From Szabo's delightfully understated response (pdf) to receiving the Veblen prize:
The joint work with Peter Ozsváth
which is noted here grew out of our
attempts to understand Seiberg-Witten
moduli spaces over three-manifolds
where the metric degenerates along a
surface. This led to the construction of Heegaard Floer homology
that involved both
topological tools, such as Heegaard diagrams, and
tools from symplectic geometry, such as holomorphic
disks with Lagrangian boundary constraints.
The time spent on investigating Heegaard Floer
homology and its relationship with problems in
low-dimensional topology was rather interesting.
Of course, if one believes that Heegaard Floer homology is somehow the limit of monopole Floer homology as one degenerates the metric in some way that depends on the Heegaard diagram, then the independence of Heegaard Floer homology from the Heegaard diagram would fall out from the metric-independence of monopole Floer homology. Unfortunately, I can't seem to find references that give any sort of precise picture of how Ozsvath and Szabo came to think that this should be the case (though it might have been a baby analogue of the picture in this paper (pdf) by Yi-Jen Lee, written a few years later).
It perhaps bears mentioning that Heegaard Floer homology wasn't the first invariant that Ozsvath and Szabo constructed based on thinking about the interaction of the Seiberg-Witten equations with a Heegaard diagram--these papers, which extract an invariant from the theta-divisor of the Heegaard surface, appear to have been based on thinking about what happens to the Seiberg-Witten equations when one has a neck Sx[-T,T] (S is the Heegaard surface) with the metric on S at t=-T itself having long cylinders over the compressing circles for one handlebody, while the metric on S at t=T has long cylinders over the compressing circles for the other handlebody.
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