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Distribution (differential geometry)

In differential geometry, a discipline within mathematics, a distribution on a manifold is an assignment of vector subspaces satisfying certain properties. In the most common situations, a distribution is asked to be a vector subbundle of the tangent bundle .

Distributions satisfying a further integrability condition give rise to foliations, i.e. partitions of the manifold into smaller submanifolds. These notions have several applications in many fields of mathematics, e.g. integrable systems, Poisson geometry, non-commutative geometry, sub-Riemannian geometry, differential topology, etc.

Even though they share the same name, distributions presented in this article have nothing to do with distributions in the sense of analysis.

Definition

Let   be a smooth manifold; a (smooth) distribution   assigns to any point   a vector subspace   in a smooth way. More precisely,   consists in a collection   of vector subspaces with the following property. Around any   there exist a neighbourhood   and a collection of vector fields   such that, for any point  , span 

The set of smooth vector fields   is also called a local basis of  . Note that the number   may be different for different neighbourhoods. The notation   is used to denote both the assignment   and the subset  .

Regular distributions

Given an integer  , a smooth distribution   on   is called regular of rank   if all the subspaces   have the same dimension. Locally, this amounts to ask that every local basis is given by   linearly independent vector fields.

More compactly, a regular distribution is a vector subbundle   of rank   (this is actually the most commonly used definition). A rank   distribution is sometimes called an  -plane distribution, and when  , one talks about hyperplane distributions.

Special classes of distributions

Unless stated otherwise, by "distribution" we mean a smooth regular distribution (in the sense explained above).

Involutive distributions

Given a distribution  , its sections consist of the vector fields which are tangent to  , and they form a vector subspace   of the space of all vector fields on  . A distribution   is called involutive if   is also a Lie subalgebra: in other words, for any two vector fields  , the Lie bracket   belongs to  .

Locally, this condition means that for every point   there exists a local basis   of the distribution in a neighbourhood of   such that, for all  , the Lie bracket   is in the span of  , i.e.   is a linear combination of  

Involutive distributions are a fundamental ingredient in the study of integrable systems. A related idea occurs in Hamiltonian mechanics: two functions   and   on a symplectic manifold are said to be in mutual involution if their Poisson bracket vanishes.

Integrable distributions and foliations

An integral manifold for a rank   distribution   is a submanifold   of dimension   such that   for every  . A distribution is called integrable if through any point   there is an integral manifold. This means that   is the disjoint union of maximal connected integral manifolds, also called leaves;   defines therefore a foliation.

Locally, integrability means that for every point   there exists a local chart   such that, for every  , the space   is spanned by the coordinate vectors  . In other words, every point admits a foliation chart, i.e. the distribution   is tangent to the leaves of a foliation. Moreover, this local characterisation coincides with the definition of integrability for a  -structures, when   is the group of real invertible upper-triangular block matrices (with   and  -blocks).

It is easy to see that any integrable distribution is automatically involutive. The converse is less trivial but holds by Frobenius theorem.

Weakly regular distributions

Given any distribution  , consider its associated Lie flag (note that some authors use a negative decreasing grading instead)

 

where  ,   and  . In other words,   denotes the set of vector fields spanned by the  -iterated Lie brackets of elements in  .

Then   is called weakly regular (or just regular by some authors) if there exists a sequence   of nested vector subbundles such that   (hence  ).[1] Note that, in such case, the associated Lie flag stabilises at a certain point  , since the ranks of   are bounded from above by  . The string of integers   is then called the grow vector of  .

Any weakly regular distribution has an associated graded vector bundle

 
Moreover, the Lie bracket of vector fields descends, for any  , to a  -linear bundle morphism  , called the  -curvature. In particular, the  -curvature vanishes identically if and only if the distribution is involutive.

Patching together the curvatures, one obtains a morphism  , also called the Levi bracket, which makes   into a bundle of nilpotent Lie algebras; for this reason,   is also called the nilpotentisation of  .[1]

The bundle  , however, is in general not locally trivial, since the Lie algebras   are not isomorphic when varying the point  . If this happens, the weakly regular distribution   is also called regular (or strongly regular by some authors). Note that the names (strongly, weakly) regular used here are completely unrelated with the notion of regularity discussed above (which is always assumed), i.e. the dimension of the spaces   being constant.

