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Pu's inequality

In differential geometry, Pu's inequality, proved by Pao Ming Pu, relates the area of an arbitrary Riemannian surface homeomorphic to the real projective plane with the lengths of the closed curves contained in it.

An animation of the Roman surface representing RP2 in R3

Statement edit

A student of Charles Loewner, Pu proved in his 1950 thesis (Pu 1952) that every Riemannian surface   homeomorphic to the real projective plane satisfies the inequality

 

where   is the systole of  . The equality is attained precisely when the metric has constant Gaussian curvature.

In other words, if all noncontractible loops in   have length at least  , then   and the equality holds if and only if   is obtained from a Euclidean sphere of radius   by identifying each point with its antipodal.

Pu's paper also stated for the first time Loewner's inequality, a similar result for Riemannian metrics on the torus.

Proof edit

Pu's original proof relies on the uniformization theorem and employs an averaging argument, as follows.

By uniformization, the Riemannian surface   is conformally diffeomorphic to a round projective plane. This means that we may assume that the surface   is obtained from the Euclidean unit sphere   by identifying antipodal points, and the Riemannian length element at each point   is

 

where   is the Euclidean length element and the function  , called the conformal factor, satisfies  .

More precisely, the universal cover of   is  , a loop   is noncontractible if and only if its lift   goes from one point to its opposite, and the length of each curve   is

 

Subject to the restriction that each of these lengths is at least  , we want to find an   that minimizes the

 

where   is the upper half of the sphere.

A key observation is that if we average several different   that satisfy the length restriction and have the same area  , then we obtain a better conformal factor  , that also satisfies the length restriction and has

 
 

and the inequality is strict unless the functions   are equal.

A way to improve any non-constant   is to obtain the different functions   from   using rotations of the sphere  , defining  . If we average over all possible rotations, then we get an   that is constant over all the sphere. We can further reduce this constant to minimum value   allowed by the length restriction. Then we obtain the obtain the unique metric that attains the minimum area  .

Reformulation edit

Alternatively, every metric on the sphere   invariant under the antipodal map admits a pair of opposite points   at Riemannian distance   satisfying  

A more detailed explanation of this viewpoint may be found at the page Introduction to systolic geometry.

Filling area conjecture edit

An alternative formulation of Pu's inequality is the following. Of all possible fillings of the Riemannian circle of length   by a  -dimensional disk with the strongly isometric property, the round hemisphere has the least area.

To explain this formulation, we start with the observation that the equatorial circle of the unit  -sphere   is a Riemannian circle   of length  . More precisely, the Riemannian distance function of   is induced from the ambient Riemannian distance on the sphere. Note that this property is not satisfied by the standard imbedding of the unit circle in the Euclidean plane. Indeed, the Euclidean distance between a pair of opposite points of the circle is only  , whereas in the Riemannian circle it is  .

We consider all fillings of   by a  -dimensional disk, such that the metric induced by the inclusion of the circle as the boundary of the disk is the Riemannian metric of a circle of length  . The inclusion of the circle as the boundary is then called a strongly isometric imbedding of the circle.

Gromov conjectured that the round hemisphere gives the "best" way of filling the circle even when the filling surface is allowed to have positive genus (Gromov 1983).

Isoperimetric inequality edit

Pu's inequality bears a curious resemblance to the classical isoperimetric inequality

 

for Jordan curves in the plane, where   is the length of the curve while   is the area of the region it bounds. Namely, in both cases a 2-dimensional quantity (area) is bounded by (the square of) a 1-dimensional quantity (length). However, the inequality goes in the opposite direction. Thus, Pu's inequality can be thought of as an "opposite" isoperimetric inequality.

See also edit

References edit

  • Gromov, Mikhael (1983). "Filling Riemannian manifolds". J. Differential Geom. 18 (1): 1–147. doi:10.4310/jdg/1214509283. MR 0697984.
  • Gromov, Mikhael (1996). "Systoles and intersystolic inequalities". In Besse, Arthur L. (ed.). Actes de la Table Ronde de Géométrie Différentielle (Luminy, 1992) [Proceedings of the Roundtable on Differential Geometry]. Séminaires et Congrès. Vol. 1. Paris: Soc. Math. France. pp. 291–362. ISBN 2-85629-047-7. MR 1427752.
  • Gromov, Misha (1999) [1981]. Metric structures for Riemannian and non-Riemannian spaces. Progress in Mathematics. Vol. 152. With appendices by M. Katz, P. Pansu and S. Semmes. Translated from the French by Sean Michael Bates. Boston, MA: Birkhäuser Boston, Inc. ISBN 0-8176-3898-9. MR 1699320.
  • Katz, Mikhail G. (2007). Systolic geometry and topology. Mathematical Surveys and Monographs. Vol. 137. With an appendix by J. Solomon. Providence, RI: American Mathematical Society. doi:10.1090/surv/137. ISBN 978-0-8218-4177-8. MR 2292367. S2CID 118039315.
  • Pu, Pao Ming (1952). "Some inequalities in certain nonorientable Riemannian manifolds". Pacific J. Math. 2 (1): 55–71. doi:10.2140/pjm.1952.2.55. MR 0048886.

