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Harvard University Department of Mathematics Tuesday August 30, 2016 (Day 1)
(a) Show that if V is a C∞-vector bundle over a compact manifold X, then there exists a vector bundle W over X such that V ⊕ W is trivializable, i.e. isomorphic to a trivial bundle. (b) Find a vector bundle W on S^2 , the 2-sphere, such that T ∗S^2 ⊕ W is trivializable.
p∈A
B(p).
(This is the “-fattening” of A.) For Y, Z bounded subsets of X define the Hausdorff distance between Y and Z by
dH (Y, Z) := inf { > 0 | Y ⊂ B(Z), Z ⊂ B(Y )}.
Show that dH defines a metric on the set X˜ := {A ⊂ X
∣ (^) A is closed and bounded}.
Let f : C → C be a nonconstant holomorphic function. Show that the image of f is dense in C.
(a) Let A ⊂ F ×^ = {z ∈ F | z 6 = 0} be a finite (multiplicative) subgroup. Prove that A is cyclic. (b) Prove that G = Gal(F/Q) is abelian.
Let C be the smooth projective curve over C with affine equation y^2 = f (x), where f ∈ C[x] is a square-free monic polynomial of degree d = 2n.
(a) Prove that the genus of C is n − 1. (b) Write down an explicit basis for the space of global differentials on C.
Harvard University Department of Mathematics Thursday September 1, 2016 (Day 3)
· · · → S^2 n−^1 → S^2 n+1^ → · · · ↓ ↓ · · · → Cn^ → Cn+1^ → · · ·.
Let S∞^ and C∞^ denote the union of these spaces, using these inclusions.
(a) Show that S∞^ is a contractible space. (b) The group S^1 appears as the unit norm elements of C×, which acts compatibly on the spaces Cn^ and S^2 n−^1 in the systems above. Calculate all the homotopy groups of the homogeneous space S∞/S^1.
(k + 1)(n − k)
then X does not contain any k-plane Λ ⊂ Pn.
gα := dx^2 + dy^2 yα where α ∈ R.
(a) Show that (H^2 , gα) is incomplete if α 6 = 2.
(b) Identify z = x + iy. For
a b c d
∈ SL(2, R), consider the map z 7 → azcz++db. Show that this defines an isometry of (H^2 , g 2 ).
(c) Show that (H^2 , g 2 ) is complete. (Hint: Show that the isometry group acts transitively on the tangent space at each point.)
Harvard University Department of Mathematics Tuesday August 30, 2016 (Day 1)
(a) Show that if V is a C∞-vector bundle over a compact manifold X, then there exists a vector bundle W over X such that V ⊕ W is trivializable, i.e. isomorphic to a trivial bundle. (b) Find a vector bundle W on S^2 , the 2-sphere, such that T ∗S^2 ⊕ W is trivializable.
Solution: Since V is locally trivializable and M is compact, one can find a finite open cover Ui, i = 1,... , n, of M and trivializations Ti : V |Ui → Rk. Thus, each Ti is a smooth map which restricts to a linear isomorphism on each fiber of V |Ui. Next, choose a smooth partition of unity {fi}i=1,...,n subordinate to the cover {Ui}i=1,...,n. If p : V → M is the projection to the base, then there are maps V |Ui → Rk, v 7 → fi(p(v))Ti(v) which extend (by zero) to all of V and which we denote by fiTi. Together, the fiTi give a map T : V → Rnk^ which has maximal rank k everywhere, because at each point of X at least one of the fi is non-zero. Thus V is isomorphic to a subbundle, T (V ), of the trivial bundle, Rnk. Using the standard inner product on Rnk^ we get an orthogonal bundle W = T (V )⊥^ which has the desired property. For the second part, embed S^2 into R^3 in the usual way, then
T S^2 ⊕ NS 2 = T R^3 |S 2
where NS 2 is the normal bundle to S^2 in R^3. Dualizing we get
T ∗S^2 ⊕ (NS 2 )∗^ = T ∗R^3 |S 2
which solves the problem with W = (NS 2 )∗.
p∈A
B(p).
(This is the “-fattening” of A.) For Y, Z bounded subsets of X define the Hausdorff distance between Y and Z by
dH (Y, Z) := inf { > 0 | Y ⊂ B(Z), Z ⊂ B(Y )}. Show that dH defines a metric on the set X˜ := {A ⊂ X
A is closed and bounded}.
