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Entropy and collapsing of compact complex surfaces

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2004

Gabriel P. Paternain
Affiliation:
Department of Pure Mathematics and Mathematical Statistics, Wilberforce Road, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB3 0WB, United Kingdom. E-mail: g.p.paternain@dpmms.cam.ac.uk
Jimmy Petean
Affiliation:
CIMAT, A.P. 402, 36000, Guanajuato. Gto., Mexico. E-mail: jimmy@cimat.mx
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Abstract

We study the problem of existence of $\mathcal{F}$-structures (in the sense of Cheeger and Gromov, but not necessarily polarized) on compact complex surfaces. We give a complete classification of compact complex surfaces of Káhler type admitting $\mathcal{F}$-structures. In the non-Káhler case we give a complete classification modulo the gap in the classification of surfaces of class VII.

We then use these results to study the minimal entropy problem for compact complex surfaces: we prove that, modulo the gap in the classification of surfaces of class VII, all compact complex surfaces of Kodaira dimension less than or equal to 1 have minimal entropy zero and such a surface admits a smooth metric $g$ with zero topological entropy if and only if it is ${\mathbb C} P^2$, a ruled surface of genus 0 or 1, a Hopf surface, a complex torus, a Kodaira surface, a hyperelliptic surface or a Kodaira surface modulo a finite group. The key result we use to prove this is a new topological obstruction to the existence of metrics with vanishing topological entropy.

Finally we show that these results fit perfectly into Wall's study of geometric structures on compact complex surfaces. For instance, we show that the minimal entropy problem can be solved for a minimal compact Káhler surface $S$ of Kodaira dimension $- \infty$, 0 or 1 if and only if $S$ admits a geometric structure modelled on ${\mathbb C} P^2$, $S^2 \times S^2$, $S^2 \times {\mathbb E}^2$ or ${\mathbb E}^4$.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2004 London Mathematical Society

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Footnotes

G. P. Paternain was partially supported by CIMAT, Guanajuato, México.
J. Petean is supported by grant 37558-E of CONACYT.