Riemannian metrics and Laplacians for generalized smooth distributions

2019 ◽  
pp. 1-47
Author(s):  
Iakovos Androulidakis ◽  
Yuri Kordyukov

We show that any generalized smooth distribution on a smooth manifold, possibly of non-constant rank, admits a Riemannian metric. Using such a metric, we attach a Laplace operator to any smooth distribution as such. When the underlying manifold is compact, we show that it is essentially self-adjoint. Viewing this Laplacian in the longitudinal pseudodifferential calculus of the smallest singular foliation which includes the distribution, we prove hypoellipticity.

We study the geodesics and pre-geodesics of a smooth manifold with smooth pseudo riemannian metric which changes bilinear type (i. e. the signature changes) on a hypersurface. We classify all geodesics and pre-geodesics that cross the hypersurface of type change transversely. We then apply these results to the eikonal partial differential equation to find geometric conditions for the local existence or non-existence of smooth, transverse solutions.


Author(s):  
Jialong Deng

AbstractWe define enlargeable length-structures on closed topological manifolds and then show that the connected sum of a closed n-manifold with an enlargeable Riemannian length-structure with an arbitrary closed smooth manifold carries no Riemannian metrics with positive scalar curvature. We show that closed smooth manifolds with a locally CAT(0)-metric which is strongly equivalent to a Riemannian metric are examples of closed manifolds with an enlargeable Riemannian length-structure. Moreover, the result is correct in arbitrary dimensions based on the main result of a recent paper by Schoen and Yau. We define the positive MV-scalar curvature on closed orientable topological manifolds and show the compactly enlargeable length-structures are the obstructions of its existence.


Author(s):  
Shahriar Aslani ◽  
Patrick Bernard

Abstract In the study of Hamiltonian systems on cotangent bundles, it is natural to perturb Hamiltonians by adding potentials (functions depending only on the base point). This led to the definition of Mañé genericity [ 8]: a property is generic if, given a Hamiltonian $H$, the set of potentials $g$ such that $H+g$ satisfies the property is generic. This notion is mostly used in the context of Hamiltonians that are convex in $p$, in the sense that $\partial ^2_{pp} H$ is positive definite at each point. We will also restrict our study to this situation. There is a close relation between perturbations of Hamiltonians by a small additive potential and perturbations by a positive factor close to one. Indeed, the Hamiltonians $H+g$ and $H/(1-g)$ have the same level one energy surface, hence their dynamics on this energy surface are reparametrisation of each other, this is the Maupertuis principle. This remark is particularly relevant when $H$ is homogeneous in the fibers (which corresponds to Finsler metrics) or even fiberwise quadratic (which corresponds to Riemannian metrics). In these cases, perturbations by potentials of the Hamiltonian correspond, up to parametrisation, to conformal perturbations of the metric. One of the widely studied aspects is to understand to what extent the return map associated to a periodic orbit can be modified by a small perturbation. This kind of question depends strongly on the context in which they are posed. Some of the most studied contexts are, in increasing order of difficulty, perturbations of general vector fields, perturbations of Hamiltonian systems inside the class of Hamiltonian systems, perturbations of Riemannian metrics inside the class of Riemannian metrics, and Mañé perturbations of convex Hamiltonians. It is for example well known that each vector field can be perturbed to a vector field with only hyperbolic periodic orbits, this is part of the Kupka–Smale Theorem, see [ 5, 13] (the other part of the Kupka–Smale Theorem states that the stable and unstable manifolds intersect transversally; it has also been studied in the various settings mentioned above but will not be discussed here). In the context of Hamiltonian vector fields, the statement has to be weakened, but it remains true that each Hamiltonian can be perturbed to a Hamiltonian with only non-degenerate periodic orbits (including the iterated ones), see [ 11, 12]. The same result is true in the context of Riemannian metrics: every Riemannian metric can be perturbed to a Riemannian metric with only non-degenerate closed geodesics, this is the bumpy metric theorem, see [ 1, 2, 4]. The question was investigated only much more recently in the context of Mañé perturbations of convex Hamiltonians, see [ 9, 10]. It is proved in [ 10] that the same result holds: if $H$ is a convex Hamiltonian and $a$ is a regular value of $H$, then there exist arbitrarily small potentials $g$ such that all periodic orbits (including iterated ones) of $H+g$ at energy $a$ are non-degenerate. The proof given in [ 10] is actually rather similar to the ones given in papers on the perturbations of Riemannian metrics. In all these proofs, it is very useful to work in appropriate coordinates around an orbit segment. In the Riemannian case, one can use the so-called Fermi coordinates. In the Hamiltonian case, appropriate coordinates are considered in [ 10,Lemma 3.1] itself taken from [ 3, Lemma C.1]. However, as we shall detail below, the proof of this Lemma in [ 3], Appendix C, is incomplete, and the statement itself is actually wrong. Our goal in the present paper is to state and prove a corrected version of this normal form Lemma. Our proof is different from the one outlined in [ 3], Appendix C. In particular, it is purely Hamiltonian and does not rest on the results of [ 7] on Finsler metrics, as [ 3] did. Although our normal form is weaker than the one claimed in [ 10], it is actually sufficient to prove the main results of [ 6, 10], as we shall explain after the statement of Theorem 1, and probably also of the other works using [ 3, Lemma C.1].