inequality, differential, geometry, proved, ming, relates, area, arbitrary, riemannian, surface, homeomorphic, real, projective, plane, with, lengths, closed, curves, contained, animation, roman, surface, representing, contents, statement, proof, reformulation. In differential geometry Pu s inequality proved by Pao Ming Pu relates the area of an arbitrary Riemannian surface homeomorphic to the real projective plane with the lengths of the closed curves contained in it An animation of the Roman surface representing RP2 in R3 Contents 1 Statement 2 Proof 3 Reformulation 4 Filling area conjecture 5 Isoperimetric inequality 6 See also 7 ReferencesStatement editA student of Charles Loewner Pu proved in his 1950 thesis Pu 1952 that every Riemannian surface M displaystyle M nbsp homeomorphic to the real projective plane satisfies the inequality Area M 2 p Systole M 2 displaystyle operatorname Area M geq frac 2 pi operatorname Systole M 2 nbsp where Systole M displaystyle operatorname Systole M nbsp is the systole of M displaystyle M nbsp The equality is attained precisely when the metric has constant Gaussian curvature In other words if all noncontractible loops in M displaystyle M nbsp have length at least L displaystyle L nbsp then Area M 2 p L 2 displaystyle operatorname Area M geq frac 2 pi L 2 nbsp and the equality holds if and only if M displaystyle M nbsp is obtained from a Euclidean sphere of radius r L p displaystyle r L pi nbsp by identifying each point with its antipodal Pu s paper also stated for the first time Loewner s inequality a similar result for Riemannian metrics on the torus Proof editPu s original proof relies on the uniformization theorem and employs an averaging argument as follows By uniformization the Riemannian surface M g displaystyle M g nbsp is conformally diffeomorphic to a round projective plane This means that we may assume that the surface M displaystyle M nbsp is obtained from the Euclidean unit sphere S 2 displaystyle S 2 nbsp by identifying antipodal points and the Riemannian length element at each point x displaystyle x nbsp is d L e n g t h f x d L e n g t h Euclidean displaystyle mathrm dLength f x mathrm dLength text Euclidean nbsp where d L e n g t h Euclidean displaystyle mathrm dLength text Euclidean nbsp is the Euclidean length element and the function f S 2 0 displaystyle f S 2 to 0 infty nbsp called the conformal factor satisfies f x f x displaystyle f x f x nbsp More precisely the universal cover of M displaystyle M nbsp is S 2 displaystyle S 2 nbsp a loop g M displaystyle gamma subseteq M nbsp is noncontractible if and only if its lift g S 2 displaystyle widetilde gamma subseteq S 2 nbsp goes from one point to its opposite and the length of each curve g displaystyle gamma nbsp is Length g g f d L e n g t h Euclidean displaystyle operatorname Length gamma int widetilde gamma f mathrm dLength text Euclidean nbsp Subject to the restriction that each of these lengths is at least L displaystyle L nbsp we want to find an f displaystyle f nbsp that minimizes the Area M g S 2 f x 2 d A r e a Euclidean x displaystyle operatorname Area M g int S 2 f x 2 mathrm dArea text Euclidean x nbsp where S 2 displaystyle S 2 nbsp is the upper half of the sphere A key observation is that if we average several different f i displaystyle f i nbsp that satisfy the length restriction and have the same area A displaystyle A nbsp then we obtain a better conformal factor f new 1 n 0 i lt n f i displaystyle f text new frac 1 n sum 0 leq i lt n f i nbsp that also satisfies the length restriction and has Area M g new S 2 1 n i f i x 2 d A r e a Euclidean x displaystyle operatorname Area M g text new int S 2 left frac 1 n sum i f i x right 2 mathrm dArea text Euclidean x nbsp 1 n i S 2 f i x 2 d A r e a Euclidean x A displaystyle qquad qquad leq frac 1 n sum i left int S 2 f i x 2 mathrm dArea text Euclidean x right A nbsp and the inequality is strict unless the functions f i displaystyle f i nbsp are equal A way to improve any non constant f displaystyle f nbsp is to obtain the different functions f i displaystyle f i nbsp from f displaystyle f nbsp using rotations of the sphere R i S O 3 displaystyle R i in SO 3 nbsp defining f i x f R i x displaystyle f i x f R i x nbsp If we average over all possible rotations then we get an f new displaystyle f text new nbsp that is constant