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In mathematics, an incompressible surface is a surface properly embedded in a
3-manifold In mathematics, a 3-manifold is a space that locally looks like Euclidean 3-dimensional space. A 3-manifold can be thought of as a possible shape of the universe. Just as a sphere looks like a plane to a small enough observer, all 3-manifolds lo ...
, which, in intuitive terms, is a "nontrivial" surface that cannot be simplified. In non-mathematical terms, the surface of a suitcase is compressible, because we could cut the handle and shrink it into the surface. But a Conway sphere (a sphere with four holes) is incompressible, because there are essential parts of a knot or link both inside and out, so there is no way to move the entire knot or link to one side of the punctured sphere. The mathematical definition is as follows. There are two cases to consider. A sphere is incompressible if both inside and outside the sphere there are some obstructions that prevent the sphere from shrinking to a point and also prevent the sphere from expanding to encompass all of space. A surface other than a sphere is incompressible if any disk with its boundary on the surface spans a disk in the surface."An Introduction to Knot Theory", W. B. Raymond Lickorish, p. 38, Springer, 1997, Incompressible surfaces are used for decomposition of
Haken manifold In mathematics, a Haken manifold is a compact, P²-irreducible 3-manifold that is sufficiently large, meaning that it contains a properly embedded two-sided incompressible surface. Sometimes one considers only orientable Haken manifolds, in whi ...
s, in
normal surface theory Normal(s) or The Normal(s) may refer to: Film and television * ''Normal'' (2003 film), starring Jessica Lange and Tom Wilkinson * ''Normal'' (2007 film), starring Carrie-Anne Moss, Kevin Zegers, Callum Keith Rennie, and Andrew Airlie * ''Norma ...
, and in the study of the fundamental groups of 3-manifolds.


Formal definition

Let ''S'' be a compact surface properly embedded in a
smooth Smooth may refer to: Mathematics * Smooth function, a function that is infinitely differentiable; used in calculus and topology * Smooth manifold, a differentiable manifold for which all the transition maps are smooth functions * Smooth algebraic ...
or PL 3-manifold ''M''. A compressing disk ''D'' is a disk embedded in ''M'' such that : D \cap S = \partial D and the intersection is transverse. If the curve ∂''D'' does not bound a disk inside of ''S'', then ''D'' is called a nontrivial compressing disk. If ''S'' has a nontrivial compressing disk, then we call ''S'' a compressible surface in ''M''. If ''S'' is neither the
2-sphere A sphere () is a geometrical object that is a three-dimensional analogue to a two-dimensional circle. A sphere is the set of points that are all at the same distance from a given point in three-dimensional space.. That given point is the ...
nor a compressible surface, then we call the surface (geometrically) incompressible. Note that 2-spheres are excluded since they have no nontrivial compressing disks by the Jordan-Schoenflies theorem, and 3-manifolds have abundant embedded 2-spheres. Sometimes one alters the definition so that an incompressible sphere is a 2-sphere embedded in a 3-manifold that does not bound an embedded 3-ball. Such spheres arise exactly when a 3-manifold is not irreducible. Since this notion of incompressibility for a sphere is quite different from the above definition for surfaces, often an incompressible sphere is instead referred to as an essential sphere or a reducing sphere.


Compression

Given a compressible surface ''S'' with a compressing disk ''D'' that we may assume lies in the interior of ''M'' and intersects ''S'' transversely, one may perform embedded 1- surgery on ''S'' to get a surface that is obtained by compressing ''S'' along ''D''. There is a
tubular neighborhood In mathematics, a tubular neighborhood of a submanifold of a smooth manifold is an open set around it resembling the normal bundle. The idea behind a tubular neighborhood can be explained in a simple example. Consider a smooth curve in the ...
of ''D'' whose closure is an embedding of ''D'' × 1,1with ''D'' × 0 being identified with ''D'' and with :(D\times 1,1\cap S=\partial D\times 1,1 Then :(S-\partial D\times(-1,1))\cup (D\times \) is a new properly embedded surface obtained by compressing ''S'' along ''D''. A non-negative complexity measure on compact surfaces without 2-sphere components is ''b''0(''S'') − ''χ''(''S''), where ''b''0(''S'') is the zeroth
Betti number In algebraic topology, the Betti numbers are used to distinguish topological spaces based on the connectivity of ''n''-dimensional simplicial complexes. For the most reasonable finite-dimensional spaces (such as compact manifolds, finite simplicia ...
(the number of connected components) and ''χ''(''S'') is the Euler characteristic. When compressing a compressible surface along a nontrivial compressing disk, the Euler characteristic increases by two, while ''b''0 might remain the same or increase by 1. Thus, every properly embedded compact surface without 2-sphere components is related to an incompressible surface through a sequence of compressions. Sometimes we drop the condition that ''S'' be compressible. If ''D'' were to bound a disk inside ''S'' (which is always the case if ''S'' is incompressible, for example), then compressing ''S'' along ''D'' would result in a disjoint union of a sphere and a surface homeomorphic to ''S''. The resulting surface with the sphere deleted might or might not be isotopic to ''S'', and it will be if ''S'' is incompressible and ''M'' is irreducible.


