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2002 Laminar branched surfaces in $3$–manifolds
Tao Li
Geom. Topol. 6(1): 153-194 (2002). DOI: 10.2140/gt.2002.6.153

Abstract

We define a laminar branched surface to be a branched surface satisfying the following conditions: (1) Its horizontal boundary is incompressible; (2) there is no monogon; (3) there is no Reeb component; (4) there is no sink disk (after eliminating trivial bubbles in the branched surface). The first three conditions are standard in the theory of branched surfaces, and a sink disk is a disk branch of the branched surface with all branch directions of its boundary arcs pointing inwards. We will show in this paper that every laminar branched surface carries an essential lamination, and any essential lamination that is not a lamination by planes is carried by a laminar branched surface. This implies that a 3–manifold contains an essential lamination if and only if it contains a laminar branched surface.

Citation

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Tao Li. "Laminar branched surfaces in $3$–manifolds." Geom. Topol. 6 (1) 153 - 194, 2002. https://doi.org/10.2140/gt.2002.6.153

Information

Received: 16 February 2001; Revised: 8 July 2001; Accepted: 18 March 2002; Published: 2002
First available in Project Euclid: 21 December 2017

zbMATH: 1067.57011
MathSciNet: MR1914567
Digital Object Identifier: 10.2140/gt.2002.6.153

Subjects:
Primary: 57M50
Secondary: 57M25 , 57N10

Keywords: 3–manifold , branched surface , lamination

Rights: Copyright © 2002 Mathematical Sciences Publishers

Vol.6 • No. 1 • 2002
MSP
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