Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Schur's lemma (from Riemannian geometry)

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Schur's lemma is a result in Riemannian geometry that says, heuristically, whenever certain curvatures are pointwise constant then they are forced to be globally constant. It is essentially a degree of freedom counting argument.

Statement of the Lemma

Suppose ( M n , g ) is a Riemannian manifold and n 3 . Then if

  • the sectional curvature is pointwise constant, that is, there exists some function f : M R such that
  • s e c t ( Π p ) = f ( p ) for all two-dimensional subspaces Π p T p M and all p M , then f is constant, and the manifold has constant sectional curvature (also known as a space form when M is complete); alternatively
  • the Ricci curvature endomorphism is pointwise a multiple of the identity, that is, there exists some function f : M R such that
  • R i c ( X p ) = f ( p ) X p for all X p T p M and all p M , then f is constant, and the manifold is Einstein.

    The requirement that n 3 cannot be lifted. This result is far from true on two-dimensional surfaces. In two dimensions sectional curvature is always pointwise constant since there is only one two-dimensional subspace Π p T p M , namely T p M . Furthermore, in two dimensions the Ricci curvature endomorphism is always a multiple of the identity (scaled by Gauss curvature). On the other hand, certainly not all two-dimensional surfaces have constant sectional (or Ricci) curvature.

    References

    Schur's lemma (from Riemannian geometry) Wikipedia


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