Explicit determination of the open book in $S^3$












1














I'm familiar with the fundamental concepts of algebraic and differential topology.



How can I determine explicitly the topology of a page of the open book in $S^3$ given by for example $$f: mathbb{C}^2 to mathbb{C}, f(z_1, z_2) = z_1z_2.$$



Any reference request or suggestion will be appreciated.










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  • 2




    The binding of the open book is a link of $z_1z_2 = 0$ near the origin, which is a Hopf link in $S^3$. I think the fibers $f^{-1}(theta)$ for $theta in S^1 subset Bbb C$ are Seifert surfaces of this link: when one goes from $z_1 z_2 = 0$ to $z_1 z_2 = epsilon$, one resolves the singularity at the origin (which entails two transverse disks intersecting at a point) by making it a Seifert surface of the boundary of the two disks, which forms a Hopf link.
    – Balarka Sen
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:59










  • If I'm not wrong, you can get the description in the paper of John etnyre.
    – Anubhav Mukherjee
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:48
















1














I'm familiar with the fundamental concepts of algebraic and differential topology.



How can I determine explicitly the topology of a page of the open book in $S^3$ given by for example $$f: mathbb{C}^2 to mathbb{C}, f(z_1, z_2) = z_1z_2.$$



Any reference request or suggestion will be appreciated.










share|cite|improve this question




















  • 2




    The binding of the open book is a link of $z_1z_2 = 0$ near the origin, which is a Hopf link in $S^3$. I think the fibers $f^{-1}(theta)$ for $theta in S^1 subset Bbb C$ are Seifert surfaces of this link: when one goes from $z_1 z_2 = 0$ to $z_1 z_2 = epsilon$, one resolves the singularity at the origin (which entails two transverse disks intersecting at a point) by making it a Seifert surface of the boundary of the two disks, which forms a Hopf link.
    – Balarka Sen
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:59










  • If I'm not wrong, you can get the description in the paper of John etnyre.
    – Anubhav Mukherjee
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:48














1












1








1


2





I'm familiar with the fundamental concepts of algebraic and differential topology.



How can I determine explicitly the topology of a page of the open book in $S^3$ given by for example $$f: mathbb{C}^2 to mathbb{C}, f(z_1, z_2) = z_1z_2.$$



Any reference request or suggestion will be appreciated.










share|cite|improve this question















I'm familiar with the fundamental concepts of algebraic and differential topology.



How can I determine explicitly the topology of a page of the open book in $S^3$ given by for example $$f: mathbb{C}^2 to mathbb{C}, f(z_1, z_2) = z_1z_2.$$



Any reference request or suggestion will be appreciated.







reference-request algebraic-topology differential-topology low-dimensional-topology






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share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited Dec 11 '18 at 21:01

























asked Dec 11 '18 at 20:53









M. Giovanni Lucaretti

797




797








  • 2




    The binding of the open book is a link of $z_1z_2 = 0$ near the origin, which is a Hopf link in $S^3$. I think the fibers $f^{-1}(theta)$ for $theta in S^1 subset Bbb C$ are Seifert surfaces of this link: when one goes from $z_1 z_2 = 0$ to $z_1 z_2 = epsilon$, one resolves the singularity at the origin (which entails two transverse disks intersecting at a point) by making it a Seifert surface of the boundary of the two disks, which forms a Hopf link.
    – Balarka Sen
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:59










  • If I'm not wrong, you can get the description in the paper of John etnyre.
    – Anubhav Mukherjee
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:48














  • 2




    The binding of the open book is a link of $z_1z_2 = 0$ near the origin, which is a Hopf link in $S^3$. I think the fibers $f^{-1}(theta)$ for $theta in S^1 subset Bbb C$ are Seifert surfaces of this link: when one goes from $z_1 z_2 = 0$ to $z_1 z_2 = epsilon$, one resolves the singularity at the origin (which entails two transverse disks intersecting at a point) by making it a Seifert surface of the boundary of the two disks, which forms a Hopf link.
    – Balarka Sen
    Dec 11 '18 at 21:59










  • If I'm not wrong, you can get the description in the paper of John etnyre.
    – Anubhav Mukherjee
    Dec 12 '18 at 0:48








2




2




The binding of the open book is a link of $z_1z_2 = 0$ near the origin, which is a Hopf link in $S^3$. I think the fibers $f^{-1}(theta)$ for $theta in S^1 subset Bbb C$ are Seifert surfaces of this link: when one goes from $z_1 z_2 = 0$ to $z_1 z_2 = epsilon$, one resolves the singularity at the origin (which entails two transverse disks intersecting at a point) by making it a Seifert surface of the boundary of the two disks, which forms a Hopf link.
– Balarka Sen
Dec 11 '18 at 21:59




The binding of the open book is a link of $z_1z_2 = 0$ near the origin, which is a Hopf link in $S^3$. I think the fibers $f^{-1}(theta)$ for $theta in S^1 subset Bbb C$ are Seifert surfaces of this link: when one goes from $z_1 z_2 = 0$ to $z_1 z_2 = epsilon$, one resolves the singularity at the origin (which entails two transverse disks intersecting at a point) by making it a Seifert surface of the boundary of the two disks, which forms a Hopf link.
– Balarka Sen
Dec 11 '18 at 21:59












If I'm not wrong, you can get the description in the paper of John etnyre.
– Anubhav Mukherjee
Dec 12 '18 at 0:48




If I'm not wrong, you can get the description in the paper of John etnyre.
– Anubhav Mukherjee
Dec 12 '18 at 0:48










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