Bracket-generating distributions

A distribution   is called bracket-generating (or non-holonomic, or it is said to satisfy the Hörmander condition) if taking a finite number of Lie brackets of elements in   is enough to generate the entire space of vector fields on  . With the notation introduced above, such condition can be written as   for certain  ; then one says also that   is bracket-generating in   steps, or has depth  .

Clearly, the associated Lie flag of a bracket-generating distribution stabilises at the point  . Even though being weakly regular and being bracket-generating are two independent properties (see the examples below), when a distribution satisfies both of them, the integer   from the two definitions is of course the same.

Thanks to Chow-Rashevskii theorem, given a bracket-generating distribution   on a connected manifold, any two points in   can be joined by a path tangent to the distribution.[2][3]

Examples of regular distributions

Integrable ones

  • Any vector field   on   defines a rank 1 distribution, by setting  , which is automatically integrable: the image of any integral curve   is an integral manifold.
  • The trivial distribution of rank   on   is generated by the first   coordinate vector fields  . It is automatically integrable, and the integral manifolds are defined by the equations  , for any constants  .
  • In general, any involutive/integrable distribution is weakly regular (with   for every  ), but it is never bracket-generating.

Non-integrable ones

  • The Martinet distribution on   is given by   , for  ; equivalently, it is generated by the vector fields   and  . It is bracket-generating since  , but it is not weakly regular:   has rank 3 everywhere except on the surface  .
  • The contact distribution on   is given by   , for  ; equivalently, it is generated by the vector fields   and  , for  . It is weakly regular, with grow vector  , and bracket-generating, with  . One can also define an abstract contact structures on a manifold   as a hyperplane distribution which is maximally non-integrable, i.e. it is as far from being involutive as possible. An analogue of the Darboux theorem shows that such structure has the unique local model described above.
  • The Engel distribution on   is given by  , for   and  ; equivalently, it is generated by the vector fields   and  . It is weakly regular, with grow vector  , and bracket-generating. One can also define an abstract Engel structure on a manifold   as a weakly regular rank 2 distribution   such that   has rank 3 and  has rank 4; Engel proved that such structure has the unique local model described above.[4]
  • In general, a Goursat structure on a manifold   is a rank 2 distribution which is weakly regular and bracket-generating, with grow vector  . For   and   one recovers, respectively, contact distributions on 3-dimensional manifolds and Engel distributions. Goursat structures are locally diffeomorphic to the Cartan distribution of the jet bundles  .

Singular distributions

A singular distribution, generalised distribution, or Stefan-Sussmann distribution, is a smooth distribution which is not regular. This means that the subspaces   may have different dimensions, and therefore the subset   is no longer a smooth subbundle.

In particular, the number of elements in a local basis spanning   will change with  , and those vector fields will no longer be linearly independent everywhere. It is not hard to see that the dimension of   is lower semicontinuous, so that at special points the dimension is lower than at nearby points.

Integrability and singular foliations

The definitions of integral manifolds and of integrability given above applies also to the singular case (removing the requirement of the fixed dimension). However, Frobenius theorem does not hold in this context, and involutivity is in general not sufficient for integrability (counterexamples in low dimensions exist).

After several partial results,[5] the integrability problem for singular distributions was fully solved by a theorem independently proved by Stefan[6][7] and Sussmann.[8][9] It states that a singular distribution   is integrable if and only if the following two properties hold:

  •   is generated by a family   of vector fields;
  •   is invariant with respect to every  , i.e.  , where   is the flow of  ,   and  .

Similarly to the regular case, an integrable singular distribution defines a singular foliation, which intuitively consists in a partition of   into submanifolds (the maximal integral manifolds of  ) of different dimensions.

