Riemannian manifold

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Feb 05, 2025 / 16:46

In differential geometry a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance ang

Riemannian manifold
Riemannian manifold
Riemannian manifold

In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance, angles, length, volume, and curvature are defined. Euclidean space, the -sphere, hyperbolic space, and smooth surfaces in three-dimensional space, such as ellipsoids and paraboloids, are all examples of Riemannian manifolds. Riemannian manifolds are named after German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, who first conceptualized them.

image
The dot product of two vectors tangent to the sphere sitting inside 3-dimensional Euclidean space contains information about the lengths and angle between the vectors. The dot products on every tangent plane, packaged together into one mathematical object, are a Riemannian metric.

Formally, a Riemannian metric (or just a metric) on a smooth manifold is a choice of inner product for each tangent space of the manifold. A Riemannian manifold is a smooth manifold together with a Riemannian metric. The techniques of differential and integral calculus are used to pull geometric data out of the Riemannian metric. For example, integration leads to the Riemannian distance function, whereas differentiation is used to define curvature and parallel transport.

Any smooth surface in three-dimensional Euclidean space is a Riemannian manifold with a Riemannian metric coming from the way it sits inside the ambient space. The same is true for any submanifold of Euclidean space of any dimension. Although John Nash proved that every Riemannian manifold arises as a submanifold of Euclidean space, and although some Riemannian manifolds are naturally exhibited or defined in that way, the idea of a Riemannian manifold emphasizes the intrinsic point of view, which defines geometric notions directly on the abstract space itself without referencing an ambient space. In many instances, such as for hyperbolic space and projective space, Riemannian metrics are more naturally defined or constructed using the intrinsic point of view. Additionally, many metrics on Lie groups and homogeneous spaces are defined intrinsically by using group actions to transport an inner product on a single tangent space to the entire manifold, and many special metrics such as constant scalar curvature metrics and Kähler–Einstein metrics are constructed intrinsically using tools from partial differential equations.

Riemannian geometry, the study of Riemannian manifolds, has deep connections to other areas of math, including geometric topology, complex geometry, and algebraic geometry. Applications include physics (especially general relativity and gauge theory), computer graphics, machine learning, and cartography. Generalizations of Riemannian manifolds include pseudo-Riemannian manifolds, Finsler manifolds, and sub-Riemannian manifolds.

History

image
Riemannian manifolds were first conceptualized by their namesake, German mathematician Bernhard Riemann.

In 1827, Carl Friedrich Gauss discovered that the Gaussian curvature of a surface embedded in 3-dimensional space only depends on local measurements made within the surface (the first fundamental form). This result is known as the Theorema Egregium ("remarkable theorem" in Latin).

A map that preserves the local measurements of a surface is called a local isometry. Call a property of a surface an intrinsic property if it is preserved by local isometries and call it an extrinsic property if it is not. In this language, the Theorema Egregium says that the Gaussian curvature is an intrinsic property of surfaces.

Riemannian manifolds and their curvature were first introduced non-rigorously by Bernhard Riemann in 1854. However, they would not be formalized until much later. In fact, the more primitive concept of a smooth manifold was first explicitly defined only in 1913 in a book by Hermann Weyl.

Élie Cartan introduced the Cartan connection, one of the first concepts of a connection. Levi-Civita defined the Levi-Civita connection, a special connection on a Riemannian manifold.

Albert Einstein used the theory of pseudo-Riemannian manifolds (a generalization of Riemannian manifolds) to develop general relativity. Specifically, the Einstein field equations are constraints on the curvature of spacetime, which is a 4-dimensional pseudo-Riemannian manifold.

Definition

Riemannian metrics and Riemannian manifolds

image
A tangent plane of the sphere with two vectors in it. A Riemannian metric allows one to take the inner product of these vectors.

Let image be a smooth manifold. For each point image, there is an associated vector space image called the tangent space of image at image. Vectors in image are thought of as the vectors tangent to image at image.

However, image does not come equipped with an inner product, a measuring stick that gives tangent vectors a concept of length and angle. This is an important deficiency because calculus teaches that to calculate the length of a curve, the length of vectors tangent to the curve must be defined. A Riemannian metric puts a measuring stick on every tangent space.

A Riemannian metric image on image assigns to each image a positive-definite inner product image in a smooth way (see the section on regularity below). This induces a norm image defined by image. A smooth manifold image endowed with a Riemannian metric image is a Riemannian manifold, denoted image. A Riemannian metric is a special case of a metric tensor.

A Riemannian metric is not to be confused with the distance function of a metric space, which is also called a metric.

The Riemannian metric in coordinates

If image are smooth local coordinates on image, the vectors

image

form a basis of the vector space image for any image. Relative to this basis, one can define the Riemannian metric's components at each point image by

image.

These image functions image can be put together into an image matrix-valued function on image. The requirement that image is a positive-definite inner product then says exactly that this matrix-valued function is a symmetric positive-definite matrix at image.

In terms of the tensor algebra, the Riemannian metric can be written in terms of the dual basis image of the cotangent bundle as

image

Regularity of the Riemannian metric

The Riemannian metric image is continuous if its components image are continuous in any smooth coordinate chart image The Riemannian metric image is smooth if its components image are smooth in any smooth coordinate chart. One can consider many other types of Riemannian metrics in this spirit, such as Lipschitz Riemannian metrics or measurable Riemannian metrics.

There are situations in geometric analysis in which one wants to consider non-smooth Riemannian metrics. See for instance (Gromov 1999) and (Shi and Tam 2002). However, in this article, image is assumed to be smooth unless stated otherwise.

Musical isomorphism

In analogy to how an inner product on a vector space induces an isomorphism between a vector space and its dual given by image, a Riemannian metric induces an isomorphism of bundles between the tangent bundle and the cotangent bundle. Namely, if image is a Riemannian metric, then

image

is a isomorphism of smooth vector bundles from the tangent bundle image to the cotangent bundle image.

Isometries

An isometry is a function between Riemannian manifolds which preserves all of the structure of Riemannian manifolds. If two Riemannian manifolds have an isometry between them, they are called isometric, and they are considered to be the same manifold for the purpose of Riemannian geometry.

