Abstract

A contact structure on a closed oriented 3-manifold 3 is a completely nonintegrable plane field on it. The existence of a contact structure on 3 was first proved by Martinet [14] and then Lutz [12], [13] for each homotopy class of plane fields. A co-orientable contact structure is given as the kernel of a 1-form α with α ∧ α > 0 or < 0, which is called a positive or negative contact form respectively. Thurston and Winkelnkemper [17] deduced the existence of a contact form in an elegant way from Alexander’s theorem [1] on open-book decompositions. Eliashberg [2] showed that the most of these contact structures are, however, too flexible for geometrical interest (see §2). On the other hand, he completely characterized more historic examples related closely to the complex analysis in several variables, namely, the strictly pseudo-convex boundary of compact Stein surfaces ([4]). The symplectic fillability is one of its significant generalizations. Recently Loi and Piergallini [11] translated Eliashberg’s characterization of compact Stein surfaces into the language of Lefschetz fibration by using Gompf’s method [8]. They also showed that 3 is realizable as the boundary of a Stein surface if and only if it admits an open-book decomposition whose monodromy map is a composition of right-handed Dehn-twists. In this note, we improve Thurston-Winkelnkemper’s construction so that we obtain a symplectically fillable contact structure in the case where the monodromy map of a given open-book decomposition is a composition of right-handed Dehn-twists along mutually disjoint curves (Theorem 2). An interesting by-product of our construction is Theorem 3 in §4 which gives a deformation of symplectically fillable contact structures into a foliation with a Reeb component. Note that a foliation admitting a Reeb component itself is not symplectically fillable. I would like to thank the referee for noticing the importance of Theorem 3.

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