History
Felix and Henri conjectured the uniformization theorem for (the Riemann surfaces of) algebraic curves. extended this to arbitrary multivalued analytic functions and gave informal arguments in its favor. The first rigorous proofs of the general uniformization theorem were given by and . Paul Koebe later gave several more proofs and generalizations. The history is described in ; a complete account of uniformization up to the 1907 papers of Koebe and Poincaré is given with detailed proofs in (the Bourbaki-type pseudonym of the group of fifteen mathematicians who jointly produced this publication).Classification of connected Riemann surfaces
Every Riemann surface is the quotient of the free, proper and holomorphic action of a discrete group on its universal covering and this universal covering, being a simply connected Riemann surface, is holomorphically isomorphic (one also says: "conformally equivalent" or "biholomorphic") to one of the following: #the Riemann sphere #the complex plane #the unit disk in the complex plane. For compact Riemann surfaces, those with universal cover the unit disk are precisely the hyperbolic surfaces of genus greater than 1, all with non-abelian fundamental group; those with universal cover the complex plane are the Riemann surfaces of genus 1, namely the complex tori or elliptic curves with fundamental group ; and those with universal cover the Riemann sphere are those of genus zero, namely the Riemann sphere itself, with trivial fundamental group.Classification of closed oriented Riemannian 2-manifolds
On an oriented 2-manifold, a Riemannian metric induces a complex structure using the passage to isothermal coordinates. If the Riemannian metric is given locally as : then in the complex coordinate ''z'' = ''x'' + i''y'', it takes the form : where : so that ''λ'' and ''μ'' are smooth with ''λ'' > 0 and , ''μ'', < 1. In isothermal coordinates (''u'', ''v'') the metric should take the form : with ''ρ'' > 0 smooth. The complex coordinate ''w'' = ''u'' + i ''v'' satisfies : so that the coordinates (''u'', ''v'') will be isothermal locally provided theMethods of proof
Many classical proofs of the uniformization theorem rely on constructing a real-valued harmonic function on the simply connected Riemann surface, possibly with a singularity at one or two points and often corresponding to a form of Green's function. Four methods of constructing the harmonic function are widely employed: the Perron method; the Schwarz alternating method; Dirichlet's principle; and Weyl's method of orthogonal projection. In the context of closed Riemannian 2-manifolds, several modern proofs invoke nonlinear differential equations on the space of conformally equivalent metrics. These include theHilbert space methods
In 1913 Hermann Weyl published his classic textbook "Die Idee der Riemannschen Fläche" based on his Göttingen lectures from 1911 to 1912. It was the first book to present the theory of Riemann surfaces in a modern setting and through its three editions has remained influential. Dedicated to Felix Klein, the first edition incorporated Hilbert's treatment of the Dirichlet problem using Hilbert space techniques; Brouwer's contributions to topology; and Koebe's proof of the uniformization theorem and its subsequent improvements. Much later developed his method of orthogonal projection which gave a streamlined approach to the Dirichlet problem, also based on Hilbert space; that theory, which included Weyl's lemma on elliptic regularity, was related to Hodge's theory of harmonic integrals; and both theories were subsumed into the modern theory of elliptic operators and Sobolev spaces. In the third edition of his book from 1955, translated into English in , Weyl adopted the modern definition of differential manifold, in preference to triangulations, but decided not to make use of his method of orthogonal projection. followed Weyl's account of the uniformisation theorem, but used the method of orthogonal projection to treat the Dirichlet problem. describes the approach in Weyl's book and also how to shorten it using the method of orthogonal projection. A related account can be found in .Nonlinear flows
Richard S. Hamilton showed that the normalized Ricci flow on a closed surface uniformizes the metric (i.e., the flow converges to a constant curvature metric). However, his proof relied on the uniformization theorem. The missing step involved Ricci flow on the 2-sphere: a method for avoiding an appeal to the uniformization theorem (for genus 0) was provided by ; a short self-contained account of Ricci flow on the 2-sphere was given in .Generalizations
Koebe proved the general uniformization theorem that if a Riemann surface is homeomorphic to an open subset of the complex sphere (or equivalently if every Jordan curve separates it), then it is conformally equivalent to an open subset of the complex sphere. In 3 dimensions, there are 8 geometries, called the eight Thurston geometries. Not every 3-manifold admits a geometry, but Thurston's geometrization conjecture proved by Grigori Perelman states that every 3-manifold can be cut into pieces that are geometrizable. The simultaneous uniformization theorem of Lipman Bers shows that it is possible to simultaneously uniformize two compact Riemann surfaces of the same genus >1 with the same quasi-Fuchsian group. The measurable Riemann mapping theorem shows more generally that the map to an open subset of the complex sphere in the uniformization theorem can be chosen to be a quasiconformal map with any given bounded measurable Beltrami coefficient.See also
* ''p''-adic uniformization theoremNotes
References
Historic references
*. * * * * * * * * * * * * *Historical surveys
* * * *, translation oHarmonic functions
Perron's method * * * * * * * * * * * Schwarz's alternating method * * * Dirichlet principle * * * Weyl's method of orthogonal projection * * * Sario operators * *Nonlinear differential equations
Beltrami's equation * * * * * Harmonic maps * Liouville's equation * * * Flows on Riemannian metrics * * * * * * * * * *General references
* * . * * * * * * *External links