Ricci curvature
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In
differential geometry Differential geometry is a mathematical discipline that studies the geometry of smooth shapes and smooth spaces, otherwise known as smooth manifolds. It uses the techniques of differential calculus, integral calculus, linear algebra and mult ...
, the Ricci curvature tensor, named after Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro, is a geometric object which is determined by a choice of Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian metric on a
manifold In mathematics, a manifold is a topological space that locally resembles Euclidean space near each point. More precisely, an n-dimensional manifold, or ''n-manifold'' for short, is a topological space with the property that each point has a n ...
. It can be considered, broadly, as a measure of the degree to which the geometry of a given metric tensor differs locally from that of ordinary
Euclidean space Euclidean space is the fundamental space of geometry, intended to represent physical space. Originally, that is, in Euclid's ''Elements'', it was the three-dimensional space of Euclidean geometry, but in modern mathematics there are Euclidea ...
or pseudo-Euclidean space. The Ricci tensor can be characterized by measurement of how a shape is deformed as one moves along geodesics in the space. In
general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity and Einstein's theory of gravity, is the geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of gravitation in modern physics ...
, which involves the pseudo-Riemannian setting, this is reflected by the presence of the Ricci tensor in the Raychaudhuri equation. Partly for this reason, the Einstein field equations propose that spacetime can be described by a pseudo-Riemannian metric, with a strikingly simple relationship between the Ricci tensor and the matter content of the universe. Like the metric tensor, the Ricci tensor assigns to each tangent space of the manifold a symmetric bilinear form . Broadly, one could analogize the role of the Ricci curvature in Riemannian geometry to that of the Laplacian in the analysis of functions; in this analogy, the Riemann curvature tensor, of which the Ricci curvature is a natural by-product, would correspond to the full matrix of second derivatives of a function. However, there are other ways to draw the same analogy. In three-dimensional topology, the Ricci tensor contains all of the information which in higher dimensions is encoded by the more complicated Riemann curvature tensor. In part, this simplicity allows for the application of many geometric and analytic tools, which led to the
solution of the Poincaré conjecture Solution may refer to: * Solution (chemistry), a mixture where one substance is dissolved in another * Solution (equation), in mathematics ** Numerical solution, in numerical analysis, approximate solutions within specified error bounds * Solut ...
through the work of Richard S. Hamilton and Grigory Perelman. In differential geometry, lower bounds on the Ricci tensor on a Riemannian manifold allow one to extract global geometric and topological information by comparison (cf. comparison theorem) with the geometry of a constant curvature
space form Space is the boundless three-dimensional extent in which objects and events have relative position and direction. In classical physics, physical space is often conceived in three linear dimensions, although modern physicists usually consid ...
. This is since lower bounds on the Ricci tensor can be successfully used in studying the length functional in Riemannian geometry, as first shown in 1941 via Myers's theorem. One common source of the Ricci tensor is that it arises whenever one commutes the covariant derivative with the tensor Laplacian. This, for instance, explains its presence in the Bochner formula, which is used ubiquitously in Riemannian geometry. For example, this formula explains why the gradient estimates due to Shing-Tung Yau (and their developments such as the Cheng-Yau and Li-Yau inequalities) nearly always depend on a lower bound for the Ricci curvature. In 2007, John Lott, Karl-Theodor Sturm, and Cedric Villani demonstrated decisively that lower bounds on Ricci curvature can be understood entirely in terms of the metric space structure of a Riemannian manifold, together with its volume form. This established a deep link between Ricci curvature and Wasserstein geometry and optimal transport, which is presently the subject of much research.


