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ThurstonGeometrizationTheorem
Thurston's Geometrization Theorem is a central result in the field of 3-manifold topology. It describes a way to decompose any closed, orientable 3-manifold into geometric pieces. Originally, it was known as the Geometrization Conjecture, proposed by William Thurston in the late 1970s, but it became a theorem after Grigori Perelman's proof in 2003.
The theorem states:
"Every closed, orientable 3-manifold can be decomposed into a union of prime 3-manifolds which further decompose into irreducible 3-manifolds with geometric structures."
Here is what it means:
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A 3-manifold is a space that locally looks like ordinary three-dimensional space.
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A manifold is said to be closed if it is compact and has no boundary.
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A manifold is orientable if it has a consistent 'orientation' or 'direction'.
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A prime 3-manifold is a 3-manifold that can't be represented as a non-trivial connected sum of other 3-manifolds.
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An irreducible 3-manifold is one that can't be reduced any further in terms of simple connect sums or decomposition. In other words, any embedded 2-sphere bounds an embedded 3-ball.
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Geometric structures are specific types of differential structures that a manifold can have. Thurston identified eight types of geometric structures for 3-manifolds:
- Euclidean 3-space (E^3)
- Hyperbolic 3-space (H^3)
- Spherical 3-space (S^3)
- The product of the plane and the real line (E^2 x R)
- The product of the hyperbolic plane and the real line (H^2 x R)
- The product of the sphere and the real line (S^2 x R)
- The universal cover of SL(2,R) (SL(2,R))
- The Heisenberg group (also known as Nil)
The Geometrization Theorem, along with its corollary the Poincaré Conjecture, brought profound impacts to the field of 3-manifold topology and led to an increased understanding of the structures and classifications of 3-manifolds.