In complex geometry, a Hopf surface is a compact complex surface obtained as a quotient of the complex vector space (with zero deleted)
\Complex2\setminus\{0\}
\Complex2
Higher-dimensional analogues of Hopf surfaces are called Hopf manifolds.
-infty
In the course of classification of compact complex surfaces, Kodaira classified the primary Hopf surfaces.
A primary Hopf surface is obtained as
H=(\Complex2\setminus\{0\})/\Gamma,
\Gamma
\gamma
\gamma
\gamma
(x,y)\mapsto(\alphax+λyn,\betay)
\alpha,\beta\in\Complex
0<|\alpha|\leq|\beta|<1
λ=0
\alpha=\betan
These surfaces contain an elliptic curve (the image of the x-axis) and if
λ=0
λ=0
\alpham=\betan
(x,y)\mapstoxmy-n
The Picard group of any primary Hopf surface is isomorphic to the non-zero complex numbers
\Complex*
has proven that a complex surface is diffeomorphic to
S3 x S1
Any secondary Hopf surface has a finite unramified cover that is a primary Hopf surface. Equivalently, its fundamental group has a subgroup of finite index in its center that is isomorphic to the integers. classified them by finding the finite groups acting without fixed points on primary Hopf surfaces.
Many examples of secondary Hopf surfaces can be constructed with underlying space a product of a spherical space forms and a circle.
. Heinz Hopf . Studies and Essays Presented to R. Courant on his 60th Birthday, January 8, 1948 . Interscience Publishers, Inc., New York . 0023054 . 1948 . Zur Topologie der komplexen Mannigfaltigkeiten. 167–185.