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arxiv: math/0611005 · v2 · submitted 2006-10-31 · 🧮 math.GT

Convexity of Morse Stratifications and Gradient Spines of 3-Manifolds

classification 🧮 math.GT
keywords flowgradientboundarycomplexityirreducibletrajectoriesemphmany
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We notice that a generic nonsingular gradient field $v = \nabla f$ on a compact 3-fold $X$ with boundary canonically generates a simple spine $K(f, v)$ of $X$. We study the transformations of $K(f, v)$ that are induced by deformations of the data $(f, v)$. We link the Matveev complexity $c(X)$ of $X$ with counting the \emph{double-tangent} trajectories of the $v$-flow, i.e. the trajectories that are tangent to the boundary $\d X$ at a pair of distinct points. Let $gc(X)$ be the minimum number of such trajectories, minimum being taken over all nonsingular $v$'s. We call $gc(X)$ the \emph{gradient complexity} of $X$. Next, we prove that there are only finitely many $X$ of bounded gradient complexity, provided that $X$ is irreducible and boundary irreducible with no essential annuli. In particular, there exists only finitely many hyperbolic manifolds $X$ with bounded $gc(X)$. For such $X$, their normalized hyperbolic volume gives an upper bound of $gc(X)$. If an irreducible and boundary irreducible $X$ with no essential annuli admits a nonsingular gradient flow with no double-tangent trajectories, then $X$ is a standard ball. All these and many other results of the paper rely on a careful study of the stratified geometry of $\d X$ relative to the $v$-flow. It is characterized by failure of $\d X$ to be \emph{convex} with respect to a generic flow $v$. It turns out, that convexity or its lack have profound influence on the topology of $X$. This interplay between intrinsic concavity of $\d X$ with respect to any gradient-like flow and complexity of $X$ is in the focus of the paper.

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