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Harmonic map

In the mathematical field of differential geometry, a smooth map between Riemannian manifolds is called harmonic if its coordinate representatives satisfy a certain nonlinear partial differential equation. This partial differential equation for a mapping also arises as the Euler-Lagrange equation of a functional called the Dirichlet energy. As such, the theory of harmonic maps contains both the theory of unit-speed geodesics in Riemannian geometry and the theory of harmonic functions.

Informally, the Dirichlet energy of a mapping f from a Riemannian manifold M to a Riemannian manifold N can be thought of as the total amount that f stretches M in allocating each of its elements to a point of N. For instance, an unstretched rubber band and a smooth stone can both be naturally viewed as Riemannian manifolds. Any way of stretching the rubber band over the stone can be viewed as a mapping between these manifolds, and the total tension involved is represented by the Dirichlet energy. Harmonicity of such a mapping means that, given any hypothetical way of physically deforming the given stretch, the tension (when considered as a function of time) has first derivative equal to zero when the deformation begins.

The theory of harmonic maps was initiated in 1964 by James Eells and Joseph Sampson, who showed that in certain geometric contexts, arbitrary maps could be deformed into harmonic maps.[1] Their work was the inspiration for Richard Hamilton's initial work on the Ricci flow. Harmonic maps and the associated harmonic map heat flow, in and of themselves, are among the most widely studied topics in the field of geometric analysis.

The discovery of the "bubbling" of sequences of harmonic maps, due to Jonathan Sacks and Karen Uhlenbeck,[2] has been particularly influential, as their analysis has been adapted to many other geometric contexts. Notably, Uhlenbeck's parallel discovery of bubbling of Yang–Mills fields is important in Simon Donaldson's work on four-dimensional manifolds, and Mikhael Gromov's later discovery of bubbling of pseudoholomorphic curves is significant in applications to symplectic geometry and quantum cohomology. The techniques used by Richard Schoen and Uhlenbeck to study the regularity theory of harmonic maps have likewise been the inspiration for the development of many analytic methods in geometric analysis.[3]

Geometry of mappings between manifolds

Here the geometry of a smooth mapping between Riemannian manifolds is considered via local coordinates and, equivalently, via linear algebra. Such a mapping defines both a first fundamental form and second fundamental form. The Laplacian (also called tension field) is defined via the second fundamental form, and its vanishing is the condition for the map to be harmonic. The definitions extend without modification to the setting of pseudo-Riemannian manifolds.

Local coordinates

Let U be an open subset of m and let V be an open subset of n. For each i and j between 1 and n, let gij be a smooth real-valued function on U, such that for each p in U, one has that the m × m matrix [gij (p)] is symmetric and positive-definite. For each α and β between 1 and m, let hαβ be a smooth real-valued function on V, such that for each q in V, one has that the n × n matrix [hαβ (q)] is symmetric and positive-definite. Denote the inverse matrices by [gij (p)] and [hαβ (q)].

For each i, j, k between 1 and n and each α, β, γ between 1 and m define the Christoffel symbols Γ(g)kij : U → ℝ and Γ(h)γαβ : V → ℝ by[4]

 

Given a smooth map f from U to V, its second fundamental form defines for each i and j between 1 and m and for each α between 1 and n the real-valued function ∇(df)αij on U by[5]

 

Its laplacian defines for each α between 1 and n the real-valued function (∆f)α on U by[6]

 

Bundle formalism

Let (M, g) and (N, h) be Riemannian manifolds. Given a smooth map f from M to N, one can consider its differential df as a section of the vector bundle T *Mf *TN over M; this is to say that for each p in M, one has a linear map dfp between tangent spaces TpMTf(p)N.[7] The vector bundle T *Mf *TN has a connection induced from the Levi-Civita connections on M and N.[8] So one may take the covariant derivative ∇(df), which is a section of the vector bundle T *MT *Mf *TN over M; this is to say that for each p in M, one has a bilinear map (∇(df))p of tangent spaces TpM × TpMTf(p)N.[9] This section is known as the hessian of f.

Using g, one may trace the hessian of f to arrive at the laplacian of f, which is a section of the bundle f *TN over M; this says that the laplacian of f assigns to each p in M an element of the tangent space Tf(p)N.[10] By the definition of the trace operator, the laplacian may be written as

 

where e1, ..., em is any gp-orthonormal basis of TpM.

Dirichlet energy and its variation formulas

From the perspective of local coordinates, as given above, the energy density of a mapping f is the real-valued function on U given by[11]

 

Alternatively, in the bundle formalism, the Riemannian metrics on M and N induce a bundle metric on T *Mf *TN, and so one may define the energy density as the smooth function 1/2 | df |2 on M.[12] It is also possible to consider the energy density as being given by (half of) the g-trace of the first fundamental form.[13] Regardless of the perspective taken, the energy density e(f) is a function on M which is smooth and nonnegative. If M is oriented and M is compact, the Dirichlet energy of f is defined as

 

where g is the volume form on M induced by g.[14] Since any nonnegative measurable function has a well-defined Lebesgue integral, it is not necessary to place the restriction that M is compact; however, then the Dirichlet energy could be infinite.

The variation formulas for the Dirichlet energy compute the derivatives of the Dirichlet energy E(f) as the mapping f is deformed. To this end, consider a one-parameter family of maps fs : MN with f0 = f for which there exists a precompact open set K of M such that fs|MK = f|MK for all s; one supposes that the parametrized family is smooth in the sense that the associated map (−ε, ε) × MN given by (s, p) ↦ fs(p) is smooth.

  • The first variation formula says that[15]
 
There is also a version for manifolds with boundary.[16]
  • There is also a second variation formula.[17]

Due to the first variation formula, the Laplacian of f can be thought of as the gradient of the Dirichlet energy; correspondingly, a harmonic map is a critical point of the Dirichlet energy.[18] This can be done formally in the language of global analysis and Banach manifolds.

Examples of harmonic maps

Let (M, g) and (N, h) be smooth Riemannian manifolds. The notation gstan is used to refer to the standard Riemannian metric on Euclidean space.

