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  2. 3-manifold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3-manifold

    In mathematics, a 3-manifold is a topological space that locally looks like a three-dimensional Euclidean space. A 3-manifold can be thought of as a possible shape of the universe. Just as a sphere looks like a plane (a tangent plane) to a small and close enough observer, all 3-manifolds look like our universe does to a small enough observer ...

  3. Hyperbolic 3-manifold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperbolic_3-manifold

    Hyperbolic geometry is the most rich and least understood of the eight geometries in dimension 3 (for example, for all other geometries it is not hard to give an explicit enumeration of the finite-volume manifolds with this geometry, while this is far from being the case for hyperbolic manifolds).

  4. Introduction to 3-Manifolds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduction_to_3-Manifolds

    Familiar examples of two-dimensional manifolds include the sphere, torus, and Klein bottle; this book concentrates on three-dimensional manifolds, and on two-dimensional surfaces within them. A particular focus is a Heegaard splitting, a two-dimensional surface that partitions a 3-manifold into two handlebodies. It aims to present the main ...

  5. The geometry and topology of three-manifolds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_geometry_and_topology...

    The geometry and topology of three-manifolds is a set of widely circulated notes for a graduate course taught at Princeton University by William Thurston from 1978 to 1980 describing his work on 3-manifolds. They were written by Thurston, assisted by students William Floyd and Steven Kerchoff. [1]

  6. Manifold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manifold

    For two dimensional manifolds a key invariant property is the genus, or "number of handles" present in a surface. A torus is a sphere with one handle, a double torus is a sphere with two handles, and so on. Indeed, it is possible to fully characterize compact, two-dimensional manifolds on the basis of genus and orientability.

  7. Classification of manifolds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classification_of_manifolds

    There is a unique connected 0-dimensional manifold, namely the point, and disconnected 0-dimensional manifolds are just discrete sets, classified by cardinality. They have no geometry, and their study is combinatorics. A connected compact 1-dimensional manifold without boundary is homeomorphic (or diffeomorphic if it is smooth) to the circle.

  8. Three-dimensional space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-dimensional_space

    Most commonly, it is the three-dimensional Euclidean space, that is, the Euclidean space of dimension three, which models physical space. More general three-dimensional spaces are called 3-manifolds. The term may also refer colloquially to a subset of space, a three-dimensional region (or 3D domain), [1] a solid figure.

  9. Geometric topology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geometric_topology

    In all dimensions, the fundamental group of a manifold is a very important invariant, and determines much of the structure; in dimensions 1, 2 and 3, the possible fundamental groups are restricted, while in dimension 4 and above every finitely presented group is the fundamental group of a manifold (note that it is sufficient to show this for 4- and 5-dimensional manifolds, and then to take ...

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