Exotic R4
In mathematics, an exotic is a differentiable manifold that is homeomorphic but not diffeomorphic to the Euclidean space The first examples were found in 1982 by Michael Freedman and others, by using the contrast between Freedman's theorems about topological 4-manifolds, and Simon Donaldson's theorems about smooth 4-manifolds. There is a continuum of non-diffeomorphic differentiable structures as was shown first by Clifford Taubes.
Prior to this construction, non-diffeomorphic smooth structures on spheres – exotic spheres – were already known to exist, although the question of the existence of such structures for the particular case of the 4-sphere remained open. For any positive integer n other than 4, there are no exotic smooth structures in other words, if n ≠ 4 then any smooth manifold homeomorphic to is diffeomorphic to
Small exotic R4s
An exotic is called small if it can be smoothly embedded as an open subset of the standardSmall exotic can be constructed by starting with a non-trivial smooth 5-dimensional h-cobordism and using Freedman's theorem that the topological h-cobordism theorem holds in this dimension.
Large exotic R4s
An exotic is called large if it cannot be smoothly embedded as an open subset of the standardExamples of large exotic can be constructed using the fact that compact 4-manifolds can often be split as a topological sum, but cannot be split as a smooth sum.
showed that there is a maximal exotic into which all other can be smoothly embedded as open subsets.
Related exotic structures
Casson handles are homeomorphic to by Freedman's theorem but it follows from Donaldson's theorem that they are not all diffeomorphic to In other words, some Casson handles are exoticIt is not known whether or not there are any exotic 4-spheres; such an exotic 4-sphere would be a counterexample to the smooth generalized Poincaré conjecture in dimension 4. Some plausible candidates are given by Gluck twists.