  • Every totally geodesic map (M, g) → (N, h) is harmonic; this follows directly from the above definitions. As special cases:
    • For any q in N, the constant map (M, g) → (N, h) valued at q is harmonic.
    • The identity map (M, g) → (M, g) is harmonic.
  • If f : MN is an immersion, then f : (M, f *h) → (N, h) is harmonic if and only if f is minimal relative to h. As a special case:
    • If f : ℝ → (N, h) is a constant-speed immersion, then f : (ℝ, gstan) → (N, h) is harmonic if and only if f solves the geodesic differential equation.
Recall that if M is one-dimensional, then minimality of f is equivalent to f being geodesic, although this does not imply that it is a constant-speed parametrization, and hence does not imply that f solves the geodesic differential equation.

Harmonic map heat flow

Well-posedness

Let (M, g) and (N, h) be smooth Riemannian manifolds. A harmonic map heat flow on an interval (a, b) assigns to each t in (a, b) a twice-differentiable map ft : MN in such a way that, for each p in M, the map (a, b) → N given by tft (p) is differentiable, and its derivative at a given value of t is, as a vector in Tft (p)N, equal to (∆ ft )p. This is usually abbreviated as:

 

Eells and Sampson introduced the harmonic map heat flow and proved the following fundamental properties:

  • Regularity. Any harmonic map heat flow is smooth as a map (a, b) × MN given by (t, p) ↦ ft (p).

Now suppose that M is a closed manifold and (N, h) is geodesically complete.

  • Existence. Given a continuously differentiable map f from M to N, there exists a positive number T and a harmonic map heat flow ft on the interval (0, T) such that ft converges to f in the C1 topology as t decreases to 0.[19]
  • Uniqueness. If { ft : 0 < t < T } and { f t : 0 < t < T } are two harmonic map heat flows as in the existence theorem, then ft = f t whenever 0 < t < min(T, T).

As a consequence of the uniqueness theorem, there exists a maximal harmonic map heat flow with initial data f, meaning that one has a harmonic map heat flow { ft : 0 < t < T } as in the statement of the existence theorem, and it is uniquely defined under the extra criterion that T takes on its maximal possible value, which could be infinite.

Eells and Sampson's theorem

The primary result of Eells and Sampson's 1964 paper is the following:[1]

Let (M, g) and (N, h) be smooth and closed Riemannian manifolds, and suppose that the sectional curvature of (N, h) is nonpositive. Then for any continuously differentiable map f from M to N, the maximal harmonic map heat flow { ft : 0 < t < T } with initial data f has T = ∞, and as t increases to , the maps ft subsequentially converge in the C topology to a harmonic map.

In particular, this shows that, under the assumptions on (M, g) and (N, h), every continuous map is homotopic to a harmonic map.[1] The very existence of a harmonic map in each homotopy class, which is implicitly being asserted, is part of the result. Shortly after Eells and Sampson's work, Philip Hartman extended their methods to study uniqueness of harmonic maps within homotopy classes, additionally showing that the convergence in the Eells−Sampson theorem is strong, without the need to select a subsequence.[20] Eells and Sampson's result was adapted by Richard Hamilton to the setting of the Dirichlet boundary value problem, when M is instead compact with nonempty boundary.[21]

Singularities and weak solutions

For many years after Eells and Sampson's work, it was unclear to what extent the sectional curvature assumption on (N, h) was necessary. Following the work of Kung-Ching Chang, Wei-Yue Ding, and Rugang Ye in 1992, it is widely accepted that the maximal time of existence of a harmonic map heat flow cannot "usually" be expected to be infinite.[22] Their results strongly suggest that there are harmonic map heat flows with "finite-time blowup" even when both (M, g) and (N, h) are taken to be the two-dimensional sphere with its standard metric. Since elliptic and parabolic partial differential equations are particularly smooth when the domain is two dimensions, the Chang−Ding−Ye result is considered to be indicative of the general character of the flow.

Modeled upon the fundamental works of Sacks and Uhlenbeck, Michael Struwe considered the case where no geometric assumption on (N, h) is made. In the case that M is two-dimensional, he established the unconditional existence and uniqueness for weak solutions of the harmonic map heat flow.[23] Moreover, he found that his weak solutions are smooth away from finitely many spacetime points at which the energy density concentrates. On microscopic levels, the flow near these points is modeled by a bubble, i.e. a smooth harmonic map from the round 2-sphere into the target. Weiyue Ding and Gang Tian were able to prove the energy quantization at singular times, meaning that the Dirichlet energy of Struwe's weak solution, at a singular time, drops by exactly the sum of the total Dirichlet energies of the bubbles corresponding to singularities at that time.[24]

Struwe was later able to adapt his methods to higher dimensions, in the case that the domain manifold is Euclidean space;[25] he and Yun Mei Chen also considered higher-dimensional closed manifolds.[26] Their results achieved less than in low dimensions, only being able to prove existence of weak solutions which are smooth on open dense subsets.

The Bochner formula and rigidity

The main computational point in the proof of Eells and Sampson's theorem is an adaptation of the Bochner formula to the setting of a harmonic map heat flow { ft : 0 < t < T }. This formula says[27]

 

This is also of interest in analyzing harmonic maps. Suppose f : MN is harmonic; any harmonic map can be viewed as a constant-in-t solution of the harmonic map heat flow, and so one gets from the above formula that[28]

 

If the Ricci curvature of g is positive and the sectional curvature of h is nonpositive, then this implies that e(f) is nonnegative. If M is closed, then multiplication by e(f) and a single integration by parts shows that e(f) must be constant, and hence zero; hence f must itself be constant.[29] Richard Schoen and Shing-Tung Yau noted that this reasoning can be extended to noncompact M by making use of Yau's theorem asserting that nonnegative subharmonic functions which are L2-bounded must be constant.[30] In summary, according to these results, one has:

Let (M, g) and (N, h) be smooth and complete Riemannian manifolds, and let f be a harmonic map from M to N. Suppose that the Ricci curvature of g is positive and the sectional curvature of h is nonpositive.

  • If M and N are both closed then f must be constant.
  • If N is closed and f has finite Dirichlet energy, then it must be constant.