The definition of singular foliation can be made precise in several equivalent ways. Actually, in the literature there is a plethora of variations, reformulations and generalisations of the Stefan-Sussman theorem, using different notion of singuar foliations according to which applications one has in mind, e.g. Poisson geometry[10][11] or non-commutative geometry.[12][13]

Examples

  • Given a Lie group action of a Lie group on a manifold  , its infinitesimal generators span a singular distribution which is always integrable; the leaves of the associated singular foliation are precisely the orbits of the group action. The distribution/foliation is regular if and only if the action is free.
  • Given a Poisson manifold  , the image of   is a singular distribution which is always integrable; the leaves of the associated singular foliation are precisely the symplectic leaves of  . The distribution/foliation is regular If and only if the Poisson manifold is regular.
  • More generally, the image of the anchor map   of any Lie algebroid   defines a singular distribution which is automatically integrable, and the leaves of the associated singular foliation are precisely the leaves of the Lie algebroid. The distribution/foliation is regular if and only if   has constant rank, i.e. the Lie algebroid is regular. Considering, respectively, the action Lie algebroid   and the cotangent Lie algebroid  , one recovers the two examples above.
  • In dynamical systems, a singular distribution arise from the set of vector fields that commute with a given one.
  • There are also examples and applications in control theory, where the generalised distribution represents infinitesimal constraints of the system.

References

  1. ^ a b Tanaka, Noboru (1970-01-01). "On differential systems, graded Lie algebras and pseudo-groups". Kyoto Journal of Mathematics. 10 (1). doi:10.1215/kjm/1250523814. ISSN 2156-2261.
  2. ^ Chow, Wei-Liang (1940-12-01). "Über Systeme von liearren partiellen Differentialgleichungen erster Ordnung". Mathematische Annalen (in German). 117 (1): 98–105. doi:10.1007/BF01450011. ISSN 1432-1807. S2CID 121523670.
  3. ^ Rashevsky, P. K. (1938). "Any two points of a totally nonholonomic space may be connected by an admissible line". Uch. Zap. Ped. Inst. Im. Liebknechta, Ser. Phys. Math. (in Russian). 2: 83–94.
  4. ^ Engel, Friedrich (1889). "Zur Invariantentheorie der Systeme Pfaff'scher Gleichungen". Leipz. Ber. (in German). 41: 157–176.
  5. ^ Lavau, Sylvain (2018-12-01). "A short guide through integration theorems of generalized distributions". Differential Geometry and Its Applications. 61: 42–58. arXiv:1710.01627. doi:10.1016/j.difgeo.2018.07.005. ISSN 0926-2245. S2CID 119669163.
  6. ^ Stefan, P. (1974). "Accessibility and foliations with singularities". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 80 (6): 1142–1145. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1974-13648-7. ISSN 0002-9904.
  7. ^ Stefan, P. (1974). "Accessible Sets, Orbits, and Foliations with Singularities". Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society. s3-29 (4): 699–713. doi:10.1112/plms/s3-29.4.699. ISSN 1460-244X.
  8. ^ Sussmann, Hector J. (1973). "Orbits of families of vector fields and integrability of systems with singularities". Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. 79 (1): 197–199. doi:10.1090/S0002-9904-1973-13152-0. ISSN 0002-9904.
  9. ^ Sussmann, Héctor J. (1973). "Orbits of families of vector fields and integrability of distributions". Transactions of the American Mathematical Society. 180: 171–188. doi:10.1090/S0002-9947-1973-0321133-2. ISSN 0002-9947.
  10. ^ Androulidakis, Iakovos; Zambon, Marco (2016-04-28). "Stefan–Sussmann singular foliations, singular subalgebroids and their associated sheaves". International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics. 13 (Supp. 1): 1641001–1641267. Bibcode:2016IJGMM..1341001A. doi:10.1142/S0219887816410012. ISSN 0219-8878.
  11. ^ Laurent-Gengoux, Camille; Lavau, Sylvain; Strobl, Thomas (2020). "The Universal Lie ∞-Algebroid of a Singular Foliation". ELibM – Doc. Math. 25 (2020): 1571–1652. doi:10.25537/dm.2020v25.1571-1652.
  12. ^ Debord, Claire (2001-07-01). "Holonomy Groupoids of Singular Foliations". Journal of Differential Geometry. 58 (3). doi:10.4310/jdg/1090348356. ISSN 0022-040X. S2CID 54714044.
  13. ^ Androulidakis, Iakovos; Skandalis, Georges (2009-01-01). "The holonomy groupoid of a singular foliation". Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik (Crelle's Journal). 2009 (626): 1–37. doi:10.1515/CRELLE.2009.001. ISSN 1435-5345. S2CID 14450917.

