In the mathematical field of geometric topology, a Heegaard splitting (pronounced as /da/) is a decomposition of a compact oriented 3-manifold that results from dividing it into two handlebodies.
Let V and W be handlebodies of genus g, and let ƒ be an orientation reversing homeomorphism from the boundary of V to the boundary of W. By gluing V to W along ƒ we obtain the compact oriented 3-manifold
M=V\cupfW.
Every closed, orientable three-manifold may be so obtained; this follows from deep results on the triangulability of three-manifolds due to Moise. This contrasts strongly with higher-dimensional manifolds which need not admit smooth or piecewise linear structures. Assuming smoothness the existence of a Heegaard splitting also follows from the work of Smale about handle decompositions from Morse theory.
The decomposition of M into two handlebodies is called a Heegaard splitting, and their common boundary H is called the Heegaard surface of the splitting. Splittings are considered up to isotopy.
The gluing map ƒ need only be specified up to taking a double coset in the mapping class group of H. This connection with the mapping class group was first made by W. B. R. Lickorish.
Heegaard splittings can also be defined for compact 3-manifolds with boundary by replacing handlebodies with compression bodies. The gluing map is between the positive boundaries of the compression bodies.
A closed curve is called essential if it is not homotopic to a point, a puncture, or a boundary component.[1]
A Heegaard splitting is reducible if there is an essential simple closed curve
\alpha
A Heegaard splitting is stabilized if there are essential simple closed curves
\alpha
\beta
\alpha
\beta
\alpha
\beta
A Heegaard splitting is weakly reducible if there are disjoint essential simple closed curves
\alpha
\beta
\alpha
\beta
A Heegaard splitting is minimal or minimal genus if there is no other splitting of the ambient three-manifold of lower genus. The minimal value g of the splitting surface is the Heegaard genus of M.
Vi,Wi,i=1,...c,n
Hi,i=1,...c,n
\partial+Vi=\partial+Wi=Hi
\partial-Wi=\partial-Vi+1
M
Hi
Vi\cupWi
M
A generalized Heegaard splitting is called strongly irreducible if each
Vi\cupWi
There is an analogous notion of thin position, defined for knots, for Heegaard splittings. The complexity of a connected surface S, c(S), is defined to be
\operatorname{max}\left\{0,1-\chi(S)\right\}
\{c(Si)\}
S3
R4
xyz
S3
S3
R4
C2
S3
C2
1/\sqrt{2}
T2
S3
(M,H)
\left(S3,T2\right)
S3
T3
S1
x0
S1
\Gamma=S1 x \{x0\} x \{x0\}\cup \{x0\} x S1 x \{x0\}\cup \{x0\} x \{x0\} x S1
\Gamma
T3-V
T3
T3
S3
S3
Suppose now that M is a closed orientable three-manifold.
H1
H2
H
S1
S2
There are several classes of three-manifolds where the set of Heegaard splittings is completely known. For example, Waldhausen's Theorem shows that all splittings of
S3
Splittings of Seifert fiber spaces are more subtle. Here, all splittings may be isotoped to be vertical or horizontal (as proved by Yoav Moriah and Jennifer Schultens).
classified splittings of torus bundles (which includes all three-manifolds with Sol geometry). It follows from their work that all torus bundles have a unique splitting of minimal genus. All other splittings of the torus bundle are stabilizations of the minimal genus one.
A paper of classifies the Heegaard splittings of hyperbolic three-manifolds which are two-bridge knot complements.
Computational methods can be used to determine or approximate the Heegaard genus of a 3-manifold. John Berge's software Heegaard studies Heegaard splittings generated by the fundamental group of a manifold.
Heegaard splittings appeared in the theory of minimal surfaces first in the work of Blaine Lawson who proved that embedded minimal surfaces in compact manifolds of positive sectional curvature are Heegaard splittings. This result was extended by William Meeks to flat manifolds, except he proves that an embedded minimal surface in a flat three-manifold is either a Heegaard surface or totally geodesic. Meeks and Shing-Tung Yau went on to use results of Waldhausen to prove results about the topological uniqueness of minimal surfaces of finite genus in
\R3
\R3
Heegaard diagrams, which are simple combinatorial descriptions of Heegaard splittings, have been used extensively to construct invariants of three-manifolds. The most recent example of this is the Heegaard Floer homology of Peter Ozsvath and Zoltán Szabó. The theory uses the
gth
The idea of a Heegaard splitting was introduced by . While Heegaard splittings were studied extensively by mathematicians such as Wolfgang Haken and Friedhelm Waldhausen in the 1960s, it was not until a few decades later that the field was rejuvenated by, primarily through their concept of strong irreducibility.