. We prove the local selection theorem which is an analog of finite-dimensional selection theorem [1], but for an arbitrary paracompact domain. Shortly, we replace the equi-LCn conditions by equiAocal paraconvexity of the family of values. Theorem. Let F be a lower semicontinuous mapping from a paracompact space X into a Banach space Y. Let A be a closed subset of X and h : A-+Y be a continuous single-valued selection of the restriction F\a- Then h can be continuously extended to a selection of F\u for some open neighborhood U of A, whenever the family of values of F is equi-locally paraconvex at every point у € h{A).
206 References [1] Ε. Michael, Continuous selections II, Ann. Math. 64 (1956), 375-390. [2] E. Michael, Paraconvex sets, Scand. Math. 7 (1959), 372-376. [3] D. Repovs and P.V. Semenov, On functions of nonconvexity for graphs of continuous functions, J. Math. Anal, and Appl. 196 (1995), 1021-1029. [4] P.V. Semenov, Functionally paraconvex sets, Mat. Zametki 50 (1993), 75-80 (in Russian). [5] P.V. Semenov, On paraconvexity of star-like sets, Sib. Mat. Zh. 37 (1996), 399-405 (in Russian).
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 207-208 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Relative structural stability and relative structural instability of different degrees in Topological Dynamics Maxim V. Shamolin Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia By a structurally stable (coarse) system of differential equations we mean a system such that under small deformations that belong not to the entire class of functions, but only to some subclass, it is equivalent to the original system [1]. A system of differential equations specifying a sufficiently smooth vector field V will be referred to as structurally stable (coarse) with respect to a class of functions К (relatively structurally stable) if any vector field W defined with the aid of the class of functions К and obtained by deforming the field V in the standard topology relative to the class of functions К is topologically equivalent to the field V [2, 3]. It is known that coarse systems are not dense in the standard topology [4]. But if one considers coarse systems with respect to some subclass, then it may turn out that in the standard topology the given systems can generate an everywhere dense set. Relatively structurally instable vector fields which are the vector fields of different degrees of structural instability can be defined analogously. References [1] M.V. Shamolin, Relative structural stability in the problem of a body motion in a resisting medium, ICM'94. Abstracts of Short Communications, Zurich, 1994, 207.
208 [2] M.V. Shamolin, New two-parameter families of the phase patterns in the problem of a body motion in a resisting medium, ICIAM'95. Book of Abstracts, Hamburg, 1995, 436. [3] M.V. Shamolin, Qualitative methods to the dynamic model of an interaction of a rigid body with a resisting medium and new two-parametric families of the phase portraits, DynDays'95. Program and Abstracts, Lyon, 1995, 185. [4] S. Smale, Coarse systems are not dense, Period. Sbornik Perev. Ino'str. Statei 11(4) (1967), 107-112.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 209-210 Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow; May 27-31, 1996 Hausdorff dimension and dynamics of diffeomorphisms Evgenii V. Shchepin Steklov Mathematical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia There are two purposes of the lecture. The first is to point out an elementary proof of the Hilbert-Smith conjecture for Lipschitz actions [1]. The second is to point out consequences of this result for diffeomorphisms. We start with the second part. A diffeomorphism Λ of a manifold Mn is called a Lie diffeomorphism if it belongs to a compact Lie subgroup of Diff Mn — the group of all diffeomorphisms of Mn endowed by C^-topology. The following characterization theorem is implied by the Hilbert-Smith conjecture for Lipschitz actions. Theorem 1. A diffeomorphism h of a manifold Mn without boundary is a Lie diffeomorphism iff all orbits of points are bounded and, at any point χ £ Mn, the partial derivatives in any direction are bounded for all iterations of h. The proof of the above theorem relied on a non-elementary theorem of Yang [2] which stated that the cohomological dimension of the orbit space for a p-adic action have to be greater than the dimension of the original manifold. Yang's theorem may be replaced by the following elementary theorem for actions with infinite orbits. Theorem 2· Let a compact group G act effectively via Lipschitz homeo- morphism on a metric space with finite k-dimensional Hausdorff measure and all orbits of the action be infinite. Then the topological dimension of M/G is less than к. The last theorem implies the nonexistence of p-adic Lipschitz actions on every Hausdorff regular metric space. Here we call a metric on a space