Specifically, if image and image are two Riemannian manifolds, a diffeomorphism image is called an isometry if image, that is, if

image

for all image and image For example, translations and rotations are both isometries from Euclidean space (to be defined soon) to itself.

One says that a smooth map image not assumed to be a diffeomorphism, is a local isometry if every image has an open neighborhood image such that image is an isometry (and thus a diffeomorphism).

Volume

An oriented image-dimensional Riemannian manifold image has a unique image-form image called the Riemannian volume form. The Riemannian volume form is preserved by orientation-preserving isometries. The volume form gives rise to a measure on image which allows measurable functions to be integrated.[citation needed] If image is compact, the volume of image is image.

Examples

Euclidean space

Let image denote the standard coordinates on image The (canonical) Euclidean metric image is given by

image

or equivalently

image

or equivalently by its coordinate functions

image where image is the Kronecker delta

which together form the matrix

image

The Riemannian manifold image is called Euclidean space.

Submanifolds

image
The image-sphere image with the round metric is an embedded Riemannian submanifold of image.

Let image be a Riemannian manifold and let image be an immersed submanifold or an embedded submanifold of image. The pullback image of image is a Riemannian metric on image, and image is said to be a Riemannian submanifold of image.

In the case where image, the map image is given by image and the metric image is just the restriction of image to vectors tangent along image. In general, the formula for image is

image

where image is the pushforward of image by image

Examples:

  • The image-sphere
    image
is a smooth embedded submanifold of Euclidean space image. The Riemannian metric this induces on image is called the round metric or standard metric.
  • Fix real numbers image. The ellipsoid
    image
is a smooth embedded submanifold of Euclidean space image.
  • The graph of a smooth function image is a smooth embedded submanifold of image with its standard metric.
  • If image is not simply connected, there is a covering map image, where image is the universal cover of image. This is an immersion (since it is locally a diffeomorphism), so image automatically inherits a Riemannian metric. By the same principle, any smooth covering space of a Riemannian manifold inherits a Riemannian metric.

On the other hand, if image already has a Riemannian metric image, then the immersion (or embedding) image is called an isometric immersion (or isometric embedding) if image. Hence isometric immersions and isometric embeddings are Riemannian submanifolds.

Products

image
image
A torus naturally carries a Euclidean metric, obtained by identifying opposite sides of a square (left). The resulting Riemannian manifold, called a flat torus, cannot be isometrically embedded in 3-dimensional Euclidean space (right), because it is necessary to bend and stretch the sheet in doing so. Thus the intrinsic geometry of a flat torus is different from that of an embedded torus.

Let image and image be two Riemannian manifolds, and consider the product manifold image. The Riemannian metrics image and image naturally put a Riemannian metric image on image which can be described in a few ways.

  • Considering the decomposition image one may define
    image
  • If image is a smooth coordinate chart on image and image is a smooth coordinate chart on image, then image is a smooth coordinate chart on image Let image be the representation of image in the chart image and let image be the representation of image in the chart image. The representation of image in the coordinates image is
    image where image

For example, consider the image-torus image. If each copy of image is given the round metric, the product Riemannian manifold image is called the flat torus. As another example, the Riemannian product image, where each copy of image has the Euclidean metric, is isometric to image with the Euclidean metric.

Positive combinations of metrics

Let image be Riemannian metrics on image If image are any positive smooth functions on image, then image is another Riemannian metric on image

Every smooth manifold admits a Riemannian metric

Theorem: Every smooth manifold admits a (non-canonical) Riemannian metric.

This is a fundamental result. Although much of the basic theory of Riemannian metrics can be developed using only that a smooth manifold is a locally Euclidean topological space, for this result it is necessary to use that smooth manifolds are Hausdorff and paracompact. The reason is that the proof makes use of a partition of unity.

Proof that every smooth manifold admits a Riemannian metric

Let image be a smooth manifold and image a locally finite atlas so that image are open subsets and image are diffeomorphisms. Such an atlas exists because the manifold is paracompact.

Let image be a differentiable partition of unity subordinate to the given atlas, i.e. such that image for all image.

Define a Riemannian metric image on image by

image

where

image

Here image is the Euclidean metric on image and image is its pullback along image. While image is only defined on image, the product image is defined and smooth on image since image. It takes the value 0 outside of image. Because the atlas is locally finite, at every point the sum contains only finitely many nonzero terms, so the sum converges. It is straightforward to check that image is a Riemannian metric.

An alternative proof uses the Whitney embedding theorem to embed image into Euclidean space and then pulls back the metric from Euclidean space to image. On the other hand, the Nash embedding theorem states that, given any smooth Riemannian manifold image there is an embedding image for some image such that the pullback by image of the standard Riemannian metric on image is image That is, the entire structure of a smooth Riemannian manifold can be encoded by a diffeomorphism to a certain embedded submanifold of some Euclidean space. Therefore, one could argue that nothing can be gained from the consideration of abstract smooth manifolds and their Riemannian metrics. However, there are many natural smooth Riemannian manifolds, such as the set of rotations of three-dimensional space and hyperbolic space, of which any representation as a submanifold of Euclidean space will fail to represent their remarkable symmetries and properties as clearly as their abstract presentations do.

Metric space structure

An admissible curve is a piecewise smooth curve image whose velocity image is nonzero everywhere it is defined. The nonnegative function image is defined on the interval image except for at finitely many points. The length image of an admissible curve image is defined as

image

The integrand is bounded and continuous except at finitely many points, so it is integrable. For image a connected Riemannian manifold, define image by

image

Theorem: image is a metric space, and the metric topology on image coincides with the topology on image.

Proof sketch that image is a metric space, and the metric topology on image agrees with the topology on image

In verifying that image satisfies all of the axioms of a metric space, the most difficult part is checking that image implies image. Verification of the other metric space axioms is omitted.

There must be some precompact open set around p which every curve from p to q must escape. By selecting this open set to be contained in a coordinate chart, one can reduce the claim to the well-known fact that, in Euclidean geometry, the shortest curve between two points is a line. In particular, as seen by the Euclidean geometry of a coordinate chart around p, any curve from p to q must first pass though a certain "inner radius." The assumed continuity of the Riemannian metric g only allows this "coordinate chart geometry" to distort the "true geometry" by some bounded factor.

