Kobayashi metric
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In mathematics and especially
complex geometry In mathematics, complex geometry is the study of geometric structures and constructions arising out of, or described by, the complex numbers. In particular, complex geometry is concerned with the study of spaces such as complex manifolds and c ...
, the Kobayashi metric is a pseudometric intrinsically associated to any complex manifold. It was introduced by
Shoshichi Kobayashi was a Japanese mathematician. He was the eldest brother of electrical engineer and computer scientist Hisashi Kobayashi. His research interests were in Riemannian and complex manifolds, transformation groups of geometric structures, and Lie alg ...
in 1967. Kobayashi hyperbolic manifolds are an important class of complex manifolds, defined by the property that the Kobayashi pseudometric is a metric. Kobayashi hyperbolicity of a complex manifold ''X'' implies that every
holomorphic map In mathematics, a holomorphic function is a complex-valued function of one or more complex variables that is complex differentiable in a neighbourhood of each point in a domain in complex coordinate space . The existence of a complex derivat ...
from the complex line C to ''X'' is constant.


Definition

The origins of the concept lie in Schwarz's lemma in complex analysis. Namely, if ''f'' is a holomorphic function on the open unit disc ''D'' in the complex numbers C such that ''f''(0) = 0 and , ''f''(''z''), < 1 for all ''z'' in ''D'', then the
derivative In mathematics, the derivative of a function of a real variable measures the sensitivity to change of the function value (output value) with respect to a change in its argument (input value). Derivatives are a fundamental tool of calculus. ...
''f'' '(0) has absolute value at most 1. More generally, for any holomorphic map ''f'' from ''D'' to itself (not necessarily sending 0 to 0), there is a more complicated upper bound for the derivative of ''f'' at any point of ''D''. However, the bound has a simple formulation in terms of the
Poincaré metric In mathematics, the Poincaré metric, named after Henri Poincaré, is the metric tensor describing a two-dimensional surface of constant negative curvature. It is the natural metric commonly used in a variety of calculations in hyperbolic geometry ...
, which is a complete
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 space '' ...
on ''D'' with curvature −1 (isometric to the
hyperbolic plane In mathematics, hyperbolic geometry (also called Lobachevskian geometry or Bolyai– Lobachevskian geometry) is a non-Euclidean geometry. The parallel postulate of Euclidean geometry is replaced with: :For any given line ''R'' and point ''P' ...
). Namely: every holomorphic map from ''D'' to itself is distance-decreasing with respect to the Poincaré metric on ''D''. This is the beginning of a strong connection between complex analysis and the geometry of negative curvature. For any complex space ''X'' (for example a complex manifold), the Kobayashi pseudometric ''d''''X'' is defined as the largest pseudometric on ''X'' such that :d_X(f(x),f(y)) \le \rho(x,y), for all holomorphic maps ''f'' from the unit disc ''D'' to ''X'', where \rho(x,y) denotes distance in the Poincaré metric on ''D''. In a sense, this formula generalizes Schwarz's lemma to all complex spaces; but it may be vacuous in the sense that the Kobayashi pseudometric ''d''''X'' may be identically zero. For example, it is identically zero when ''X'' is the complex line C. (This occurs because C contains arbitrarily big discs, the images of the holomorphic maps ''f''''a'': ''D'' → C given by ''f''(''z'') = ''az'' for arbitrarily big positive numbers ''a''.) A complex space ''X'' is said to be Kobayashi hyperbolic if the Kobayashi pseudometric ''d''''X'' is a metric, meaning that ''d''''X''(''x'',''y'') > 0 for all ''x'' ≠ ''y'' in ''X''. Informally, this means that there is a genuine bound on the size of discs mapping holomorphically into ''X''. In these terms, Schwarz's lemma says that the unit disc ''D'' is Kobayashi hyperbolic, and more precisely that the Kobayashi metric on ''D'' is exactly the Poincaré metric. The theory becomes more interesting as more examples of Kobayashi hyperbolic manifolds are found. (For a Kobayashi hyperbolic manifold ''X'', the Kobayashi metric is a metric intrinsically determined by the complex structure of ''X''; it is not at all clear that this should ever happen. A real manifold of positive dimension never has an intrinsic metric in this sense, because its
diffeomorphism group In mathematics, a diffeomorphism is an isomorphism of smooth manifolds. It is an Inverse function, invertible Function (mathematics), function that maps one differentiable manifold to another such that both the function and its inverse function ...
is too big to allow that.)


