Link of a singularityClosed image of a product of morphismsThe link of a singular quintic hypersurface in CP^4How can one determine if a singularity is simple?Étale coverings of cubics and gluingsA direct proof of a property of symmetric 2x2-determinantsIs there a way to find any $mathbbF_2(t)$-point on the elliptic curve $mathcalE$?

Link of a singularity


Closed image of a product of morphismsThe link of a singular quintic hypersurface in CP^4How can one determine if a singularity is simple?Étale coverings of cubics and gluingsA direct proof of a property of symmetric 2x2-determinantsIs there a way to find any $mathbbF_2(t)$-point on the elliptic curve $mathcalE$?













8














$begingroup$


I would like to understand the topological type of a link of a singularity in a simple example. Consider for instance the cone $xy-z^2=0subsetmathbbC^3$.
If we set $x = x_1+ix_2, y = y_1+iy_2, z = z_1+iz_2$ then this corresponds to the $4$-dimensional real subvariety of $mathbbR^6$ given as the complete intersection $x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0$.



Therefore the link of the singularity is given by



$x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = 0, x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0, x_1^2+x_2^2+y_1^2+y_2^2+z_1^2+z_2^2 = 1$



What is the topological type of this link?



Can we determine the topological type of the link from these three equations?










share|cite|improve this question












$endgroup$














  • $begingroup$
    There's a great book on hypersurface singularties by Yoshino London Mathematical Society. Also, x.y=z^2, appears as an example in Intersection Theory by Fulton.
    $endgroup$
    – mark James
    Aug 4 at 22:14















8














$begingroup$


I would like to understand the topological type of a link of a singularity in a simple example. Consider for instance the cone $xy-z^2=0subsetmathbbC^3$.
If we set $x = x_1+ix_2, y = y_1+iy_2, z = z_1+iz_2$ then this corresponds to the $4$-dimensional real subvariety of $mathbbR^6$ given as the complete intersection $x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0$.



Therefore the link of the singularity is given by



$x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = 0, x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0, x_1^2+x_2^2+y_1^2+y_2^2+z_1^2+z_2^2 = 1$



What is the topological type of this link?



Can we determine the topological type of the link from these three equations?










share|cite|improve this question












$endgroup$














  • $begingroup$
    There's a great book on hypersurface singularties by Yoshino London Mathematical Society. Also, x.y=z^2, appears as an example in Intersection Theory by Fulton.
    $endgroup$
    – mark James
    Aug 4 at 22:14













8












8








8


3



$begingroup$


I would like to understand the topological type of a link of a singularity in a simple example. Consider for instance the cone $xy-z^2=0subsetmathbbC^3$.
If we set $x = x_1+ix_2, y = y_1+iy_2, z = z_1+iz_2$ then this corresponds to the $4$-dimensional real subvariety of $mathbbR^6$ given as the complete intersection $x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0$.



Therefore the link of the singularity is given by



$x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = 0, x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0, x_1^2+x_2^2+y_1^2+y_2^2+z_1^2+z_2^2 = 1$



What is the topological type of this link?



Can we determine the topological type of the link from these three equations?










share|cite|improve this question












$endgroup$




I would like to understand the topological type of a link of a singularity in a simple example. Consider for instance the cone $xy-z^2=0subsetmathbbC^3$.
If we set $x = x_1+ix_2, y = y_1+iy_2, z = z_1+iz_2$ then this corresponds to the $4$-dimensional real subvariety of $mathbbR^6$ given as the complete intersection $x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0$.



Therefore the link of the singularity is given by



$x_1y_1-x_2y_2-z_1^2+z_2^2 = 0, x_1y_2+x_2y_1-2z_1z_2 = 0, x_1^2+x_2^2+y_1^2+y_2^2+z_1^2+z_2^2 = 1$



What is the topological type of this link?