Algebraically incompressible surfaces

There is also an algebraic version of incompressibility. Suppose \iota: S \rightarrow M is a proper embedding of a compact surface in a 3-manifold. Then ''S'' is ''π''1-injective (or algebraically incompressible) if the induced map :\iota_\star: \pi_1(S) \rightarrow \pi_1(M) on fundamental groups is injective. In general, every ''π''1-injective surface is incompressible, but the reverse implication is not always true. For instance, the Lens space ''L''(4,1) contains an incompressible Klein bottle that is not ''π''1-injective. However, if ''S'' is
two-sided In mathematics, specifically in topology of manifolds, a compact codimension-one submanifold F of a manifold M is said to be 2-sided in M when there is an embedding ::h\colon F\times 1,1to M with h(x,0)=x for each x\in F and ::h(F\times 1,1\c ...
, the
loop theorem In mathematics, in the topology of 3-manifolds, the loop theorem is a generalization of Dehn's lemma. The loop theorem was first proven by Christos Papakyriakopoulos in 1956, along with Dehn's lemma and the Sphere theorem. A simple and useful ver ...
implies Kneser's lemma, that if ''S'' is incompressible, then it is ''π''1-injective.


Seifert surfaces

A
Seifert surface In mathematics, a Seifert surface (named after German mathematician Herbert Seifert) is an orientable surface whose boundary is a given knot or link. Such surfaces can be used to study the properties of the associated knot or link. For exam ...
''S'' for an oriented link ''L'' is an oriented surface whose boundary is ''L'' with the same induced orientation. If ''S'' is not ''π''1 injective in ''S''3 − ''N''(''L''), where ''N''(''L'') is a
tubular neighborhood In mathematics, a tubular neighborhood of a submanifold of a smooth manifold is an open set around it resembling the normal bundle. The idea behind a tubular neighborhood can be explained in a simple example. Consider a smooth curve in the ...
of ''L'', then the loop theorem gives a compressing disk that one may use to compress ''S'' along, providing another Seifert surface of reduced complexity. Hence, there are incompressible Seifert surfaces. Every Seifert surface of a link is related to one another through compressions in the sense that the equivalence relation generated by compression has one equivalence class. The inverse of a compression is sometimes called embedded arc surgery (an embedded 0-surgery). The genus of a link is the minimal genus of all Seifert surfaces of a link. A Seifert surface of minimal genus is incompressible. However, it is not in general the case that an incompressible Seifert surface is of minimal genus, so ''π''1 alone cannot certify the genus of a link. Gabai proved in particular that a genus-minimizing Seifert surface is a leaf of some taut, transversely oriented
foliation In mathematics (differential geometry), a foliation is an equivalence relation on an ''n''-manifold, the equivalence classes being connected, injectively immersed submanifolds, all of the same dimension ''p'', modeled on the decomposition of ...
of the knot complement, which can be certified with a taut sutured manifold hierarchy. Given an incompressible Seifert surface ''S'' for a knot ''K'', then the fundamental group of ''S''3 − ''N''(''K'') splits as an HNN extension over ''π''1(''S''), which is a
free group In mathematics, the free group ''F'S'' over a given set ''S'' consists of all words that can be built from members of ''S'', considering two words to be different unless their equality follows from the group axioms (e.g. ''st'' = ''suu''−1 ...
. The two maps from ''π''1(''S'') into ''π''1(''S''3 − ''N''(''S'')) given by pushing loops off the surface to the positive or negative side of ''N''(''S'') are both injections.


See also

*
Haken manifold In mathematics, a Haken manifold is a compact, P²-irreducible 3-manifold that is sufficiently large, meaning that it contains a properly embedded two-sided incompressible surface. Sometimes one considers only orientable Haken manifolds, in whi ...
*
Virtually Haken conjecture In topology, an area of mathematics, the virtually Haken conjecture states that every compact, orientable, irreducible three-dimensional manifold with infinite fundamental group is ''virtually Haken''. That is, it has a finite cover (a covering ...
*
Thurston norm In mathematics, the Thurston norm is a function on the second homology group of an oriented 3-manifold introduced by William Thurston, which measures in a natural way the topological complexity of homology classes represented by surfaces. Definitio ...
*
Boundary-incompressible surface In low-dimensional topology, a boundary-incompressible surface is a two-dimensional surface within a three-dimensional manifold whose topology cannot be made simpler by a certain type of operation known as boundary compression. Suppose ''M'' is a 3 ...


References

* W. Jaco, ''Lectures on Three-Manifold Topology'', volume 43 of CBMS Regional Conference Series in Mathematics. American Mathematical Society, Providence, R.I., 1980. * http://users.monash.edu/~jpurcell/book/08Essential.pdf * https://homepages.warwick.ac.uk/~masgar/Articles/Lackenby/thrmans3.pdf * D. Gabai, "Foliations and the topology of 3-manifolds." Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. (N.S.) 8 (1983), no. 1, 77–80. {{DEFAULTSORT:Incompressible Surface 3-manifolds