Definition

Suppose that \left( M, g \right) is an n-dimensional Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian manifold, equipped with its
Levi-Civita connection In Riemannian or pseudo Riemannian geometry (in particular the Lorentzian geometry of general relativity), the Levi-Civita connection is the unique affine connection on the tangent bundle of a manifold (i.e. affine connection) that preserves ...
\nabla. The
Riemann curvature In mathematics, specifically differential geometry, the infinitesimal geometry of Riemannian manifolds with dimension greater than 2 is too complicated to be described by a single number at a given point. Riemann introduced an abstract and rig ...
of M is a map which takes smooth vector fields X, Y, and Z, and returns the vector field R(X,Y)Z := \nabla_X\nabla_Y Z - \nabla_Y\nabla_XZ - \nabla_Z on vector fields X, Y, Z. The crucial property of this mapping is that if X, Y, Z and X', Y', Z' are smooth vector fields such that X and X' define the same element of some tangent space T_p M, and Y and Y' also define the same element of T_p M, and Z and Z' also define the same element of T_p M, then the vector fields R(X, Y)Z and R(X', Y')Z' also define the same element of T_p M. The implication is that the Riemann curvature, which is a priori a mapping with vector field inputs and a vector field output, can actually be viewed as a mapping with tangent vector inputs and a tangent vector output. That is, it defines for each point p \in M a (multilinear) map: \operatorname_p:T_pM\times T_pM\times T_pM\to T_pM. Define for each point p \in M the map \operatorname_p:T_pM\times T_pM\to\mathbb by \operatorname_p(Y,Z) := \operatorname\big(X\mapsto \operatorname_p(X,Y,Z)\big). That is, having fixed Y and Z, then for any basis v_1, \ldots, v_n of the vector space T_p M, one defines \operatorname_p(Y,Z) := \sum_ c_ where for any fixed i, the numbers c_, \ldots, c_ are the coordinates of \operatorname_p(v_i, Y, Z) relative to the basis v_1, \ldots, v_n. It is a standard exercise of (multi)linear algebra to verify that this definition does not depend on the choice of the basis v_1, \ldots, v_n. Sign conventions. Note that some sources define R(X,Y)Z to be what would here be called -R(X,Y)Z; they would then define \operatorname_p as -\operatorname(X\mapsto \operatorname_p(X,Y,Z)). Although sign conventions differ about the Riemann tensor, they do not differ about the Ricci tensor.


Definition via local coordinates on a smooth manifold

Let \left( M, g \right) be a smooth Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian n-manifold. Given a smooth chart \left( U, \varphi \right) one then has functions g_: \varphi(U) \rightarrow \mathbb and g^: \varphi(U) \rightarrow \mathbb for each i, j = 1, \ldots, n which satisfy \sum_^n g^(x)g_(x) = \delta^_j = \begin 1 & i=j \\ 0 & i \neq j \end for all x \in \varphi(U). The latter shows that, expressed as matrices, g^(x) = (g^)_(x). The functions g_ are defined by evaluating g on coordinate vector fields, while the functions g^ are defined so that, as a matrix-valued function, they provide an inverse to the matrix-valued function x \mapsto g_(x). Now define, for each a, b, c, i, and j between 1 and n, the functions \begin \Gamma_^c &:= \frac \sum_^n \left(\frac + \frac - \frac\right)g^\\ R_ &:= \sum_^n\frac - \sum_^n\frac + \sum_^n\sum_^n\left(\Gamma_^a\Gamma_^b - \Gamma_^a\Gamma_^b\right) \end as maps \varphi: U \rightarrow \mathbb. Now let \left( U, \varphi \right) and \left( V, \psi \right) be two smooth charts with U \cap V \neq \emptyset. Let R_: \varphi(U) \rightarrow \mathbb be the functions computed as above via the chart \left( U, \varphi \right) and let r_: \psi(V) \rightarrow \mathbb be the functions computed as above via the chart \left( V, \psi \right). Then one can check by a calculation with the chain rule and the product rule that R_(x) = \sum_^n r_\left(\psi\circ\varphi^(x)\right)D_i\Big, _x \left(\psi\circ\varphi^\right)^kD_j\Big, _x \left(\psi\circ\varphi^\right)^l. where D_ is the first derivative along ith direction of \mathbb^n. This shows that the following definition does not depend on the choice of \left( U, \varphi \right). For any p \in U, define a bilinear map \operatorname_p : T_p M \times T_p M \rightarrow \mathbb by (X, Y) \in T_p M \times T_p M \mapsto \operatorname_p(X,Y) = \sum_^n R_(\varphi(x))X^i(p)Y^j(p), where X^1, \ldots, X^n and Y^1, \ldots, Y^n are the components of the tangent vectors at p in X and Y relative to the coordinate vector fields of \left( U, \varphi \right). It is common to abbreviate the above formal presentation in the following style: The final line includes the demonstration that the bilinear map Ric is well-defined, which is much easier to write out with the informal notation.


