Using surgeries to construct 4-manifolds of arbitrary topology

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SUMMARY

This discussion centers on the construction of arbitrary connected 4-manifolds through surgeries on simply connected 4-manifolds. The inquiry references the established result for 3-manifolds, specifically Dehn surgery, and seeks a parallel in four dimensions. Key questions include the types of surgeries available and the potential for generating the first fundamental group through these surgeries. The conversation emphasizes the need for further exploration of differential topology techniques to better understand these concepts.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of 4-manifolds and their properties
  • Familiarity with surgery theory in topology
  • Knowledge of fundamental groups in algebraic topology
  • Basic concepts of differential topology
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the types of surgeries applicable to 4-manifolds
  • Explore the relationship between surgeries and the first fundamental group
  • Study Dehn surgery and its implications in higher dimensions
  • Investigate differential topology techniques and their applications
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Mathematicians, topologists, and students interested in manifold theory, particularly those focusing on 4-manifolds and surgery techniques.

straycat
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Hello all,

I am wondering whether it is possible to construct any arbitrary connected 4-manifold out of a sequence of surgeries on a simply connected 4-manifold. That is, suppose we are given a simply connected 4-manifold, and a multiply connected 4-manifold. Is it in general possible to construct the latter out of the fomer via a sequence of surgeries?

For example, mathworld states [1] that "Every compact connected 3-manifold comes from Dehn surgery on a link in S^3 (Wallace 1960, Lickorish 1962)." I am looking for a similar statement, but in four dimensions instead of three.

If so, then my next questions:

How many different types of surgeries are there?

Is it possible to construct a set S of generators {g} for the first fundamental group by saying, in effect, that each time we do a surgery, we add a few more generators? In two dimensions, I'm thinking that each surgery results in the addition of two more generators, although I'm not sure about that.

Any help would be appreciated.

David

[1] http://mathworld.wolfram.com/DehnSurgery.html
 
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wallace has a nice little book, called "differential topology, first steps", out of print, but in some libraries. you might like it. i.e. if you learn the techniques, you can think about your own question better.
 
Thanks - I'll check it out the next time I make it to the math library. (Hopefully in the next week or so!)

David
 

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