In mathematics, Hopf conjecture may refer to one of several conjectural statements from
differential geometry and
topology
In mathematics, topology (from the Greek words , and ) is concerned with the properties of a geometric object that are preserved under continuous deformations, such as stretching, twisting, crumpling, and bending; that is, without closing ho ...
attributed to
Heinz Hopf
Heinz Hopf (19 November 1894 – 3 June 1971) was a German mathematician who worked on the fields of topology and geometry.
Early life and education
Hopf was born in Gräbschen, Germany (now , part of Wrocław, Poland), the son of Elizabeth ( ...
.
Positively or negatively curved Riemannian manifolds
The Hopf conjecture is an open problem in global Riemannian geometry. It goes back to questions of
Heinz Hopf
Heinz Hopf (19 November 1894 – 3 June 1971) was a German mathematician who worked on the fields of topology and geometry.
Early life and education
Hopf was born in Gräbschen, Germany (now , part of Wrocław, Poland), the son of Elizabeth ( ...
from 1931. A modern formulation is:
: ''A compact, even-dimensional
Riemannian manifold
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold or Riemannian space , so called after the German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is a real, smooth manifold ''M'' equipped with a positive-definite inner product ''g'p'' on the tangent spac ...
with positive
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 ...
has positive
Euler characteristic
In mathematics, and more specifically in algebraic topology and polyhedral combinatorics, the Euler characteristic (or Euler number, or Euler–Poincaré characteristic) is a topological invariant, a number that describes a topological spac ...
. A compact, (2''d'')-dimensional
Riemannian manifold
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold or Riemannian space , so called after the German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is a real, smooth manifold ''M'' equipped with a positive-definite inner product ''g'p'' on the tangent spac ...
with negative
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 ...
has
Euler characteristic
In mathematics, and more specifically in algebraic topology and polyhedral combinatorics, the Euler characteristic (or Euler number, or Euler–Poincaré characteristic) is a topological invariant, a number that describes a topological spac ...
of sign
.''
For
surfaces, these statements follow from the
Gauss–Bonnet theorem. For
four-dimensional manifolds, this follows from the finiteness of the
fundamental group
In the mathematical field of algebraic topology, the fundamental group of a topological space is the group of the equivalence classes under homotopy of the loops contained in the space. It records information about the basic shape, or holes, of ...
and
Poincaré duality
In mathematics, the Poincaré duality theorem, named after Henri Poincaré, is a basic result on the structure of the homology and cohomology groups of manifolds. It states that if ''M'' is an ''n''-dimensional oriented closed manifold ( comp ...
and
Euler–Poincaré formula equating for
4-manifold
In mathematics, a 4-manifold is a 4-dimensional topological manifold. A smooth 4-manifold is a 4-manifold with a smooth structure. In dimension four, in marked contrast with lower dimensions, topological and smooth manifolds are quite different. ...
s the Euler characteristic with
and
Synge's theorem
In mathematics, specifically Riemannian geometry, Synge's theorem is a classical result relating the curvature of a Riemannian manifold to its topology. It is named for John Lighton Synge, who proved it in 1936.
Theorem and sketch of proof
Let ...
, assuring that the orientation cover is simply connected, so that the
Betti numbers vanish
. For 4-manifolds, the statement also follows from the
Chern–Gauss–Bonnet theorem
In mathematics, the Chern theorem (or the Chern–Gauss–Bonnet theorem after Shiing-Shen Chern, Carl Friedrich Gauss, and Pierre Ossian Bonnet) states that the Euler–Poincaré characteristic (a topological invariant defined as the alternatin ...
as noticed by
John Milnor
John Willard Milnor (born February 20, 1931) is an American mathematician known for his work in differential topology, algebraic K-theory and low-dimensional holomorphic dynamical systems. Milnor is a distinguished professor at Stony Brook Un ...
in 1955 (written down by
Shiing-Shen Chern
Shiing-Shen Chern (; , ; October 28, 1911 – December 3, 2004) was a Chinese-American mathematician and poet. He made fundamental contributions to differential geometry and topology. He has been called the "father of modern differential geom ...