Can we determine the topological type of the link from these three equations?







ag.algebraic-geometry at.algebraic-topology gn.general-topology differential-topology singularity-theory






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edited Jul 16 at 16:11







japin

















asked Jul 16 at 15:37









japinjapin

1907 bronze badges




1907 bronze badges














  • $begingroup$
    There's a great book on hypersurface singularties by Yoshino London Mathematical Society. Also, x.y=z^2, appears as an example in Intersection Theory by Fulton.
    $endgroup$
    – mark James
    Aug 4 at 22:14
















  • $begingroup$
    There's a great book on hypersurface singularties by Yoshino London Mathematical Society. Also, x.y=z^2, appears as an example in Intersection Theory by Fulton.
    $endgroup$
    – mark James
    Aug 4 at 22:14















$begingroup$
There's a great book on hypersurface singularties by Yoshino London Mathematical Society. Also, x.y=z^2, appears as an example in Intersection Theory by Fulton.
$endgroup$
– mark James
Aug 4 at 22:14




$begingroup$
There's a great book on hypersurface singularties by Yoshino London Mathematical Society. Also, x.y=z^2, appears as an example in Intersection Theory by Fulton.
$endgroup$
– mark James
Aug 4 at 22:14










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















11
















$begingroup$

More generally, consider the singularity given by $$x_1^2+cdots+x_n+1^2=0$$ in $mathbfC^n+1$. (Your case is $n=2$ after a change of variables.) Identifying $mathbfC^n+1=mathbfR^n+1timesmathbfR^n+1$ we see at once that the link is the Stiefel manifold $mathrmV_2(mathbfR^n+1)$ of pairs of orthonormal vectors in $mathbfR^n+1$. (For $n=2$ this is $mathrmSO(3)$, which is homeomorphic to $mathbfRP^3$.) If you allow more complicated exponents in the defining equation of the singularity, the link can be very interesting.
For example, the links of the singularities defined by
$$x_1^2+x_2^2+x_3^2+x_4^3+x_5^6k-1=0 (1leqslant kleqslant 28)$$
give all 28 differentiable structures on $S^7$. (See for example E. Brieskorn's classic paper Beispiele zur Differentialtopologie von Singularitäten).






share|cite|improve this answer












$endgroup$






















    8
















    $begingroup$

    For singularities of the form $g(x,y)+z^n = 0$ there is a nice description: if you project onto the $xy$-plane (and you take a very small neighbourhood of the origin), you can view the link of the (surface) singularity as the cyclic $n$-fold cover of $S^3$ branched over the link of the (curve) singularity determined by $g$.



    In the case at hand, $g(x,y) = xy$ and $n=2$, so its link is the Hopf link in $S^3$, and the double cover of $S^3$ branched over it is the lens space $L(2,1)$ (also known as $mathbbRP^3$). More generally, for arbitrary $n$ (and the same $g$), you get the lens space $L(n,n-1)$ ($+n$-surgery on the unknot).






    share|cite|improve this answer










    $endgroup$






















      6
















      $begingroup$

      To add to the excellent answers already provided, here are some general facts in the case of rational surface singularities (1 and 2) and hypersurface singularities (3).



      1. Many interesting singularities are obtained by quotienting $C^2$ by the action of a finite subgroup $Gsubset U(2)$. Since $U(2)$ preserves the unit sphere, you can get the link just by quotienting $S^3$ by $G$. The example you gave is equivalent to the singularity you get by taking the quotient of $C^2$ by the subgroup $G=I,-I$, so that tells you the link is $RP^3$, as Marco pointed out. For cyclic quotient singularities, you'll get a lens space. There are more exotic examples, for example, for the spin double cover of the symmetry group of the icosahedron (under the covering map $SU(2)to SO(3)$), the link of the quotient singularity will be the Poincaré homology sphere. If you want to understand these singularities as affine varieties, they're obtained by taking Spec of the ring of invariants for the finite group action on the ring of polynomial functions on $C^2$ (for $G=I,-I$the invariant functions are generated by $u=x^2,v=xy,w=y^2$ with the obvious relation $uw=v^2$, which is where your equation comes into it).


      2. Take the minimal resolution of the singularity. Let's suppose the exceptional divisor is a tree T of spheres with negative self-intersection numbers. A neighbourhood of the exceptional divisor is then a plumbing (according to the tree) of disc bundles over spheres with Euler numbers given by these self-intersection numbers. This has a surgery description: you take a bunch (one for each vertex of T) of unknots in $S^3$ such that two of them link like a Hopf link if they are connected by an edge in T (and are pairwise unlinked otherwise). Give each unknot a framing of minus the self-intersection of the corresponding sphere. This is both a Kirby diagram of the minimal resolution and a Dehn surgery presentation of the link (the exceptional curves in the minimal resolution are given by slice discs for the unknots capped off by the cores of the 2-handles you attach).


