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Curvature of Riemannian manifolds

In mathematics, specifically differential geometry, the infinitesimal geometry of Riemannian manifolds with dimension greater than 2 is too complicated to be described by a single number at a given point. Riemann introduced an abstract and rigorous way to define curvature for these manifolds, now known as the Riemann curvature tensor. Similar notions have found applications everywhere in differential geometry of surfaces and other objects. The curvature of a pseudo-Riemannian manifold can be expressed in the same way with only slight modifications.

From left to right: a surface of negative Gaussian curvature (hyperboloid), a surface of zero Gaussian curvature (cylinder), and a surface of positive Gaussian curvature (sphere). In higher dimensions, a manifold may have different curvatures in different directions, described by the Riemann curvature tensor.

Ways to express the curvature of a Riemannian manifold edit

The Riemann curvature tensor edit

The curvature of a Riemannian manifold can be described in various ways; the most standard one is the curvature tensor, given in terms of a Levi-Civita connection (or covariant differentiation)   and Lie bracket   by the following formula:

 

Here   is a linear transformation of the tangent space of the manifold; it is linear in each argument. If   and   are coordinate vector fields then   and therefore the formula simplifies to

 

i.e. the curvature tensor measures noncommutativity of the covariant derivative.

The linear transformation   is also called the curvature transformation or endomorphism.

N.B. There are a few books where the curvature tensor is defined with opposite sign.

Symmetries and identities edit

The curvature tensor has the following symmetries:

 
 
 

The last identity was discovered by Ricci, but is often called the first Bianchi identity, just because it looks similar to the Bianchi identity below. The first two should be addressed as antisymmetry and Lie algebra property respectively, since the second means that the R(u, v) for all u, v are elements of the pseudo-orthogonal Lie algebra. All three together should be named pseudo-orthogonal curvature structure. They give rise to a tensor only by identifications with objects of the tensor algebra - but likewise there are identifications with concepts in the Clifford-algebra. Let us note that these three axioms of a curvature structure give rise to a well-developed structure theory, formulated in terms of projectors (a Weyl projector, giving rise to Weyl curvature and an Einstein projector, needed for the setup of the Einsteinian gravitational equations). This structure theory is compatible with the action of the pseudo-orthogonal groups plus dilations. It has strong ties with the theory of Lie groups and algebras, Lie triples and Jordan algebras. See the references given in the discussion.

The three identities form a complete list of symmetries of the curvature tensor, i.e. given any tensor which satisfies the identities above, one could find a Riemannian manifold with such a curvature tensor at some point. Simple calculations show that such a tensor has   independent components. Yet another useful identity follows from these three:

 

The Bianchi identity (often the second Bianchi identity) involves the covariant derivatives:

 

Sectional curvature edit

Sectional curvature is a further, equivalent but more geometrical, description of the curvature of Riemannian manifolds. It is a function   which depends on a section   (i.e. a 2-plane in the tangent spaces). It is the Gauss curvature of the  -section at p; here  -section is a locally defined piece of surface which has the plane   as a tangent plane at p, obtained from geodesics which start at p in the directions of the image of   under the exponential map at p.

If   are two linearly independent vectors in   then

 

The following formula indicates that sectional curvature describes the curvature tensor completely:

 
 
 

Or in a simpler formula:

 

Curvature form edit

The connection form gives an alternative way to describe curvature. It is used more for general vector bundles, and for principal bundles, but it works just as well for the tangent bundle with the Levi-Civita connection. The curvature of an n-dimensional Riemannian manifold is given by an antisymmetric n×n matrix   of 2-forms (or equivalently a 2-form with values in  , the Lie algebra of the orthogonal group  , which is the structure group of the tangent bundle of a Riemannian manifold).

Let   be a local section of orthonormal bases. Then one can define the connection form, an antisymmetric matrix of 1-forms   which satisfy from the following identity

 

Then the curvature form   is defined by

 .

Note that the expression " " is shorthand for   and hence does not necessarily vanish. The following describes relation between curvature form and curvature tensor:

 

This approach builds in all symmetries of curvature tensor except the first Bianchi identity, which takes form

 

where   is an n-vector of 1-forms defined by  . The second Bianchi identity takes form

 

D denotes the exterior covariant derivative

The curvature operator edit

It is sometimes convenient to think about curvature as an operator   on tangent bivectors (elements of  ), which is uniquely defined by the following identity:

 

It is possible to do this precisely because of the symmetries of the curvature tensor (namely antisymmetry in the first and last pairs of indices, and block-symmetry of those pairs).

Further curvature tensors edit

In general the following tensors and functions do not describe the curvature tensor completely, however they play an important role.