Solution: We need to show that ( X, d˜ H ) is a metric space. First, since com- pact sets are bounded, dH (Y, Z) is well defined for any compact sets Y, Z. Secondly, dH (Y, Z) = dH (Z, Y ) ≥ 0 is obvious from the definition. We need to prove that the distance is positive when Y 6 = Z, and that dH satisfies the triangle inequality. First, let us show that dH (Y, Z) > 0 if Y 6 = Z. Without loss of generality, we can assume there is a point p ∈ Y ∩ Zc. Since Z is com- pact, it is closed, so there exists r > 0 such that Br(p) ⊂ Zc. In particular, p is not in Br(Z). Thus Y is not contained in Br(Z) and so dH (Y, Z) ≥ r > 0.
It remains to prove the triangle inequality. To this end, suppose that Y, Z, W are compact subsets of X. Fix 1 > dH (Y, Z), 2 > dH (Z, W ), then Y ⊂ B 1 (Z), Z ⊂ B 1 (Y ), Z ⊂ B 2 (W ), W ⊂ B 2 (Z)
Then dH (Y, Z) < 1 , dH (Z, W ) < 2. Let us prove that Y ⊂ B 1 + 2 (W ), the other containment being identical. Fix a point y ∈ Y. By our choice of 1 there exists a point z ∈ Z such that y ∈ N 1 (z). By our choice of 2 there exists a point w ∈ W such that z ∈ B 2 (w). Then
d(y, w) ≤ d(y, z) + d(z, w) ≤ 1 + 2 so y ∈ B 1 + 2 (w). This proves the containment. The other containment is identical, by just swapping Y, W. Thus dH (Y, W ) ≤ 1 + 2 But this holds for all 1 , 2 as above. Taking the infimum we obtain the result.
Solution: The universal covering space of T n^ is Rn, so that any path connected covering space of X is of the form Rn/G, for some subgroup G ⊆ π 1 (T n). We have π 1 (T n) = π 1 (S^1 ) × · · · × π 1 (S^1 ) = Zn, and Zn^ is acting on Rn^ by translation. Thus, G ⊆ Zn^ is free. Choose a Z-basis (v 1 ,... , vm) of G, and consider the (real!) change of basis taking (v 1 ,... , vm) to the first m standard basis vectors (e 1 ,... , em). Hence, G is acting on Rn^ by translation in the first m coordinates. Thus, Rn/G ' Rm/Zm^ × Rn−m^ ' T m^ × Rn−m.
Harvard University Department of Mathematics Wednesday August 31, 2016 (Day 2)
Prove that (^) √ I =
p⊇I p prime
p.
Solution: First, we prove for the case I = 0. Let f ∈
0 so that f n^ = 0, and f n^ ∈ p, for any prime ideal p ⊆ R. Let p be a prime ideal in R. The quotient ring R/p is an integral domain and, in particular, contains no nonzero nilpotent elements. Hence, f n^ + p = 0 ∈ R/p so that f ∈ p. Now, suppose that f /∈
p⊆R prime p. If I ⊆ R is a proper ideal, we consider the quotient ring π : R → S = R/I. Recall the bijective correspondence
{prime ideals in S} ↔ {prime ideals in R containing I} , p ↔ π−^1 (p)
Then,
√ I = π−^1 (
(^0) S ) = π−^1
p⊆S prime
p
p⊆S prime
π−^1 (p) =
q⊇I q prime
q.
ϕ : (s, θ) 7 → (r(s) cos θ, r(s) sin θ, z(s)).
Find an example of a curve c such that S has constant negative curvature −1.
Solution: ∂ϕ ∂s (s, θ) = (r′(s) cos θ, r′(s) sin θ, z′(s)) ∂ϕ ∂θ
(s, θ) = (−r(s) sin θ, r(s) cos θ, 0)
The coefficients of the first fundamental form are:
E = r′(s)^2 + z′(s)^2 = 1, F = 0, G = r(s)^2
Curvature: K = −
∂s^2
r′′(s) r(s) To get K = −1 we need to find r(s), z(s) such that
r′′(s) = r(s), r′(s)^2 + z′(s)^2 = 1.
A possible solution is r(s) = e−s^ with
z(s) =
1 − e−^2 tdt = Arcosh(r−^1 ) −
1 − r^2.
F (z) =
0
f (t)e^2 πiztdt
for z in the upper half-plane.
(a) Check that the above integral converges absolutely and uniformly in any region Im(z) ≥ C > 0. (b) Show that sup y> 0
0
|F (x + iy)|^2 dx = ‖f ‖^2 L (^2) (0,∞).