In combination with the Eells−Sampson theorem, this shows (for instance) that if (M, g) is a closed Riemannian manifold with positive Ricci curvature and (N, h) is a closed Riemannian manifold with nonpositive sectional curvature, then every continuous map from M to N is homotopic to a constant.

The general idea of deforming a general map to a harmonic map, and then showing that any such harmonic map must automatically be of a highly restricted class, has found many applications. For instance, Yum-Tong Siu found an important complex-analytic version of the Bochner formula, asserting that a harmonic map between Kähler manifolds must be holomorphic, provided that the target manifold has appropriately negative curvature.[31] As an application, by making use of the Eells−Sampson existence theorem for harmonic maps, he was able to show that if (M, g) and (N, h) are smooth and closed Kähler manifolds, and if the curvature of (N, h) is appropriately negative, then M and N must be biholomorphic or anti-biholomorphic if they are homotopic to each other; the biholomorphism (or anti-biholomorphism) is precisely the harmonic map produced as the limit of the harmonic map heat flow with initial data given by the homotopy. By an alternative formulation of the same approach, Siu was able to prove a variant of the still-unsolved Hodge conjecture, albeit in the restricted context of negative curvature.

Kevin Corlette found a significant extension of Siu's Bochner formula, and used it to prove new rigidity theorems for lattices in certain Lie groups.[32] Following this, Mikhael Gromov and Richard Schoen extended much of the theory of harmonic maps to allow (N, h) to be replaced by a metric space.[33] By an extension of the Eells−Sampson theorem together with an extension of the Siu–Corlette Bochner formula, they were able to prove new rigidity theorems for lattices.

Problems and applications

  • Existence results on harmonic maps between manifolds has consequences for their curvature.
  • Once existence is known, how can a harmonic map be constructed explicitly? (One fruitful method uses twistor theory.)
  • In theoretical physics, a quantum field theory whose action is given by the Dirichlet energy is known as a sigma model. In such a theory, harmonic maps correspond to instantons.
  • One of the original ideas in grid generation methods for computational fluid dynamics and computational physics was to use either conformal or harmonic mapping to generate regular grids.

Harmonic maps between metric spaces

The energy integral can be formulated in a weaker setting for functions u : MN between two metric spaces. The energy integrand is instead a function of the form

 

in which με
x
is a family of measures attached to each point of M.[34]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 11A.
  2. ^ Sacks & Uhlenbeck 1981.
  3. ^ Schoen & Uhlenbeck 1982; Schoen & Uhlenbeck 1983.
  4. ^ Aubin 1998, p.6; Hélein 2002, p.6; Jost 2017, p.489; Lin & Wang 2008, p.2.
  5. ^ Aubin 1998, p.349; Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.9; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.15; Hamilton 1975, p.4.
  6. ^ Aubin 1998, Definition 10.2; Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.9; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.15; Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 2B; Hamilton 1975, p.4; Lin & Wang 2008, p.3.
  7. ^ Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.8; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.13; Hamilton 1975, p.3.
  8. ^ Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.4.
  9. ^ Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.8; Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 3B; Hamilton 1975, p.4.
  10. ^ Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.9; Hamilton 1975, p.4; Jost 2017, p.494.
  11. ^ Aubin 1998, Definition 10.1; Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.10; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.13; Hélein 2002, p.7; Jost 2017, p.489; Lin & Wang 2008, p.1; Schoen & Yau 1997, p.1.
  12. ^ Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.10; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.13; Jost 2017, p.490-491.
  13. ^ Aubin 1998, Definition 10.1; Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.10; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.13; Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 1A; Jost 2017, p.490-491; Schoen & Yau 1997, p.1.
  14. ^ Aubin 1998, Definition 10.1; Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.10; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.13; Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 1A; Hélein 2002, p.7; Jost 2017, p.491; Lin & Wang 2008, p.1; Schoen & Yau 1997, p.2.
  15. ^ Aubin 1998, Proposition 10.2; Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.11; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.14; Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 2B; Jost 2017, Formula 9.1.13.
  16. ^ Hamilton 1975, p.135.
  17. ^ Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.10; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.28; Lin & Wang 2008, Proposition 1.6.2.
  18. ^ Aubin 1998, Definition 10.3; Eells & Lemaire 1978, p.11; Eells & Lemaire 1983, p.14.
  19. ^ This means that, relative to any local coordinate charts, one has uniform convergence on compact sets of the functions and their first partial derivatives.
  20. ^ Hartman 1967, Theorem B.
  21. ^ Hamilton 1975, p.157-161.
  22. ^ Chang, Ding & Ye 1992; Lin & Wang 2008, Section 6.3.
  23. ^ Struwe 1985.
  24. ^ Ding & Tian 1995.
  25. ^ Struwe 1988.
  26. ^ Chen & Struwe 1989.
  27. ^ Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 8A; Hamilton 1975, p.128-130; Lin & Wang 2008, Lemma 5.3.3.
  28. ^ Aubin 1998, Lemma 10.11; Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 3C; Jost 1997, Formula 5.1.18; Jost 2017, Formula 9.2.13; Lin & Wang 2008, Theorem 1.5.1.
  29. ^ Aubin 1998, Corollary 10.12; Eells & Sampson 1964, Section 3C; Jost 1997, Theorem 5.1.2; Jost 2017, Corollary 9.2.3; Lin & Wang 2008, Proposition 1.5.2.
  30. ^ Schoen & Yau 1976, p.336-337.
  31. ^ Siu 1980.
  32. ^ Corlette 1992.
  33. ^ Gromov & Schoen 1992.
  34. ^ Jost 1994, Definition 1.1.