Examples

#Every holomorphic map ''f'': ''X'' → ''Y'' of complex spaces is distance-decreasing with respect to the Kobayashi pseudometrics of ''X'' and ''Y''. It follows that if two points ''p'' and ''q'' in a complex space ''Y'' can be connected by a chain of holomorphic maps C → ''Y'', then ''d''''Y''(''p'',''q'') = 0, using that ''d''C is identically zero. This gives many examples of complex manifolds for which the Kobayashi pseudometric is identically zero: the
complex projective line In mathematics, the Riemann sphere, named after Bernhard Riemann, is a model of the extended complex plane: the complex plane plus one point at infinity. This extended plane represents the extended complex numbers, that is, the complex numbers p ...
CP1 or more generally
complex projective space In mathematics, complex projective space is the projective space with respect to the field of complex numbers. By analogy, whereas the points of a real projective space label the lines through the origin of a real Euclidean space, the points of a ...
CP''n'', C− (using the
exponential function The exponential function is a mathematical function denoted by f(x)=\exp(x) or e^x (where the argument is written as an exponent). Unless otherwise specified, the term generally refers to the positive-valued function of a real variable, ...
C → C−), an
elliptic curve In mathematics, an elliptic curve is a smooth, projective, algebraic curve of genus one, on which there is a specified point . An elliptic curve is defined over a field and describes points in , the Cartesian product of with itself. If ...
, or more generally a compact complex torus. #Kobayashi hyperbolicity is preserved under passage to open subsets or to closed complex subspaces. It follows, for example, that any bounded domain in C''n'' is hyperbolic. #A complex space is Kobayashi hyperbolic if and only if its
universal covering space A covering of a topological space X is a continuous map \pi : E \rightarrow X with special properties. Definition Let X be a topological space. A covering of X is a continuous map : \pi : E \rightarrow X such that there exists a discrete spa ...
is Kobayashi hyperbolic. This gives many examples of hyperbolic complex curves, since the
uniformization theorem In mathematics, the uniformization theorem says that every simply connected Riemann surface is conformally equivalent to one of three Riemann surfaces: the open unit disk, the complex plane, or the Riemann sphere. The theorem is a generalization ...
shows that most complex curves (also called
Riemann surface In mathematics, particularly in complex analysis, a Riemann surface is a connected one-dimensional complex manifold. These surfaces were first studied by and are named after Bernhard Riemann. Riemann surfaces can be thought of as deformed ver ...
s) have universal cover isomorphic to the disc ''D''. In particular, every compact complex curve of
genus Genus ( plural genera ) is a taxonomic rank used in the biological classification of living and fossil organisms as well as viruses. In the hierarchy of biological classification, genus comes above species and below family. In binomial nom ...
at least 2 is hyperbolic, as is the complement of 2 or more points in C.