1995 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 77-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingwang Xu

In this paper, we are interested in the compactness of isospectral conformal metrics in dimension 4.Let us recall the definition of the isospectral metrics. Two Riemannian metrics g, g′ on a compact manifold are said to be isospectral if their associated Laplace operators on functions have identical spectrum. There are now numeruos examples of compact Riemannian manifolds which admit more than two metrics such that they are isospectral but not isometric. That is to say that the eigenvalues of the Laplace operator Δ on the functions do not necessarily determine the isometry class of (M, g). If we further require the metrics stay in the same conformal class, the spectrum of Laplace operator still does not determine the metric uniquely ([BG], [BPY]).


1968 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 67-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihiko Morimoto

The purpose of the present paper is to study the prolongations of G-structures on a manifold M to its tangent bundle T(M), G being a Lie subgroup of GL(n,R) with n = dim M. Recently, K. Yano and S. Kobayashi [9] studied the prolongations of tensor fields on M to T(M) and they proposed the following question: Is it possible to associate with each G-structure on M a naturally induced G-structure on T(M), where G′ is a certain subgroup of GL(2n,R)? In this paper we give an answer to this question and we shall show that the prolongations of some special tensor fields by Yano-Kobayashi — for instance, the prolongations of almost complex structures — are derived naturally by our prolongations of the classical G-structures. On the other hand, S. Sasaki [5] studied a prolongation of Riemannian metrics on M to a Riemannian metric on T(M), while the prolongation of a (positive definite) Riemannian metric due to Yano-Kobayashi is always pseudo-Riemannian on T(M) but never Riemannian. We shall clarify the circumstances for this difference and give the reason why the one is positive definite Riemannian and the other is not.


1983 ◽  
Vol 90 ◽  
pp. 1-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Atsuro Sannami

One of the basic problems in the theory of dynamical systems is the characterization of stable systems.Let M be a closed (i.e. compact without boundary) connected smooth manifold with a smooth Riemannian metric and Diffr (M) (r ≥ 1) denote the space of Cr diffeomorphisms on M with the uniform Cr topology.