Scalar curvature edit

Scalar curvature is a function on any Riemannian manifold, denoted variously by   or  . It is the full trace of the curvature tensor; given an orthonormal basis   in the tangent space at a point

we have

 

where   denotes the Ricci tensor. The result does not depend on the choice of orthonormal basis. Starting with dimension 3, scalar curvature does not describe the curvature tensor completely.

Ricci curvature edit

Ricci curvature is a linear operator on tangent space at a point, usually denoted by  . Given an orthonormal basis   in the tangent space at p we have

 

The result does not depend on the choice of orthonormal basis. With four or more dimensions, Ricci curvature does not describe the curvature tensor completely.

Explicit expressions for the Ricci tensor in terms of the Levi-Civita connection is given in the article on Christoffel symbols.

Weyl curvature tensor edit

The Weyl curvature tensor has the same symmetries as the Riemann curvature tensor, but with one extra constraint: its trace (as used to define the Ricci curvature) must vanish.

The Weyl tensor is invariant with respect to a conformal change of metric: if two metrics are related as   for some positive scalar function  , then  .

In dimensions 2 and 3 the Weyl tensor vanishes, but in 4 or more dimensions the Weyl tensor can be non-zero. For a manifold of constant curvature, the Weyl tensor is zero. Moreover,   if and only if the metric is locally conformal to the Euclidean metric.

Ricci decomposition edit

Although individually, the Weyl tensor and Ricci tensor do not in general determine the full curvature tensor, the Riemann curvature tensor can be decomposed into a Weyl part and a Ricci part. This decomposition is known as the Ricci decomposition, and plays an important role in the conformal geometry of Riemannian manifolds. In particular, it can be used to show that if the metric is rescaled by a conformal factor of  , then the Riemann curvature tensor changes to (seen as a (0, 4)-tensor):

 

where   denotes the Kulkarni–Nomizu product and Hess is the Hessian.

Calculation of curvature edit

For calculation of curvature

References edit

  • Kobayashi, Shoshichi; Nomizu, Katsumi (1996). Foundations of Differential Geometry, Vol. 1 (New ed.). Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 0-471-15733-3.
  • Woods, F. S. (1901). "Space of constant curvature". The Annals of Mathematics. 3 (1/4): 71–112. doi:10.2307/1967636. JSTOR 1967636.

