1547671870-The_Ricci_Flow__Chow

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CHAPTER 6

Three-manifolds of positive Ricci curvature


The topic of this chapter is Hamilton's application of the Ricci flow to the
classification of closed 3-manifolds of positive Ricci curvature, in particular
his landmark result that any such manifold is diffeomorphic to a spherical
space form. Let (Mn, g) be a closed Riemannian n-manifold with positive
Ricci ~vature. By Myers' Theorem, Mn is compact. Since its universal
cover Mn also has positive Ricci curvature, it too is compact; and hence the
fundamental group of Mn is finite. When n = 3, we have the well-known


CONJECTURE 6.1 (Poincare Conjecture). Any simply connected closed
smooth 3-manifold is diffeomorphic to 53.

A successful resolution of the Poincare Conjecture implies that M3 is
diffeomorphic to 53. Furthermore, there is also the following

CONJECTURE 6.2 (Spherical Space Form Conjecture). Any finite group
of diffeomorphisms acting freely on 53 is conjugate to a group of isometries
of the standard sphere.

In the presence of a complete proof of the Spherical Space Form Conjec-
ture, the diffeomorphism .M3 ;:.::::; 53 would imply that M^3 is diffeomorphic to
53 /r, where r is a finite subgroup of 0 ( 4). In other words, one could con-
clude that M^3 is diffeomorphic to a space form, all of which are classified.

[126] As a consequence, M^3 would admit a metric of constant positive sec-


tional curvature. It is this last statement - the existence of a constant pos-


itive sectional curvature metric on any closed 3-manifold with positive Ricci
curvature - that Hamilton proved in 1982 using the then newly-introduced
Ricci flow. Our goal in this chapter is to present his result:

THEOREM 6.3 (Hamilton). Let (M^3 ,go) be a closed Riemannian 3-


manifold of positive Ricci curvature. Then a unique solution g (t) of the

normalized Ricci flow with g (0) = go exists for all positive time; and as


t-----+ oo, the metrics g(t) converge exponentially fast in every cm-norm to a


metric g 00 of constant positive sectional curvature.

Although the result is stated for the normalized flow, it will be more
convenient to work with the unnormalized flow for as long as possible. The
two equations differ only by rescaling space and time. (See Subsection 9.1.)
In fact, the theorem may be interpreted as a statement of the convergence
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