Abstract

ABSTRACTGiven a completely arbitrary surface, whether or not it has bounded curvature, or even whether or not it is complete, there exists an instantaneously complete Ricci flow evolution of that surface that exists for a specific amount of time. In the case that the underlying Riemann surface supports a hyperbolic metric, this Ricci flow always exists for all time and converges (after scaling by a factor ) to this hyperbolic metric, i.e. our Ricci flow geometrises the surface. In this paper we show that there exist complete, bounded curvature initial metrics, including those conformal to a hyperbolic metric, which have subsequent Ricci flows developing unbounded curvature at certain intermediate times. In particular, when coupled with uniqueness, we find that any complete Ricci flow starting with such initial metrics must develop unbounded curvature over some intermediate time interval, but that nevertheless, the curvature must later become bounded and the flow must achieve geometrisation as t → ∞, even though there are other conformal deformations to hyperbolic metrics that do not involve unbounded curvature.Another consequence of our constructions is that while our Ricci flow must agree initially with the classical flow of Hamilton and Shi in the special case that the initial surface is complete and of bounded curvature, by uniqueness, it is now clear that our flow lasts for a longer time interval in general, with Shi's flow stopping when the curvature blows up, but our flow continuing strictly beyond in these situations.All our constructions of unbounded curvature developing and then disappearing are in two dimensions. Generalisations to higher dimensions are then immediate.

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