Notes edit


curvature, riemannian, manifolds, more, elementary, discussion, curvature, space, mathematics, specifically, differential, geometry, infinitesimal, geometry, riemannian, manifolds, with, dimension, greater, than, complicated, described, single, number, given, . For a more elementary discussion see Curvature of space In mathematics specifically differential geometry the infinitesimal geometry of Riemannian manifolds with dimension greater than 2 is too complicated to be described by a single number at a given point Riemann introduced an abstract and rigorous way to define curvature for these manifolds now known as the Riemann curvature tensor Similar notions have found applications everywhere in differential geometry of surfaces and other objects The curvature of a pseudo Riemannian manifold can be expressed in the same way with only slight modifications From left to right a surface of negative Gaussian curvature hyperboloid a surface of zero Gaussian curvature cylinder and a surface of positive Gaussian curvature sphere In higher dimensions a manifold may have different curvatures in different directions described by the Riemann curvature tensor Contents 1 Ways to express the curvature of a Riemannian manifold 1 1 The Riemann curvature tensor 1 1 1 Symmetries and identities 1 2 Sectional curvature 1 3 Curvature form 1 4 The curvature operator 2 Further curvature tensors 2 1 Scalar curvature 2 2 Ricci curvature 2 3 Weyl curvature tensor 2 4 Ricci decomposition 3 Calculation of curvature 4 References 5 NotesWays to express the curvature of a Riemannian manifold editThe Riemann curvature tensor edit Main article Riemann curvature tensor The curvature of a Riemannian manifold can be described in various ways the most standard one is the curvature tensor given in terms of a Levi Civita connection or covariant differentiation displaystyle nabla nbsp and Lie bracket displaystyle cdot cdot nbsp by the following formula R u v w u v w v u w u v w displaystyle R u v w nabla u nabla v w nabla v nabla u w nabla u v w nbsp Here R u v displaystyle R u v nbsp is a linear transformation of the tangent space of the manifold it is linear in each argument If u x i displaystyle u partial partial x i nbsp and v x j displaystyle v partial partial x j nbsp are coordinate vector fields then u v 0 displaystyle u v 0 nbsp and therefore the formula simplifies to R u v w u v w v u w displaystyle R u v w nabla u nabla v w nabla v nabla u w nbsp i e the curvature tensor measures noncommutativity of the covariant derivative The linear transformation w R u v w displaystyle w mapsto R u v w nbsp is also called the curvature transformation or endomorphism N B There are a few books where the curvature tensor is defined with opposite sign Symmetries and identities edit The curvature tensor has the following symmetries R u v R v u displaystyle R u v R v u nbsp R u v w z R u v z w displaystyle langle R u v w z rangle langle R u v z w rangle nbsp R u v w R v w u R w u v 0 displaystyle R u v w R v w u R w u v 0 nbsp The last identity was discovered by Ricci but is often called the first Bianchi identity just because it looks similar to the Bianchi identity below The first two should be addressed as antisymmetry and Lie algebra property respectively since the second means that the R u v for all u v are elements of the pseudo orthogonal Lie algebra All three together should be named pseudo orthogonal curvature structure They give rise to a tensor only by identifications with objects of the tensor algebra but likewise there are identifications with concepts in the Clifford algebra Let us note that these three axioms of a curvature structure give rise to a well developed structure theory formulated in terms of projectors a Weyl projector giving rise to Weyl curvature and an Einstein projector needed for the setup of the Einsteinian gravitational equations This structure theory is compatible with the action of the pseudo orthogonal groups plus dilations It has strong ties with the theory of Lie groups and algebras Lie triples and Jordan algebras See the references given in the discussion The three identities form a complete list of symmetries of the curvature tensor i e given any tensor which satisfies the identities above one could find a Riemannian manifold with such a curvature tensor at some point Simple calculations show that such a tensor has n 2 n 2 1 12 displaystyle n 2 n 2 1 12 nbsp independent components Yet another useful identity follows from these three R u v w z R w z u v displaystyle langle R u v w z rangle langle R w z u v rangle nbsp The Bianchi identity often the second Bianchi identity involves the covariant derivatives u R v w v R w u w R u v 0 displaystyle nabla u R v w nabla v R w u nabla w R u v 0 nbsp Sectional curvature edit Main article Sectional curvature Sectional curvature is a further equivalent but more geometrical description of the curvature of Riemannian manifolds It is a function K s displaystyle K sigma nbsp which depends on a section s displaystyle sigma nbsp i e a 2 plane in the tangent spaces It is the Gauss curvature of the s displaystyle sigma nbsp section at p here s displaystyle sigma nbsp section is a locally defined piece of surface which has the plane s displaystyle sigma nbsp as a tangent plane at p obtained from geodesics which start at p in the directions of the image of s displaystyle sigma nbsp under the exponential map at p If v u displaystyle v u nbsp are two linearly independent vectors in s displaystyle sigma nbsp then K s K u v u v 2 where K u v R u v v u displaystyle K sigma K u v u wedge v 2 text where K u v langle R u v v u rangle nbsp The following formula indicates that sectional curvature describes the curvature tensor completely 6 R u v w z displaystyle 6 langle R u v w z rangle nbsp K u z v w K u z v K u z w K u v w K z v w K u w K v z displaystyle K u z v w K u z v K u z w K u v w K z v w K u w K v z nbsp K u w v z K u w v K u w z K u v z K w v z K v w K u z displaystyle K u w v z K u w v K u w z K u v z K w v z K v w K u z nbsp Or in a simpler formula R u v w z 1 6 2 s t K u s z v t w K u s w v t z s t 0 0 displaystyle langle R u v w z rangle frac 1 6 left frac partial 2 partial s