Articles

  • Chang, Kung-Ching; Ding, Wei Yue; Ye, Rugang (1992). "Finite-time blow-up of the heat flow of harmonic maps from surfaces". Journal of Differential Geometry. 36 (2): 507–515. doi:10.4310/jdg/1214448751. MR 1180392. Zbl 0765.53026.
  • Chen, Yun Mei; Struwe, Michael (1989). "Existence and partial regularity results for the heat flow for harmonic maps". Mathematische Zeitschrift. 201 (1): 83–103. doi:10.1007/BF01161997. MR 0990191. S2CID 11210055. Zbl 0652.58024.
  • Corlette, Kevin (1992). "Archimedean superrigidity and hyperbolic geometry". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 135 (1): 165–182. doi:10.2307/2946567. JSTOR 2946567. MR 1147961. Zbl 0768.53025.
  • Ding, Weiyue; Tian, Gang (1995). "Energy identity for a class of approximate harmonic maps from surfaces". Communications in Analysis and Geometry. 3 (3–4): 543–554. doi:10.4310/CAG.1995.v3.n4.a1. MR 1371209. Zbl 0855.58016.
  • Eells, James Jr.; Sampson, J. H. (1964). "Harmonic mappings of Riemannian manifolds". American Journal of Mathematics. 86 (1): 109–160. doi:10.2307/2373037. JSTOR 2373037. MR 0164306. Zbl 0122.40102.
  • Gromov, Mikhail; Schoen, Richard (1992). "Harmonic maps into singular spaces and p-adic superrigidity for lattices in groups of rank one". Publications Mathématiques de l'Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques. 76: 165–246. doi:10.1007/bf02699433. MR 1215595. S2CID 118023776. Zbl 0896.58024.
  • Hartman, Philip (1967). "On homotopic harmonic maps". Canadian Journal of Mathematics. 19: 673–687. doi:10.4153/cjm-1967-062-6. MR 0214004. S2CID 13381249. Zbl 0148.42404.
  • Jost, Jürgen (1994). "Equilibrium maps between metric spaces". Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations. 2 (2): 173–204. doi:10.1007/BF01191341. MR 1385525. S2CID 122184265. Zbl 0798.58021.
  • Sacks, J.; Uhlenbeck, K. (1981). "The existence of minimal immersions of 2-spheres". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 113 (1): 1–24. doi:10.2307/1971131. JSTOR 1971131. MR 0604040. Zbl 0462.58014.
  • Schoen, Richard; Uhlenbeck, Karen (1982). "A regularity theory for harmonic maps". Journal of Differential Geometry. 17 (2): 307–335. doi:10.4310/jdg/1214436923. MR 0664498. Zbl 0521.58021. (Erratum: doi:10.4310/jdg/1214437667)
  • Schoen, Richard; Uhlenbeck, Karen (1983). "Boundary regularity and the Dirichlet problem for harmonic maps". Journal of Differential Geometry. 18 (2): 253–268. doi:10.4310/jdg/1214437663. MR 0710054. Zbl 0547.58020.
  • Schoen, Richard; Yau, Shing Tung (1976). "Harmonic maps and the topology of stable hypersurfaces and manifolds with non-negative Ricci curvature". Commentarii Mathematici Helvetici. 51 (3): 333–341. doi:10.1007/BF02568161. MR 0438388. S2CID 120845708. Zbl 0361.53040.
  • Siu, Yum Tong (1980). "The complex-analyticity of harmonic maps and the strong rigidity of compact Kähler manifolds". Annals of Mathematics. Second Series. 112 (1): 73–111. doi:10.2307/1971321. JSTOR 1971321. MR 0584075. Zbl 0517.53058.
  • Struwe, Michael (1985). "On the evolution of harmonic mappings of Riemannian surfaces". Commentarii Mathematici Helvetici. 60 (4): 558–581. doi:10.1007/BF02567432. MR 0826871. S2CID 122295509. Zbl 0595.58013.
  • Struwe, Michael (1988). "On the evolution of harmonic maps in higher dimensions". Journal of Differential Geometry. 28 (3): 485–502. doi:10.4310/jdg/1214442475. MR 0965226. Zbl 0631.58004.

Books and surveys

External links

  • MathWorld: Harmonic map
  • Harmonic Maps Bibliography
  • The Bibliography of Harmonic Morphisms

