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An Introduction to Riemannian Geometry Chapter 3 Presented by Mehdi Nadjafikhah © URL: webpages.iust.ac.ir/m_nadjfikhah

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Presentation on theme: "An Introduction to Riemannian Geometry Chapter 3 Presented by Mehdi Nadjafikhah © URL: webpages.iust.ac.ir/m_nadjfikhah"— Presentation transcript:

1 An Introduction to Riemannian Geometry Chapter 3 Presented by Mehdi Nadjafikhah © URL: webpages.iust.ac.ir/m_nadjfikhah Email: m_Nadjafikhah@iust.ac.ir 5 April 2016 17 September 1826 – 20 July 1866

2 Contents Chapter 3 - Riemannian Manifolds 3.1 Riemannian Manifolds 3.2 Affine Connections 3.3 Levi-Civita Connection 3.4 Minimizing Properties of Geodesics 3.5 Hopf-Rinow Theorem

3  The metric properties of n-dimensional Euclidean space (distances and angles) are determined by the canonical Cartesian coordinates.  In a general differentiable manifold, however, there are no such preferred coordinates;  to define distances and angles one must add more structure by choosing a special 2-tensor field, called a Riemannian metric.  This idea was introduced by Riemann in his 1854 habilitation lecture “On the hypotheses which underlie geometry”,  following the discovery (around 1830) of non-Euclidean geometry by Gauss, Bolyai and Lobachevsky.  It proved to be an extremely fruitful concept, having led, among other things, to the development of Einstein’s general theory of relativity.

4 http://www.cs.jhu.edu/~misha/ReadingSeminar/Papers/Riemann54.pdf

5 3.1 Riemannian Manifolds

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9 Example 1.5

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12 Example: Helicoid

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17 The Tangent–Cotangent Isomorphism

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20 Inverse metric on Polar plane

21 Killing vector field

22 Killing vectors of the Poincare half-plane Inverse metric on Polar plane

23 3.2 Affine Connections

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25 The terminology is due to Cartan and has its origins in the identification of tangent spaces in Euclidean space R n by translation: the idea is that a choice of affine connection makes a manifold look infinitesimally like Euclidean space not just smoothly, but as an affine space.Euclidean spaceaffine space É lie Joseph Cartan 1869-1951

26 Elwin Bruno Christoffel 1829-1900

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28 Remark 2.3  Locally, an affine connection is uniquely determined by specifying its Christoffel symbols on a coordinate neighborhood.  However, the choices of Christoffel symbols on different charts are not independent, as the covariant derivative must agree on the overlap.

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30 Geodesic

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32 Parallel transportaion of vector field Y along curve C with respect to the connection Gamma.

33 General parallel vector field Y along curve C.

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35 Covariant Derivatives of Tensor Fields

36 This connection satisfies the following additional properties:

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41 3.3 Levi-Civita Connection Tullio Levi-Civita 1873-1941

42 Jean-Louis Koszul French Mathematician 1921-

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48 Example: Sphere

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50 Example: Hyperbolic Spaces

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53 Divergence

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55 Laplacian Laplacian of a function f defined as

56 3.4 Minimizing Properties of Geodesics

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59 Normal ball and Normal sphere

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61 Lemma. X is (and hence the geodesics through p are) orthogonal to normal spheres. Lemma. X is (and hence the geodesics through p are) orthogonal to normal spheres.

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73 3.5 Hopf-Rinow Theorem

74 Geodesically complete

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