Every closed, compact, orientable 3-manifold can be represented by a Heegaard diagram. Similarly every such 3-manifold can be represented by a framed link diagram. Is there any general procedure for going between these? Specifically, given a Heegaard diagram is there an algorithmic way to obtain a framed link diagram of the same manifold, and vice versa?
2026-03-27 04:21:06.1774585266
Going between Heegaard diagrams and framed link diagrams
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As PVAL already said in the comments Lickorish's proof of Lickerish-Wallace theorem somehow tells you how to go from Heegaard diagrams to surgery presentations.
To go from surgery diagrams to Heegaard decomposition there is an algorithm. I tell to you how it works for surgeries on knots, then you can easily generalise to the case of links.
The reason why this algorithm produce the right answer is not that deep: after gluing three-dimensional 2-handles along the $\alpha$- and the $\beta$-curves $\not=\gamma$, we get a three-manifold $Y$ with $2$ boundary components (a torus and a sphere). If we fill the sphere boundary component of $Y$ with a three-ball we get the complement of $K$ in $S^3$, and the Dhen filling operation along $\gamma$ prescribes to attach a 2-handle along $\gamma$ and fill the only sphere boundary component of the resulting three-manifold with a three-ball. This is the same as attaching 2-handles along all the $\alpha$- and the $\beta$-curves and fill the two boundary components with three-balls as prescribed by the Heegaard diagram $(\Sigma, \alpha, \beta)$.