Limits of Geometries

Abstract:

A geometric transition is a continuous path of geometric structures that changes type, meaning that the model geometry, i.e., the homogeneous space on which the structures are modeled, abruptly changes. In order to rigorously study transitions, one must define a notion of geometric limit at the level of homogeneous spaces, describing the basic process by which one homogeneous geometry may transform into another. We develop a general framework to describe transitions in the context that both geometries involved are represented as sub-geometries of a larger ambient geometry. Specializing to the setting of real projective geometry, we classify the geometric limits of any sub-geometry whose structure group is a symmetric subgroup of the projective general linear group. As an application, we classify all limits of three-dimensional hyperbolic geometry inside of projective geometry, finding Euclidean, Nil, and Sol geometry among the limits. We prove, however, that the other Thurston geometries, in particular \mathbbH^2 \times \mathbbR and \widetilde \textup SL_2\mathbbR, do not embed in any limit of hyperbolic geometry in this sense.

SEEK ID: https://publications.h-its.org/publications/891

DOI: 10.1090/tran/7174

Research Groups: Groups and Geometry

Publication type: Journal

Journal: Transactions of the American Mathematical Society

Citation: Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 370(9):6585-6627

Date Published: 1st Sep 2018

Registered Mode: imported from a bibtex file

Authors: Daryl Cooper, Jeffrey Danciger, Anna Wienhard

help Submitter
Citation
Cooper, D., Danciger, J., & Wienhard, A. (2018). Limits of Geometries. In Transactions of the American Mathematical Society (Vol. 370, Issue 9, pp. 6585–6627). American Mathematical Society (AMS). https://doi.org/10.1090/tran/7174
Activity

Views: 4760

Created: 7th Jan 2020 at 22:31

Last updated: 5th Mar 2024 at 21:24

help Tags

This item has not yet been tagged.

help Attributions

None

Powered by
(v.1.14.2)
Copyright © 2008 - 2023 The University of Manchester and HITS gGmbH