in 1955.). For manifolds of dimension 6 or higher the conjecture is open. An example of
Robert Geroch
Robert Geroch (born 1 June 1942 in Akron, Ohio) is an American theoretical physicist and professor at the University of Chicago. He has worked prominently on general relativity and mathematical physics and has promoted the use of category theo ...
had shown that the Chern–Gauss–Bonnet integrand can become negative for
. The positive curvature case is known to hold however for hypersurfaces in
(Hopf) or codimension two surfaces embedded in
. For sufficiently pinched positive curvature manifolds, the Hopf conjecture (in the positive curvature case) follows from the
sphere theorem, a theorem which had also been conjectured first by Hopf. One of the lines of attacks is by looking for manifolds with more symmetry. It is particular for example that all known manifolds of positive sectional curvature allow for an isometric circle action. The corresponding vector field is called a
killing vector field
In mathematics, a Killing vector field (often called a Killing field), named after Wilhelm Killing, is a vector field on a Riemannian manifold (or pseudo-Riemannian manifold) that preserves the metric. Killing fields are the infinitesimal gen ...
. The conjecture (for the positive curvature case) has also been proved for manifolds of dimension
or
admitting an isometric
torus action In algebraic geometry, a torus action on an algebraic variety is a group action of an algebraic torus on the variety. A variety equipped with an action of a torus ''T'' is called a ''T''-variety. In differential geometry, one considers an action of ...
of a ''k''-dimensional torus and for manifolds ''M'' admitting an isometric action of a compact
Lie group
In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group that is also a differentiable manifold. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Euclidean space, whereas groups define the abstract concept of a binary operation along with the addit ...
''G'' with principal isotropy subgroup ''H'' and cohomogeneity ''k'' such that
Some references about manifolds with some symmetry are and
On the history of the problem:
the first written explicit appearance of the conjecture is in the proceedings of the
German Mathematical Society
The German Mathematical Society (german: Deutsche Mathematiker-Vereinigung, DMV) is the main professional society of German mathematicians and represents German mathematics within the European Mathematical Society (EMS) and the International Mathe ...
, which is a paper based on talks, Heinz Hopf gave in the spring of 1931 in
Fribourg
, Location of , Location of ()
() or , ; or , ; gsw, label=Swiss German, Frybùrg ; it, Friburgo or ; rm, Friburg. is the capital of the Cantons of Switzerland, Swiss canton of Canton of Fribourg, Fribourg and district of Sarine (district), ...
,
Switzerland and at
Bad Elster
Bad Elster () is a spa town in the Vogtlandkreis district, in Saxony, Germany. It lies on the border of Bavaria and the Czech Republic in the Elster gebirge hills. It is situated on the river White Elster, and is protected from extremes of ...
in the fall of 1931.
Marcel Berger
Marcel Berger (14 April 1927 – 15 October 2016) was a French mathematician, doyen of French differential geometry, and a former director of the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques (IHÉS), France. Formerly residing in Le Castera in Las ...
discusses the conjecture in his book, and points to the work of Hopf from the 1920s which was influenced by such type of questions. The conjectures are listed as problem 8 (positive curvature case) and 10 (negative curvature case) in ``Yau's problems" of 1982.
Non-negatively or non-positively curved Riemannian manifolds
There are analogue conjectures if the curvature is allowed to become zero too. The statement should still be attributed to Hopf (for example in a talk given in 1953 in Italy).
: ''A compact, even-dimensional
Riemannian manifold
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold or Riemannian space , so called after the German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is a real, smooth manifold ''M'' equipped with a positive-definite inner product ''g'p'' on the tangent spac ...
with non-negative
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 ...
has non-negative
Euler characteristic
In mathematics, and more specifically in algebraic topology and polyhedral combinatorics, the Euler characteristic (or Euler number, or Euler–Poincaré characteristic) is a topological invariant, a number that describes a topological spac ...