partial t left K u sz v tw K u sw v tz right right s t 0 0 nbsp Curvature form edit Main article Curvature form The connection form gives an alternative way to describe curvature It is used more for general vector bundles and for principal bundles but it works just as well for the tangent bundle with the Levi Civita connection The curvature of an n dimensional Riemannian manifold is given by an antisymmetric n n matrix W W j i displaystyle Omega Omega j i nbsp of 2 forms or equivalently a 2 form with values in so n displaystyle operatorname so n nbsp the Lie algebra of the orthogonal group O n displaystyle operatorname O n nbsp which is the structure group of the tangent bundle of a Riemannian manifold Let e i displaystyle e i nbsp be a local section of orthonormal bases Then one can define the connection form an antisymmetric matrix of 1 forms w w j i displaystyle omega omega j i nbsp which satisfy from the following identity w j k e i e i e j e k displaystyle omega j k e i langle nabla e i e j e k rangle nbsp Then the curvature form W W j i displaystyle Omega Omega j i nbsp is defined by W d w w w displaystyle Omega d omega omega wedge omega nbsp Note that the expression w w displaystyle omega wedge omega nbsp is shorthand for w j i w k j displaystyle omega j i wedge omega k j nbsp and hence does not necessarily vanish The following describes relation between curvature form and curvature tensor R u v w W u v w displaystyle R u v w Omega u wedge v w nbsp This approach builds in all symmetries of curvature tensor except the first Bianchi identity which takes form W 8 0 displaystyle Omega wedge theta 0 nbsp where 8 8 i displaystyle theta theta i nbsp is an n vector of 1 forms defined by 8 i v e i v displaystyle theta i v langle e i v rangle nbsp The second Bianchi identity takes form D W 0 displaystyle D Omega 0 nbsp D denotes the exterior covariant derivative The curvature operator edit It is sometimes convenient to think about curvature as an operator Q displaystyle Q nbsp on tangent bivectors elements of L 2 T displaystyle Lambda 2 T nbsp which is uniquely defined by the following identity Q u v w z R u v z w displaystyle langle Q u wedge v w wedge z rangle langle R u v z w rangle nbsp It is possible to do this precisely because of the symmetries of the curvature tensor namely antisymmetry in the first and last pairs of indices and block symmetry of those pairs Further curvature tensors editIn general the following tensors and functions do not describe the curvature tensor completely however they play an important role Scalar curvature edit Main article Scalar curvature Scalar curvature is a function on any Riemannian manifold denoted variously by S R displaystyle S R nbsp or Sc displaystyle text Sc nbsp It is the full trace of the curvature tensor given an orthonormal basis e i displaystyle e i nbsp in the tangent space at a pointwe have S i j R e i e j e j e i i Ric e i e i displaystyle S sum i j langle R e i e j e j e i rangle sum i langle text Ric e i e i rangle nbsp where Ric displaystyle text Ric nbsp denotes the Ricci tensor The result does not depend on the choice of orthonormal basis Starting with dimension 3 scalar curvature does not describe the curvature tensor completely Ricci curvature edit Main article Ricci curvature Ricci curvature is a linear operator on tangent space at a point usually denoted by Ric displaystyle text Ric nbsp Given an orthonormal basis e i displaystyle e i nbsp in the tangent space at p we have Ric u i R u e i e i displaystyle text Ric u sum i R u e i e i nbsp The result does not depend on the choice of orthonormal basis With four or more dimensions Ricci curvature does not describe the curvature tensor completely Explicit expressions for the Ricci tensor in terms of the Levi Civita connection is given in the article on Christoffel symbols Weyl curvature tensor edit Main article Weyl tensor The Weyl curvature tensor has the same symmetries as the Riemann curvature tensor but with one extra constraint its trace as used to define the Ricci curvature must vanish The Weyl tensor is invariant with respect to a conformal change of metric if two metrics are related as g f g displaystyle tilde g fg nbsp for some positive scalar function f displaystyle f nbsp then W W displaystyle tilde W W nbsp In dimensions 2 and 3 the Weyl tensor vanishes but in 4 or more dimensions the Weyl tensor can be non zero For a manifold of constant curvature the Weyl tensor is zero Moreover W 0 displaystyle W 0 nbsp if and only if the metric is locally conformal to the Euclidean metric Ricci decomposition edit Main article Ricci decomposition Although individually the Weyl tensor and Ricci tensor do not in general determine the full curvature tensor the Riemann curvature tensor can be decomposed into a Weyl part and a Ricci part This decomposition is known as the Ricci decomposition and plays an important role in the conformal geometry of Riemannian manifolds In particular it can be used to show that if the metric is rescaled by a conformal factor of e 2 f displaystyle e 2f nbsp then the Riemann curvature tensor changes to seen as a 0 4 tensor e 2 f R Hess f d f d f 1 2 grad f 2 g g displaystyle e 2f left R left text Hess f df otimes df frac 1 2 text grad f 2 g right wedge bigcirc g right nbsp where displaystyle wedge bigcirc nbsp denotes the Kulkarni Nomizu product and Hess is the Hessian Calculation of curvature editFor calculation of curvature of hypersurfaces and submanifolds see second fundamental form in coordinates see the list of formulas in Riemannian geometry or covariant derivative by moving frames see Cartan connection and curvature form the Jacobi equation can help if one knows something about the behavior of geodesics References editKobayashi Shoshichi Nomizu Katsumi 1996 Foundations of Differential Geometry Vol 1 New ed Wiley Interscience ISBN 0 471 15733 3 Woods F S 1901 Space of constant curvature The Annals of Mathematics 3 1 4 71 112 doi 10 2307 1967636 JSTOR 1967636 Notes edit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Curvature of Riemannian manifolds amp oldid 1201149767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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