Basic results

For a Kobayashi hyperbolic space ''X'', every holomorphic map C → ''X'' is constant, by the distance-decreasing property of the Kobayashi pseudometric. This is often the most important consequence of hyperbolicity. For example, the fact that C minus 2 points is hyperbolic implies
Picard's theorem In complex analysis, Picard's great theorem and Picard's little theorem are related theorems about the range of an analytic function. They are named after Émile Picard. The theorems Little Picard Theorem: If a function f: \mathbb \to\mathbb ...
that the image of any nonconstant
entire function In complex analysis, an entire function, also called an integral function, is a complex-valued function that is holomorphic on the whole complex plane. Typical examples of entire functions are polynomials and the exponential function, and any fin ...
C → C misses at most one point of C.
Nevanlinna theory In the mathematical field of complex analysis, Nevanlinna theory is part of the theory of meromorphic functions. It was devised in 1925, by Rolf Nevanlinna. Hermann Weyl called it "one of the few great mathematical events of (the twentieth) century ...
is a more quantitative descendant of Picard's theorem. Brody's theorem says that a ''compact'' complex space ''X'' is Kobayashi hyperbolic if and only if every holomorphic map C → ''X'' is constant. An application is that hyperbolicity is an open condition (in the Euclidean topology) for families of compact complex spaces. Mark Green used Brody's argument to characterize hyperbolicity for closed complex subspaces ''X'' of a compact complex torus: ''X'' is hyperbolic if and only if it contains no translate of a positive-dimensional subtorus. If a complex manifold ''X'' has a
Hermitian metric In mathematics, and more specifically in differential geometry, a Hermitian manifold is the complex analogue of a Riemannian manifold. More precisely, a Hermitian manifold is a complex manifold with a smoothly varying Hermitian inner product on ea ...
with holomorphic sectional curvature bounded above by a negative constant, then ''X'' is Kobayashi hyperbolic. In dimension 1, this is called the Ahlfors–Schwarz lemma.


The Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture

The results above give a complete description of which complex manifolds are Kobayashi hyperbolic in complex dimension 1. The picture is less clear in higher dimensions. A central open problem is the Green– Griffiths
Lang Lang may refer to: * Lang (surname), a surname of independent Germanic or Chinese origin Places * Lang Island (Antarctica), East Antarctica * Lang Nunatak, Antarctica * Lang Sound, Antarctica * Lang Park, a stadium in Brisbane, Australia * L ...
conjecture: if ''X'' is a complex projective variety of
general type In algebraic geometry, the Kodaira dimension ''κ''(''X'') measures the size of the canonical model of a projective variety ''X''. Igor Shafarevich, in a seminar introduced an important numerical invariant of surfaces with the notation ''κ''. ...
, then there should be a closed algebraic subset ''Y'' not equal to ''X'' such that every nonconstant holomorphic map C → ''X'' maps into ''Y''.
Clemens Clemens is both a Late Latin masculine given name and a surname meaning "merciful". Notable people with the name include: Surname * Adelaide Clemens (born 1989), Australian actress. * Andrew Clemens (b. 1852 or 1857–1894), American folk artist * ...
and
Voisin Voisin (French for "neighbour") may refer to: Companies *Avions Voisin, the French automobile company :*Voisin Laboratoire, a car manufactured by Avions Voisin *Voisin (aircraft), the French aircraft manufacturer * Voisin, a Lyon-based chocolat ...
showed that for ''n'' at least 2, a very general
hypersurface In geometry, a hypersurface is a generalization of the concepts of hyperplane, plane curve, and surface. A hypersurface is a manifold or an algebraic variety of dimension , which is embedded in an ambient space of dimension , generally a Euclidea ...
''X'' in CP''n''+1 of degree ''d'' at least 2''n''+1 has the property that every closed subvariety of ''X'' is of general type. ("Very general" means that the property holds for all hypersurfaces of degree ''d'' outside a
countable In mathematics, a set is countable if either it is finite or it can be made in one to one correspondence with the set of natural numbers. Equivalently, a set is ''countable'' if there exists an injective function from it into the natural numbers ...
union of lower-dimensional algebraic subsets of the projective space of all such hypersurfaces.) As a result, the Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture would imply that a very general hypersurface of degree at least 2''n''+1 is Kobayashi hyperbolic. Note that one cannot expect all
smooth Smooth may refer to: Mathematics * Smooth function, a function that is infinitely differentiable; used in calculus and topology * Smooth manifold, a differentiable manifold for which all the transition maps are smooth functions * Smooth algebrai ...
hypersurfaces of a given degree to be hyperbolic, for example because some hypersurfaces contain lines (isomorphic to CP1). Such examples show the need for the subset ''Y'' in the Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture. The conjecture on hyperbolicity is known for hypersurfaces of high enough degree, thanks to a series of advances by Siu, Demailly and others, using the technique of jet differentials. For example, Diverio, Merker and Rousseau showed that a general hypersurface in CP''n''+1 of degree at least 2''n''5 satisfies the Green-Griffiths-Lang conjecture. ("General" means that this holds for all hypersurfaces of given degree outside a ''finite'' union of lower-dimensional algebraic subsets of the projective space of all such hypersurfaces.) In 2016, Brotbek gave a proof of the Kobayashi conjecture for the hyperbolicity of general hypersurfaces of high degree, based on a use of Wronskian differential equations; explicit degree bounds have then been obtained in arbitrary dimension by Ya Deng and Demailly, e.g. '(en)2n+2/3''by the latter. Better bounds for the degree are known in low dimensions.
McQuillan McQuillan and MacQuillan are surnames of Irish origin. There are several unrelated origins of the surnames McQuillan and MacQuillan. The Ulster variant of the surname was claimed to be an anglicisation of the Gaelic ''Mac Uighilín'' (''son of Hug ...
proved the Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture for every complex projective surface of general type whose
Chern number In mathematics, in particular in algebraic topology, differential geometry and algebraic geometry, the Chern classes are characteristic classes associated with complex vector bundles. They have since found applications in physics, Calabi–Yau ma ...
s satisfy ''c''12 > ''c''2. For an arbitrary variety ''X'' of general type, Demailly showed that every holomorphic map C→ ''X'' satisfies some (in fact, many)
algebraic differential equation In mathematics, an algebraic differential equation is a differential equation that can be expressed by means of differential algebra. There are several such notions, according to the concept of differential algebra used. The intention is to i ...
s. In the opposite direction, Kobayashi conjectured that the Kobayashi pseudometric is identically zero for
Calabi–Yau manifold In algebraic geometry, a Calabi–Yau manifold, also known as a Calabi–Yau space, is a particular type of manifold which has properties, such as Ricci flatness, yielding applications in theoretical physics. Particularly in superstri ...
s. This is true in the case of
K3 surface In mathematics, a complex analytic K3 surface is a compact connected complex manifold of dimension 2 with trivial canonical bundle and irregularity zero. An (algebraic) K3 surface over any field means a smooth proper geometrically connected al ...
s, using that every projective K3 surface is covered by a family of elliptic curves. More generally, Campana gave a precise conjecture about which complex projective varieties ''X'' have Kobayashi pseudometric equal to zero. Namely, this should be equivalent to ''X'' being special in the sense that ''X'' has no rational fibration over a positive-dimensional
orbifold In the mathematical disciplines of topology and geometry, an orbifold (for "orbit-manifold") is a generalization of a manifold. Roughly speaking, an orbifold is a topological space which is locally a finite group quotient of a Euclidean space. D ...
of general type.


