Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Ricci Flow: Techniques and Applications: Part IV: Long-Time Solutions and Related Topics [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 374 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 855 g
  • Sari: Mathematical Surveys and Monographs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2015
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 0821849913
  • ISBN-13: 9780821849910
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 374 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 855 g
  • Sari: Mathematical Surveys and Monographs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2015
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 0821849913
  • ISBN-13: 9780821849910
Teised raamatud teemal:
Ricci flow is a powerful technique using a heat-type equation to deform Riemannian metrics on manifolds to better metrics in the search for geometric decompositions. With the fourth part of their volume on techniques and applications of the theory, the authors discuss long-time solutions of the Ricci flow and related topics.

In dimension 3, Perelman completed Hamilton's program to prove Thurston's geometrization conjecture. In higher dimensions the Ricci flow has remarkable properties, which indicates its usefulness to understand relations between the geometry and topology of manifolds. This book discusses recent developments on gradient Ricci solitons, which model the singularities developing under the Ricci flow. In the shrinking case there is a surprising rigidity which suggests the likelihood of a well-developed structure theory. A broader class of solutions is ancient solutions; the authors discuss the beautiful classification in dimension 2. In higher dimensions they consider both ancient and singular Type I solutions, which must have shrinking gradient Ricci soliton models. Next, Hamilton's theory of 3-dimensional nonsingular solutions is presented, following his original work. Historically, this theory initially connected the Ricci flow to the geometrization conjecture. From a dynamical point of view, one is interested in the stability of the Ricci flow. The authors discuss what is known about this basic problem. Finally, they consider the degenerate neckpinch singularity from both the numerical and theoretical perspectives.

This book makes advanced material accessible to researchers and graduate students who are interested in the Ricci flow and geometric evolution equations and who have a knowledge of the fundamentals of the Ricci flow.

Arvustused

This book concludes a long series of carefully written and extremely detailed textbooks on the Ricci flow, which have instantly become mandatory reading for any graduate student who is interested in doing research in this field. They are also an excellent resource for established researchers in this and neighboring fields." - Valentino Tosatti, Zentralblatt MATH

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Contents of Volume One and Parts I, II, and III of Volume Two xv
Notation and Symbols xvii
Chapter 27 Noncompact Gradient Ricci Solitons
1(34)
1 Basic properties of gradient Ricci solitons
1(8)
2 Estimates for potential functions of gradient solitons
9(6)
3 Lower bounds for the scalar curvature of nonflat nonexpanding gradient Ricci solitons
15(2)
4 Volume growth of shrinking gradient Ricci solitons
17(9)
5 Logarithmic Sobolev inequality
26(3)
6 Gradient shrinkers with nonnegative Ricci curvature
29(4)
7 Notes and commentary
33(2)
Chapter 28 Special Ancient Solutions
35(34)
1 Local estimate for the scalar curvature under Ricci flow
35(5)
2 Properties of singularity models
40(9)
3 Noncompact 2-dimensional ancient solutions with finite width
49(14)
4 Ancient solutions with positive curvature
63(3)
5 Notes and commentary
66(3)
Chapter 29 Compact 2-Dimensional Ancient Solutions
69(64)
1 Statement of the classification result and outline of its proof
69(1)
2 The Ricci flow equation on S2 and some intuition
70(3)
3 The King-Rosenau solution in the various coordinates
73(3)
4 A priori estimates for the pressure function
76(3)
5 The almost everywhere vanishing of R∞
79(2)
6 First properties of the backward limit ν∞
81(2)
7 Isoperimetric constant of metrics on S2
83(4)
8 Characterizing round solutions
87(13)
9 Classifying the backward pointwise limit
100(6)
10 An unrescaled cigar backward Cheeger--Gromov limit
106(2)
11 Irreducible components of Wν
108(3)
12 The heat-type equation satisfied by Q
111(6)
13 That Q -- Q implies the solution is the King-Rosenau solution
117(7)
14 The evolution equation for Q
124(1)
15 The quantity Q must be identically zero
125(4)
16 The equivalence of Q and Q
129(3)
17 Notes and commentary
132(1)
Chapter 30 Type I Singularities and Ancient Solutions
133(38)
1 Reduced distance of Type A solutions
133(12)
2 Reduced volume at the singular time for Type I solutions
145(9)
3 Type I solutions have shrinker singularity models
154(5)
4 Some results on Type I ancient solutions
159(10)
5 Notes and commentary
169(2)
Chapter 31 Hyperbolic Geometry and 3-Manifolds
171(26)
1 Introduction to hyperbolic space
171(7)
2 Topology and geometry of hyperbolic 3-manifolds
178(7)
3 The Margulis lemma and hyperbolic cusps
185(7)
4 Mostow rigidity
192(1)
5 Seifert fibered manifolds and graph manifolds
193(1)
6 Notes and commentary
194(3)
Chapter 32 Nonsingular Solutions on Closed 3-Manifolds
197(16)
1 Introduction
197(3)
2 The main result on nonsingular solutions
200(3)
3 The three cases of nonsingular solutions
203(4)
4 The positive and zero cases of nonsingular solutions
207(3)
5 The negative case---sequential limits must be hyperbolic
210(1)
6 Notes and commentary
211(2)
Chapter 33 Noncompact Hyperbolic Limits
213(44)
1 Main results on hyperbolic pieces
214(5)
2 Harmonic maps parametrizing almost hyperbolic pieces
219(7)
3 Proof of the stability of hyperbolic limits
226(11)
4 Incompressibility of boundary tori of hyperbolic pieces
237(17)
5 Notes and commentary
254(3)
Chapter 34 Constant Mean Curvature Surfaces and Harmonic Maps by IFT
257(22)
1 Constant mean curvature surfaces
257(3)
2 Harmonic maps near the identity of Sn
260(6)
3 Existence of harmonic maps near the identity of manifolds with negative Ricci curvature
266(7)
4 Application of Mostow rigidity to the existence of isometries
273(5)
5 Notes and commentary
278(1)
Chapter 35 Stability of Ricci Flow
279(28)
1 Linear stability of Ricci flow
280(7)
2 Analytic semigroups and maximal regularity theory
287(9)
3 Dynamic stability results obtained using linearization
296(8)
4 Dynamic stability results obtained by other methods
304(3)
Chapter 36 Type II Singularities and Degenerate Neckpinches
307(20)
1 Numerical simulation of solutions with degenerate neckpinches
309(9)
2 Matched asymptotic studies of degenerate neckpinches
318(6)
3 Ricci flow solutions with degenerate neckpinch singularities
324(2)
4 Concluding remarks
326(1)
Appendix K Implicit Function Theorem
327(26)
1 The implicit function theorem
327(5)
2 Holder spaces and Sobolev spaces on manifolds
332(4)
3 Harmonic maps and their linearization
336(11)
4 Spectrum of Ad on p-forms on Sn
347(5)
5 Notes and commentary
352(1)
Bibliography 353(18)
Index 371
Bennett Chow, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.

Sun-Chin Chu, National Chung Cheng University, Chia-Yi, Taiwan.

David Glickenstein, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.

Christine Guenther, Pacific University, Forest Grove, OR, USA.

James Isenberg, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA.

Tom Ivey, The College of Charleston, SC, USA.

Dan Knopf, University of Texas at Austin, TX, USA.

Peng Lu, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA.

Feng Luo, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, USA.

Lei Ni, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.