over all the sphere We can further reduce this constant to minimum value r L p displaystyle r frac L pi nbsp allowed by the length restriction Then we obtain the obtain the unique metric that attains the minimum area 2 p r 2 2 p L 2 displaystyle 2 pi r 2 frac 2 pi L 2 nbsp Reformulation editAlternatively every metric on the sphere S 2 displaystyle S 2 nbsp invariant under the antipodal map admits a pair of opposite points p q S 2 displaystyle p q in S 2 nbsp at Riemannian distance d d p q displaystyle d d p q nbsp satisfying d 2 p 4 area S 2 displaystyle d 2 leq frac pi 4 operatorname area S 2 nbsp A more detailed explanation of this viewpoint may be found at the page Introduction to systolic geometry Filling area conjecture editAn alternative formulation of Pu s inequality is the following Of all possible fillings of the Riemannian circle of length 2 p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp by a 2 displaystyle 2 nbsp dimensional disk with the strongly isometric property the round hemisphere has the least area To explain this formulation we start with the observation that the equatorial circle of the unit 2 displaystyle 2 nbsp sphere S 2 R 3 displaystyle S 2 subset mathbb R 3 nbsp is a Riemannian circle S 1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp of length 2 p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp More precisely the Riemannian distance function of S 1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp is induced from the ambient Riemannian distance on the sphere Note that this property is not satisfied by the standard imbedding of the unit circle in the Euclidean plane Indeed the Euclidean distance between a pair of opposite points of the circle is only 2 displaystyle 2 nbsp whereas in the Riemannian circle it is p displaystyle pi nbsp We consider all fillings of S 1 displaystyle S 1 nbsp by a 2 displaystyle 2 nbsp dimensional disk such that the metric induced by the inclusion of the circle as the boundary of the disk is the Riemannian metric of a circle of length 2 p displaystyle 2 pi nbsp The inclusion of the circle as the boundary is then called a strongly isometric imbedding of the circle Gromov conjectured that the round hemisphere gives the best way of filling the circle even when the filling surface is allowed to have positive genus Gromov 1983 Isoperimetric inequality editPu s inequality bears a curious resemblance to the classical isoperimetric inequality L 2 4 p A displaystyle L 2 geq 4 pi A nbsp for Jordan curves in the plane where L displaystyle L nbsp is the length of the curve while A displaystyle A nbsp is the area of the region it bounds Namely in both cases a 2 dimensional quantity area is bounded by the square of a 1 dimensional quantity length However the inequality goes in the opposite direction Thus Pu s inequality can be thought of as an opposite isoperimetric inequality See also editFilling area conjecture Gromov s systolic inequality for essential manifolds Gromov s inequality for complex projective space Loewner s torus inequality Systolic geometry Systoles of surfacesReferences editGromov Mikhael 1983 Filling Riemannian manifolds J Differential Geom 18 1 1 147 doi 10 4310 jdg 1214509283 MR 0697984 Gromov Mikhael 1996 Systoles and intersystolic inequalities In Besse Arthur L ed Actes de la Table Ronde de Geometrie Differentielle Luminy 1992 Proceedings of the Roundtable on Differential Geometry Seminaires et Congres Vol 1 Paris Soc Math France pp 291 362 ISBN 2 85629 047 7 MR 1427752 Gromov Misha 1999 1981 Metric structures for Riemannian and non Riemannian spaces Progress in Mathematics Vol 152 With appendices by M Katz P Pansu and S Semmes Translated from the French by Sean Michael Bates Boston MA Birkhauser Boston Inc ISBN 0 8176 3898 9 MR 1699320 Katz Mikhail G 2007 Systolic geometry and topology Mathematical Surveys and Monographs Vol 137 With an appendix by J Solomon Providence RI American Mathematical Society doi 10 1090 surv 137 ISBN 978 0 8218 4177 8 MR 2292367 S2CID 118039315 Pu Pao Ming 1952 Some inequalities in certain nonorientable Riemannian manifolds Pacific J Math 2 1 55 71 doi 10 2140 pjm 1952 2 55 MR 0048886 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pu 27s inequality amp oldid 1181868933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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