To be precise, let image be a smooth coordinate chart with image and image Let image be an open subset of image with image By continuity of image and compactness of image there is a positive number image such that image for any image and any image where image denotes the Euclidean norm induced by the local coordinates. Let R denote image. Now, given any admissible curve image from p to q, there must be some minimal image such that image clearly image

The length of image is at least as large as the restriction of image to image So

image

The integral which appears here represents the Euclidean length of a curve from 0 to image, and so it is greater than or equal to R. So we conclude image

The observation about comparison between lengths measured by g and Euclidean lengths measured in a smooth coordinate chart, also verifies that the metric space topology of image coincides with the original topological space structure of image.

Although the length of a curve is given by an explicit formula, it is generally impossible to write out the distance function image by any explicit means. In fact, if image is compact, there always exist points where image is non-differentiable, and it can be remarkably difficult to even determine the location or nature of these points, even in seemingly simple cases such as when image is an ellipsoid.[citation needed]

If one works with Riemannian metrics that are merely continuous but possibly not smooth, the length of an admissible curve and the Riemannian distance function are defined exactly the same, and, as before, image is a metric space and the metric topology on image coincides with the topology on image.

Diameter

The diameter of the metric space image is

image

The Hopf–Rinow theorem shows that if image is complete and has finite diameter, it is compact. Conversely, if image is compact, then the function image has a maximum, since it is a continuous function on a compact metric space. This proves the following.

If image is complete, then it is compact if and only if it has finite diameter.

This is not the case without the completeness assumption; for counterexamples one could consider any open bounded subset of a Euclidean space with the standard Riemannian metric. It is also not true that any complete metric space of finite diameter must be compact; it matters that the metric space came from a Riemannian manifold.

Connections, geodesics, and curvature

Connections

An (affine) connection is an additional structure on a Riemannian manifold that defines differentiation of one vector field with respect to another. Connections contain geometric data, and two Riemannian manifolds with different connections have different geometry.

Let image denote the space of vector fields on image. An (affine) connection

image

on image is a bilinear map image such that

  1. For every function image, image
  2. The product rule image holds.

The expression image is called the covariant derivative of image with respect to image.

Levi-Civita connection

Two Riemannian manifolds with different connections have different geometry. Thankfully, there is a natural connection associated to a Riemannian manifold called the Levi-Civita connection.

A connection image is said to preserve the metric if

image

A connection image is torsion-free if

image

where image is the Lie bracket.

A Levi-Civita connection is a torsion-free connection that preserves the metric. Once a Riemannian metric is fixed, there exists a unique Levi-Civita connection. Note that the definition of preserving the metric uses the regularity of image.

Covariant derivative along a curve

If image is a smooth curve, a smooth vector field along image is a smooth map image such that image for all image. The set image of smooth vector fields along image is a vector space under pointwise vector addition and scalar multiplication. One can also pointwise multiply a smooth vector field along image by a smooth function image:

image for image

Let image be a smooth vector field along image. If image is a smooth vector field on a neighborhood of the image of image such that image, then image is called an extension of image.

Given a fixed connection image on image and a smooth curve image, there is a unique operator image, called the covariant derivative along image, such that:

  1. image
  2. image
  3. If image is an extension of image, then image.

Geodesics

image
image
In Euclidean space image (left), the maximal geodesics are straight lines. In the round sphere image (right), the maximal geodesics are great circles.

Geodesics are curves with no intrinsic acceleration. Equivalently, geodesics are curves that locally take the shortest path between two points. They are the generalization of straight lines in Euclidean space to arbitrary Riemannian manifolds. An ant living in a Riemannian manifold walking straight ahead without making any effort to accelerate or turn would trace out a geodesic.

Fix a connection image on image. Let image be a smooth curve. The acceleration of image is the vector field image along image. If image for all image, image is called a geodesic.

For every image and image, there exists a geodesic image defined on some open interval image containing 0 such that image and image. Any two such geodesics agree on their common domain. Taking the union over all open intervals image containing 0 on which a geodesic satisfying image and image exists, one obtains a geodesic called a maximal geodesic of which every geodesic satisfying image and image is a restriction.

Every curve image that has the shortest length of any admissible curve with the same endpoints as image is a geodesic (in a unit-speed reparameterization).

Examples

  • The nonconstant maximal geodesics of the Euclidean plane image are exactly the straight lines. This agrees with the fact from Euclidean geometry that the shortest path between two points is a straight line segment.
  • The nonconstant maximal geodesics of image with the round metric are exactly the great circles. Since the Earth is approximately a sphere, this means that the shortest path a plane can fly between two locations on Earth is a segment of a great circle.

Hopf–Rinow theorem

image
The punctured plane image is not geodesically complete because the maximal geodesic with initial conditions image, image does not have domain image.

The Riemannian manifold image with its Levi-Civita connection is geodesically complete if the domain of every maximal geodesic is image. The plane image is geodesically complete. On the other hand, the punctured plane image with the restriction of the Riemannian metric from image is not geodesically complete as the maximal geodesic with initial conditions image, image does not have domain image.

The Hopf–Rinow theorem characterizes geodesically complete manifolds.

Theorem: Let image be a connected Riemannian manifold. The following are equivalent:

  • The metric space image is complete (every image-Cauchy sequence converges),
  • All closed and bounded subsets of image are compact,
  • image is geodesically complete.

Parallel transport

image
Parallel transport of a tangent vector along a curve in the sphere.

In Euclidean space, all tangent spaces are canonically identified with each other via translation, so it is easy to move vectors from one tangent space to another. Parallel transport is a way of moving vectors from one tangent space to another along a curve in the setting of a general Riemannian manifold. Given a fixed connection, there is a unique way to do parallel transport.

Specifically, call a smooth vector field image along a smooth curve image parallel along image if image identically. Fix a curve image with image and image. to parallel transport a vector image to a vector in image along image, first extend image to a vector field parallel along image, and then take the value of this vector field at image.

The images below show parallel transport induced by the Levi-Civita connection associated to two different Riemannian metrics on the punctured plane image. The curve the parallel transport is done along is the unit circle. In polar coordinates, the metric on the left is the standard Euclidean metric image, while the metric on the right is image. This second metric has a singularity at the origin, so it does not extend past the puncture, but the first metric extends to the entire plane.