      3. If you have a complex hypersurface singularity (i.e. one defined by a single equation over C) then you can use the ideas of Milnor to get at the topology of the link (see his book on isolated singularities of complex hypersurfaces). This will give you an "open book decomposition" of the link, i.e. you end up finding a collection of knots (called the "binding") in the link of the singularity whose complement fibres over the circle (the fibres are real surfaces called the "pages"). In higher dimensions, the binding is a real codimension 2 contact submanifold of the link and the pages are real codimension 1 Stein domains.






      share|cite|improve this answer












      $endgroup$
















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        3 Answers
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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

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        active

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        active

        oldest

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        11
















        $begingroup$

        More generally, consider the singularity given by $$x_1^2+cdots+x_n+1^2=0$$ in $mathbfC^n+1$. (Your case is $n=2$ after a change of variables.) Identifying $mathbfC^n+1=mathbfR^n+1timesmathbfR^n+1$ we see at once that the link is the Stiefel manifold $mathrmV_2(mathbfR^n+1)$ of pairs of orthonormal vectors in $mathbfR^n+1$. (For $n=2$ this is $mathrmSO(3)$, which is homeomorphic to $mathbfRP^3$.) If you allow more complicated exponents in the defining equation of the singularity, the link can be very interesting.
        For example, the links of the singularities defined by
        $$x_1^2+x_2^2+x_3^2+x_4^3+x_5^6k-1=0 (1leqslant kleqslant 28)$$
        give all 28 differentiable structures on $S^7$. (See for example E. Brieskorn's classic paper Beispiele zur Differentialtopologie von Singularitäten).






        share|cite|improve this answer












        $endgroup$



















          11
















          $begingroup$

          More generally, consider the singularity given by $$x_1^2+cdots+x_n+1^2=0$$ in $mathbfC^n+1$. (Your case is $n=2$ after a change of variables.) Identifying $mathbfC^n+1=mathbfR^n+1timesmathbfR^n+1$ we see at once that the link is the Stiefel manifold $mathrmV_2(mathbfR^n+1)$ of pairs of orthonormal vectors in $mathbfR^n+1$. (For $n=2$ this is $mathrmSO(3)$, which is homeomorphic to $mathbfRP^3$.) If you allow more complicated exponents in the defining equation of the singularity, the link can be very interesting.
          For example, the links of the singularities defined by
          $$x_1^2+x_2^2+x_3^2+x_4^3+x_5^6k-1=0 (1leqslant kleqslant 28)$$
          give all 28 differentiable structures on $S^7$. (See for example E. Brieskorn's classic paper Beispiele zur Differentialtopologie von Singularitäten).






          share|cite|improve this answer












          $endgroup$

















            11














            11










            11







            $begingroup$

            More generally, consider the singularity given by $$x_1^2+cdots+x_n+1^2=0$$ in $mathbfC^n+1$. (Your case is $n=2$ after a change of variables.) Identifying $mathbfC^n+1=mathbfR^n+1timesmathbfR^n+1$ we see at once that the link is the Stiefel manifold $mathrmV_2(mathbfR^n+1)$ of pairs of orthonormal vectors in $mathbfR^n+1$. (For $n=2$ this is $mathrmSO(3)$, which is homeomorphic to $mathbfRP^3$.) If you allow more complicated exponents in the defining equation of the singularity, the link can be very interesting.
            For example, the links of the singularities defined by
            $$x_1^2+x_2^2+x_3^2+x_4^3+x_5^6k-1=0 (1leqslant kleqslant 28)$$
            give all 28 differentiable structures on $S^7$. (See for example E. Brieskorn's classic paper Beispiele zur Differentialtopologie von Singularitäten).






            share|cite|improve this answer












            $endgroup$



            More generally, consider the singularity given by $$x_1^2+cdots+x_n+1^2=0$$ in $mathbfC^n+1$. (Your case is $n=2$ after a change of variables.) Identifying $mathbfC^n+1=mathbfR^n+1timesmathbfR^n+1$ we see at once that the link is the Stiefel manifold $mathrmV_2(mathbfR^n+1)$ of pairs of orthonormal vectors in $mathbfR^n+1$. (For $n=2$ this is $mathrmSO(3)$, which is homeomorphic to $mathbfRP^3$.) If you allow more complicated exponents in the defining equation of the singularity, the link can be very interesting.
            For example, the links of the singularities defined by
            $$x_1^2+x_2^2+x_3^2+x_4^3+x_5^6k-1=0 (1leqslant kleqslant 28)$$
            give all 28 differentiable structures on $S^7$. (See for example E. Brieskorn's classic paper Beispiele zur Differentialtopologie von Singularitäten).







            share|cite|improve this answer















            share|cite|improve this answer




            share|cite|improve this answer








            edited Jul 16 at 23:38

























            answered Jul 16 at 16:19









            SimpletonSimpleton

            1,3473 gold badges8 silver badges23 bronze badges




            1,3473 gold badges8 silver badges23 bronze badges
























                8
















                $begingroup$

                For singularities of the form $g(x,y)+z^n = 0$ there is a nice description: if you project onto the $xy$-plane (and you take a very small neighbourhood of the origin), you can view the link of the (surface) singularity as the cyclic $n$-fold cover of $S^3$ branched over the link of the (curve) singularity determined by $g$.



