Date: Mon, 05 Feb 2001 13:44:42 +0100 From: Andrew Ranicki Subject: Re: more on embedding question Kervaire ("On higher dimensional knots", Morse Symposium, 1965) proved that a homotopy n-sphere \Sigma^n can be smoothly embedded in S^{n+2} if and only if \Sigma^n is the boundary of a parallelizable (n+1)-manifold. Andrew Ranicki aar@maths.ed.ac.uk ____________________________ From: Mark Mahowald Subject: Re: more on embedding question Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2001 16:05:25 -0600 (CST) I think Massey proved something like: Any exotic n-sphere embeds no better than in R^{n+3}. A possible reference is in the Proc. AMS Vol 10,(1959)959-964. A thesis student of mine "proved" that the exotic spheres associated to the homotopy classes call eta_j in stem 2^j do not embed in R^{2^j+2{j-1}-3}. I use quotes about proved since he never published the result. I suppose this makes it at least a conjecture. Mark Mahowald _______________________________________ Date: Mon, 05 Feb 2001 17:10:16 -0500 From: "John R. Klein" Subject: Re: more on embedding question > Another natural question that arises from Tom's answer is: If the exotic > seven-spheres don't embed in R^8, then where *do* they embed? 1) They embed in codimension 3 (using the work of Haefliger). 2) They embed in codimension 2: This uses Th 1.7 of Hsiang, W.-c.; Levine, J.; Szczarba, R. H. On the normal bundle of a homotopy sphere embedded in Euclidean space. Topology 3 1965 173--181. and the work of Kervaire and Milnor that every exotic 7-sphere is the boundary of an paralellizable 8-manifold. _____________________________________________________ From: Dave Rusin Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2001 16:44:59 -0600 (CST) Subject: Re: more on embedding question >Another natural question that arises from Tom's answer is: If the exotic >seven-spheres don't embed in R^8, then where *do* they embed? Ooh! Ooh! I know! I know that one! Consider the complex hypersurface of C^5 defined by z1^(4k+1) + z2^3 + z3^2 + z4^2 + z5^2 = 0. There's a singularity at the origin but small spheres intersect the surface transversely, giving a 7-manifold embedded in R^10. Take k=0, 1, 2, ..., 27 to get all diffeomorphism classes of 7-spheres. dave