harmonic, this, article, about, harmonic, maps, between, riemannian, manifolds, harmonic, functions, harmonic, function, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, artic. This article is about harmonic maps between Riemannian manifolds For harmonic functions see harmonic function This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the mathematical field of differential geometry a smooth map between Riemannian manifolds is called harmonic if its coordinate representatives satisfy a certain nonlinear partial differential equation This partial differential equation for a mapping also arises as the Euler Lagrange equation of a functional called the Dirichlet energy As such the theory of harmonic maps contains both the theory of unit speed geodesics in Riemannian geometry and the theory of harmonic functions Informally the Dirichlet energy of a mapping f from a Riemannian manifold M to a Riemannian manifold N can be thought of as the total amount that f stretches M in allocating each of its elements to a point of N For instance an unstretched rubber band and a smooth stone can both be naturally viewed as Riemannian manifolds Any way of stretching the rubber band over the stone can be viewed as a mapping between these manifolds and the total tension involved is represented by the Dirichlet energy Harmonicity of such a mapping means that given any hypothetical way of physically deforming the given stretch the tension when considered as a function of time has first derivative equal to zero when the deformation begins The theory of harmonic maps was initiated in 1964 by James Eells and Joseph Sampson who showed that in certain geometric contexts arbitrary maps could be deformed into harmonic maps 1 Their work was the inspiration for Richard Hamilton s initial work on the Ricci flow Harmonic maps and the associated harmonic map heat flow in and of themselves are among the most widely studied topics in the field of geometric analysis The discovery of the bubbling of sequences of harmonic maps due to Jonathan Sacks and Karen Uhlenbeck 2 has been particularly influential as their analysis has been adapted to many other geometric contexts Notably Uhlenbeck s parallel discovery of bubbling of Yang Mills fields is important in Simon Donaldson s work on four dimensional manifolds and Mikhael Gromov s later discovery of bubbling of pseudoholomorphic curves is significant in applications to symplectic geometry and quantum cohomology The techniques used by Richard Schoen and Uhlenbeck to study the regularity theory of harmonic maps have likewise been the inspiration for the development of many analytic methods in geometric analysis 3 Contents 1 Geometry of mappings between manifolds 1 1 Local coordinates 1 2 Bundle formalism 2 Dirichlet energy and its variation formulas 3 Examples of harmonic maps 4 Harmonic map heat flow 4 1 Well posedness 4 2 Eells and Sampson s theorem 4 3 Singularities and weak solutions 5 The Bochner formula and rigidity 6 Problems and applications 7 Harmonic maps between metric spaces 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGeometry of mappings between manifolds EditHere the geometry of a smooth mapping between Riemannian manifolds is considered via local coordinates and equivalently via linear algebra Such a mapping defines both a first fundamental form and second fundamental form The Laplacian also called tension field is defined via the second fundamental form and its vanishing is the condition for the map to be harmonic The definitions extend without modification to the setting of pseudo Riemannian manifolds Local coordinates Edit Let U be an open subset of ℝm and let V be an open subset of ℝn For each i and j between 1 and n let gij be a smooth real valued function on U such that for each p in U one has that the m m matrix gij p is symmetric and positive definite For each a and b between 1 and m let hab be a smooth real valued function on V such that for each q in V one has that the n n matrix hab q is symmetric and positive definite Denote the inverse matrices by gij p and hab q For each i j k between 1 and n and each a b g between 1 and m define the Christoffel symbols G g kij U ℝ and G h gab V ℝ by 4 G g i j k 1 2 ℓ 1 m g k ℓ g j ℓ x i g i ℓ x j g i j x ℓ G h a b g 1 2 d 1 n h g d h b d y a h a d y b h a b y d displaystyle begin aligned Gamma g ij k amp frac 1 2 sum ell 1 m g k ell Big frac partial g j ell partial x i frac partial g i ell partial x j frac partial g ij partial x ell Big Gamma h alpha beta gamma amp frac 1 2 sum delta 1 n h gamma delta Big frac partial h beta delta partial y alpha frac partial h alpha delta partial y beta frac partial h alpha beta partial y delta Big end aligned Given a smooth map f from U to V its second fundamental form defines for each i and j between 1 and m and for each a between 1 and n the real valued function df aij on U by 5 d f i j a 2 f a x i x j k 1 m G g i j k f a x k b 1 n g 1 n f b x i f g x j G h b g a f displaystyle nabla df ij alpha frac partial 2 f alpha partial x i partial x j sum k 1 m Gamma g ij k frac partial f alpha partial x k sum beta 1 n sum gamma 1 n frac partial f beta partial x i frac partial f gamma partial x j Gamma h beta gamma alpha circ f Its laplacian defines for each a between 1 and n the real valued function f a on U by 6 D f a i 1 m j 1 m g i j d f i j a displaystyle Delta f alpha sum i 1 m sum j 1 m g ij nabla df ij alpha Bundle formalism Edit Let M g and N h be Riemannian manifolds Given a smooth map f from M to N one can consider its differential df as a section of the vector bundle T M f TN over M this is to say that for each p in M one has a linear map dfp between tangent spaces TpM Tf p N 7 The vector bundle T M f TN has a connection induced from the Levi Civita connections on M and N 8 So one may take the covariant derivative df which is a section of the vector bundle T M T M f TN over M this is to say that for each p in M one has a bilinear map df p of tangent spaces TpM TpM Tf p N 9 This section is known as the hessian of f Using g one may trace the hessian of f to arrive at the laplacian of f which is a section of the bundle f TN over M this says that the laplacian of f assigns to each p in M an element of the tangent space Tf p N 10 By the definition of the trace operator the laplacian may be written as D f p i 1 m d f p e i e i displaystyle Delta f p sum i 1 m big nabla df big p e i e i where e1 em is any gp orthonormal basis of TpM Dirichlet energy and its variation formulas EditFrom the perspective of local coordinates as given above the energy density of a mapping f is the real valued function on U given by 11 1 2 i 1 m j 1 m a 1 n b 1 n g i j f a x i f b x j h a b f displaystyle frac 1 2 sum i 1 m sum j 1 m sum alpha 1 n sum beta 1 n g ij frac partial f alpha partial x i frac partial f beta partial x j h alpha beta circ f Alternatively in the bundle formalism the Riemannian metrics on M and N induce a bundle metric on T M f TN and so one may define the energy density as the smooth function 1 2 df 2 on M 12 It is also possible to consider the energy density as being given by half of the g trace of the first fundamental form 13 Regardless