Parallel transports on the punctured plane under Levi-Civita connections
image
This transport is given by the metric image.
image
This transport is given by the metric image.

Warning: This is parallel transport on the punctured plane along the unit circle, not parallel transport on the unit circle. Indeed, in the first image, the vectors fall outside of the tangent space to the unit circle.

Riemann curvature tensor

The Riemann curvature tensor measures precisely the extent to which parallel transporting vectors around a small rectangle is not the identity map. The Riemann curvature tensor is 0 at every point if and only if the manifold is locally isometric to Euclidean space.

Fix a connection image on image. The Riemann curvature tensor is the map image defined by

image

where image is the Lie bracket of vector fields. The Riemann curvature tensor is a image-tensor field.

Ricci curvature tensor

Fix a connection image on image. The Ricci curvature tensor is

In differential geometry a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance angles length volume and curvature are defined Euclidean space the n displaystyle n sphere hyperbolic space and smooth surfaces in three dimensional space such as ellipsoids and paraboloids are all examples of Riemannian manifolds Riemannian manifolds are named after German mathematician Bernhard Riemann who first conceptualized them The dot product of two vectors tangent to the sphere sitting inside 3 dimensional Euclidean space contains information about the lengths and angle between the vectors The dot products on every tangent plane packaged together into one mathematical object are a Riemannian metric Formally a Riemannian metric or just a metric on a smooth manifold is a choice of inner product for each tangent space of the manifold A Riemannian manifold is a smooth manifold together with a Riemannian metric The techniques of differential and integral calculus are used to pull geometric data out of the Riemannian metric For example integration leads to the Riemannian distance function whereas differentiation is used to define curvature and parallel transport Any smooth surface in three dimensional Euclidean space is a Riemannian manifold with a Riemannian metric coming from the way it sits inside the ambient space The same is true for any submanifold of Euclidean space of any dimension Although John Nash proved that every Riemannian manifold arises as a submanifold of Euclidean space and although some Riemannian manifolds are naturally exhibited or defined in that way the idea of a Riemannian manifold emphasizes the intrinsic point of view which defines geometric notions directly on the abstract space itself without referencing an ambient space In many instances such as for hyperbolic space and projective space Riemannian metrics are more naturally defined or constructed using the intrinsic point of view Additionally many metrics on Lie groups and homogeneous spaces are defined intrinsically by using group actions to transport an inner product on a single tangent space to the entire manifold and many special metrics such as constant scalar curvature metrics and Kahler Einstein metrics are constructed intrinsically using tools from partial differential equations Riemannian geometry the study of Riemannian manifolds has deep connections to other areas of math including geometric topology complex geometry and algebraic geometry Applications include physics especially general relativity and gauge theory computer graphics machine learning and cartography Generalizations of Riemannian manifolds include pseudo Riemannian manifolds Finsler manifolds and sub Riemannian manifolds HistoryRiemannian manifolds were first conceptualized by their namesake German mathematician Bernhard Riemann In 1827 Carl Friedrich Gauss discovered that the Gaussian curvature of a surface embedded in 3 dimensional space only depends on local measurements made within the surface the first fundamental form This result is known as the Theorema Egregium remarkable theorem in Latin A map that preserves the local measurements of a surface is called a local isometry Call a property of a surface an intrinsic property if it is preserved by local isometries and call it an extrinsic property if it is not In this language the Theorema Egregium says that the Gaussian curvature is an intrinsic property of surfaces Riemannian manifolds and their curvature were first introduced non rigorously by Bernhard Riemann in 1854 However they would not be formalized until much later In fact the more primitive concept of a smooth manifold was first explicitly defined only in 1913 in a book by Hermann Weyl Elie Cartan introduced the Cartan connection one of the first concepts of a connection Levi Civita defined the Levi Civita connection a special connection on a Riemannian manifold Albert Einstein used the theory of pseudo Riemannian manifolds a generalization of Riemannian manifolds to develop general relativity Specifically the Einstein field equations are constraints on the curvature of spacetime which is a 4 dimensional pseudo Riemannian manifold DefinitionRiemannian metrics and Riemannian manifolds A tangent plane of the sphere with two vectors in it A Riemannian metric allows one to take the inner product of these vectors Let M displaystyle M be a smooth manifold For each point p M displaystyle p in M there is an associated vector space TpM displaystyle T p M called the tangent space of M displaystyle M at p displaystyle p Vectors in TpM displaystyle T p M are thought of as the vectors tangent to M displaystyle M at p displaystyle p However TpM displaystyle T p M does not come equipped with an inner product a measuring stick that gives tangent vectors a concept of length and angle This is an important deficiency because calculus teaches that to calculate the length of a curve the length of vectors tangent to the curve must be defined A Riemannian metric puts a measuring stick on every tangent space A Riemannian metric g displaystyle g on M displaystyle M assigns to each p displaystyle p a positive definite inner product gp TpM TpM R displaystyle g p T p M times T p M to mathbb R in a smooth way see the section on regularity below This induces a norm p TpM R displaystyle cdot p T p M to mathbb R defined by v p gp v v displaystyle v p sqrt g p v v A smooth manifold M displaystyle M endowed with a Riemannian metric g displaystyle g is a Riemannian manifold denoted M g displaystyle M g A Riemannian metric is a special case of a metric tensor A Riemannian metric is not to be confused with the distance function of a metric space which is also called a metric The Riemannian metric in coordinates If x1 xn U Rn displaystyle x 1 ldots x n U to mathbb R n are smooth local coordinates on M displaystyle M the vectors x1 p xn p displaystyle left frac partial partial x 1 Big p dotsc frac partial partial x n Big p right form