Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Facets of contact geometry
- 2 Contact manifolds
- 3 Knots in contact 3—manifolds
- 4 Contact structures on 3—manifolds
- 5 Symplectic fillings and convexity
- 6 Contact surgery
- 7 Further constructions of contact manifolds
- 8 Contact structures on 5—manifolds
- Appendix A The generalised Poincaré lemma
- Appendix B Time-dependent vector fields
- References
- Notation index
- Author index
- Subject index
6 - Contact surgery
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Facets of contact geometry
- 2 Contact manifolds
- 3 Knots in contact 3—manifolds
- 4 Contact structures on 3—manifolds
- 5 Symplectic fillings and convexity
- 6 Contact surgery
- 7 Further constructions of contact manifolds
- 8 Contact structures on 5—manifolds
- Appendix A The generalised Poincaré lemma
- Appendix B Time-dependent vector fields
- References
- Notation index
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
‘The afternoon he came to say goodbye there was a positively surgical atmosphere in the flat.’
Christopher Isherwood, Goodbye to BerlinThe proof of the Lutz—Martinet theorem in Chapter 4 was based on Dehn surgery along transverse knots in a given contact 3—manifold. This construction does not admit any direct extension to higher dimensions. In 1982, Meckert [178] developed a connected sum construction for contact manifolds. Now, forming the connected sum of two manifolds is the same as performing a surgery along a 0—sphere (i.e. two points, one in each of the two manifolds we want to connect). Since a point in a contact manifold is the simplest example of an isotropic submanifold, this intimated that there might be a more general form of ‘contact surgery’ along isotropic submanifolds. On the other hand, Meckert's construction is so complex that such a generalisation did not immediately suggest itself.
Then, in 1990, Eliashberg [65] did indeed find such a general form of contact surgery. In fact, he solved a much more intricate problem about the topology of Stein manifolds, involving the construction of complex structures on certain handlebodies such that their boundaries are strictly pseudoconvex (and hence inherit a contact structure), see Example 2.1.7 and Section 5.3.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- An Introduction to Contact Topology , pp. 286 - 331Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008