of the perspective taken the energy density e f is a function on M which is smooth and nonnegative If M is oriented and M is compact the Dirichlet energy of f is defined as E f M e f d m g displaystyle E f int M e f d mu g where dmg is the volume form on M induced by g 14 Since any nonnegative measurable function has a well defined Lebesgue integral it is not necessary to place the restriction that M is compact however then the Dirichlet energy could be infinite The variation formulas for the Dirichlet energy compute the derivatives of the Dirichlet energy E f as the mapping f is deformed To this end consider a one parameter family of maps fs M N with f0 f for which there exists a precompact open set K of M such that fs M K f M K for all s one supposes that the parametrized family is smooth in the sense that the associated map e e M N given by s p fs p is smooth The first variation formula says that 15 M s s 0 e f s d m g M h s s 0 f s D f d m g displaystyle int M frac partial partial s Big s 0 e f s d mu g int M h left frac partial partial s Big s 0 f s Delta f right d mu g dd There is also a version for manifolds with boundary 16 There is also a second variation formula 17 Due to the first variation formula the Laplacian of f can be thought of as the gradient of the Dirichlet energy correspondingly a harmonic map is a critical point of the Dirichlet energy 18 This can be done formally in the language of global analysis and Banach manifolds Examples of harmonic maps EditLet M g and N h be smooth Riemannian manifolds The notation gstan is used to refer to the standard Riemannian metric on Euclidean space Every totally geodesic map M g N h is harmonic this follows directly from the above definitions As special cases For any q in N the constant map M g N h valued at q is harmonic The identity map M g M g is harmonic If f M N is an immersion then f M f h N h is harmonic if and only if f is minimal relative to h As a special case If f ℝ N h is a constant speed immersion then f ℝ gstan N h is harmonic if and only if f solves the geodesic differential equation Recall that if M is one dimensional then minimality of f is equivalent to f being geodesic although this does not imply that it is a constant speed parametrization and hence does not imply that f solves the geodesic differential equation A smooth map f M g ℝn gstan is harmonic if and only if each of its n component functions are harmonic as maps M g ℝ gstan This coincides with the notion of harmonicity provided by the Laplace Beltrami operator Every holomorphic map between Kahler manifolds is harmonic Every harmonic morphism between Riemannian manifolds is harmonic Harmonic map heat flow EditWell posedness Edit Let M g and N h be smooth Riemannian manifolds A harmonic map heat flow on an interval a b assigns to each t in a b a twice differentiable map ft M N in such a way that for each p in M the map a b N given by t ft p is differentiable and its derivative at a given value of t is as a vector in Tft p N equal to ft p This is usually abbreviated as f t D f displaystyle frac partial f partial t Delta f Eells and Sampson introduced the harmonic map heat flow and proved the following fundamental properties Regularity Any harmonic map heat flow is smooth as a map a b M N given by t p ft p Now suppose that M is a closed manifold and N h is geodesically complete Existence Given a continuously differentiable map f from M to N there exists a positive number T and a harmonic map heat flow ft on the interval 0 T such that ft converges to f in the C1 topology as t decreases to 0 19 Uniqueness If ft 0 lt t lt T and f t 0 lt t lt T are two harmonic map heat flows as in the existence theorem then ft f t whenever 0 lt t lt min T T As a consequence of the uniqueness theorem there exists a maximal harmonic map heat flow with initial data f meaning that one has a harmonic map heat flow ft 0 lt t lt T as in the statement of the existence theorem and it is uniquely defined under the extra criterion that T takes on its maximal possible value which could be infinite Eells and Sampson s theorem Edit The primary result of Eells and Sampson s 1964 paper is the following 1 Let M g and N h be smooth and closed Riemannian manifolds and suppose that the sectional curvature of N h is nonpositive Then for any continuously differentiable map f from M to N the maximal harmonic map heat flow ft 0 lt t lt T with initial data f has T and as t increases to the maps ft subsequentially converge in the C topology to a harmonic map In particular this shows that under the assumptions on M g and N h every continuous map is homotopic to a harmonic map 1 The very existence of a harmonic map in each homotopy class which is implicitly being asserted is part of the result Shortly after Eells and Sampson s work Philip Hartman extended their methods to study uniqueness of harmonic maps within homotopy classes additionally showing that the convergence in the Eells Sampson theorem is strong without the need to select a subsequence 20 Eells and Sampson s result was adapted by Richard Hamilton to the setting of the Dirichlet boundary value problem when M is instead compact with nonempty boundary 21 Singularities and weak solutions Edit For many years after Eells and Sampson s work it was unclear to what extent the sectional curvature assumption on N h was necessary Following the work of Kung Ching Chang Wei Yue Ding and Rugang Ye in 1992 it is widely accepted that the maximal time of existence of a harmonic map heat flow cannot usually be expected to be infinite 22 Their results strongly suggest that there are harmonic map heat flows with finite time blowup even when both M g and N h are taken to be the two dimensional sphere with its standard metric Since elliptic and parabolic partial differential equations are particularly smooth when the domain is two dimensions the Chang Ding Ye result is considered to be indicative of the general character of the flow Modeled upon the fundamental works of Sacks and Uhlenbeck Michael Struwe considered the case where no geometric assumption on N h is made In the case that M is two dimensional he established the unconditional existence and uniqueness for weak solutions of the harmonic map heat flow 23 Moreover he found that his weak solutions are smooth away from finitely many spacetime points at which the energy density concentrates On microscopic levels the flow near these points is modeled by a bubble i e a smooth harmonic map from the round 2 sphere into the target Weiyue Ding and Gang Tian were able to prove the energy quantization at singular times meaning that the Dirichlet energy of Struwe s weak solution at a singular time drops by exactly the sum of the total Dirichlet energies of the bubbles corresponding to singularities at that time 24 Struwe was later able to adapt his methods to higher dimensions in the case that the domain manifold is Euclidean space 25 he and Yun Mei Chen also considered higher dimensional closed manifolds 26 Their results achieved less than in low dimensions only being able to prove existence of weak solutions which are smooth on open dense subsets The Bochner formula and rigidity EditThe