210 Μ of topological dimension к Hausdorff regular if Μ has locally finite fc-dimensional Hausdorff measure. An important example of such metric is given by Riemannian metric on manifolds. References [1] D. Repovs and E.V. Scepin, A proof of the Hilbert-Smith conjecture for actions of Lipschitz maps, Institute of Mathematics at University of Ljubljana, Preprint series 34 (1996), 502. [2] C.T. Yang, p-Adic transformation groups, Michigan Math. J. 7 (1960), 201-218.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS International Topological Conference Dedicated to P.S.Alexandroff's 100th Birthday .Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On the bigraduated cohomology of manifolds over local algebras and its applications * Vadim V, Shurygin Kazan State University, Kazan, Russia Let M„ be a smooth η-dimensional manifold over a local algebra A [6, 5], AVM^ the bundle of exterior p-forms over M^, and A.A-lin<Mn^ the subbundle of Α-linear p-forms. Using the decomposition A<g>AlM£ = ΑιΑ_ιϊηΜ£ φ A1 M£ one can construct the bundles дг,5д^А с А®ЛГ+5М^ whose fibers ArjfM£ are spanned by exterior products ξι Λ ... Λ fr Λ ηχ Λ ... Λ η8, where fi,...,fr € ΑιχΜ* and are Α-linear 1-forms. Let us denote by ΩΓ'5({7) the A-ipodule of smooth sections of ЛГ,5М£ over an open set U С M^, and by Ωτ*8Μ£ the sheaf of germs of smooth sections of ΛΓ·5Μ^. For ω € ΩΓ'5(£7) we define άω to be the component of the exterior differential άω which belongs to ΩΓ+1»*(ί/). There holds dod = 0, and let Нг>а(М£) denote the corresponding cohomology groups: Let I bis an ideal of A, A = A/I the quotient algebra, and ЛХ-1шМ$ С A ® ЛрМ^ the subbundle of Α-linear forms. There arises the decomposition A ® Л*МА = A^_linM^ φ Λ^Μ^ and the corresponding bundles Λ^ΜηΑ. Let f&'(U), Jfc'M* and № .._MA A A A A,—Qllt denote, respectively, Α-module of smooth sections of the bundle ΑψΜ^ over J7, the sheaf of germs of smooth sections of this bundle, and the sheaf of Α-smooth A-valued s-forms on M„. The following statements take place: The operator d can be extended to the case of forms of Ω~5(ί7), and Hr/(M£) S Я" (мА, П|_аш(МА)). The research described in this publication was made possible in part by Grant No JGX100 from the International Science Foundation and Russian Government. Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 Pages 211-212
212 The canonical epimorphism ρ : A —> A induces the morphism of com- plexes ρ : Ω*'5(Μ^) —> Ω~5(Μ^) and the corresponding cohomology mor- Q phisms Η ρ : НГ>3(М£) -> #£5(М£). In the case when I = A, the maximal ideal of A, p : A -» R induces Hp : Hr>s(M£) -> Hr/(M%), where HpS(M£) are dp-cohomology groups [4] of M^ with respect to the canonical о Α-foliation (see [5]). Forl-valuedforms, there holdsЩ>8(М%) й Нг(м£,Of A_diff(M*))· For JAe bundle J^Wn of Α-jets in the sense of A. Weil (see [6, 5, 3]) tfiere Ao/d tf °'5(JAWn) S A®Q*(Wn), tf r'5(JAWn) =0i/r>0. The isomorphisms indicated above allow to represent in terms of ci-coho- mology the space Я1 (MA,T(MA)J, which contains infinitesimal deformations of Α-smooth structure on MA in the sense of Kodaira and Spenser [2], and the Atiyah classes [1] which are obstructions to the existence of Α-smooth connections in Α-smooth principal bundles. In addition, in terms of d-cohomology the obstruction to the prolongation of transversal con- o nection on Μ£ with respect to the canonical A-foliation [4] to A-smooth Α-linear connection is represented. References [1] M.F. Atiyah, Complex analytic connections in fibre bundles, Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 85 (1957), 181-207. [2] K. Kodaira, Complex Manifolds and Deformations of Complex Structures, Springer-Verlag, 1986. [3] I. Kolar, P.W. Michor and J. Slovak, Natural Operations in Differential Geometry, Springer-Verlag, 1993. [4] P. Molino, Riemannian Foliations, Birkhauser, 1988. [5] V. V. Shurygin, Manifolds over algebras and their applications to the geometry of jet bundles, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk (Russian Math. Surveys) 43(2) (1993), 75-106. [6] V.V. Vishnevsky, A.P. Shirokov and V.V. Shurygin, Spaces over algebras, Kazan University, 1985.