Comparison of the definitions

The two above definitions are identical. The formulas defining \Gamma_^k and R_ in the coordinate approach have an exact parallel in the formulas defining the Levi-Civita connection, and the Riemann curvature via the Levi-Civita connection. Arguably, the definitions directly using local coordinates are preferable, since the "crucial property" of the Riemann tensor mentioned above requires M to be Hausdorff in order to hold. By contrast, the local coordinate approach only requires a smooth atlas. It is also somewhat easier to connect the "invariance" philosophy underlying the local approach with the methods of constructing more exotic geometric objects, such as
spinor field In differential geometry, given a spin structure on an n-dimensional orientable Riemannian manifold (M, g),\, one defines the spinor bundle to be the complex vector bundle \pi_\colon\to M\, associated to the corresponding principal bundle \pi_\c ...
s. The complicated formula defining R_ in the introductory section is the same as that in the following section. The only difference is that terms have been grouped so that it is easy to see that R_=R_.


Properties

As can be seen from the
Bianchi identities In differential geometry, the curvature form describes curvature of a connection on a principal bundle. The Riemann curvature tensor in Riemannian geometry can be considered as a special case. Definition Let ''G'' be a Lie group with Lie alg ...
, the Ricci tensor of a Riemannian manifold is symmetric, in the sense that \operatorname(X ,Y) = \operatorname(Y,X) for all X,Y\in T_pM. It thus follows linear-algebraically that the Ricci tensor is completely determined by knowing the quantity \operatorname(X, X) for all vectors X of unit length. This function on the set of unit tangent vectors is often also called the Ricci curvature, since knowing it is equivalent to knowing the Ricci curvature tensor. The Ricci curvature is determined by 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 p ...
s of a Riemannian manifold, but generally contains less information. Indeed, if \xi is a vector of unit length on a Riemannian n-manifold, then \operatorname(\xi, \xi) is precisely (n - 1) times the average value of the sectional curvature, taken over all the 2-planes containing \xi. There is an (n - 2)-dimensional family of such 2-planes, and so only in dimensions 2 and 3 does the Ricci tensor determine the full curvature tensor. A notable exception is when the manifold is given a priori as a hypersurface of
Euclidean space Euclidean space is the fundamental space of geometry, intended to represent physical space. Originally, that is, in Euclid's ''Elements'', it was the three-dimensional space of Euclidean geometry, but in modern mathematics there are Euclidea ...
. The second fundamental form, which determines the full curvature via the Gauss–Codazzi equation, is itself determined by the Ricci tensor and the principal directions of the hypersurface are also the eigendirections of the Ricci tensor. The tensor was introduced by Ricci for this reason. As can be seen from the second Bianchi identity, one has \operatorname\operatorname = \fracdR, where R is the
scalar curvature In the mathematical field of Riemannian geometry, the scalar curvature (or the Ricci scalar) is a measure of the curvature of a Riemannian manifold. To each point on a Riemannian manifold, it assigns a single real number determined by the geome ...
, defined in local coordinates as g^R_. This is often called the contracted second Bianchi identity.


Informal properties

The Ricci curvature is sometimes thought of as (a negative multiple of) the Laplacian of the metric tensor . Specifically, in
harmonic A harmonic is a wave with a frequency that is a positive integer multiple of the ''fundamental frequency'', the frequency of the original periodic signal, such as a sinusoidal wave. The original signal is also called the ''1st harmonic'', t ...
local coordinates the components satisfy R_ = -\frac\Delta \left(g_\right) + \text, where \Delta = \nabla \cdot \nabla is the
Laplace–Beltrami operator In differential geometry, the Laplace–Beltrami operator is a generalization of the Laplace operator to functions defined on submanifolds in Euclidean space and, even more generally, on Riemannian and pseudo-Riemannian manifolds. It is named ...
, here regarded as acting on the locally-defined functions g_. This fact motivates, for instance, the introduction of the
Ricci flow In the mathematical fields of differential geometry and geometric analysis, the Ricci flow ( , ), sometimes also referred to as Hamilton's Ricci flow, is a certain partial differential equation for a Riemannian metric. It is often said to be an ...
equation as a natural extension of the heat equation for the metric. Alternatively, in a normal coordinate system based at p, R_ = -\frac\Delta \left(g_\right).