Books, lecture notes and external links

  • William M. Boothby. Section IV. 8 in An Introduction to Differentiable Manifolds and Riemannian Geometry, Academic Press, San Diego, California, 2003.
  • John M. Lee, Chapter 19 in Introduction to Smooth Manifolds, Graduate Texts in Mathematics, Springer-Verlag, 2003.
  • Richard Montgomery, Chapters 2, 4 and 6 in A tour of subriemannian geometries, their geodesics and applications. Mathematical Surveys and Monographs 91. Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, RI, 2002.
  • Álvaro del Pino, Topological aspects in the study of tangent distributions. Textos de Matemática. Série B, 48. Universidade de Coimbra, 2019.
  • "Involutive distribution", Encyclopedia of Mathematics, EMS Press, 2001 [1994]

This article incorporates material from Distribution on PlanetMath, which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

distribution, differential, geometry, other, uses, distribution, disambiguation, mathematics, differential, geometry, discipline, within, mathematics, distribution, manifold, displaystyle, assignment, displaystyle, mapsto, delta, subseteq, vector, subspaces, s. For other uses see Distribution disambiguation Mathematics In differential geometry a discipline within mathematics a distribution on a manifold M displaystyle M is an assignment x D x T x M displaystyle x mapsto Delta x subseteq T x M of vector subspaces satisfying certain properties In the most common situations a distribution is asked to be a vector subbundle of the tangent bundle T M displaystyle TM Distributions satisfying a further integrability condition give rise to foliations i e partitions of the manifold into smaller submanifolds These notions have several applications in many fields of mathematics e g integrable systems Poisson geometry non commutative geometry sub Riemannian geometry differential topology etc Even though they share the same name distributions presented in this article have nothing to do with distributions in the sense of analysis Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Regular distributions 2 Special classes of distributions 2 1 Involutive distributions 2 2 Integrable distributions and foliations 2 3 Weakly regular distributions 2 4 Bracket generating distributions 3 Examples of regular distributions 3 1 Integrable ones 3 2 Non integrable ones 4 Singular distributions 4 1 Integrability and singular foliations 4 2 Examples 5 References 6 Books lecture notes and external linksDefinition EditLet M displaystyle M be a smooth manifold a smooth distribution D displaystyle Delta assigns to any point x M displaystyle x in M a vector subspace D x T x M displaystyle Delta x subset T x M in a smooth way More precisely D displaystyle Delta consists in a collection D x T x M x M displaystyle Delta x subset T x M x in M of vector subspaces with the following property Around any x M displaystyle x in M there exist a neighbourhood N x M displaystyle N x subset M and a collection of vector fields X 1 X k displaystyle X 1 ldots X k such that for any point y N x displaystyle y in N x span X 1 y X k y D y displaystyle X 1 y ldots X k y Delta y The set of smooth vector fields X 1 X k displaystyle X 1 ldots X k is also called a local basis of D displaystyle Delta Note that the number k displaystyle k may be different for different neighbourhoods The notation D displaystyle Delta is used to denote both the assignment x D x displaystyle x mapsto Delta x and the subset D x M D x T M displaystyle Delta amalg x in M Delta x subseteq TM Regular distributions Edit Given an integer n m d i m M displaystyle n leq m mathrm dim M a smooth distribution D displaystyle Delta on M displaystyle M is called regular of rank n displaystyle n if all the subspaces D x T x M displaystyle Delta x subset T x M have the same dimension Locally this amounts to ask that every local basis is given by n displaystyle n linearly independent vector fields More compactly a regular distribution is a vector subbundle D T M displaystyle Delta subset TM of rank n displaystyle n this is actually the most commonly used definition A rank n displaystyle n distribution is sometimes called an n displaystyle n plane distribution and when n m 1 displaystyle n m 1 one talks about hyperplane distributions Special classes of distributions EditUnless stated otherwise by distribution we mean a smooth regular distribution in the sense explained above Involutive distributions Edit Given a distribution D displaystyle Delta its sections consist of the vector fields which are tangent to D T M displaystyle