Analogy with number theory

For a projective variety ''X'', the study of holomorphic maps C → ''X'' has some analogy with the study of
rational point In number theory and algebraic geometry, a rational point of an algebraic variety is a point whose coordinates belong to a given field. If the field is not mentioned, the field of rational numbers is generally understood. If the field is the fiel ...
s of ''X'', a central topic of
number theory Number theory (or arithmetic or higher arithmetic in older usage) is a branch of pure mathematics devoted primarily to the study of the integers and integer-valued functions. German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855) said, "Mat ...
. There are several conjectures on the relation between these two subjects. In particular, let ''X'' be a projective variety over a
number field In mathematics, an algebraic number field (or simply number field) is an extension field K of the field of rational numbers such that the field extension K / \mathbb has finite degree (and hence is an algebraic field extension). Thus K is a f ...
''k''. Fix an embedding of ''k'' into C. Then Lang conjectured that the complex manifold ''X''(C) is Kobayashi hyperbolic if and only if ''X'' has only finitely many ''F''-rational points for every finite extension field ''F'' of ''k''. This is consistent with the known results on rational points, notably
Faltings's theorem In arithmetic geometry, the Mordell conjecture is the conjecture made by Louis Mordell that a curve of genus greater than 1 over the field Q of rational numbers has only finitely many rational points. In 1983 it was proved by Gerd Faltings, and ...
on subvarieties of
abelian varieties In mathematics, particularly in algebraic geometry, complex analysis and algebraic number theory, an abelian variety is a Algebraic variety#Projective variety, projective algebraic variety that is also an algebraic group, i.e., has a group law th ...
. More precisely, let ''X'' be a projective variety of general type over a number field ''k''. Let the exceptional set ''Y'' be the
Zariski closure In algebraic geometry and commutative algebra, the Zariski topology is a topology which is primarily defined by its closed sets. It is very different from topologies which are commonly used in the real or complex analysis; in particular, it is ...
of the union of the images of all nonconstant holomorphic maps C → ''X''. According to the Green–Griffiths–Lang conjecture, ''Y'' should be a proper closed subset of ''X'' (and, in particular, not be equal to ''X''). The strong Lang conjecture predicts that ''Y'' is defined over ''k'' and that ''X'' − ''Y'' has only finitely many ''F''-rational points for every finite extension field ''F'' of ''k''. In the same spirit, for a projective variety ''X'' over a number field ''k'' (or, more generally, a finitely generated field ''k'' of characteristic zero), Campana conjectured that the Kobayashi pseudometric of ''X''(C) is identically zero if and only if ''X'' has potentially dense rational points, meaning that there is a finite extension field ''F'' of ''k'' such that the set ''X''(''F'') of ''F''-rational points is Zariski dense in ''X''.


Variants

The
Carathéodory metric In mathematics, the Carathéodory metric is a metric defined on the open unit ball of a complex Banach space that has many similar properties to the Poincaré metric of hyperbolic geometry. It is named after the Greek mathematician Constantin Cara ...
is another intrinsic pseudometric on complex manifolds, based on holomorphic maps to the unit disc rather than from the unit disc. The Kobayashi infinitesimal pseudometric is a Finsler pseudometric whose associated distance function is the Kobayashi pseudometric as defined above. The Kobayashi–Eisenman pseudo-volume form is an intrinsic measure on a complex ''n''-fold, based on holomorphic maps from the ''n''-dimensional
polydisc In the theory of functions of several complex variables, a branch of mathematics, a polydisc is a Cartesian product of discs. More specifically, if we denote by D(z,r) the open disc of center ''z'' and radius ''r'' in the complex plane, then a ...
to ''X''. It is understood better than the Kobayashi pseudometric. In particular, every projective variety of general type is measure-hyperbolic, meaning that the Kobayashi–Eisenman pseudo-volume form is positive outside a lower-dimensional algebraic subset. Analogous pseudometrics have been considered for flat
affine Affine may describe any of various topics concerned with connections or affinities. It may refer to: * Affine, a relative by marriage in law and anthropology * Affine cipher, a special case of the more general substitution cipher * Affine comb ...
and projective structures, as well as for more general projective connections and
conformal connection In conformal differential geometry, a conformal connection is a Cartan connection on an ''n''-dimensional manifold ''M'' arising as a deformation of the Klein geometry given by the celestial ''n''-sphere, viewed as the homogeneous space :O+(n ...
s.Kobayashi (1977).


Notes


References

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Kahler manifold Algebraic geometry Complex manifolds