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Page 213 Dedicated to P. S. Alexandroff 's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Minimal topologies on acting groups Yuri M. Smirnov Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia R. Arens has proved that if a group of homeomorphisms acts on a locally compact space then among all its topologies under which both group operations and the action are continuous, there is a minimal one. He defined it as a slight modification of the compact-open topology. It turns out that a criterion for the existence of a minimal topology can be given with the help of equivariant compactifications of a TychonofF space with a group of homeomorphisms acting on it. In general, a minimal topology need not exist. Arens' constructive definition of a topology, minimal in the case of a locally compact space, does not provide minimality in the general case.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 215-216 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Summands of the Turaev-Viro invariants Maxim V. Sokolov Chelyabinsk State University, Chelyabinsk, Russia In 1990 V.G. Turaev and O.Ya. Viro obtained an infinite set of 3-manifold numerical invariants TV(M)q [6]. The invariants are parametrized by roots of unity q of degree 2r such that q2 is a primitive root of degree r > 3. Let X be a simple spine of a 3-manifold M3. Fix r > 3. Let Gi,...,Gb be the 2-components of X. By a coloring of X we mean an arbitrary mapping <p:{Gu...,Gb}-> Zr_! = {0,1,..., r - 2}. Let us denote the set of colorings of X by Col(X). The Turaev-Viro invariant for a 3-manifold Μ is computed by the following formula TV(M)q= Σ I*. И, φ£θο\(Χ) where \X, <p\q € Q(q) is the weight of the colored spine X. A definition of \X, φ\4 is contained in [6]. Set Adm(X) = {ψ e Col(X) : \X,ip\q ^0}, and . S(<p) = {J{Cl(Gi): <p(Gi) = l (mod 2)}, where Cl(G{) denotes the closure of G{. It is known, that if φ 6 Adm(X) then S(cp) is a closed surface. Let us represent the set Adm(X) as the union of three sets Adm0(X)UAdmi(X)UAdm2(X) where 0) φ € Adm0(X) «=* ψ € Adm(X), S{<p) = 0; 1) ψ € Admi(X) <i=> y? € Adm(X), x{S{<p)) = 1 (mod 2); * Supported in part by ISSEP, Grant No a96-1639, INTAS, Grant No 94201.
216 2) φ € Adm2(X) <=»> j χ(5(ν)) ^ Q (mod 2) Theorem 1 ([2, 3]). The numbers tvn{M)4= Σ \χΜ9, where N £ {0,1,2}, are non-trivial (except the case r = 3, Af = 0) invariants of M, and TV(M)q = TV0{M)q + TVi(M)q + TV2(M)q. Lemma ([4]). Let X be a simple spine of a 3-manifold M. Then for any φ € Adm(A') and for any parameter q we have \X,<p\q = (-l)xW«»\X,<p\-r The following theorem is an easy corollary of the previous lemma. Theorem 2 ([4]). For any 3-manifold Μ and any q we have TVN(M)q = (-l)NTVN(M).q, where N G {0,1,2}, TV0(M)q + TV2(M)q = ±(TV(M)q + TV(M).q), 3ViWf = \{TV{M)q-TV{M).q). Remark. It follows from the Turaev-Walker theorem (see [5, 1]) that if r is odd then, up to normalization, the invariant TVo(M)q coincides with the square of the modulus of the so-called SO(3)-invariant re(M) defined in [5]. References [1] J.D. Roberts, Skein theory and Turaev-Viro invariants, Topology 34 (1995), 771-787. [2] M. Sokolov, Calculation of Turaev-Viro invariants for 3-manifolds and solution of Kauffman-Lins conjecture, Abstracts of XXX International Scientific Student Conference, Novosibirsk, 1992, 82-88 (in Russian). [3] M. Sokolov, The Turaev-Viro invariant for Ъ-manifolds is a sum of three invariants, Canad. Math. Bull., to appear. [4] M. Sokolov, On the absolute value of the SO ($)-invariant and other summands of the Turaev-Viro invariants, Submitted for publication to Banach Center Publications, available via q-algCeprints. math. duke. edu, 9601013. [5] V.G. Turaev, Quantum invariants of knots and 3-manifolds, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin-New York, 1994. [6] V.G. Turaev and O.Ya. Viro, State sum invariants of 3-manifolds and quantum 6j-symbols, Topology 31 (1992), 865-902.