Delta subset TM and they form a vector subspace G D G T M X M displaystyle Gamma Delta subseteq Gamma TM mathfrak X M of the space of all vector fields on M displaystyle M A distribution D displaystyle Delta is called involutive if G D X M displaystyle Gamma Delta subseteq mathfrak X M is also a Lie subalgebra in other words for any two vector fields X Y G D X M displaystyle X Y in Gamma Delta subseteq mathfrak X M the Lie bracket X Y displaystyle X Y belongs to G D X M displaystyle Gamma Delta subseteq mathfrak X M Locally this condition means that for every point x M displaystyle x in M there exists a local basis X 1 X n displaystyle X 1 ldots X n of the distribution in a neighbourhood of x displaystyle x such that for all 1 i j n displaystyle 1 leq i j leq n the Lie bracket X i X j displaystyle X i X j is in the span of X 1 X n displaystyle X 1 ldots X n i e X i X j displaystyle X i X j is a linear combination of X 1 X n displaystyle X 1 ldots X n Involutive distributions are a fundamental ingredient in the study of integrable systems A related idea occurs in Hamiltonian mechanics two functions f displaystyle f and g displaystyle g on a symplectic manifold are said to be in mutual involution if their Poisson bracket vanishes Integrable distributions and foliations Edit An integral manifold for a rank n displaystyle n distribution D displaystyle Delta is a submanifold N M displaystyle N subset M of dimension n displaystyle n such that T x N D x displaystyle T x N Delta x for every x N displaystyle x in N A distribution is called integrable if through any point x M displaystyle x in M there is an integral manifold This means that D displaystyle Delta is the disjoint union of maximal connected integral manifolds also called leaves D displaystyle Delta defines therefore a foliation Locally integrability means that for every point x M displaystyle x in M there exists a local chart U x 1 x n displaystyle U chi 1 ldots chi n such that for every y U displaystyle y in U the space D y displaystyle Delta y is spanned by the coordinate vectors x 1 y x n y displaystyle frac partial partial chi 1 y ldots frac partial partial chi n y In other words every point admits a foliation chart i e the distribution D displaystyle Delta is tangent to the leaves of a foliation Moreover this local characterisation coincides with the definition of integrability for a G displaystyle G structures when G displaystyle G is the group of real invertible upper triangular block matrices with n n displaystyle n times n and m n m n displaystyle m n m n blocks It is easy to see that any integrable distribution is automatically involutive The converse is less trivial but holds by Frobenius theorem Weakly regular distributions Edit Given any distribution D T M displaystyle Delta subseteq TM consider its associated Lie flag note that some authors use a negative decreasing grading instead D 0 D 1 D i D i 1 displaystyle Delta 0 subseteq Delta 1 subseteq ldots subseteq Delta i subseteq Delta i 1 subseteq ldots where D 0 G D displaystyle Delta 0 Gamma Delta D 1 D 0 D 0 C M displaystyle Delta 1 langle Delta 0 Delta 0 rangle mathcal C infty M and D i 1 D i D 0 C M displaystyle Delta i 1 langle Delta i Delta 0 rangle mathcal C infty M In other words D i X M displaystyle Delta i subseteq mathfrak X M denotes the set of vector fields spanned by the i displaystyle i iterated Lie brackets of elements in G D displaystyle Gamma Delta Then D displaystyle Delta is called weakly regular or just regular by some authors if there exists a sequence T i M T M i displaystyle T i M subseteq TM i of nested vector subbundles such that G T i M D i displaystyle Gamma T i M Delta i hence T 0 M D displaystyle T 0 M Delta 1 Note that in such case the associated Lie flag stabilises at a certain point m N displaystyle m in mathbb N since the ranks of T i M displaystyle T i M are bounded from above by r a n k T M d i m M displaystyle mathrm rank TM mathrm dim M The string of integers r a n k D 0 r a n k D 1 r a n k D m displaystyle mathrm rank Delta 0 mathrm rank Delta 1 ldots mathrm rank Delta m is then called the grow vector of D displaystyle Delta Any weakly regular distribution has an associated graded vector bundleg r T M T 0 M i 0 m 1 T i 1 M T i M T M T m M displaystyle mathrm gr TM T 0 M oplus Big bigoplus i 0 m 1 T i 1 M T i M Big oplus TM T m M Moreover the Lie bracket of vector fields descends for any i j 0 m displaystyle i j 0 ldots m to a C M displaystyle mathcal C infty M linear bundle morphism g r i T M g r j T M g r i j 1 T M displaystyle mathrm gr i TM