
Computers, Rigidity, and Moduli
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The main sort of algorithmic problem that arises is recognition: is the presented object equivalent to some standard one? If it is difficult to determine whether the problem is solvable, then the original object has doppelgängers--that is, other objects that are extremely difficult to distinguish from it.
Many new questions emerge about the algorithmic nature of known geometric theorems, about "dichotomy problems," and about the metric entropy of moduli space. Weinberger studies them using tools from group theory, computability, differential geometry, and topology, all of which he explains before use. Since several examples are worked out, the overarching principles are set in a clear relief that goes beyond the details of any one problem.
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Content
- Cover Page
- Half-title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction and Overview
- I.1 Reflections on Light
- I.2 Variational Problems
- I.3 The Best Is Often Beautiful
- I.4 Moduli Space (Phase Space)
- I.5 Calculus and Beyond
- I.6 Some Fine Print
- I.7 The Limits of Computation (and of Proof)
- I.8 And Beyond
- I.9 The Method of Eastern Philosophy
- I.10 Fractals and Geometricization
- Notes
- Chapter 1: Group Theory
- 1.1 Presentations of Groups
- 1.2 Problems about Groups
- Appendix: Some Refinements and Extensions
- 1.3 Dehn Functions
- 1.4 Group Homology
- 1.5 Arithmetic Groups
- 1.6 Realization of Sequences of Groups as Group Homology
- Notes
- Chapter 2: Designer Homology Spheres
- 2.1 Fundamental Groups
- 2.2 Algorithmic Impossibility Results
- 2.3 Nabutovsky's Thesis
- 2.4 The Classification of Homology Spheres
- Appendix 1: Surgery, Homology Surgery, and All That
- Appendix 2: Isotopy of Hypersurfaces
- Appendix 3: The Novikov Conjecture
- 2.5 Simplicial Norm
- 2.6 Homology Spheres with Nonzero Simplical Norm
- Notes
- Chapter 3: The Roles of Entropy
- 3.1 The Problem of Closed Geodesics
- 3.2 Entropy of Free Loopspaces and Closed Contractible Geodesics
- Appendix: Constructing Aspherical Manifolds by Reflection Groups
- 3.3 Introduction to Kolmogorov Complexity
- 3.4 Complexity and Closed Geodesics
- Notes
- Chapter 4: The Large-Scale Fractal Geometry of Riemannian Moduli Space
- 4.1 Statement of Results
- 4.2 Neoclassical Comparison Geometry
- 4.3 Existence of Extremal Metrics
- 4.4 Depth versus Density
- 4.5 BDiff
- Appendix 1: The Isomorphism Conjecture and Secondary Invariants
- Appendix 2: JSJ Decompositions
- 4.6 The Contagion of Symmetry
- 4.7 Filling Functions for R(M)
- 4.8 Further Directions
- Notes
- Index
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