a basis of the vector space TpM displaystyle T p M for any p U displaystyle p in U Relative to this basis one can define the Riemannian metric s components at each point p displaystyle p by gij p gp xi p xj p displaystyle g ij p g p left left frac partial partial x i right p left frac partial partial x j right p right These n2 displaystyle n 2 functions gij U R displaystyle g ij U to mathbb R can be put together into an n n displaystyle n times n matrix valued function on U displaystyle U The requirement that gp displaystyle g p is a positive definite inner product then says exactly that this matrix valued function is a symmetric positive definite matrix at p displaystyle p In terms of the tensor algebra the Riemannian metric can be written in terms of the dual basis dx1 dxn displaystyle dx 1 ldots dx n of the cotangent bundle as g i jgijdxi dxj displaystyle g sum i j g ij dx i otimes dx j Regularity of the Riemannian metric The Riemannian metric g displaystyle g is continuous if its components gij U R displaystyle g ij U to mathbb R are continuous in any smooth coordinate chart U x displaystyle U x The Riemannian metric g displaystyle g is smooth if its components gij displaystyle g ij are smooth in any smooth coordinate chart One can consider many other types of Riemannian metrics in this spirit such as Lipschitz Riemannian metrics or measurable Riemannian metrics There are situations in geometric analysis in which one wants to consider non smooth Riemannian metrics See for instance Gromov 1999 and Shi and Tam 2002 However in this article g displaystyle g is assumed to be smooth unless stated otherwise Musical isomorphism In analogy to how an inner product on a vector space induces an isomorphism between a vector space and its dual given by v v displaystyle v mapsto langle v cdot rangle a Riemannian metric induces an isomorphism of bundles between the tangent bundle and the cotangent bundle Namely if g displaystyle g is a Riemannian metric then p v gp v displaystyle p v mapsto g p v cdot is a isomorphism of smooth vector bundles from the tangent bundle TM displaystyle TM to the cotangent bundle T M displaystyle T M Isometries An isometry is a function between Riemannian manifolds which preserves all of the structure of Riemannian manifolds If two Riemannian manifolds have an isometry between them they are called isometric and they are considered to be the same manifold for the purpose of Riemannian geometry Specifically if M g displaystyle M g and N h displaystyle N h are two Riemannian manifolds a diffeomorphism f M N displaystyle f M to N is called an isometry if g f h displaystyle g f ast h that is if gp u v hf p dfp u dfp v displaystyle g p u v h f p df p u df p v for all p M displaystyle p in M and u v TpM displaystyle u v in T p M For example translations and rotations are both isometries from Euclidean space to be defined soon to itself One says that a smooth map f M N displaystyle f M to N not assumed to be a diffeomorphism is a local isometry if every p M displaystyle p in M has an open neighborhood U displaystyle U such that f U f U displaystyle f U to f U is an isometry and thus a diffeomorphism Volume An oriented n displaystyle n dimensional Riemannian manifold M g displaystyle M g has a unique n displaystyle n form dVg displaystyle dV g called the Riemannian volume form The Riemannian volume form is preserved by orientation preserving isometries The volume form gives rise to a measure on M displaystyle M which allows measurable functions to be integrated citation needed If M displaystyle M is compact the volume of M displaystyle M is MdVg displaystyle int M dV g ExamplesEuclidean space Let x1 xn displaystyle x 1 ldots x n denote the standard coordinates on Rn displaystyle mathbb R n The canonical Euclidean metric gcan displaystyle g text can is given by gcan iai xi jbj xj iaibi displaystyle g text can left sum i a i frac partial partial x i sum j b j frac partial partial x j right sum i a i b i or equivalently gcan dx1 2 dxn 2 displaystyle g text can dx 1 2 cdots dx n 2 or equivalently by its coordinate functions gijcan dij displaystyle g ij text can delta ij where dij displaystyle delta ij is the Kronecker delta which together form the matrix gijcan 10 001 0 00 1 displaystyle g ij text can begin pmatrix 1 amp 0 amp cdots amp 0 0 amp 1 amp cdots amp 0 vdots amp vdots amp ddots amp vdots 0 amp 0 amp cdots amp 1 end pmatrix The Riemannian manifold Rn gcan displaystyle mathbb R n g text can is called Euclidean space Submanifolds The n displaystyle n sphere Sn displaystyle S n with the round metric is an embedded Riemannian submanifold of Rn 1 displaystyle mathbb R n 1 Let M g displaystyle M g be a Riemannian manifold and let i N M displaystyle i N to M be an immersed submanifold or an embedded submanifold of M displaystyle M The pullback i g displaystyle i g of g displaystyle g is a Riemannian metric on N displaystyle N and N i g displaystyle N i g is said to be a Riemannian submanifold of M g displaystyle M g In the case where N M displaystyle N subseteq M the map i N M displaystyle i N to M is given by i x x displaystyle i x x and the metric i g displaystyle i g is just the restriction of g displaystyle g to vectors tangent along N displaystyle N In general the formula for i g displaystyle i g is i gp v w gi p dip v dip w displaystyle i g p v w g i p big di p v di p w big where dip v displaystyle di p v is the pushforward of v displaystyle v by i displaystyle i Examples The n displaystyle n sphere Sn x Rn 1 x1 2 xn 1 2 1 displaystyle S n x in mathbb R n 1 x 1 2 cdots x n 1 2 1 is a smooth embedded submanifold of Euclidean space Rn 1 displaystyle mathbb R n 1 The Riemannian metric this induces on Sn displaystyle S n is called the round metric or standard metric Fix real numbers a b c displaystyle a b c The ellipsoid x y z R3 x2a2 y2b2 z2c2 1 displaystyle left x y z in mathbb R 3 frac x 2 a 2 frac y 2 b 2 frac z 2 c 2 1 right is a smooth embedded submanifold of Euclidean space R3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 The graph of a smooth function f Rn R displaystyle f mathbb R n to mathbb R is a smooth embedded submanifold of Rn 1 displaystyle mathbb R n 1 with its standard metric If M g displaystyle M g is not simply connected there is a covering map M M displaystyle widetilde M to M where M displaystyle widetilde M is the universal cover of M displaystyle M This is an immersion since it is locally a diffeomorphism so M displaystyle widetilde M automatically inherits a Riemannian metric By the same principle any smooth covering space of a Riemannian manifold inherits a Riemannian metric On the other hand if N displaystyle N already has a Riemannian metric g displaystyle tilde g then the immersion or embedding i N M displaystyle i N to M is called an isometric immersion or isometric embedding if g i g displaystyle tilde g i g Hence isometric immersions and isometric embeddings