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The Geometry of the Bing Involution (2209.07597v4)

Published 15 Sep 2022 in math.GT

Abstract: In 1952 Bing published a wild (not topologically conjugate to smooth) involution $I$ of the 3-sphere $S3$. But exactly how wild is it, analytically? We prove that any involution $Ih$, topologically conjugate to $I$, must have a nearly exponential modulus of continuity. Specifically, given any $\alpha>0$, there exists a sequence of $\delta$'s converging to zero, $\delta > 0$, and points $x,y \in S3$ with dist$(x,y) < \delta$, yet dist$(Ih(x), Ih(y)) > \epsilon$, where $\delta{-1} = e{\left(\frac{\epsilon{-1}}{\log{(1+\alpha)}(\epsilon{-1})}\right)}$, and dist is the usual Riemannian distance on $S3$. In particular, $Ih$ stretches distance much more than a Lipschitz function ($\delta{-1} = c\epsilon{-1}$) or a H\"{o}lder function ($\delta{-1} = c\prime(\epsilon{-1}){p}$, $1 < p < \infty$). Bing's original construction and known alternatives (see text) for $I$ have a modulus of continuity $\delta{-1} > c \sqrt{2}{\epsilon{-1}}$, so the theorem is reasonably tight -- we prove the modulus must be at least exponential up to a polylog, whereas the truth may be fully exponential. Actually, the functional for $\delta{-1}$ coming out of the proof can be chosen slightly closer to exponential than stated here (see Theorem 1). Using the same technique we analyze a large class of ``ramified'' Bing involutions and show, as a scholium, that given any function $f: \mathbb{R}+ \rightarrow \mathbb{R}+$, no matter how rapid its growth, we can find a corresponding involution $J$ of the 3-sphere such that any topological conjugate $Jh$ of $J$ must have a modulus of continuity $\delta{-1}(\epsilon{-1})$ growing faster than $f$ (near infinity). There is a literature on inherent differentiability (references in text) but as far as the authors know the subject of inherent modulus of continuity is new.

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