. A compact, (2d)-dimensional
Riemannian manifold
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold or Riemannian space , so called after the German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is a real, smooth manifold ''M'' equipped with a positive-definite inner product ''g'p'' on the tangent spac ...
with non-positive
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 ...
has
Euler characteristic
In mathematics, and more specifically in algebraic topology and polyhedral combinatorics, the Euler characteristic (or Euler number, or Euler–Poincaré characteristic) is a topological invariant, a number that describes a topological spac ...
of sign
or zero.''
This version was stated as such as Question 1 in the paper or then in a paper of Chern.
An example for which the conjecture is confirmed is for the product
of 2-dimensional manifolds with curvature sign
. As the Euler characteristic satisfies
which has the sign
, the sign conjecture is confirmed in that case (if
for all k, then
and if
for all k, then
for even d and
for odd d, and if one of the
is zero, then
).
Self-maps of degree 1
Hopf asked whether every continuous self-map of an oriented closed manifold of degree 1 is necessarily a homotopy equivalence.
It is easy to see that any map
of degree 1 induces a surjection on
; if not, then
factors through a non-trivial covering space, contradicting the degree-1 assumption.
This implies that the conjecture holds for
Hopfian groups, as for them one then gets that
is an isomorphism on
and thus a homotopy equivalence.
There are, however, some non-Hopfian groups.
Product conjecture for the product of two spheres
Another famous question of Hopf is the Hopf product conjecture:
: ''Can the 4-manifold
carry a metric with positive curvature?''
The conjecture was popularized in the book of Gromoll, Klingenberg and Meyer from 1968, and was prominently displayed as Problem 1 in Yau's list of problems.
Shing-Tung Yau
Shing-Tung Yau (; ; born April 4, 1949) is a Chinese-American mathematician and the William Caspar Graustein Professor of Mathematics at Harvard University. In April 2022, Yau announced retirement from Harvard to become Chair Professor of mathem ...
formulated there an interesting new observation (which could be reformulated as a conjecture).
: ''One does not know any example of a compact, simply-connected manifold of nonnegative sectional curvature which does not admit a metric of strictly positive curvature.''
At present, the 4-sphere
and the complex projective plane
are the only simply-connected 4-manifolds which are known to admit a metric of positive curvature. Wolfgang Ziller once conjectured this might be the full list and that in dimension 5, the only simply-connected 5-manifold of positive curvature is the 5-sphere
. Of course, solving the Hopf product conjecture would settle the Yau question. Also the Ziller conjecture that
and
are the only simply connected positive curvature 4-manifolds would settle the Hopf product conjecture. Back to the case
: it is known from work of
Jean-Pierre Bourguignon
Jean-Pierre Bourguignon (born 21 July 1947) is a French mathematician, working in the field of differential geometry.
Biography
Born in Lyon, he studied at École Polytechnique in Palaiseau, graduating in 1969. For his graduate studies he wen ...
that in the neighborhood of the product metric, there is no metric of positive curvature. It is also known from work of
Alan Weinstein
Alan David Weinstein (17 June, 1943, New York City) is a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley, working in the field of differential geometry, and especially in Poisson geometry.
Education and career
Weinstein o ...
that if a metric is given on
exists with positive curvature, then this Riemannian manifold can not be embedded in
. (It follows already from a result of Hopf that an embedding in
is not possible as then the manifold has to be a sphere.) A general reference for manifolds with non-negative sectional curvature giving many examples is as well as. A related conjecture is that
: ''A compact
symmetric space
In mathematics, a symmetric space is a Riemannian manifold (or more generally, a pseudo-Riemannian manifold) whose group of symmetries contains an inversion symmetry about every point. This can be studied with the tools of Riemannian geometry, ...
of rank greater than one cannot carry a Riemannian metric of positive sectional curvature.''