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 217-218 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Entire rational approximation of G-maps Dong Youp Suh Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Taejon, Korea Let G be a compact Lie group. A real algebraic G-variety in an orthogonal representation Ω is the common zeros of polynomials pi,.. .,pm : Ω -» R, which are invariant under the action of G on Ω. Let X, respectively Υ, be a real algebraic G-variety in an orthogonal representation Ω, respectively Ξ. A G-map / : X —> Υ is entire rational if there are polynomials Ρ : Ω —> Ξ and Q : Ω -> R with Q(x) φ 0 for all χ <E X such that f(x) = P(x)/Q(x) for all χ € X. The problem we are interested in is as follows: Equivariant Entire Rational Approximation Problem. When can a smooth G-map f : Χ —ϊ Υ between two nonsingular real algebraic G-varieties X and Υ be approximated by an entire rational G-map? The problem is motivated by non-equivariant works by Bochnak and Kucharz in [1], [2] and [3]. Here we consider the problem in the case when the target space Υ is the unit sphere of an orthogonal representation of G. Especially when Υ is either 1- or 2-dimensional sphere, the problem is closely related with equivariant vector bundle theory. Namely, sometimes Υ can be viewed as Grassmann G-variety, and the smooth G-map / : X —> Υ is a classifying G-map for some G-vector bundle over X. There are several results on these cases, and we state two of them. Theorem A ([5])· Let G be either an odd order group or any compact Abelian group. Let W be any-dimensional and V a 2-dimensional representation of G. Then any smooth G-map f : S(W) —>· S(V) can be approximated by an entire rational G-map. Theorem В ([5]). Let G be a finite cyclic group or any compact Abelian group. Let Ε and U%} г = 1,..., η be any-dimensional and V a 1-dimensional unitary representation of G. Let X = S(E) χ CP(U\) X ... X CP(Un) and
218 Υ = 5(R® V). Then any smooth G-map f : Χ χ Υ can be approximated by an entire rational G-map. Equivariant entire rational approximation is not always possible. In fact, under certain conditions any entire rational G-map to even-dimensional G-spheres are G-homotopically trivial [5]. On the other hand, if we allow the algebraic variety structure of X in a given differentiable manifold structure in the approximation of /, the problem becomes more topological and we r^fer the reader to [4] for such a case. References [1] J. Bochnak and W. Kucharz, Algebraic approximation of mappings into spheres, Michigan Math. J. 43 (1979), 119-125. [2] J. Bochnak and W. Kucharz, Realization of homotopy class by algebraic mappings, J. Reiner Angewandte Math. 377 (1987), 159-169. [3] J. Bochnak and W. Kucharz, On real algebraic morphisms into even-dimension- al spheres, Ann. Math. 128 (1988), 415-433. [4] K.H. Dovermann, M. Masuda and D.Y. Suh, Algebraic realization of equivariant vector bundles, J. Reiner Angewandte Math. 448 (1994), 31-64. [5] D.Y. Suh, Entire rational approximation of G-maps and strongly algebraic G-vector bundles, Preprint, 1996.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 219-221 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 Cohomological sphere bundles and parametrized Borsuk-Ulam theorems Alexei Yu. Volovikov Moscow Institute of Radiotechnics, Electronics and Automatics, Moscow, Russia We present a generalization of parametrized Borsuk-Ulam theorems proved by Dold [2] and Nakaoka [5]. Using the results of [3] we generalize Dold-Nakaoka's theorems to the case of cohomological sphere bundles. 1. All spaces are assumed to be paracompact and maps continuous. We use Cech cohomology groups with coefficients in a field k. Let G be a compact Lie group. For a G-space X define its equivari- ant cohomology using the Borel construction, i.e. Hq{X) = H*(Eq Xg X) [4, Chapter 3] where Eq —* Bq is the universal principle G-bundle. Assume that Τ С Υ and С С Ζ are closed invariant subspaces of a G-space Ζ and g : Ζ -* Υ is a G-map. A G-map (С,СП g~xT) -* (У,Т) arising from g induces a homomorphism of equivariant cohomology groups. Following [3] we denote its kernel by IndyTG. Let Ρ С Ε be a closed invariant subset of a G-space Ε and assume that the following diagram of G-spaces and G-maps is commutative: Χ Α Ε D E\P ψ Υ > В i.e. μ/χ = φι/χ for any x 6 f~l(E\P). We put A = f~lP and assume that Τ С Υ is a closed and G-invariant subspace.