                In the case at hand, $g(x,y) = xy$ and $n=2$, so its link is the Hopf link in $S^3$, and the double cover of $S^3$ branched over it is the lens space $L(2,1)$ (also known as $mathbbRP^3$). More generally, for arbitrary $n$ (and the same $g$), you get the lens space $L(n,n-1)$ ($+n$-surgery on the unknot).






                share|cite|improve this answer










                $endgroup$



















                  8
















                  $begingroup$

                  For singularities of the form $g(x,y)+z^n = 0$ there is a nice description: if you project onto the $xy$-plane (and you take a very small neighbourhood of the origin), you can view the link of the (surface) singularity as the cyclic $n$-fold cover of $S^3$ branched over the link of the (curve) singularity determined by $g$.



                  In the case at hand, $g(x,y) = xy$ and $n=2$, so its link is the Hopf link in $S^3$, and the double cover of $S^3$ branched over it is the lens space $L(2,1)$ (also known as $mathbbRP^3$). More generally, for arbitrary $n$ (and the same $g$), you get the lens space $L(n,n-1)$ ($+n$-surgery on the unknot).






                  share|cite|improve this answer










                  $endgroup$

















                    8














                    8










                    8







                    $begingroup$

                    For singularities of the form $g(x,y)+z^n = 0$ there is a nice description: if you project onto the $xy$-plane (and you take a very small neighbourhood of the origin), you can view the link of the (surface) singularity as the cyclic $n$-fold cover of $S^3$ branched over the link of the (curve) singularity determined by $g$.



                    In the case at hand, $g(x,y) = xy$ and $n=2$, so its link is the Hopf link in $S^3$, and the double cover of $S^3$ branched over it is the lens space $L(2,1)$ (also known as $mathbbRP^3$). More generally, for arbitrary $n$ (and the same $g$), you get the lens space $L(n,n-1)$ ($+n$-surgery on the unknot).






                    share|cite|improve this answer










                    $endgroup$



                    For singularities of the form $g(x,y)+z^n = 0$ there is a nice description: if you project onto the $xy$-plane (and you take a very small neighbourhood of the origin), you can view the link of the (surface) singularity as the cyclic $n$-fold cover of $S^3$ branched over the link of the (curve) singularity determined by $g$.



                    In the case at hand, $g(x,y) = xy$ and $n=2$, so its link is the Hopf link in $S^3$, and the double cover of $S^3$ branched over it is the lens space $L(2,1)$ (also known as $mathbbRP^3$). More generally, for arbitrary $n$ (and the same $g$), you get the lens space $L(n,n-1)$ ($+n$-surgery on the unknot).







                    share|cite|improve this answer













                    share|cite|improve this answer




                    share|cite|improve this answer










                    answered Jul 16 at 19:47









                    Marco GollaMarco Golla

                    5,4543 gold badges29 silver badges48 bronze badges




                    5,4543 gold badges29 silver badges48 bronze badges
























                        6
















                        $begingroup$

                        To add to the excellent answers already provided, here are some general facts in the case of rational surface singularities (1 and 2) and hypersurface singularities (3).



                        1. Many interesting singularities are obtained by quotienting $C^2$ by the action of a finite subgroup $Gsubset U(2)$. Since $U(2)$ preserves the unit sphere, you can get the link just by quotienting $S^3$ by $G$. The example you gave is equivalent to the singularity you get by taking the quotient of $C^2$ by the subgroup $G=I,-I$, so that tells you the link is $RP^3$, as Marco pointed out. For cyclic quotient singularities, you'll get a lens space. There are more exotic examples, for example, for the spin double cover of the symmetry group of the icosahedron (under the covering map $SU(2)to SO(3)$), the link of the quotient singularity will be the Poincaré homology sphere. If you want to understand these singularities as affine varieties, they're obtained by taking Spec of the ring of invariants for the finite group action on the ring of polynomial functions on $C^2$ (for $G=I,-I$the invariant functions are generated by $u=x^2,v=xy,w=y^2$ with the obvious relation $uw=v^2$, which is where your equation comes into it).