Direct geometric meaning

Near any point p in a Riemannian manifold \left( M, g \right), one can define preferred local coordinates, called
geodesic normal coordinates In differential geometry, normal coordinates at a point ''p'' in a differentiable manifold equipped with a symmetric affine connection are a local coordinate system in a neighborhood of ''p'' obtained by applying the exponential map to the tange ...
. These are adapted to the metric so that geodesics through p correspond to straight lines through the origin, in such a manner that the geodesic distance from p corresponds to the Euclidean distance from the origin. In these coordinates, the metric tensor is well-approximated by the Euclidean metric, in the precise sense that g_ = \delta_ + O \left(, x, ^2\right) . In fact, by taking the Taylor expansion of the metric applied to a Jacobi field along a radial geodesic in the normal coordinate system, one has g_ = \delta_ - \frac R_x^kx^l + O\left(, x, ^3\right) . In these coordinates, the metric volume element then has the following expansion at : d\mu_g = \left x, ^3\right) \rightd\mu_\text , which follows by expanding the square root of the
determinant In mathematics, the determinant is a scalar value that is a function of the entries of a square matrix. It characterizes some properties of the matrix and the linear map represented by the matrix. In particular, the determinant is nonzero if a ...
of the metric. Thus, if the Ricci curvature \operatorname(\xi, \xi) is positive in the direction of a vector \xi, the conical region in M swept out by a tightly focused family of geodesic segments of length \varepsilon emanating from p, with initial velocity inside a small cone about \xi, will have smaller volume than the corresponding conical region in Euclidean space, at least provided that \varepsilon is sufficiently small. Similarly, if the Ricci curvature is negative in the direction of a given vector \xi, such a conical region in the manifold will instead have larger volume than it would in Euclidean space. The Ricci curvature is essentially an average of curvatures in the planes including \xi. Thus if a cone emitted with an initially circular (or spherical) cross-section becomes distorted into an ellipse (
ellipsoid An ellipsoid is a surface that may be obtained from a sphere by deforming it by means of directional scalings, or more generally, of an affine transformation. An ellipsoid is a quadric surface;  that is, a surface that may be defined as th ...
), it is possible for the volume distortion to vanish if the distortions along the principal axes counteract one another. The Ricci curvature would then vanish along \xi. In physical applications, the presence of a nonvanishing sectional curvature does not necessarily indicate the presence of any mass locally; if an initially circular cross-section of a cone of
worldline The world line (or worldline) of an object is the path that an object traces in 4-dimensional spacetime. It is an important concept in modern physics, and particularly theoretical physics. The concept of a "world line" is distinguished from con ...
s later becomes elliptical, without changing its volume, then this is due to tidal effects from a mass at some other location.


Applications

Ricci curvature plays an important role in
general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity and Einstein's theory of gravity, is the geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of gravitation in modern physics ...
, where it is the key term in the Einstein field equations. Ricci curvature also appears in the
Ricci flow In the mathematical fields of differential geometry and geometric analysis, the Ricci flow ( , ), sometimes also referred to as Hamilton's Ricci flow, is a certain partial differential equation for a Riemannian metric. It is often said to be an ...
equation, where certain one-parameter families of Riemannian metrics are singled out as solutions of a geometrically-defined partial differential equation. This system of equations can be thought of as a geometric analog of the heat equation, and was first introduced by Richard S. Hamilton in 1982. Since heat tends to spread through a solid until the body reaches an equilibrium state of constant temperature, if one is given a manifold, the Ricci flow may be hoped to produce an 'equilibrium' Riemannian metric which is Einstein or of constant curvature. However, such a clean "convergence" picture cannot be achieved since many manifolds cannot support such metrics. A detailed study of the nature of solutions of the Ricci flow, due principally to Hamilton and Grigori Perelman, shows that the types of "singularities" that occur along a Ricci flow, corresponding to the failure of convergence, encodes deep information about 3-dimensional topology. The culmination of this work was a proof of the geometrization conjecture first proposed by William Thurston in the 1970s, which can be thought of as a classification of compact 3-manifolds. On a
Kähler manifold In mathematics and especially differential geometry, a Kähler manifold is a manifold with three mutually compatible structures: a complex structure, a Riemannian structure, and a symplectic structure. The concept was first studied by Jan Arn ...
, the Ricci curvature determines the first Chern class of the manifold (mod torsion). However, the Ricci curvature has no analogous topological interpretation on a generic Riemannian manifold.


