In low-dimensional topology, a branch of mathematics, the E8 manifold is the unique compact, simply connected topological 4-manifold with intersection form the E8 lattice.

History

The E 8 {\displaystyle E_{8}} manifold was discovered by Michael Freedman in 1982. Rokhlin's theorem shows that it has no smooth structure (as does Donaldson's theorem), and in fact, combined with the work of Andrew Casson on the Casson invariant, this shows that the E 8 {\displaystyle E_{8}} manifold is not even triangulable as a simplicial complex.

Construction

The manifold can be constructed by first plumbing together disc bundles of Euler number 2 over the sphere, according to the Dynkin diagram for E 8 {\displaystyle E_{8}} . This results in P E 8 {\displaystyle P_{E_{8}}} , a 4-manifold whose boundary is homeomorphic to the Poincaré homology sphere. Freedman's theorem on fake 4-balls then says we can cap off this homology sphere with a fake 4-ball to obtain the E 8 {\displaystyle E_{8}} manifold.

See also

  • E8 (mathematics) – 248-dimensional exceptional simple Lie group
  • Glossary of topology
  • List of geometric topology topics

References


31744 SMC 8STATION INPUT UNIT MANIFOLD EEX500IB1E8 J316Gallery

31745 SMC 8STATION INPUT UNIT MANIFOLD (NEW) EEX500IB1E8 J316Gallery

31744 SMC 8STATION INPUT UNIT MANIFOLD EEX500IB1E8 J316Gallery

The E8Manifold, Singular Fibers and Handlebody 0 DocsLib

Table 1 from The E8manifold, singular fibers and handlebody