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mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, systolic inequalities for curves on surfaces were first studied by
Charles Loewner Charles Loewner (29 May 1893 – 8 January 1968) was an American mathematician. His name was Karel Löwner in Czech and Karl Löwner in German. Karl Loewner was born into a Jewish family in Lany, about 30 km from Prague, where his father Sig ...
in 1949 (unpublished; see remark at end of P. M. Pu's paper in '52). Given a
closed surface In the part of mathematics referred to as topology, a surface is a two-dimensional manifold. Some surfaces arise as the boundaries of three-dimensional solids; for example, the sphere is the boundary of the solid ball. Other surfaces arise as g ...
, its systole, denoted sys, is defined to be the least length of a loop that cannot be contracted to a point on the surface. The ''systolic area'' of a metric is defined to be the ratio area/sys2. The ''systolic ratio'' SR is the reciprocal quantity sys2/area. See also
Introduction to systolic geometry Systolic geometry is a branch of differential geometry, a field within mathematics, studying problems such as the relationship between the area inside a closed curve ''C'', and the length or perimeter of ''C''. Since the area ''A'' may be smal ...
.


Torus

In 1949 Loewner proved his inequality for metrics on the
torus In geometry, a torus (plural tori, colloquially donut or doughnut) is a surface of revolution generated by revolving a circle in three-dimensional space about an axis that is coplanar with the circle. If the axis of revolution does not tou ...
T2, namely that the systolic ratio SR(T2) is bounded above by 2/\sqrt, with equality in the flat (constant curvature) case of the equilateral torus (see
hexagonal lattice The hexagonal lattice or triangular lattice is one of the five two-dimensional Bravais lattice types. The symmetry category of the lattice is wallpaper group p6m. The primitive translation vectors of the hexagonal lattice form an angle of 120° ...
).


Real projective plane

A similar result is given by Pu's inequality for the real projective plane from 1952, due to
Pao Ming Pu Pao Ming Pu (the form of his name he used in Western languages, although the Wade-Giles transliteration would be Pu Baoming; ; August 1910 – February 22, 1988), was a mathematician born in Jintang County, Sichuan, China.. He was a student ...
, with an upper bound of ''π''/2 for the systolic ratio SR(RP2), also attained in the constant curvature case.


Klein bottle

For the Klein bottle ''K'', Bavard (1986) obtained an optimal upper bound of \pi/\sqrt for the systolic ratio: :\mathrm(K) \leq \frac, based on work by Blatter from the 1960s.


Genus 2

An orientable surface of genus 2 satisfies Loewner's bound \mathrm(2)\leq \tfrac, see (Katz-Sabourau '06). It is unknown whether or not every surface of positive genus satisfies Loewner's bound. It is conjectured that they all do. The answer is affirmative for genus 20 and above by (Katz-Sabourau '05).


Arbitrary genus

For a closed surface of genus ''g'', Hebda and Burago (1980) showed that the systolic ratio SR(g) is bounded above by the constant 2. Three years later, Mikhail Gromov found an upper bound for SR(g) given by a constant times :\frac. A similar ''lower'' bound (with a smaller constant) was obtained by Buser and Sarnak. Namely, they exhibited arithmetic hyperbolic Riemann surfaces with systole behaving as a constant times \log (g). Note that area is 4π(g-1) from the Gauss-Bonnet theorem, so that SR(g) behaves asymptotically as a constant times \tfrac. The study of the asymptotic behavior for large genus g of the systole of hyperbolic surfaces reveals some interesting constants. Thus,
Hurwitz surface In Riemann surface theory and hyperbolic geometry, a Hurwitz surface, named after Adolf Hurwitz, is a compact Riemann surface with precisely 84(''g'' − 1) automorphisms, where ''g'' is the genus of the surface. This number is maximal by vir ...
s \Sigma_g defined by a tower of principal congruence subgroups of the (2,3,7) hyperbolic triangle group satisfy the bound : \mathrm(\Sigma_g) \geq \frac \log g, resulting from an analysis of the
Hurwitz quaternion order The Hurwitz quaternion order is a specific order in a quaternion algebra over a suitable number field. The order is of particular importance in Riemann surface theory, in connection with surfaces with maximal symmetry, namely the Hurwitz surfaces. ...
. A similar bound holds for more general arithmetic
Fuchsian group In mathematics, a Fuchsian group is a discrete subgroup of PSL(2,R). The group PSL(2,R) can be regarded equivalently as a group of isometries of the hyperbolic plane, or conformal transformations of the unit disc, or conformal transformations o ...
s. This 2007 result by
Mikhail Katz Mikhail "Mischa" Gershevich Katz (born 1958, in Chișinău)Curriculum vitae
...
, Mary Schaps, and
Uzi Vishne Uzi Vishne is Professor of Mathematics at Bar Ilan University, Israel. His main interests are division algebras, Gelfand–Kirillov dimension, Coxeter groups, Artin groups, combinatorial group theory, monomial algebras, and arithmetic of algebra ...
improves an inequality due to Peter Buser and
Peter Sarnak Peter Clive Sarnak (born 18 December 1953) is a South African-born mathematician with dual South-African and American nationalities. Sarnak has been a member of the permanent faculty of the School of Mathematics at the Institute for Advanced St ...
in the case of arithmetic groups defined over \mathbb, from 1994, which contained a nonzero additive constant. For the Hurwitz surfaces of principal congruence type, the systolic ratio SR(g) is asymptotic to :\frac \frac. Using Katok's entropy inequality, the following asymptotic ''upper bound'' for SR(g) was found in (Katz-Sabourau 2005): :\frac, see also (Katz 2007), p. 85. Combining the two estimates, one obtains tight bounds for the asymptotic behavior of the systolic ratio of surfaces.


Sphere

There is also a version of the inequality for metrics on the sphere, for the invariant ''L'' defined as the least length of a closed geodesic of the metric. In '80, Gromov conjectured a lower bound of 1/2\sqrt for the ratio area/''L''2. A lower bound of 1/961 obtained by Croke in '88 has recently been improved by Nabutovsky, Rotman, and Sabourau.


See also

*
Differential geometry of surfaces In mathematics, the differential geometry of surfaces deals with the differential geometry of smooth surfaces with various additional structures, most often, a Riemannian metric. Surfaces have been extensively studied from various perspective ...


References

* * * * * * * * * {{Systolic geometry navbox Differential geometry of surfaces Systolic geometry