main computational point in the proof of Eells and Sampson s theorem is an adaptation of the Bochner formula to the setting of a harmonic map heat flow ft 0 lt t lt T This formula says 27 t D g e f d f 2 Ric g f h g scal g f Rm h displaystyle Big frac partial partial t Delta g Big e f big nabla df big 2 big langle operatorname Ric g f ast h big rangle g operatorname scal g big f ast operatorname Rm h big This is also of interest in analyzing harmonic maps Suppose f M N is harmonic any harmonic map can be viewed as a constant in t solution of the harmonic map heat flow and so one gets from the above formula that 28 D g e f d f 2 Ric g f h g scal g f Rm h displaystyle Delta g e f big nabla df big 2 big langle operatorname Ric g f ast h big rangle g operatorname scal g big f ast operatorname Rm h big If the Ricci curvature of g is positive and the sectional curvature of h is nonpositive then this implies that e f is nonnegative If M is closed then multiplication by e f and a single integration by parts shows that e f must be constant and hence zero hence f must itself be constant 29 Richard Schoen and Shing Tung Yau noted that this reasoning can be extended to noncompact M by making use of Yau s theorem asserting that nonnegative subharmonic functions which are L2 bounded must be constant 30 In summary according to these results one has Let M g and N h be smooth and complete Riemannian manifolds and let f be a harmonic map from M to N Suppose that the Ricci curvature of g is positive and the sectional curvature of h is nonpositive If M and N are both closed then f must be constant If N is closed and f has finite Dirichlet energy then it must be constant In combination with the Eells Sampson theorem this shows for instance that if M g is a closed Riemannian manifold with positive Ricci curvature and N h is a closed Riemannian manifold with nonpositive sectional curvature then every continuous map from M to N is homotopic to a constant The general idea of deforming a general map to a harmonic map and then showing that any such harmonic map must automatically be of a highly restricted class has found many applications For instance Yum Tong Siu found an important complex analytic version of the Bochner formula asserting that a harmonic map between Kahler manifolds must be holomorphic provided that the target manifold has appropriately negative curvature 31 As an application by making use of the Eells Sampson existence theorem for harmonic maps he was able to show that if M g and N h are smooth and closed Kahler manifolds and if the curvature of N h is appropriately negative then M and N must be biholomorphic or anti biholomorphic if they are homotopic to each other the biholomorphism or anti biholomorphism is precisely the harmonic map produced as the limit of the harmonic map heat flow with initial data given by the homotopy By an alternative formulation of the same approach Siu was able to prove a variant of the still unsolved Hodge conjecture albeit in the restricted context of negative curvature Kevin Corlette found a significant extension of Siu s Bochner formula and used it to prove new rigidity theorems for lattices in certain Lie groups 32 Following this Mikhael Gromov and Richard Schoen extended much of the theory of harmonic maps to allow N h to be replaced by a metric space 33 By an extension of the Eells Sampson theorem together with an extension of the Siu Corlette Bochner formula they were able to prove new rigidity theorems for lattices Problems and applications EditExistence results on harmonic maps between manifolds has consequences for their curvature Once existence is known how can a harmonic map be constructed explicitly One fruitful method uses twistor theory In theoretical physics a quantum field theory whose action is given by the Dirichlet energy is known as a sigma model In such a theory harmonic maps correspond to instantons One of the original ideas in grid generation methods for computational fluid dynamics and computational physics was to use either conformal or harmonic mapping to generate regular grids Harmonic maps between metric spaces EditThe energy integral can be formulated in a weaker setting for functions u M N between two metric spaces The energy integrand is instead a function of the form e ϵ u x M d 2 u x u y d m x ϵ y M d 2 x y d m x ϵ y displaystyle e epsilon u x frac int M d 2 u x u y d mu x epsilon y int M d 2 x y d mu x epsilon y in which mex is a family of measures attached to each point of M 34 See also EditGeometric flowReferences EditFootnotes a b c Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 11A Sacks amp Uhlenbeck 1981 Schoen amp Uhlenbeck 1982 Schoen amp Uhlenbeck 1983 Aubin 1998 p 6 Helein 2002 p 6 Jost 2017 p 489 Lin amp Wang 2008 p 2 Aubin 1998 p 349 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 9 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 15 Hamilton 1975 p 4 Aubin 1998 Definition 10 2 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 9 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 15 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 2B Hamilton 1975 p 4 Lin amp Wang 2008 p 3 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 8 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 13 Hamilton 1975 p 3 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 4 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 8 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 3B Hamilton 1975 p 4 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 9 Hamilton 1975 p 4 Jost 2017 p 494 Aubin 1998 Definition 10 1 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 10 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 13 Helein 2002 p 7 Jost 2017 p 489 Lin amp Wang 2008 p 1 Schoen amp Yau 1997 p 1 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 10 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 13 Jost 2017 p 490 491 Aubin 1998 Definition 10 1 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 10 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 13 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 1A Jost 2017 p 490 491 Schoen amp Yau 1997 p 1 Aubin 1998 Definition 10 1 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 10 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 13 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 1A Helein 2002 p 7 Jost 2017 p 491 Lin amp Wang 2008 p 1 Schoen amp Yau 1997 p 2 Aubin 1998 Proposition 10 2 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 11 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 14 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 2B Jost 2017 Formula 9 1 13 Hamilton 1975 p 135 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 10 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 28 Lin amp Wang 2008 Proposition 1 6 2 Aubin 1998 Definition 10 3 Eells amp Lemaire 1978 p 11 Eells amp Lemaire 1983 p 14 This means that relative to any local coordinate charts one has uniform convergence on compact sets of the functions and their first partial derivatives Hartman 1967 Theorem B Hamilton 1975 p 157 161 Chang Ding amp Ye 1992 Lin amp Wang 2008 Section 6 3 Struwe 1985 Ding amp