Moduli space of hyperbolic pants The interesting hyperbolic structures on a pair of pants are easily classified. : For all \ell_1, \ell_2, \ell_3 \in (0, \infty) there is a hyperbolic surface M which is homeomorphic to a pair of pants and whose boundary components are simple closed geodesics of lengths equal to \ell_1, \ell_2, \ell_3. Such a surface is uniquely determined by the \ell_i up to
isometry. By taking the length of a cuff to be equal to zero, one obtains a
complete metric on the pair of pants minus the cuff, which is replaced by a
cusp. This structure is of finite volume.
Pants and hexagons The geometric proof of the classification in the previous paragraph is important for understanding the structure of hyperbolic pants. It proceeds as follows: Given a hyperbolic pair of pants with totally geodesic boundary, there exist three unique geodesic arcs that join the cuffs pairwise and that are perpendicular to them at their endpoints. These arcs are called the
seams of the pants. Cutting the pants along the seams, one gets two right-angled hyperbolic hexagons which have three alternate sides of matching lengths. The following lemma can be proven with elementary hyperbolic geometry. : If two right-angled hyperbolic hexagons each have three alternate sides of matching lengths, then they are isometric to each other. So we see that the pair of pants is the
double of a right-angled hexagon along alternate sides. Since the isometry class of the hexagon is also uniquely determined by the lengths of the remaining three alternate sides, the classification of pants follows from that of hexagons. When a length of one cuff is zero one replaces the corresponding side in the right-angled hexagon by an ideal vertex.
Fenchel-Nielsen coordinates A point in the Teichmüller space of a surface S is represented by a pair (M, f) where M is a complete hyperbolic surface and f: S \to M a diffeomorphism. If S has a pants decomposition by curves \gamma_i then one can parametrise Teichmüller pairs by the Fenchel-Nielsen coordinates which are defined as follows. The
cuff lengths \ell_i are simply the lengths of the closed geodesics homotopic to the f(\gamma_i). The
twist parameters \tau_i are harder to define. They correspond to how much one turns when gluing two pairs of pants along \gamma_i: this defines them modulo \ell_i\mathbb Z. One can refine the definition (using either analytic continuation or geometric techniques) to obtain twist parameters valued in \mathbb R (roughly, the point is that when one makes a full turn one changes the point in Teichmüller space by precomposing f with a
Dehn twist around \gamma_i).
The pants complex and the Weil-Petersson metric One can define a map from the pants complex to Teichmüller space, which takes a pants decomposition to an arbitrarily chosen point in the region where the cuff part of the Fenchel-Nielsen coordinates are bounded by a large enough constant. It is a
quasi-isometry when Teichmüller space is endowed with the
Weil-Petersson metric, which has proven useful in the study of this metric.
Pairs of pants and Schottky groups These structures correspond to
Schottky groups on two generators (more precisely, if the quotient of the
hyperbolic plane by a Schottky group on two generators is homeomorphic to the interior of a pair of pants then its convex core is an hyperbolic pair of pants as described above, and all are obtained as such). == 2-dimensional cobordisms ==