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Weak Wecken's theorem for periodic points in dimension 3

Jerzy Jezierski (2003)

Fundamenta Mathematicae

We prove that a self-map f: M → M of a compact PL-manifold of dimension ≥ 3 is homotopic to a map with no periodic points of period n iff the Nielsen numbers N ( f k ) for k dividing n all vanish. This generalizes the result from [Je] to dimension 3.

Weakly additive cohomology.

Edwin Spanier (1990)

Publicacions Matemàtiques

In this paper the concept of weakly additive cohomology theory is introduced as a variant of the known concept of additive cohomology theory. It is shown that for a closed A in X the singular homology of the pair (X, X-A) (with some fixed cohomology group) regarded as a furcter of A is a weakly additive cohomology theory on any collectionwise normal space X. Furthermore, every compactly supported cohomology theory is weakly additive.The main result is a comparison theorem for two cohomology theories...

Wecken theorems for Nielsen intersection theory

Christopher McCord (1999)

Banach Center Publications

Nielsen theory, originally developed as a homotopy-theoretic approach to fixed point theory, has been translated and extended to various other problems, such as the study of periodic points, coincidence points and roots. Recently, the techniques of Nielsen theory have been applied to the study of intersections of maps. A Nielsen-type number, the Nielsen intersection number NI(f,g), was introduced, and shown to have many of the properties analogous to those of the Nielsen fixed point number. In particular,...

Weights in cohomology and the Eilenberg-Moore spectral sequence

Matthias Franz, Andrzej Weber (2005)

Annales de l’institut Fourier

We show that in the category of complex algebraic varieties, the Eilenberg–Moore spectral sequence can be endowed with a weight filtration. This implies that it degenerates if all spaces involved have pure cohomology. As application, we compute the rational cohomology of an algebraic G -variety X ( G being a connected algebraic group) in terms of its equivariant cohomology provided that H G * ( X ) is pure. This is the case, for example, if X is smooth and has only finitely many orbits. We work in the category...

Which 3-manifold groups are Kähler groups?

Alexandru Dimca, Alexander Suciu (2009)

Journal of the European Mathematical Society

The question in the title, first raised by Goldman and Donaldson, was partially answered by Reznikov. We give a complete answer, as follows: if G can be realized as both the fundamental group of a closed 3-manifold and of a compact Kähler manifold, then G must be finite—and thus belongs to the well-known list of finite subgroups of O ( 4 ) , acting freely on S 3 .

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