                        2. Take the minimal resolution of the singularity. Let's suppose the exceptional divisor is a tree T of spheres with negative self-intersection numbers. A neighbourhood of the exceptional divisor is then a plumbing (according to the tree) of disc bundles over spheres with Euler numbers given by these self-intersection numbers. This has a surgery description: you take a bunch (one for each vertex of T) of unknots in $S^3$ such that two of them link like a Hopf link if they are connected by an edge in T (and are pairwise unlinked otherwise). Give each unknot a framing of minus the self-intersection of the corresponding sphere. This is both a Kirby diagram of the minimal resolution and a Dehn surgery presentation of the link (the exceptional curves in the minimal resolution are given by slice discs for the unknots capped off by the cores of the 2-handles you attach).


                        3. If you have a complex hypersurface singularity (i.e. one defined by a single equation over C) then you can use the ideas of Milnor to get at the topology of the link (see his book on isolated singularities of complex hypersurfaces). This will give you an "open book decomposition" of the link, i.e. you end up finding a collection of knots (called the "binding") in the link of the singularity whose complement fibres over the circle (the fibres are real surfaces called the "pages"). In higher dimensions, the binding is a real codimension 2 contact submanifold of the link and the pages are real codimension 1 Stein domains.






                        share|cite|improve this answer












                        $endgroup$



















                          6
















                          $begingroup$

                          To add to the excellent answers already provided, here are some general facts in the case of rational surface singularities (1 and 2) and hypersurface singularities (3).



                          1. Many interesting singularities are obtained by quotienting $C^2$ by the action of a finite subgroup $Gsubset U(2)$. Since $U(2)$ preserves the unit sphere, you can get the link just by quotienting $S^3$ by $G$. The example you gave is equivalent to the singularity you get by taking the quotient of $C^2$ by the subgroup $G=I,-I$, so that tells you the link is $RP^3$, as Marco pointed out. For cyclic quotient singularities, you'll get a lens space. There are more exotic examples, for example, for the spin double cover of the symmetry group of the icosahedron (under the covering map $SU(2)to SO(3)$), the link of the quotient singularity will be the Poincaré homology sphere. If you want to understand these singularities as affine varieties, they're obtained by taking Spec of the ring of invariants for the finite group action on the ring of polynomial functions on $C^2$ (for $G=I,-I$the invariant functions are generated by $u=x^2,v=xy,w=y^2$ with the obvious relation $uw=v^2$, which is where your equation comes into it).


                          2. Take the minimal resolution of the singularity. Let's suppose the exceptional divisor is a tree T of spheres with negative self-intersection numbers. A neighbourhood of the exceptional divisor is then a plumbing (according to the tree) of disc bundles over spheres with Euler numbers given by these self-intersection numbers. This has a surgery description: you take a bunch (one for each vertex of T) of unknots in $S^3$ such that two of them link like a Hopf link if they are connected by an edge in T (and are pairwise unlinked otherwise). Give each unknot a framing of minus the self-intersection of the corresponding sphere. This is both a Kirby diagram of the minimal resolution and a Dehn surgery presentation of the link (the exceptional curves in the minimal resolution are given by slice discs for the unknots capped off by the cores of the 2-handles you attach).


                          3. If you have a complex hypersurface singularity (i.e. one defined by a single equation over C) then you can use the ideas of Milnor to get at the topology of the link (see his book on isolated singularities of complex hypersurfaces). This will give you an "open book decomposition" of the link, i.e. you end up finding a collection of knots (called the "binding") in the link of the singularity whose complement fibres over the circle (the fibres are real surfaces called the "pages"). In higher dimensions, the binding is a real codimension 2 contact submanifold of the link and the pages are real codimension 1 Stein domains.






                          share|cite|improve this answer












                          $endgroup$

















                            6














                            6










                            6







                            $begingroup$

                            To add to the excellent answers already provided, here are some general facts in the case of rational surface singularities (1 and 2) and hypersurface singularities (3).