are Riemannian submanifolds Products A torus naturally carries a Euclidean metric obtained by identifying opposite sides of a square left The resulting Riemannian manifold called a flat torus cannot be isometrically embedded in 3 dimensional Euclidean space right because it is necessary to bend and stretch the sheet in doing so Thus the intrinsic geometry of a flat torus is different from that of an embedded torus Let M g displaystyle M g and N h displaystyle N h be two Riemannian manifolds and consider the product manifold M N displaystyle M times N The Riemannian metrics g displaystyle g and h displaystyle h naturally put a Riemannian metric g displaystyle widetilde g on M N displaystyle M times N which can be described in a few ways Considering the decomposition T p q M N TpM TqN displaystyle T p q M times N cong T p M oplus T q N one may define g p q u1 u2 v1 v2 gp u1 v1 hq u2 v2 displaystyle widetilde g p q u 1 u 2 v 1 v 2 g p u 1 v 1 h q u 2 v 2 If U x displaystyle U x is a smooth coordinate chart on M displaystyle M and V y displaystyle V y is a smooth coordinate chart on N displaystyle N then U V x y displaystyle U times V x y is a smooth coordinate chart on M N displaystyle M times N Let gU displaystyle g U be the representation of g displaystyle g in the chart U x displaystyle U x and let hV displaystyle h V be the representation of h displaystyle h in the chart V y displaystyle V y The representation of g displaystyle widetilde g in the coordinates U V x y displaystyle U times V x y is g ijg ijdxidxj displaystyle widetilde g sum ij widetilde g ij dx i dx j where g ij gU00hV displaystyle widetilde g ij begin pmatrix g U amp 0 0 amp h V end pmatrix For example consider the n displaystyle n torus Tn S1 S1 displaystyle T n S 1 times cdots times S 1 If each copy of S1 displaystyle S 1 is given the round metric the product Riemannian manifold Tn displaystyle T n is called the flat torus As another example the Riemannian product R R displaystyle mathbb R times cdots times mathbb R where each copy of R displaystyle mathbb R has the Euclidean metric is isometric to Rn displaystyle mathbb R n with the Euclidean metric Positive combinations of metrics Let g1 gk displaystyle g 1 ldots g k be Riemannian metrics on M displaystyle M If f1 fk displaystyle f 1 ldots f k are any positive smooth functions on M displaystyle M then f1g1 fkgk displaystyle f 1 g 1 ldots f k g k is another Riemannian metric on M displaystyle M Every smooth manifold admits a Riemannian metricTheorem Every smooth manifold admits a non canonical Riemannian metric This is a fundamental result Although much of the basic theory of Riemannian metrics can be developed using only that a smooth manifold is a locally Euclidean topological space for this result it is necessary to use that smooth manifolds are Hausdorff and paracompact The reason is that the proof makes use of a partition of unity Proof that every smooth manifold admits a Riemannian metricLet M displaystyle M be a smooth manifold and Ua fa a A displaystyle U alpha varphi alpha alpha in A a locally finite atlas so that Ua M displaystyle U alpha subseteq M are open subsets and fa Ua fa Ua Rn displaystyle varphi alpha colon U alpha to varphi alpha U alpha subseteq mathbf R n are diffeomorphisms Such an atlas exists because the manifold is paracompact Let ta a A displaystyle tau alpha alpha in A be a differentiable partition of unity subordinate to the given atlas i e such that supp ta Ua displaystyle operatorname supp tau alpha subseteq U alpha for all a A displaystyle alpha in A Define a Riemannian metric g displaystyle g on M displaystyle M by g a Ata g a displaystyle g sum alpha in A tau alpha cdot tilde g alpha where g a fa gcan displaystyle tilde g alpha varphi alpha g text can Here gcan displaystyle g text can is the Euclidean metric on Rn displaystyle mathbb R n and fa gcan displaystyle varphi alpha g mathrm can is its pullback along fa displaystyle varphi alpha While g a displaystyle tilde g alpha is only defined on Ua displaystyle U alpha the product ta g a displaystyle tau alpha cdot tilde g alpha is defined and smooth on M displaystyle M since supp ta Ua displaystyle operatorname supp tau alpha subseteq U alpha It takes the value 0 outside of Ua displaystyle U alpha Because the atlas is locally finite at every point the sum contains only finitely many nonzero terms so the sum converges It is straightforward to check that g displaystyle g is a Riemannian metric An alternative proof uses the Whitney embedding theorem to embed M displaystyle M into Euclidean space and then pulls back the metric from Euclidean space to M displaystyle M On the other hand the Nash embedding theorem states that given any smooth Riemannian manifold M g displaystyle M g there is an embedding F M RN displaystyle F M to mathbb R N for some N displaystyle N such that the pullback by F displaystyle F of the standard Riemannian metric on RN displaystyle mathbb R N is g displaystyle g That is the entire structure of a smooth Riemannian manifold can be encoded by a diffeomorphism to a certain embedded submanifold of some Euclidean space Therefore one could argue that nothing can be gained from the consideration of abstract smooth manifolds and their Riemannian metrics However there are many natural smooth Riemannian manifolds such as the set of rotations of three dimensional space and hyperbolic space of which any representation as a submanifold of Euclidean space will fail to represent their remarkable symmetries and properties as clearly as their abstract presentations do Metric space structureAn admissible curve is a piecewise smooth curve g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M whose velocity g t Tg t M displaystyle gamma t in T gamma t M is nonzero everywhere it is defined The nonnegative function t g t g t displaystyle t mapsto gamma t gamma t is defined on the interval 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 except for at finitely many points The length L g displaystyle L gamma of an admissible curve g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M is defined as L g 01 g t g t dt displaystyle L gamma int 0 1 gamma t gamma t dt The integrand is bounded and continuous except at finitely many points so it is integrable For M g displaystyle M g a connected Riemannian manifold define dg M M 0 displaystyle d g M times M to 0 infty by dg p q inf L g g an admissible curve with g 0 p g 1 q displaystyle d g p q inf L gamma gamma text an admissible curve with gamma 0 p gamma 1 q Theorem M dg displaystyle M d g is a metric space and the metric topology on M dg displaystyle M d g coincides with the topology on M displaystyle M Proof sketch that M dg displaystyle M d g is a metric space and the metric topology on M dg displaystyle M d g agrees with the topology on M displaystyle M In verifying that M dg displaystyle M d g satisfies all of the axioms of a metric space the