This would also imply that
admits no
Riemannian metric
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold or Riemannian space , so called after the German mathematician Bernhard Riemann, is a real, smooth manifold ''M'' equipped with a positive-definite inner product ''g'p'' on the tangent spac ...
with positive sectional curvature. So, when looking at the evidence and the work done so far, it appears that the Hopf question most likely will be answered as the statement "There is no metric of positive curvature on
" because so far, the theorems of Bourguignon (perturbation result near product metric), Hopf (codimension 1), Weinstein (codimension 2) as well as the
sphere theorem excluding pinched positive curvature metrics, point towards this outcome. The construction of a positive curvature metric on
would certainly be a surprise in global differential geometry, but it is not excluded yet that such a metric exists.
Finally, one can ask why one would be interested in such a special case like the Hopf product conjecture. Hopf himself was motivated by problems from physics. When Hopf started to work in the mid 1920s, the theory of relativity was only 10 years old and it sparked a great deal of interest in differential geometry, especially in global structure of 4-manifolds, as such manifolds appear in cosmology as models of the universe.
Thurston conjecture on aspherical manifolds (extension of Hopf's conjecture)
There is a conjecture which relates to the Hopf sign conjecture but which does not refer to Riemannian geometry at all. Aspherical manifolds are connected manifolds for which all higher homotopy groups disappear. The Euler characteristic then should satisfy the same condition as a negatively curved manifold is conjectured to satisfy in Riemannian geometry:
: ''Suppose M
2k is a closed,
aspherical manifold of even dimension. Then its Euler characteristic satisfies the inequality
''
There can not be a direct relation to the Riemannian case as there are aspherical manifolds that are not homeomorphic to a smooth Riemannian manifold with negative sectional curvature.
This topological version of Hopf conjecture is due to
William Thurston
William Paul Thurston (October 30, 1946August 21, 2012) was an American mathematician. He was a pioneer in the field of low-dimensional topology and was awarded the Fields Medal in 1982 for his contributions to the study of 3-manifolds.
Thursto ...
.
Ruth Charney and
Michael Davis conjectured that the same inequality holds for a non-positively curved piecewise Euclidean (PE) manifold.
(Unrelated:) Riemannian metrics with no conjugate points
There had been a bit of confusion about the word ``Hopf conjecture" as an unrelated mathematician Eberhard Hopf and contemporary of Heinz Hopf worked on topics like geodesic flows. (
Eberhard Hopf and
Heinz Hopf
Heinz Hopf (19 November 1894 – 3 June 1971) was a German mathematician who worked on the fields of topology and geometry.
Early life and education
Hopf was born in Gräbschen, Germany (now , part of Wrocław, Poland), the son of Elizabeth ( ...
are unrelated and might never have met even so they were both students of
Erhard Schmidt
Erhard Schmidt (13 January 1876 – 6 December 1959) was a Baltic German mathematician whose work significantly influenced the direction of mathematics in the twentieth century. Schmidt was born in Tartu (german: link=no, Dorpat), in the Gover ...
). There is a theorem of Eberhard Hopf stating that if the 2-torus
has no conjugate points, then it must be flat (the Gauss curvature is zero everywhere). The theorem of Eberhard Hopf generalized a theorem of
Marston Morse
Harold Calvin Marston Morse (March 24, 1892 – June 22, 1977) was an American mathematician best known for his work on the ''calculus of variations in the large'', a subject where he introduced the technique of differential topology now known a ...
and
Gustav Hedlund (a PhD student of Morse) from a year earlier. The problem to generalize this to higher dimensions was for some time known as the Hopf conjecture too. In any case, this is now a theorem: ''A Riemannian metric without conjugate points on the n-dimensional torus is flat.''
[Dmitri Burago and Sergei Ivanov, ''Riemannian tori without conjugate points are flat'', ]Geometric and Functional Analysis
''Geometric and Functional Analysis'' (''GAFA'') is a mathematical journal published by Birkhäuser, an independent division of Springer-Verlag. The journal is published approximately bi-monthly.
The journal publishes papers on broad range of to ...
4 (1994), no. 3, 259-269, , .
References
{{Reflist
Differential geometry
Topology
Conjectures
Unsolved problems in geometry