Solution: For Im(z) ≥ C > 0 we have
|f (t)e^2 πizt| ≤ |f (t)|e−^2 Cπt
thus with the Cauchy–Schwarz inequality ∫ (^) ∞
0
|f (t)e^2 πizt|dt ≤
0
|f (t)|^2 dt
0
e−^4 Cπtdt
Solution: The universal covers of RP 2 and RP 3 are S^2 and S^3 , respectively. Moreover, these covers are both 2-sheeted. Hence, we have
π 1 (X) = π 1 (RP 3 ) × π 1 (S^2 ) = π 1 (RP 3 ) = Z/ 2 Z
π 1 (Y ) = π 1 (RP 2 ) × π 1 (S^3 ) = π 1 (RP 2 ) = Z/ 2 Z.
Also, πk(RP j^ ) = πk(Sj^ ), for k > 1, j = 2, 3 so that
πk(X) = πk(S^2 ) × πk(S^3 ) = πk(Y ), k > 1.
To show that X and Y are not homotopy equivalent, we show that they have nonisomorphic homology groups. We make use of the following well-known singular homology groups (with integral coefficients)
H 0 (Sn) = Hn(Sn) = Z, Hi(Sk) = 0, i 6 = 0, n,
H 0 (RP 2 ) = H 2 (RP 2 ) = Z, H 1 (RP 2 ) = Z/ 2 Z, Hi(RP 2 ) = 0, i 6 = 0, 1 , 2 H 0 (RP 3 ) = Z, H 1 (RP 3 ) = Z/ 2 Z, Hi(RP 3 ) = 0, i 6 = 0, 1
Now, the Kunneth theorem in singular homology (with Z-coefficients) gives an exact sequence
i+j=
Hi(RP 3 )⊗Z Hj (S^2 ) → H 2 (X) →
i+j=
T or 1 (Hi(RP 3 ), Hj (S^2 )) → 0
Since Hk(S^2 ) is free, for every k, we have
H 2 (X) '
i+j=
Hi(RP 3 ) ⊗Z Hj (S^2 ) = Z
Similarly, we compute
H 2 (Y ) '
i+j=
Hi(RP 2 ) ⊗Z Hj (S^3 ) = Z/ 2 Z.
In particular, X and Y are not homotopy equivalent.
For the second part, B can be constructed as a cell complex with a single cell in dimensions 0, 2 , 4 , 6. Therefore, the homology of B is H 2 i(B) = Z, for i = 0,... , 3, and Hk(B) = 0 otherwise.
The Kunneth theorem for singular cohomology (with Z-coefficients), combined with the fact that Hk(Sn) is free, for any k, gives
Hk(A) '
i+j=k
Hi(S^2 ) ⊗ Hj (S^4 ).
Hence, H 2 i(A) = Z, for i = 0,... , 3, and Hk(A) = 0 otherwise. In order to show that A and B are not homotopy equivalent we will show that they have nonisomorphic homotopy groups. Consider the canonical quotient map C^4 − { 0 } → CP 3. This restricts to give a fiber bundle S^1 → S^7 → CP 3. The associated long exact sequence in homotopy
· · · → πk+1(CP 3 ) → πk(S^1 ) → πk(S^7 ) → πk(CP 3 ) → · · ·
together with the fact that π 3 (S 1 ) = π 4 (S^7 ), shows that π 4 (CP 3 ) = 0. How- ever, π 4 (A) = π 4 (S^4 ) = Z.
Let C be the smooth projective curve over C with affine equation y^2 = f (x), where f ∈ C[x] is a square-free monic polynomial of degree d = 2n.
(a) Prove that the genus of C is n − 1. (b) Write down an explicit basis for the space of global differentials on C.
Solution: For the first part, use Riemann-Hurwitz: the 2 : 1 map from C to the x-line is ramified above the roots of f and nowhere else (not even at infinity because deg f is even), so
2 − 2 g(C) = χ(C) = 2χ(P^1 ) − deg P = 4 − 2 n,
whence g(C) = n − 1. For the second, let ω 0 = dx/y. This differential is holomorphic, with zeros of order g − 1 at the two points at infinity. (Proof by local computation around those points and the roots of P , which are the only places where holomorphy is not immediate; dx has a pole of order −2 at infinity but 1/y has zeros of order n at the points above x = ∞, while 2y dy = P ′(x) dx takes care of the Weierstrass points.) Hence the space of holomorphic differentials contains
Ω := {P (x) ω 0 | deg P < g},
which has dimension g. Thus Ω is the full space of differentials, with basis {ωk = xkω 0 , k = 0,... , g − 1 }.
The fiber of Γ over the point [Λ] ∈ G(k, n) is just the subspace of PN^ corre- sponding to the vector space of polynomials vanishing on Λ; since the space of polynomials on Pn^ surjects onto the space of polynomials on Λ ∼= Pk, this is a subspace of codimension
(k+d k
in PN^. We deduce that
dim Γ = (k + 1)(n − k) + N −
k + d k
in particular, if the inequality of the problem holds, then dim Γ < N , so that Γ cannot dominate PN^.
gα := dx^2 + dy^2 yα where α ∈ R.