Global geometry and topology

Here is a short list of global results concerning manifolds with positive Ricci curvature; see also classical theorems of Riemannian geometry. Briefly, positive Ricci curvature of a Riemannian manifold has strong topological consequences, while (for dimension at least 3), negative Ricci curvature has ''no'' topological implications. (The Ricci curvature is said to be positive if the Ricci curvature function \operatorname(\xi, \xi) is positive on the set of non-zero tangent vectors \xi.) Some results are also known for pseudo-Riemannian manifolds. # Myers' theorem (1941) states that if the Ricci curvature is bounded from below on a complete Riemannian ''n''-manifold by (n - 1)k > 0, then the manifold has diameter \leq \pi / \sqrt. By a covering-space argument, it follows that any compact manifold of positive Ricci curvature must have finite fundamental group. Cheng (1975) showed that, in this setting, equality in the diameter inequality occurs if only if the manifold is isometric to a sphere of a constant curvature k. #The
Bishop–Gromov inequality In mathematics, the Bishop–Gromov inequality is a comparison theorem in Riemannian geometry, named after Richard L. Bishop and Mikhail Gromov. It is closely related to Myers' theorem, and is the key point in the proof of Gromov's compactness ...
states that if a complete n-dimensional Riemannian manifold has non-negative Ricci curvature, then the volume of a geodesic ball is less than or equal to the volume of a geodesic ball of the same radius in Euclidean n-space. Moreover, if v_p(R) denotes the volume of the ball with center p and radius R in the manifold and V(R) = c_n R^n denotes the volume of the ball of radius R in Euclidean n-space then the function v_p(R) / V(R) is nonincreasing. This can be generalized to any lower bound on the Ricci curvature (not just nonnegativity), and is the key point in the proof of Gromov's compactness theorem.) #The Cheeger–Gromoll splitting theorem states that if a complete Riemannian manifold \left( M, g \right) with \operatorname \geq 0 contains a ''line'', meaning a geodesic \gamma : \mathbb \to M such that d(\gamma(u), \gamma(v)) = \left, u - v \ for all u, v \in \mathbb, then it is isometric to a product space \mathbb \times L. Consequently, a complete manifold of positive Ricci curvature can have at most one topological end. The theorem is also true under some additional hypotheses for complete Lorentzian manifolds (of metric signature \left( + - - \ldots \right)) with non-negative Ricci tensor (). #Hamilton's first convergence theorem for Ricci flow has, as a corollary, that the only compact 3-manifolds which have Riemannian metrics of positive Ricci curvature are the quotients of the 3-sphere by discrete subgroups of SO(4) which act properly discontinuously. He later extended this to allow for nonnegative Ricci curvature. In particular, the only simply-connected possibility is the 3-sphere itself. These results, particularly Myers' and Hamilton's, show that positive Ricci curvature has strong topological consequences. By contrast, excluding the case of surfaces, negative Ricci curvature is now known to have ''no'' topological implications; has shown that any manifold of dimension greater than two admits a complete Riemannian metric of negative Ricci curvature. In the case of two-dimensional manifolds, negativity of the Ricci curvature is synonymous with negativity of the Gaussian curvature, which has very clear topological implications. There are very few two-dimensional manifolds which fail to admit Riemannian metrics of negative Gaussian curvature.


Behavior under conformal rescaling

If the metric g is changed by multiplying it by a conformal factor e^, the Ricci tensor of the new, conformally-related metric \tilde = e^ g is given by \widetilde=\operatorname+(2-n)\left \nabla df-df\otimes df\right\left df\, ^2\right , where \Delta = *d*d is the (positive spectrum) Hodge Laplacian, i.e., the ''opposite'' of the usual trace of the Hessian. In particular, given a point p in a Riemannian manifold, it is always possible to find metrics conformal to the given metric g for which the Ricci tensor vanishes at p. Note, however, that this is only pointwise assertion; it is usually impossible to make the Ricci curvature vanish identically on the entire manifold by a conformal rescaling. For two dimensional manifolds, the above formula shows that if f is a harmonic function, then the conformal scaling g \mapsto e^g does not change the Ricci tensor (although it still changes its trace with respect to the metric unless f = 0.