220 Proposition, a) (φ%Ιηά%(Ε\Ρ)) · (Ш$т А) С Ind£TX. b) Let L be a linear subspace in Hq(Y,T) and e G lnd%(E \ P). If acp^e £ ΙηάγΤΧ for any 0 ф a 6 L then L Π lndyTA = 0, i.e. L —» Hq(A, Α Π г/_1Т) г*5 α monomorphism. Here <p£ : #£(£) -> Я£(У) is induced by ψ. 2. Let π : Ζ —> Υ be a surjective map. Suppose that the fibers of π are cohomology π-spheres over к and that the Leray sheaf of π is constant with fibers H*(Sn). In this case we say that π is an orientable cohomological sphere bundle. Then for connected Υ there is a Gysin sequence of π, we can define the Euler class e G Hn+l(Y) (depending on orientation) and Indy Ζ is the ideal (e) generated by e. Now assume that in the diagram (*) Υ and В are connected and that the maps Eq^gX -> EqXgY and EqXg{E\P) -> EqXgB arising from ν and μ are orientable cohomological sphere bundles with Euler classes e'G) eo respectively. Theorem. If a 6 Indy A then онр^ео G (^g)· Assume further that G acts trivially on Υ and B. Then Hq{Y) = Л* ® #*(У), ff£(fl) = Л* ® tf*(B) where A* = H*{BG) = H%(pt). Let ν and μ be orientable cohomological sphere bundles and assume that G preserves the orientations. Denote the equivariant Euler classes of fibers v~x у and μ~ιΒ by e'G and ео,ь respectively. Corollary. // the classes e'Gy and еа%ь are n°t zero divisors in A* then Σ A* ® H*(Y,T) -¥ Hq(A,A Π ι/"1^ is a monomorphism for j < dege^-degea. In particular, this assertion can be applied in the situation of torus or p-torus action without fixed points. We can define characteristic classes of an orientable cohomological π-sphere bundle (with an orientation preserving G-action) via the equivariant Euler class (cf. [1, Chapter 4, § 10]). For example, if G = Z2, к = Z2, г n+1 the fixed point set XG is empty, then ec = Σ tn+l~* X ti7j, Λ* = Ζ2Μ, i=o degi = 1, Wj are Stiefel-Whitney classes (by definition). If G = S1, к = Zp and XG = 0 then the equivariant Euler class coincides (for locally trivial bundle) with the characteristic polynomial of Nakaoka [5].
221 The above results can be generalized to the relative case [6] and to the case of multivalued mappings. References [1] G. Bredon, Sheaf theory, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1988. [2] A. Dold, Comment. Math. Helv. 63 (1988), 275-285. [3] E. Fadell and S. Husseini, Ergodic theory and dynamic systems 8 Special Issue (1988), 259-268. [4] W.C. Hsiang, Cohomology theory topological transformation groups, Springer- Verlag, Berlin, 1979. [5] M. Nakaoka, Lecture Notes in Math. 1411 (1989), 155-170. [6] A. Volovikov, Uspekhi Mat. Nauk 51(3) (1996), 189-190.