most difficult part is checking that p q displaystyle p neq q implies dg p q gt 0 displaystyle d g p q gt 0 Verification of the other metric space axioms is omitted There must be some precompact open set around p which every curve from p to q must escape By selecting this open set to be contained in a coordinate chart one can reduce the claim to the well known fact that in Euclidean geometry the shortest curve between two points is a line In particular as seen by the Euclidean geometry of a coordinate chart around p any curve from p to q must first pass though a certain inner radius The assumed continuity of the Riemannian metric g only allows this coordinate chart geometry to distort the true geometry by some bounded factor To be precise let U x displaystyle U x be a smooth coordinate chart with x p 0 displaystyle x p 0 and q U displaystyle q notin U Let V x displaystyle V ni x be an open subset of U displaystyle U with V U displaystyle overline V subset U By continuity of g displaystyle g and compactness of V displaystyle overline V there is a positive number l displaystyle lambda such that g X X l X 2 displaystyle g X X geq lambda X 2 for any r V displaystyle r in V and any X TrM displaystyle X in T r M where displaystyle cdot denotes the Euclidean norm induced by the local coordinates Let R denote sup r gt 0 Br 0 x V displaystyle sup r gt 0 B r 0 subset x V Now given any admissible curve g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M from p to q there must be some minimal d gt 0 displaystyle delta gt 0 such that g d V displaystyle gamma delta notin V clearly g d V displaystyle gamma delta in partial V The length of g displaystyle gamma is at least as large as the restriction of g displaystyle gamma to 0 d displaystyle 0 delta So L g l 0d g t dt displaystyle L gamma geq sqrt lambda int 0 delta gamma t dt The integral which appears here represents the Euclidean length of a curve from 0 to x V Rn displaystyle x partial V subset mathbb R n and so it is greater than or equal to R So we conclude L g lR displaystyle L gamma geq sqrt lambda R The observation about comparison between lengths measured by g and Euclidean lengths measured in a smooth coordinate chart also verifies that the metric space topology of M dg displaystyle M d g coincides with the original topological space structure of M displaystyle M Although the length of a curve is given by an explicit formula it is generally impossible to write out the distance function dg displaystyle d g by any explicit means In fact if M displaystyle M is compact there always exist points where dg M M R displaystyle d g M times M to mathbb R is non differentiable and it can be remarkably difficult to even determine the location or nature of these points even in seemingly simple cases such as when M g displaystyle M g is an ellipsoid citation needed If one works with Riemannian metrics that are merely continuous but possibly not smooth the length of an admissible curve and the Riemannian distance function are defined exactly the same and as before M dg displaystyle M d g is a metric space and the metric topology on M dg displaystyle M d g coincides with the topology on M displaystyle M Diameter The diameter of the metric space M dg displaystyle M d g is diam M dg sup dg p q p q M displaystyle operatorname diam M d g sup d g p q p q in M The Hopf Rinow theorem shows that if M dg displaystyle M d g is complete and has finite diameter it is compact Conversely if M dg displaystyle M d g is compact then the function dg M M R displaystyle d g M times M to mathbb R has a maximum since it is a continuous function on a compact metric space This proves the following If M dg displaystyle M d g is complete then it is compact if and only if it has finite diameter This is not the case without the completeness assumption for counterexamples one could consider any open bounded subset of a Euclidean space with the standard Riemannian metric It is also not true that any complete metric space of finite diameter must be compact it matters that the metric space came from a Riemannian manifold Connections geodesics and curvatureConnections An affine connection is an additional structure on a Riemannian manifold that defines differentiation of one vector field with respect to another Connections contain geometric data and two Riemannian manifolds with different connections have different geometry Let X M displaystyle mathfrak X M denote the space of vector fields on M displaystyle M An affine connection X M X M X M displaystyle nabla mathfrak X M times mathfrak X M to mathfrak X M on M displaystyle M is a bilinear map X Y XY displaystyle X Y mapsto nabla X Y such that For every function f C M displaystyle f in C infty M f1X1 f2X2Y f1 X1Y f2 X2Y displaystyle nabla f 1 X 1 f 2 X 2 Y f 1 nabla X 1 Y f 2 nabla X 2 Y The product rule XfY X f Y f XY displaystyle nabla X fY X f Y f nabla X Y holds The expression XY displaystyle nabla X Y is called the covariant derivative of Y displaystyle Y with respect to X displaystyle X Levi Civita connection Two Riemannian manifolds with different connections have different geometry Thankfully there is a natural connection associated to a Riemannian manifold called the Levi Civita connection A connection displaystyle nabla is said to preserve the metric if X g Y Z g XY Z g Y XZ displaystyle X bigl g Y Z bigr g nabla X Y Z g Y nabla X Z A connection displaystyle nabla is torsion free if XY YX X Y displaystyle nabla X Y nabla Y X X Y where displaystyle cdot cdot is the Lie bracket A Levi Civita connection is a torsion free connection that preserves the metric Once a Riemannian metric is fixed there exists a unique Levi Civita connection Note that the definition of preserving the metric uses the regularity of g displaystyle g Covariant derivative along a curve If g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M is a smooth curve a smooth vector field along g displaystyle gamma is a smooth map X 0 1 TM displaystyle X 0 1 to TM such that X t Tg t M displaystyle X t in T gamma t M for all t 0 1 displaystyle t in 0 1 The set X g displaystyle mathfrak X gamma of smooth vector fields along g displaystyle gamma is a vector space under pointwise vector addition and scalar multiplication One can also pointwise multiply a smooth vector field along g displaystyle gamma by a smooth function f 0 1 R displaystyle f 0 1 to mathbb R fX t f t X t displaystyle fX t f t X t for X X g displaystyle X in mathfrak X gamma Let X displaystyle X be a smooth vector field along g displaystyle gamma If X displaystyle tilde X is a smooth vector field on a neighborhood of the image of g displaystyle gamma such that X t X g t displaystyle X t tilde X gamma t then X displaystyle tilde X is called an extension of X displaystyle X Given a fixed connection displaystyle nabla on M displaystyle M and a smooth curve g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M there