(a) Show that (H^2 , gα) is incomplete if α 6 = 2.
(b) Identify z = x + iy. For
a b c d
∈ SL(2, R), consider the map
z 7 → azcz++db. Show that this defines an isometry of (H^2 , g 2 ).
(c) Show that (H^2 , g 2 ) is complete. (Hint: Show that the isometry group acts transitively on the tangent space at each point.)
Solution: For the first part, consider the geodesic γ(t) with γ(0) = (0, 1), and γ′(0) = (^) ∂y∂. In order for (H^2 , gα) to be complete, this geodesics must exist for all t ∈ (−∞, ∞). By symmetry, this geodesic must be given by
x(t) = (0, y(t)).
Furthermore, x(t) must have constant speed, which we may as well take to be
2 yα^ = 1, or in other words,
y˙ = yα/^2.
If α 6 = 2, then the solution to this ODE is
y(t) =
α 2
)t + 1
) 1 /(1− α 2 )
thus, this geodesics persists only as long as (1 − α 2 )t + 1 ≥ 0. This set is always bounded from one side. Note that when α = 2, we get x(t) = (0, et), which
exists for all time.
(b) To begin, note that dz ⊗ d¯z = dx ⊗ dx + dy ⊗ dy, so we can write the metric as g 2 = 4 dz ⊗ dz¯ |z − z¯|^2 Let A ∈ SL(2, R), we compute
A∗dz =
adz cz + d − c
(az + b)dz (cz + d)^2 = (ad − bc)
dz (cz + d)^2
dz (cz + d)^2
and so A∗dz¯ = (^) (c¯zd+z¯d) 2. It remains to compute
A∗z − A∗^ ¯z = az + b cz + d
a¯z + b c¯z + d
z − z¯ |cz + d|^2
where we have used that A ∈ SL(2, R). Putting everything together we get
A∗g 2 = 4 dz ⊗ d¯z |cz + d|^4
|cz + d|^4 |z − ¯z|^2
= g 2 ,
and so SL(2, R) acts by isometry.
(c) By the computation from part (a), we know that the geodesic– let’s call it γ 0 (t)– through the point (0, 1) in the direction (0, 1) exists for all time. Let z = x + iy be any point in H^2. By an isometry, we can map this point to z = iy. Without loss of generality, let us assume y = 1. It suffices to show that we can find A ∈ SL(2, R) so that A(i) = i, and A∗V = (0, 1), where V is any unit vector in the tangent space TiH^2 , for then the geodesic through i with tangent vector V will be nothing but A−^1 (γ 0 (t)), and hence will exist for all time. First, observe that A(i) = i, if and only if A =
a b −b a
Consider the rotation matrix
A =
cos θ − sin θ sin θ cos θ
A straightforward computation shows that, in complex coordinates,
A∗V =
(cos θ + i sin θ)^2
V = e−^2
√ − 1 θV,
that is, A∗ : TiH^2 → TiH^2 acts as a rotation. Since θ is arbitrary, and the rotations act transitively on S^2 , we’re done.
g 7 = g 3 g 3 g 3 · g 7 · g− 3 1 g 3 − 1 g 3 −^1 = g 3 g 3 (g 7 j)g 3 − 1 g 3 −^1 = g 3 (gj
2 7 )g
− 1 3 = gj
3 7 , and hence j^3 ≡ 1 (mod 7). This is nontrivially solved by j = 2 and j = 4, and these two cases coincide: if for instance g 3 g 7 g− 3 1 = g^27 , then by replacing the generator g 3 with g^23 we instead see
g^23 g 7 (g 32 )−^1 = g 3 g^27 g 3 − 1 = g^47.
We have the following conjugacy classes of elements:
These five conjugacy sets give rise to five irreducible representations, which must be of dimensions 1, 1, 1, 3, and 3 (since these square-sum to |G| = 21).
Solution: The functions satisfying these conditions are precisely the C-linear combinations of e−^2 πiz^ , 1, and e^2 πiz^. Indeed such f is readily seen to satisfy the two conditions. Conversely (1) means that f descends to a function of q := e^2 πiz^ ∈ C∗, say f (z) = F (q), and then by (2) there is some M ′^ such that |F (q)| ≤ M ′^ max(|q|−^5 /π, |q|^5 /π) for all q, whence qF and q−^1 F have removable singularities at q = 0 and q = ∞ respectively, etc.