TOPOLOGY and APPLICATIONS Moscow: PHASIS, 1996 International Topological Conference Pages 223-224 Dedicated to P.S. Alexandroff's 100th Birthday Moscow, May 27-31, 1996 On some variant of the degree theory and its applications to problems of Hydrodynamics Victor G. Zvyagin Voronezh State University, Voronezh, Russia Let D be a boundary domain of a Banach space E. We introduce the idea of the degree of a map deg(A—g—k€, D, j/o) for maps of type A—g—ke : D —l· F where F is a Banach space, Л is a homomorphism, k€ is a completely continuous map and g is an Α-condensing map. This idea is used for the investigation of the problem of weak solutions of an initial-boundary problem for a vector function ν : Qt —* Kn, ν = (t>i,,.., vn) and a scalar function dv n dv fl — - μ0Αν + J2 Ъ -сг^- + Bi (v) " ] Div[a(t, s, v(s), Dv(s)] ds t=l - / L(t,s)B2{v)ds + gr<idp = f{t,s), {x,t)eQT, (1) Jo divv(a:,i) = 0, (x,t) G Qt, (2) v(3,t) = o, te[o,T], xedn, (3) υ(χ,0) = υ°(χ), же Ω, (4) where Ω С Rn is a bounded domain with C°°-smooth boundary, QT = Ω χ [Ο, Τ], μ0 > 0 is a constant, / : QT -¥ Rn, v° : Ω -* En are given functions, η = 2, 3. Here B{{v) = - Όίν[2μί(/2(υ))(ε(υ))], г = 1, 2, where ε(υ) is the matrix-function with components Sij(v) = - I —— + —— J, ' 2 у oxj oxi J / η \i/2 h(v) — ( Σ [ε«^(υ)]2 I j M«(5) is a continuous differential function and α(ί, 5, ν, w) is a matrix-function with components at-j(i, 5, v, it;) which satisfy the Lipschitz condition on variable w. Different models describing the motion of non-Newton fluids lead to investigation of the problem (l)-(4). Particular cases of this problem were investigated earlier by Litvinov, Oldroit, Sobolevskii, Agranovich and others.
224 Under some conditions on functions /zt-, г = 1, 2, and atJ(t, 5, v,tt;) the following theorem holds: Theorem. For any f e £2((0, Г), V*) and v° e Η the problem (l)-(4) has at least one solution υ € Χ Π L°°((0,T), Я), and tAi* solution satisfies the following estimate: n II ftv £«N011»+ Σ" - - t=i dxi L2((0,T),H) + ΙΙνΊΐ^((0,Τ),ν·) < С (l + ||/|b((o,T),v·) + \\А\н) with a constant С which does not depend on v°, f and v. Here Η is the closure of C°°-smooth finite solenoidal functions in L2(ii) о and V is the closure of the same functions in W^i^).
PHASIS Publishing House (Licence LR No 064705 / 09.08.1996) 42-44 Presnenski val, 123557 Moscow, Russia Phone/Fax: (7 095) 253-0820 URL: http://www.aha.ru/~phasis E-mail: phasis@aha.ru Printed in Russia by the RAS Printing House No 2 6 Shubinski per., 121099 Moscow
ISBN 5-7036-0017-0 The International Topological Conference, which was held in Moscow in the summer of 1996, had gathered a brilliant assembly of mathematicians. The Conference was dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the birth of Pavel Sergeevich Alexandroff, the founder of the world-famous Moscow topological school. The traditions of this school were sharply featured in the lectures delivered by mathematicians from Moscow State University, Steklov Mathematical Institute and other Russian scientific centers. The lectures presented by foreign guests of the Conference also comprised a great deal of interest. The papers collected in this book are written by the participants of this Conference. They give a clear impression of the current state of Topology, as one of the most actively developing mathematical sciences. Nowadays topological methods often find applications not only in other branches of Mathematics, but also in various problems of Physics and other sciences. Investigations in such fields as the behavior of dynamical systems and their stability, wave phenomena in a continuous medium, quantum mechanics and field theory are especially fruitful when they are carried out from the topological viewpoint. The present book will be of use both for professional mathematicians and for all investigators who apply topological methods in their research. PHASIS Publishing House Moscow