Trace-free Ricci tensor

In Riemannian geometry and
pseudo-Riemannian geometry In differential geometry, a pseudo-Riemannian manifold, also called a semi-Riemannian manifold, is a differentiable manifold with a metric tensor that is everywhere nondegenerate. This is a generalization of a Riemannian manifold in which th ...
, the trace-free Ricci tensor (also called traceless Ricci tensor) of a Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian n-manifold \left( M, g \right) is the tensor defined by Z = \operatorname - \fracRg , where \operatorname and R denote the Ricci curvature and
scalar curvature In the mathematical field of Riemannian geometry, the scalar curvature (or the Ricci scalar) is a measure of the curvature of a Riemannian manifold. To each point on a Riemannian manifold, it assigns a single real number determined by the geome ...
of g. The name of this object reflects the fact that its trace automatically vanishes: \operatorname_gZ\equiv g^Z_ = 0. However, it is quite an important tensor since it reflects an "orthogonal decomposition" of the Ricci tensor.


The orthogonal decomposition of the Ricci tensor

The following, not so trivial, property is \operatorname = Z + \fracRg. It is less immediately obvious that the two terms on the right hand side are orthogonal to each other: \left\langle Z, \fracRg\right\rangle_g \equiv g^\left(R_ - \fracRg_\right) = 0. An identity which is intimately connected with this (but which could be proved directly) is that \left, \operatorname\_g^2 = , Z, _g^2 + \fracR^2.


The trace-free Ricci tensor and Einstein metrics

By taking a divergence, and using the contracted Bianchi identity, one sees that Z = 0 implies \fracdR - \fracdR = 0. So, provided that and M is connected, the vanishing of Z implies that the scalar curvature is constant. One can then see that the following are equivalent: * Z = 0 * \operatorname = \lambda g for some number \lambda * \operatorname = \fracRg In the Riemannian setting, the above orthogonal decomposition shows that R^2 = n, \operatorname, ^2 is also equivalent to these conditions. In the pseudo-Riemmannian setting, by contrast, the condition , Z, _g^2 = 0 does not necessarily imply Z = 0, so the most that one can say is that these conditions imply R^2 = n \left, \operatorname\_g^2. In particular, the vanishing of trace-free Ricci tensor characterizes
Einstein manifold In differential geometry and mathematical physics, an Einstein manifold is a Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian differentiable manifold whose Ricci tensor is proportional to the metric. They are named after Albert Einstein because this condition ...
s, as defined by the condition \operatorname = \lambda g for a number \lambda. In
general relativity General relativity, also known as the general theory of relativity and Einstein's theory of gravity, is the geometric theory of gravitation published by Albert Einstein in 1915 and is the current description of gravitation in modern physics ...
, this equation states that \left( M, g \right) is a solution of Einstein's vacuum field equations with cosmological constant.


Kähler manifolds

On a
Kähler manifold In mathematics and especially differential geometry, a Kähler manifold is a manifold with three mutually compatible structures: a complex structure, a Riemannian structure, and a symplectic structure. The concept was first studied by Jan Arn ...
X, the Ricci curvature determines the curvature form of the canonical line bundle . The canonical line bundle is the top
exterior power In mathematics, the exterior algebra, or Grassmann algebra, named after Hermann Grassmann, is an algebra that uses the exterior product or wedge product as its multiplication. In mathematics, the exterior product or wedge product of vectors is ...
of the bundle of holomorphic
Kähler differential In mathematics, Kähler differentials provide an adaptation of differential forms to arbitrary commutative rings or schemes. The notion was introduced by Erich Kähler in the 1930s. It was adopted as standard in commutative algebra and algebraic ...
s: \kappa = ^n ~ \Omega_X. The Levi-Civita connection corresponding to the metric on X gives rise to a connection on \kappa. The curvature of this connection is the 2-form defined by \rho(X,Y) \;\stackrel\; \operatorname(JX,Y) where J is the complex structure map on the tangent bundle determined by the structure of the Kähler manifold. The Ricci form is a
closed Closed may refer to: Mathematics * Closure (mathematics), a set, along with operations, for which applying those operations on members always results in a member of the set * Closed set, a set which contains all its limit points * Closed interval, ...
2-form. Its
cohomology class In mathematics, specifically in homology theory and algebraic topology, cohomology is a general term for a sequence of abelian groups, usually one associated with a topological space, often defined from a cochain complex. Cohomology can be viewed ...
is, up to a real constant factor, the first Chern class of the canonical bundle, and is therefore a topological invariant of X (for compact X) in the sense that it depends only on the topology of X and the homotopy class of the complex structure. Conversely, the Ricci form determines the Ricci tensor by \operatorname(X, Y) = \rho(X, JY). In local holomorphic coordinates z^\alpha, the Ricci form is given by \rho = -i\partial\overline\log\det\left(g_\right) where is the
Dolbeault operator In mathematics, a complex differential form is a differential form on a manifold (usually a complex manifold) which is permitted to have complex coefficients. Complex forms have broad applications in differential geometry. On complex manifolds, ...
and g_ = g\left(\frac, \frac\right). If the Ricci tensor vanishes, then the canonical bundle is flat, so the
structure group In mathematics, and particularly topology, a fiber bundle (or, in Commonwealth English: fibre bundle) is a space that is a product space, but may have a different topological structure. Specifically, the similarity between a space E an ...
can be locally reduced to a subgroup of the special linear group SL(n; \mathbb). However, Kähler manifolds already possess holonomy in U(n), and so the (restricted) holonomy of a Ricci-flat Kähler manifold is contained in SU(n). Conversely, if the (restricted) holonomy of a 2n-dimensional Riemannian manifold is contained in SU(n), then the manifold is a Ricci-flat Kähler manifold .