times mathrm gr j TM to mathrm gr i j 1 TM called the i j displaystyle i j curvature In particular the 0 0 displaystyle 0 0 curvature vanishes identically if and only if the distribution is involutive Patching together the curvatures one obtains a morphism L g r T M g r T M g r T M displaystyle mathcal L mathrm gr TM times mathrm gr TM to mathrm gr TM also called the Levi bracket which makes g r T M displaystyle mathrm gr TM into a bundle of nilpotent Lie algebras for this reason g r T M L displaystyle mathrm gr TM mathcal L is also called the nilpotentisation of D displaystyle Delta 1 The bundle g r T M M displaystyle mathrm gr TM to M however is in general not locally trivial since the Lie algebras g r i T x M T x i M T x i 1 M displaystyle mathrm gr i T x M T x i M T x i 1 M are not isomorphic when varying the point x M displaystyle x in M If this happens the weakly regular distribution D displaystyle Delta is also called regular or strongly regular by some authors Note that the names strongly weakly regular used here are completely unrelated with the notion of regularity discussed above which is always assumed i e the dimension of the spaces D x displaystyle Delta x being constant Bracket generating distributions Edit A distribution D T M displaystyle Delta subseteq TM is called bracket generating or non holonomic or it is said to satisfy the Hormander condition if taking a finite number of Lie brackets of elements in G D displaystyle Gamma Delta is enough to generate the entire space of vector fields on M displaystyle M With the notation introduced above such condition can be written as D m X M displaystyle Delta m mathfrak X M for certain m N displaystyle m in mathbb N then one says also that D displaystyle Delta is bracket generating in m 1 displaystyle m 1 steps or has depth m 1 displaystyle m 1 Clearly the associated Lie flag of a bracket generating distribution stabilises at the point m displaystyle m Even though being weakly regular and being bracket generating are two independent properties see the examples below when a distribution satisfies both of them the integer m displaystyle m from the two definitions is of course the same Thanks to Chow Rashevskii theorem given a bracket generating distribution D T M displaystyle Delta subseteq TM on a connected manifold any two points in M displaystyle M can be joined by a path tangent to the distribution 2 3 Examples of regular distributions EditIntegrable ones Edit Any vector field X displaystyle X on M displaystyle M defines a rank 1 distribution by setting D x X x T x M displaystyle Delta x langle X x rangle subseteq T x M which is automatically integrable the image of any integral curve g I M displaystyle gamma I to M is an integral manifold The trivial distribution of rank k displaystyle k on M R n displaystyle M mathbb R n is generated by the first k displaystyle k coordinate vector fields x 1 x k displaystyle frac partial partial x 1 ldots frac partial partial x k It is automatically integrable and the integral manifolds are defined by the equations x i c i i k 1 n displaystyle x i c i i k 1 ldots n for any constants c i R displaystyle c i in mathbb R In general any involutive integrable distribution is weakly regular with D i G D displaystyle Delta i Gamma Delta for every i displaystyle i but it is never bracket generating Non integrable ones Edit The Martinet distribution on M R 3 displaystyle M mathbb R 3 is given by D ker w T M displaystyle Delta ker omega subseteq TM for w d y z 2 d x W 1 M displaystyle omega dy z 2 dx in Omega 1 M equivalently it is generated by the vector fields x z 2 y displaystyle frac partial partial x z 2 frac partial partial y and z displaystyle frac partial partial z It is bracket generating since D 2 X M displaystyle Delta 2 mathfrak X M but it is not weakly regular D 1 displaystyle Delta 1 has rank 3 everywhere except on the surface z 0 displaystyle z 0 The contact distribution on M R 2 n 1 displaystyle M mathbb R 2n 1 is given by D ker w T M displaystyle Delta ker omega subseteq TM for w d z i 1 n x i d y i W 1 M displaystyle omega dz sum i 1 n x i dy i in Omega 1 M equivalently it is generated by the vector fields y i displaystyle frac partial partial y i and x i y i z displaystyle frac partial partial x i y i frac partial partial z for i 1 n displaystyle i 1 ldots n It is weakly regular with grow vector 2 n 2 n 1 displaystyle 2n 2n 1 and bracket generating with D 1 X M displaystyle Delta 1 mathfrak X M One can also define an abstract contact structures on a manifold M 2 n 1 displaystyle M 2n 1 as a hyperplane