is a unique operator Dt X g X g displaystyle D t mathfrak X gamma to mathfrak X gamma called the covariant derivative along g displaystyle gamma such that Dt aX bY aDtX bDtY displaystyle D t aX bY a D t X b D t Y Dt fX f X fDtX displaystyle D t fX f X f D t X If X displaystyle tilde X is an extension of X displaystyle X then DtX t g t X displaystyle D t X t nabla gamma t tilde X Geodesics In Euclidean space Rn displaystyle mathbb R n left the maximal geodesics are straight lines In the round sphere Sn displaystyle S n right the maximal geodesics are great circles Geodesics are curves with no intrinsic acceleration Equivalently geodesics are curves that locally take the shortest path between two points They are the generalization of straight lines in Euclidean space to arbitrary Riemannian manifolds An ant living in a Riemannian manifold walking straight ahead without making any effort to accelerate or turn would trace out a geodesic Fix a connection displaystyle nabla on M displaystyle M Let g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M be a smooth curve The acceleration of g displaystyle gamma is the vector field Dtg displaystyle D t gamma along g displaystyle gamma If Dtg 0 displaystyle D t gamma 0 for all t displaystyle t g displaystyle gamma is called a geodesic For every p M displaystyle p in M and v TpM displaystyle v in T p M there exists a geodesic g I M displaystyle gamma I to M defined on some open interval I displaystyle I containing 0 such that g 0 p displaystyle gamma 0 p and g 0 v displaystyle gamma 0 v Any two such geodesics agree on their common domain Taking the union over all open intervals I displaystyle I containing 0 on which a geodesic satisfying g 0 p displaystyle gamma 0 p and g 0 v displaystyle gamma 0 v exists one obtains a geodesic called a maximal geodesic of which every geodesic satisfying g 0 p displaystyle gamma 0 p and g 0 v displaystyle gamma 0 v is a restriction Every curve g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M that has the shortest length of any admissible curve with the same endpoints as g displaystyle gamma is a geodesic in a unit speed reparameterization Examples The nonconstant maximal geodesics of the Euclidean plane R2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 are exactly the straight lines This agrees with the fact from Euclidean geometry that the shortest path between two points is a straight line segment The nonconstant maximal geodesics of S2 displaystyle S 2 with the round metric are exactly the great circles Since the Earth is approximately a sphere this means that the shortest path a plane can fly between two locations on Earth is a segment of a great circle Hopf Rinow theorem The punctured plane R2 0 0 displaystyle mathbb R 2 backslash 0 0 is not geodesically complete because the maximal geodesic with initial conditions p 1 1 displaystyle p 1 1 v 1 1 displaystyle v 1 1 does not have domain R displaystyle mathbb R The Riemannian manifold M displaystyle M with its Levi Civita connection is geodesically complete if the domain of every maximal geodesic is displaystyle infty infty The plane R2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 is geodesically complete On the other hand the punctured plane R2 0 0 displaystyle mathbb R 2 smallsetminus 0 0 with the restriction of the Riemannian metric from R2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 is not geodesically complete as the maximal geodesic with initial conditions p 1 1 displaystyle p 1 1 v 1 1 displaystyle v 1 1 does not have domain R displaystyle mathbb R The Hopf Rinow theorem characterizes geodesically complete manifolds Theorem Let M g displaystyle M g be a connected Riemannian manifold The following are equivalent The metric space M dg displaystyle M d g is complete every dg displaystyle d g Cauchy sequence converges All closed and bounded subsets of M displaystyle M are compact M displaystyle M is geodesically complete Parallel transport Parallel transport of a tangent vector along a curve in the sphere In Euclidean space all tangent spaces are canonically identified with each other via translation so it is easy to move vectors from one tangent space to another Parallel transport is a way of moving vectors from one tangent space to another along a curve in the setting of a general Riemannian manifold Given a fixed connection there is a unique way to do parallel transport Specifically call a smooth vector field V displaystyle V along a smooth curve g displaystyle gamma parallel along g displaystyle gamma if DtV 0 displaystyle D t V 0 identically Fix a curve g 0 1 M displaystyle gamma 0 1 to M with g 0 p displaystyle gamma 0 p and g 1 q displaystyle gamma 1 q to parallel transport a vector v TpM displaystyle v in T p M to a vector in TqM displaystyle T q M along g displaystyle gamma first extend v displaystyle v to a vector field parallel along g displaystyle gamma and then take the value of this vector field at q displaystyle q The images below show parallel transport induced by the Levi Civita connection associated to two different Riemannian metrics on the punctured plane R2 0 0 displaystyle mathbb R 2 smallsetminus 0 0 The curve the parallel transport is done along is the unit circle In polar coordinates the metric on the left is the standard Euclidean metric dx2 dy2 dr2 r2d82 displaystyle dx 2 dy 2 dr 2 r 2 d theta 2 while the metric on the right is dr2 d82 displaystyle dr 2 d theta 2 This second metric has a singularity at the origin so it does not extend past the puncture but the first metric extends to the entire plane Parallel transports on the punctured plane under Levi Civita connectionsThis transport is given by the metric dr2 r2d82 displaystyle dr 2 r 2 d theta 2 This transport is given by the metric dr2 d82 displaystyle dr 2 d theta 2 Warning This is parallel transport on the punctured plane along the unit circle not parallel transport on the unit circle Indeed in the first image the vectors fall outside of the tangent space to the unit circle Riemann curvature tensor The Riemann curvature tensor measures precisely the extent to which parallel transporting vectors around a small rectangle is not the identity map The Riemann curvature tensor is 0 at every point if and only if the manifold is locally isometric to Euclidean space Fix a connection displaystyle nabla on M displaystyle M The Riemann curvature tensor is the map R X M X M X M X M displaystyle R mathfrak X M times mathfrak X M times mathfrak X M to mathfrak X M defined by R X Y Z X YZ Y XZ X Y Z displaystyle R X Y Z nabla X nabla Y Z nabla Y nabla X Z nabla X Y Z where X Y displaystyle X Y is the Lie bracket of vector fields The Riemann curvature tensor is a 1 3 displaystyle 1 3 tensor field Ricci curvature tensor Fix a connection displaystyle nabla on M displaystyle M The Ricci curvature tensor is Ric X Y tr Z R Z X Y gt

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