The simplest example of a hyperbolic manifold is
hyperbolic space, as each point in hyperbolic space has a neighborhood isometric to hyperbolic space. A simple non-trivial example, however, is the
once-punctured torus. This is an example of an
(Isom(\mathbb{H}^2), \mathbb{H}^2)-manifold. This can be formed by taking an ideal rectangle in \mathbb{H}^2 – that is, a rectangle where the vertices are on the boundary at infinity, and thus don't exist in the resulting manifold – and identifying opposite images. In a similar fashion, we can construct the thrice-punctured sphere, shown below, by gluing two ideal triangles together. This also shows how to draw curves on the surface – the black line in the diagram becomes the closed curve when the green edges are glued together. As we are working with a punctured sphere, the colored circles in the surface – including their boundaries – are not part of the surface, and hence are represented in the diagram as
ideal vertices. Many
knots and links, including some of the simpler knots such as the
figure eight knot and the
Borromean rings, are
hyperbolic, and so the complement of the knot or link in S^3 is a hyperbolic 3-manifold of finite volume. ==Important results==