distribution which is maximally non integrable i e it is as far from being involutive as possible An analogue of the Darboux theorem shows that such structure has the unique local model described above The Engel distribution on M R 4 displaystyle M mathbb R 4 is given by D ker w 1 ker w 2 T M displaystyle Delta ker omega 1 cap ker omega 2 subseteq TM for w 1 d z w d x W 1 M displaystyle omega 1 dz wdx in Omega 1 M and w 2 d y z d x W 1 M displaystyle omega 2 dy zdx in Omega 1 M equivalently it is generated by the vector fields x z y w z displaystyle frac partial partial x z frac partial partial y w frac partial partial z and w displaystyle frac partial partial w It is weakly regular with grow vector 2 3 4 displaystyle 2 3 4 and bracket generating One can also define an abstract Engel structure on a manifold M 4 displaystyle M 4 as a weakly regular rank 2 distribution D T M displaystyle Delta subseteq TM such that D 1 displaystyle Delta 1 has rank 3 and D 2 displaystyle Delta 2 has rank 4 Engel proved that such structure has the unique local model described above 4 In general a Goursat structure on a manifold M k 2 displaystyle M k 2 is a rank 2 distribution which is weakly regular and bracket generating with grow vector 2 3 k 1 k 2 displaystyle 2 3 ldots k 1 k 2 For k 1 displaystyle k 1 and k 2 displaystyle k 2 one recovers respectively contact distributions on 3 dimensional manifolds and Engel distributions Goursat structures are locally diffeomorphic to the Cartan distribution of the jet bundles J k R R displaystyle J k mathbb R mathbb R Singular distributions EditNot to be confused with Singular distribution A singular distribution generalised distribution or Stefan Sussmann distribution is a smooth distribution which is not regular This means that the subspaces D x T x M displaystyle Delta x subset T x M may have different dimensions and therefore the subset D T M displaystyle Delta subset TM is no longer a smooth subbundle In particular the number of elements in a local basis spanning D x displaystyle Delta x will change with x displaystyle x and those vector fields will no longer be linearly independent everywhere It is not hard to see that the dimension of D x displaystyle Delta x is lower semicontinuous so that at special points the dimension is lower than at nearby points Integrability and singular foliations Edit The definitions of integral manifolds and of integrability given above applies also to the singular case removing the requirement of the fixed dimension However Frobenius theorem does not hold in this context and involutivity is in general not sufficient for integrability counterexamples in low dimensions exist After several partial results 5 the integrability problem for singular distributions was fully solved by a theorem independently proved by Stefan 6 7 and Sussmann 8 9 It states that a singular distribution D displaystyle Delta is integrable if and only if the following two properties hold D displaystyle Delta is generated by a family F X M displaystyle F subseteq mathfrak X M of vector fields D displaystyle Delta is invariant with respect to every X F displaystyle X in F i e ϕ X t D y D ϕ X t y displaystyle phi X t Delta y subseteq Delta phi X t y where ϕ X t displaystyle phi X t is the flow of X displaystyle X t R displaystyle t in mathbb R and y d o m X displaystyle y in mathrm dom X Similarly to the regular case an integrable singular distribution defines a singular foliation which intuitively consists in a partition of M displaystyle M into submanifolds the maximal integral manifolds of D displaystyle Delta of different dimensions The definition of singular foliation can be made precise in several equivalent ways Actually in the literature there is a plethora of variations reformulations and generalisations of the Stefan Sussman theorem using different notion of singuar foliations according to which applications one has in mind e g Poisson geometry 10 11 or non commutative geometry 12 13 Examples Edit Given a Lie group action of a Lie group on a manifold M displaystyle M its infinitesimal generators span a singular distribution which is always integrable the leaves of the associated singular foliation are precisely the orbits of the group action The distribution foliation is regular if and only if the action is free Given a Poisson manifold M p displaystyle M pi the image of p i p T M T M displaystyle pi sharp iota pi T M to TM is a singular distribution which is always integrable the leaves of the associated singular foliation are precisely the symplectic leaves of M