2017 ◽  
Vol 09 (01) ◽  
pp. 15-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boris Lishak ◽  
Alexander Nabutovsky

We prove that: (1) There exist infinitely many nontrivial codimension one “thick” knots in [Formula: see text]; (2) For each closed four-dimensional smooth manifold [Formula: see text] and for each sufficiently small positive [Formula: see text] the set of isometry classes of Riemannian metrics with volume equal to [Formula: see text] and injectivity radius greater than [Formula: see text] is disconnected; and (3) For each closed four-dimensional [Formula: see text]-manifold [Formula: see text] and any [Formula: see text] there exist arbitrarily large values of [Formula: see text] such that some two triangulations of [Formula: see text] with [Formula: see text] simplices cannot be connected by any sequence of [Formula: see text] bistellar transformations, where [Formula: see text] ([Formula: see text] times).


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (02) ◽  
pp. 1250043
Author(s):  
MAHUYA DATTA

In this article, we obtain the following generalization of isometric C1-immersion theorem of Nash and Kuiper. Let M be a smooth manifold of dimension m and H a rank k subbundle of the tangent bundle TM with a Riemannian metric gH. Then the pair (H, gH) defines a sub-Riemannian structure on M. We call a C1-map f : (M, H, gH) → (N, h) into a Riemannian manifold (N, h) a partial isometry if the derivative map df restricted to H is isometric, that is if f*h|H = gH. We prove that if f0 : M → N is a smooth map such that df0|H is a bundle monomorphism and [Formula: see text], then f0 can be homotoped to a C1-map f : M → N which is a partial isometry, provided dim N > k. As a consequence of this result, we obtain that every sub-Riemannian manifold (M, H, gH) admits a partial isometry in ℝn, provided n ≥ m + k.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sirkka-Liisa Eriksson ◽  
Terhi Kaarakka

Abstract We study harmonic functions with respect to the Riemannian metric $$\begin{aligned} ds^{2}=\frac{dx_{1}^{2}+\cdots +dx_{n}^{2}}{x_{n}^{\frac{2\alpha }{n-2}}} \end{aligned}$$ d s 2 = d x 1 2 + ⋯ + d x n 2 x n 2 α n - 2 in the upper half space $$\mathbb {R}_{+}^{n}=\{\left( x_{1},\ldots ,x_{n}\right) \in \mathbb {R}^{n}:x_{n}>0\}$$ R + n = { x 1 , … , x n ∈ R n : x n > 0 } . They are called $$\alpha $$ α -hyperbolic harmonic. An important result is that a function f is $$\alpha $$ α -hyperbolic harmonic íf and only if the function $$g\left( x\right) =x_{n}^{-\frac{ 2-n+\alpha }{2}}f\left( x\right) $$ g x = x n - 2 - n + α 2 f x is the eigenfunction of the hyperbolic Laplace operator $$\bigtriangleup _{h}=x_{n}^{2}\triangle -\left( n-2\right) x_{n}\frac{\partial }{\partial x_{n}}$$ △ h = x n 2 ▵ - n - 2 x n ∂ ∂ x n corresponding to the eigenvalue $$\ \frac{1}{4}\left( \left( \alpha +1\right) ^{2}-\left( n-1\right) ^{2}\right) =0$$ 1 4 α + 1 2 - n - 1 2 = 0 . This means that in case $$\alpha =n-2$$ α = n - 2 , the $$n-2$$ n - 2 -hyperbolic harmonic functions are harmonic with respect to the hyperbolic metric of the Poincaré upper half-space. We are presenting some connections of $$\alpha $$ α -hyperbolic functions to the generalized hyperbolic Brownian motion. These results are similar as in case of harmonic functions with respect to usual Laplace and Brownian motion.


Author(s):  
Miloš Žefran ◽  
Vijay Kumar ◽  
Christopher Croke

Abstract The set of spatial rigid body motions forms a Lie group known as the special Euclidean group in three dimensions, SE(3). Chasles’s theorem states that there exists a screw motion between two arbitrary elements of SE(3). In this paper we investigate whether there exist a Riemannian metric whose geodesics are screw motions. We prove that no Riemannian metric with such geodesics exists and we show that the metrics whose geodesics are screw motions form a two-parameter family of semi-Riemannian metrics.


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