LECTURE 3. FLOER HOMOLOGY
In particular, DuR 'T/u + DvR 'T/v = DR*'T/ and hence
llDR'T/llw1.p < llDuR 'T/ullLP + llDvR *'T/vllLP
< C1 (llDuRDUR 'T/ullLP + llDvRDVR 'T/vllLP)
< C1 (llDR(,8RDR*'T/ - ,8R
1
'T/)llLP
+ llDR((l - ,8R)DR*'T/ + ,8R
1
'T/)llLP)
< 2c1 II DRDR 'T/ II LP+ R 2c1 II DR 'T/ - DR'T/lb + 4c1 R ll'T/llLP
< 2c1 llDRDR*'T/lb +
2
~
1
llDR*'T/llLP + ~ ll'T/llw1,p
< 2c1 llDRDR 'T/llLv + 2c1 + R 4coc2 llDR 'T/llLv ·
In the last step we have used (33). With (2c 1 +4c 0 c 2 )/R:::;1/2 we obtain
llDR*'T/llw1,p::::: 4c1 llDRDR*'T/llLP
181
as claimed. This proves the proposition. D
With the uniform estimates for the inverse established, it follows easily from
the implicit function theorem that, for R > 0 sufficiently large, there exists a unique
solution WR E M(z, x; H, J) near v#Ru of the form
WR= expV#Ru(DR*'T/)
for some 'T/ E W^2 ·P (IR x 81 , ( v# RU) *TM). The details are standard and will not be
carried out here. If the original moduli spaces M(z, y; H , J) and M(y, x; H , J) are
zero dimensional, then the images of the gluing maps describe precisely the ends of
the one dimensional moduli space M(z, x; H, J). In other words, the complement
of these images is a compact I-manifold. This justifies the formula (29) in the proof
of Theorem 3.5.
3.4. Invariance of Floer homology
The proof of Theorem 3.6 is based on the following construction. We assume
throughout that J is fixed and discuss the dependence of the Floer homology groups
on the Hamiltonian function. Variations of the almost complex structure can easily
be incorporated by an analogout construction. Given two regular Hamiltonians
H°', Hf3 E Hreg choose a homotopy H°'/3 = { H:,f} from H°' to Hf3 such that
Hs ,t °'/3 - { - HHf' /3
t )
for s :S -1,
for s ~ 1.
Now consider the time-dependent version of equation (7) with Ht replaced by Hs ,t·
This equation has the form
(34) 08 U + J(u)OtU - 'lH~f (u) = 0.
We consider solutions of (34) which satisfy the limit conditions
(35) lim u(s, t) = x°'(t), lim u(s, t) = xf3(t)
S--+- 00 S--+00
for some periodic solutions x°' E P(H°') and xf3 E P(Hf3). The solutions of (34)
and (35) form a moduli space