Tian 1995 Struwe 1988 Chen amp Struwe 1989 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 8A Hamilton 1975 p 128 130 Lin amp Wang 2008 Lemma 5 3 3 Aubin 1998 Lemma 10 11 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 3C Jost 1997 Formula 5 1 18 Jost 2017 Formula 9 2 13 Lin amp Wang 2008 Theorem 1 5 1 Aubin 1998 Corollary 10 12 Eells amp Sampson 1964 Section 3C Jost 1997 Theorem 5 1 2 Jost 2017 Corollary 9 2 3 Lin amp Wang 2008 Proposition 1 5 2 Schoen amp Yau 1976 p 336 337 Siu 1980 Corlette 1992 Gromov amp Schoen 1992 Jost 1994 Definition 1 1 Articles Chang Kung Ching Ding Wei Yue Ye Rugang 1992 Finite time blow up of the heat flow of harmonic maps from surfaces Journal of Differential Geometry 36 2 507 515 doi 10 4310 jdg 1214448751 MR 1180392 Zbl 0765 53026 Chen Yun Mei Struwe Michael 1989 Existence and partial regularity results for the heat flow for harmonic maps Mathematische Zeitschrift 201 1 83 103 doi 10 1007 BF01161997 MR 0990191 S2CID 11210055 Zbl 0652 58024 Corlette Kevin 1992 Archimedean superrigidity and hyperbolic geometry Annals of Mathematics Second Series 135 1 165 182 doi 10 2307 2946567 JSTOR 2946567 MR 1147961 Zbl 0768 53025 Ding Weiyue Tian Gang 1995 Energy identity for a class of approximate harmonic maps from surfaces Communications in Analysis and Geometry 3 3 4 543 554 doi 10 4310 CAG 1995 v3 n4 a1 MR 1371209 Zbl 0855 58016 Eells James Jr Sampson J H 1964 Harmonic mappings of Riemannian manifolds American Journal of Mathematics 86 1 109 160 doi 10 2307 2373037 JSTOR 2373037 MR 0164306 Zbl 0122 40102 Gromov Mikhail Schoen Richard 1992 Harmonic maps into singular spaces and p adic superrigidity for lattices in groups of rank one Publications Mathematiques de l Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques 76 165 246 doi 10 1007 bf02699433 MR 1215595 S2CID 118023776 Zbl 0896 58024 Hartman Philip 1967 On homotopic harmonic maps Canadian Journal of Mathematics 19 673 687 doi 10 4153 cjm 1967 062 6 MR 0214004 S2CID 13381249 Zbl 0148 42404 Jost Jurgen 1994 Equilibrium maps between metric spaces Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations 2 2 173 204 doi 10 1007 BF01191341 MR 1385525 S2CID 122184265 Zbl 0798 58021 Sacks J Uhlenbeck K 1981 The existence of minimal immersions of 2 spheres Annals of Mathematics Second Series 113 1 1 24 doi 10 2307 1971131 JSTOR 1971131 MR 0604040 Zbl 0462 58014 Schoen Richard Uhlenbeck Karen 1982 A regularity theory for harmonic maps Journal of Differential Geometry 17 2 307 335 doi 10 4310 jdg 1214436923 MR 0664498 Zbl 0521 58021 Erratum doi 10 4310 jdg 1214437667 Schoen Richard Uhlenbeck Karen 1983 Boundary regularity and the Dirichlet problem for harmonic maps Journal of Differential Geometry 18 2 253 268 doi 10 4310 jdg 1214437663 MR 0710054 Zbl 0547 58020 Schoen Richard Yau Shing Tung 1976 Harmonic maps and the topology of stable hypersurfaces and manifolds with non negative Ricci curvature Commentarii Mathematici Helvetici 51 3 333 341 doi 10 1007 BF02568161 MR 0438388 S2CID 120845708 Zbl 0361 53040 Siu Yum Tong 1980 The complex analyticity of harmonic maps and the strong rigidity of compact Kahler manifolds Annals of Mathematics Second Series 112 1 73 111 doi 10 2307 1971321 JSTOR 1971321 MR 0584075 Zbl 0517 53058 Struwe Michael 1985 On the evolution of harmonic mappings of Riemannian surfaces Commentarii Mathematici Helvetici 60 4 558 581 doi 10 1007 BF02567432 MR 0826871 S2CID 122295509 Zbl 0595 58013 Struwe Michael 1988 On the evolution of harmonic maps in higher dimensions Journal of Differential Geometry 28 3 485 502 doi 10 4310 jdg 1214442475 MR 0965226 Zbl 0631 58004 Books and surveys Aubin Thierry 1998 Some nonlinear problems in Riemannian geometry Springer Monographs in Mathematics Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 662 13006 3 ISBN 3 540 60752 8 MR 1636569 Zbl 0896 53003 Eells James Lemaire Luc 1983 Selected topics in harmonic maps CBMS Regional Conference Series in Mathematics Vol 50 Providence RI American Mathematical Society doi 10 1090 cbms 050 ISBN 0 8218 0700 5 MR 0703510 Zbl 0515 58011 Eells James Lemaire Luc 1995 Two reports on harmonic maps River Edge NJ World Scientific doi 10 1142 9789812832030 ISBN 981 02 1466 9 MR 1363513 Zbl 0836 58012 Consists of reprints of Eells J Lemaire L 1978 A report on harmonic maps Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 10 1 1 68 doi 10 1112 blms 10 1 1 MR 0495450 Zbl 0401 58003 Eells J Lemaire L 1988 Another report on harmonic maps Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society 20 5 385 524 doi 10 1112 blms 20 5 385 MR 0956352 Zbl 0669 58009 Giaquinta Mariano Martinazzi Luca 2012 An introduction to the regularity theory for elliptic systems harmonic maps and minimal graphs Appunti Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa Nuova Serie Vol 11 Second edition of 2005 original ed Pisa Edizioni della Normale doi 10 1007 978 88 7642 443 4 ISBN 978 88 7642 442 7 MR 3099262 Zbl 1262 35001 Hamilton Richard S 1975 Harmonic maps of manifolds with boundary Lecture Notes in Mathematics Vol 471 Berlin New York Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 BFb0087227 ISBN 978 3 540 07185 3 MR 0482822 Zbl 0308 35003 Helein Frederic 2002 Harmonic maps conservation laws and moving frames Cambridge Tracts in Mathematics Vol 150 With a foreword by James Eells Second edition of 1997 original ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511543036 ISBN 0 521 81160 0 Zbl 1010 58010 Jost Jurgen 1997 Nonpositive curvature geometric and analytic aspects Lectures in Mathematics ETH Zurich Basel Birkhauser Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 0348 8918 6 ISBN 3 7643 5736 3 MR 1451625 Zbl 0896 53002 Jost Jurgen 2017 Riemannian geometry and geometric analysis Universitext Seventh edition of 1995 original ed Springer Cham doi 10 1007 978 3 319 61860 9 ISBN 978 3 319 61859 3 MR 3726907 Zbl 1380 53001 Lin Fanghua Wang Changyou 2008 The analysis of harmonic maps and their heat flows Hackensack NJ World Scientific doi 10 1142 9789812779533 ISBN 978 981 277 952 6 MR 2431658 Zbl 1203 58004 Schoen R Yau S T 1997 Lectures on harmonic maps Conference Proceedings and Lecture Notes in Geometry and Topology Vol 2 Cambridge MA International Press ISBN 1 57146 002 0 MR 1474501 Zbl 0886 53004 Simon Leon 1996 Theorems on regularity and singularity of energy minimizing maps Lectures in Mathematics ETH Zurich Based on lecture notes by Norbert Hungerbuhler Basel Birkhauser Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 0348 9193 6 ISBN 3 7643 5397 X MR 1399562 Zbl 0864 58015 Yau Shing Tung 1982 Survey on partial differential equations in differential geometry In Yau Shing Tung ed Seminar on Differential Geometry Annals of Mathematics Studies Vol 102 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 3 71 doi 10 1515 9781400881918 002 ISBN 9781400881918 MR 0645729 Zbl 0478 53001 External links Edit MathWorld Harmonic map Harmonic Maps Bibliography The Bibliography of Harmonic Morphisms Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harmonic map amp oldid 1117742150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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