                            1. Many interesting singularities are obtained by quotienting $C^2$ by the action of a finite subgroup $Gsubset U(2)$. Since $U(2)$ preserves the unit sphere, you can get the link just by quotienting $S^3$ by $G$. The example you gave is equivalent to the singularity you get by taking the quotient of $C^2$ by the subgroup $G=I,-I$, so that tells you the link is $RP^3$, as Marco pointed out. For cyclic quotient singularities, you'll get a lens space. There are more exotic examples, for example, for the spin double cover of the symmetry group of the icosahedron (under the covering map $SU(2)to SO(3)$), the link of the quotient singularity will be the Poincaré homology sphere. If you want to understand these singularities as affine varieties, they're obtained by taking Spec of the ring of invariants for the finite group action on the ring of polynomial functions on $C^2$ (for $G=I,-I$the invariant functions are generated by $u=x^2,v=xy,w=y^2$ with the obvious relation $uw=v^2$, which is where your equation comes into it).


                            2. Take the minimal resolution of the singularity. Let's suppose the exceptional divisor is a tree T of spheres with negative self-intersection numbers. A neighbourhood of the exceptional divisor is then a plumbing (according to the tree) of disc bundles over spheres with Euler numbers given by these self-intersection numbers. This has a surgery description: you take a bunch (one for each vertex of T) of unknots in $S^3$ such that two of them link like a Hopf link if they are connected by an edge in T (and are pairwise unlinked otherwise). Give each unknot a framing of minus the self-intersection of the corresponding sphere. This is both a Kirby diagram of the minimal resolution and a Dehn surgery presentation of the link (the exceptional curves in the minimal resolution are given by slice discs for the unknots capped off by the cores of the 2-handles you attach).


                            3. If you have a complex hypersurface singularity (i.e. one defined by a single equation over C) then you can use the ideas of Milnor to get at the topology of the link (see his book on isolated singularities of complex hypersurfaces). This will give you an "open book decomposition" of the link, i.e. you end up finding a collection of knots (called the "binding") in the link of the singularity whose complement fibres over the circle (the fibres are real surfaces called the "pages"). In higher dimensions, the binding is a real codimension 2 contact submanifold of the link and the pages are real codimension 1 Stein domains.






                            share|cite|improve this answer












                            $endgroup$



                            To add to the excellent answers already provided, here are some general facts in the case of rational surface singularities (1 and 2) and hypersurface singularities (3).



                            1. Many interesting singularities are obtained by quotienting $C^2$ by the action of a finite subgroup $Gsubset U(2)$. Since $U(2)$ preserves the unit sphere, you can get the link just by quotienting $S^3$ by $G$. The example you gave is equivalent to the singularity you get by taking the quotient of $C^2$ by the subgroup $G=I,-I$, so that tells you the link is $RP^3$, as Marco pointed out. For cyclic quotient singularities, you'll get a lens space. There are more exotic examples, for example, for the spin double cover of the symmetry group of the icosahedron (under the covering map $SU(2)to SO(3)$), the link of the quotient singularity will be the Poincaré homology sphere. If you want to understand these singularities as affine varieties, they're obtained by taking Spec of the ring of invariants for the finite group action on the ring of polynomial functions on $C^2$ (for $G=I,-I$the invariant functions are generated by $u=x^2,v=xy,w=y^2$ with the obvious relation $uw=v^2$, which is where your equation comes into it).


                            2. Take the minimal resolution of the singularity. Let's suppose the exceptional divisor is a tree T of spheres with negative self-intersection numbers. A neighbourhood of the exceptional divisor is then a plumbing (according to the tree) of disc bundles over spheres with Euler numbers given by these self-intersection numbers. This has a surgery description: you take a bunch (one for each vertex of T) of unknots in $S^3$ such that two of them link like a Hopf link if they are connected by an edge in T (and are pairwise unlinked otherwise). Give each unknot a framing of minus the self-intersection of the corresponding sphere. This is both a Kirby diagram of the minimal resolution and a Dehn surgery presentation of the link (the exceptional curves in the minimal resolution are given by slice discs for the unknots capped off by the cores of the 2-handles you attach).


                            3. If you have a complex hypersurface singularity (i.e. one defined by a single equation over C) then you can use the ideas of Milnor to get at the topology of the link (see his book on isolated singularities of complex hypersurfaces). This will give you an "open book decomposition" of the link, i.e. you end up finding a collection of knots (called the "binding") in the link of the singularity whose complement fibres over the circle (the fibres are real surfaces called the "pages"). In higher dimensions, the binding is a real codimension 2 contact submanifold of the link and the pages are real codimension 1 Stein domains.







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                            edited Jul 16 at 21:47

























                            answered Jul 16 at 21:42









                            Jonny EvansJonny Evans

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