In
Riemannian geometry
Riemannian geometry is the branch of differential geometry that studies Riemannian manifolds, smooth manifolds with a ''Riemannian metric'', i.e. with an inner product on the tangent space at each point that varies smoothly from point to point ...
, a collapsing or collapsed manifold is an ''n''-dimensional
manifold ''M'' that admits a sequence of
Riemannian metrics ''g''
''i'', such that as ''i'' goes to infinity the manifold is close to a ''k''-dimensional space, where ''k'' < ''n'', in the
Gromov–Hausdorff distance sense. Generally there are some restrictions on the
sectional curvature In Riemannian geometry, the sectional curvature is one of the ways to describe the curvature of Riemannian manifolds. The sectional curvature ''K''(σ''p'') depends on a two-dimensional linear subspace σ''p'' of the tangent space at a poi ...
s of (''M'', ''g''
''i''). The simplest example is a
flat manifold In mathematics, a Riemannian manifold is said to be flat if its Riemann curvature tensor is everywhere zero. Intuitively, a flat manifold is one that "locally looks like" Euclidean space in terms of distances and angles, e.g. the interior angles o ...
, whose metric can be rescaled by 1/''i'', so that the manifold is close to a point, but its curvature remains 0 for all ''i''.
Examples
Generally speaking there are two types of collapsing:
(1) The first type is a collapse while keeping the curvature uniformly bounded, say
.
Let
be a sequence of
dimensional Riemannian manifolds, where
denotes the sectional curvature of the ''i''th manifold. There is a theorem proved by
Jeff Cheeger
Jeff Cheeger (born December 1, 1943, Brooklyn, New York City) is a mathematician. Cheeger is professor at the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University in New York City. His main interests are differential geometry and ...
,
Kenji Fukaya
Kenji Fukaya (Japanese: 深谷賢治, ''Fukaya Kenji'') is a Japanese mathematician known for his work in symplectic geometry and Riemannian geometry. His many fundamental contributions to mathematics include the discovery of the Fukaya cat ...
and
Mikhail Gromov, which states that: There exists a constant
such that if
and
, then
admits an
''N''-structure, with
denoting the
injectivity radius
This is a glossary of some terms used in Riemannian geometry and metric geometry — it doesn't cover the terminology of differential topology.
The following articles may also be useful; they either contain specialised vocabulary or provi ...
of the manifold ''M''. Roughly speaking the ''N''-structure is a locally action of a
nilmanifold
In mathematics, a nilmanifold is a differentiable manifold which has a transitive nilpotent group of diffeomorphisms acting on it. As such, a nilmanifold is an example of a homogeneous space and is diffeomorphic to the quotient space N/H, th ...
, which is a generalization of an
F-structure, introduced by Cheeger and Gromov. This theorem generalized previous theorems of Cheeger-Gromov and Fukaya where they only deal with the torus action and bounded diameter cases respectively.
(2) The second type is the collapsing while keeping only the lower bound of curvature, say
.
This is closely related to the so-called
almost nonnegatively curved manifold case which generalizes non-negatively curved manifolds as well as almost flat manifolds. A manifold is said to be almost nonnegatively curved if it admits a sequence of metrics
, such that
and
. The role that an almost nonnegatively curved manifold plays in this collapsing case when curvature is bounded below is the same as an almost flat manifold plays in the curvature bounded case.
When curvature is bounded only from below, the limit space called
is an
Alexandrov space In geometry, Alexandrov spaces with curvature ≥ ''k'' form a generalization of Riemannian manifolds with sectional curvature ≥ ''k'', where ''k'' is some real number. By definition, these spaces are locally compact complete length spaces where t ...
. Yamaguchi proved that on the regular part of the limit space, there is a locally trivial fibration form
to
when
is sufficiently large, the fiber is an almost nonnegatively curved manifold. Here the regular means the
-strainer radius is uniformly bounded from below by a positive number, or roughly speaking, the space locally closed to the Euclidean space.
What happens at a singular point of
? There is no answer to this question in general. But on dimension 3, Shioya and Yamaguchi give a full classification of this type collapsed manifold. They proved that there exists a
and
such that if a 3-dimensional manifold
satisfies
then one of the following is true: (i) ''M'' is a graph manifold or (ii)
has diameter less than
and has finite fundamental group.
Riemannian geometry
Manifolds