Lens space explained
A lens space is an example of a topological space, considered in mathematics. The term often refers to a specific class of 3-manifolds, but in general can be defined for higher dimensions.
In the 3-manifold case, a lens space can be visualized as the result of gluing two solid tori together by a homeomorphism of their boundaries. Often the 3-sphere and
, both of which can be obtained as above, are not counted as they are considered trivial special cases.
The three-dimensional lens spaces
were introduced by
Heinrich Tietze in 1908. They were the first known examples of 3-manifolds which were not determined by their
homology and
fundamental group alone, and the simplest examples of closed manifolds whose homeomorphism type is not determined by their homotopy type. J. W. Alexander in 1919 showed that the lens spaces
and
were not homeomorphic even though they have isomorphic fundamental groups and the same homology, though they do not have the same homotopy type. Other lens spaces (such as
and
) have even the same homotopy type (and thus isomorphic fundamental groups and homology), but not the same homeomorphism type; they can thus be seen as the birth of
geometric topology of manifolds as distinct from
algebraic topology.
There is a complete classification of three-dimensional lens spaces, by fundamental group and Reidemeister torsion.
Definition
The three-dimensional lens spaces
are quotients of
by
-actions. More precisely, let
and
be
coprime integers and consider
as the unit sphere in
. Then the
-action on
generated by the homeomorphism
(z1,z2)\mapsto(e2\pi ⋅ z1,e2\pi ⋅ z2)
is free. The resulting quotient space is called the
lens space
.
This can be generalized to higher dimensions as follows: Let
be integers such that the
are coprime to
and consider
as the unit sphere in
. The lens space
is the quotient of
by the free
-action generated by
(z1,\ldots,zn)\mapsto
⋅ z1,\ldots,
⋅ zn).
In three dimensions we have
Properties
The fundamental group of all the lens spaces
is
independent of the
.
The homology of the lens space
is given by