p displaystyle M pi The distribution foliation is regular If and only if the Poisson manifold is regular More generally the image of the anchor map r A T M displaystyle rho A to TM of any Lie algebroid A M displaystyle A to M defines a singular distribution which is automatically integrable and the leaves of the associated singular foliation are precisely the leaves of the Lie algebroid The distribution foliation is regular if and only if r displaystyle rho has constant rank i e the Lie algebroid is regular Considering respectively the action Lie algebroid M g displaystyle M times mathfrak g and the cotangent Lie algebroid T M displaystyle T M one recovers the two examples above In dynamical systems a singular distribution arise from the set of vector fields that commute with a given one There are also examples and applications in control theory where the generalised distribution represents infinitesimal constraints of the system References Edit a b Tanaka Noboru 1970 01 01 On differential systems graded Lie algebras and pseudo groups Kyoto Journal of Mathematics 10 1 doi 10 1215 kjm 1250523814 ISSN 2156 2261 Chow Wei Liang 1940 12 01 Uber Systeme von liearren partiellen Differentialgleichungen erster Ordnung Mathematische Annalen in German 117 1 98 105 doi 10 1007 BF01450011 ISSN 1432 1807 S2CID 121523670 Rashevsky P K 1938 Any two points of a totally nonholonomic space may be connected by an admissible line Uch Zap Ped Inst Im Liebknechta Ser Phys Math in Russian 2 83 94 Engel Friedrich 1889 Zur Invariantentheorie der Systeme Pfaff scher Gleichungen Leipz Ber in German 41 157 176 Lavau Sylvain 2018 12 01 A short guide through integration theorems of generalized distributions Differential Geometry and Its Applications 61 42 58 arXiv 1710 01627 doi 10 1016 j difgeo 2018 07 005 ISSN 0926 2245 S2CID 119669163 Stefan P 1974 Accessibility and foliations with singularities Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 80 6 1142 1145 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1974 13648 7 ISSN 0002 9904 Stefan P 1974 Accessible Sets Orbits and Foliations with Singularities Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society s3 29 4 699 713 doi 10 1112 plms s3 29 4 699 ISSN 1460 244X Sussmann Hector J 1973 Orbits of families of vector fields and integrability of systems with singularities Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 79 1 197 199 doi 10 1090 S0002 9904 1973 13152 0 ISSN 0002 9904 Sussmann Hector J 1973 Orbits of families of vector fields and integrability of distributions Transactions of the American Mathematical Society 180 171 188 doi 10 1090 S0002 9947 1973 0321133 2 ISSN 0002 9947 Androulidakis Iakovos Zambon Marco 2016 04 28 Stefan Sussmann singular foliations singular subalgebroids and their associated sheaves International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics 13 Supp 1 1641001 1641267 Bibcode 2016IJGMM 1341001A doi 10 1142 S0219887816410012 ISSN 0219 8878 Laurent Gengoux Camille Lavau Sylvain Strobl Thomas 2020 The Universal Lie Algebroid of a Singular Foliation ELibM Doc Math 25 2020 1571 1652 doi 10 25537 dm 2020v25 1571 1652 Debord Claire 2001 07 01 Holonomy Groupoids of Singular Foliations Journal of Differential Geometry 58 3 doi 10 4310 jdg 1090348356 ISSN 0022 040X S2CID 54714044 Androulidakis Iakovos Skandalis Georges 2009 01 01 The holonomy groupoid of a singular foliation Journal fur die reine und angewandte Mathematik Crelle s Journal 2009 626 1 37 doi 10 1515 CRELLE 2009 001 ISSN 1435 5345 S2CID 14450917 Books lecture notes and external links EditWilliam M Boothby Section IV 8 in An Introduction to Differentiable Manifolds and Riemannian Geometry Academic Press San Diego California 2003 John M Lee Chapter 19 in Introduction to Smooth Manifolds Graduate Texts in Mathematics Springer Verlag 2003 Richard Montgomery Chapters 2 4 and 6 in A tour of subriemannian geometries their geodesics and applications Mathematical Surveys and Monographs 91 Amer Math Soc Providence RI 2002 Alvaro del Pino Topological aspects in the study of tangent distributions Textos de Matematica Serie B 48 Universidade de Coimbra 2019 Involutive distribution Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 This article incorporates material from Distribution on PlanetMath which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike License Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Distribution differential geometry amp oldid 1103902602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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