Generalization to affine connections

The Ricci tensor can also be generalized to arbitrary affine connections, where it is an invariant that plays an especially important role in the study of projective geometry (geometry associated to unparameterized geodesics) . If \nabla denotes an affine connection, then the curvature tensor R is the (1,3)-tensor defined by R(X,Y)Z = \nabla_X\nabla_Y Z - \nabla_Y\nabla_XZ - \nabla_Z for any vector fields X, Y, Z. The Ricci tensor is defined to be the trace: \operatorname(X,Y) = \operatorname\big(Z\mapsto R(Z,X)Y\big). In this more general situation, the Ricci tensor is symmetric if and only if there exists locally a parallel
volume form In mathematics, a volume form or top-dimensional form is a differential form of degree equal to the differentiable manifold dimension. Thus on a manifold M of dimension n, a volume form is an n-form. It is an element of the space of sections of th ...
for the connection.


Discrete Ricci curvature

Notions of Ricci curvature on discrete manifolds have been defined on graphs and networks, where they quantify local divergence properties of edges. Ollivier's Ricci curvature is defined using optimal transport theory. A different (and earlier) notion, Forman's Ricci curvature, is based on topological arguments.


See also

* Curvature of Riemannian manifolds *
Scalar curvature In the mathematical field of Riemannian geometry, the scalar curvature (or the Ricci scalar) is a measure of the curvature of a Riemannian manifold. To each point on a Riemannian manifold, it assigns a single real number determined by the geome ...
*
Ricci calculus In mathematics, Ricci calculus constitutes the rules of index notation and manipulation for tensors and tensor fields on a differentiable manifold, with or without a metric tensor or connection. It is also the modern name for what used to be ...
*
Ricci decomposition In the mathematical fields of Riemannian and pseudo-Riemannian geometry, the Ricci decomposition is a way of breaking up the Riemann curvature tensor of a Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian manifold into pieces with special algebraic properties. ...
*
Ricci-flat manifold In the mathematical field of differential geometry, Ricci-flatness is a condition on the curvature of a Riemannian manifold. Ricci-flat manifolds are a special kind of Einstein manifold. In theoretical physics, Ricci-flat Lorentzian manifolds are of ...
* Christoffel symbols * Introduction to the mathematics of general relativity


Footnotes


References

*. *. *. *Forman (2003), "Bochner's Method for Cell Complexes and Combinatorial Ricci Curvature", ''Discrete & Computational Geometry'', 29 (3): 323–374. doi:10.1007/s00454-002-0743-x. ISSN 1432-0444 *. *. *. *. * *. *Ollivier, Yann (2009), "Ricci curvature of Markov chains on metric spaces", ''Journal of Functional Analysis'' 256 (3): 810–864. doi:10.1016/j.jfa.2008.11.001. ISSN 0022-1236 *. * * *Najman, Laurent and Romon, Pascal (2017): Modern approaches to discrete curvature, Springer (Cham), Lecture notes in mathematics


External links

*Z. Shen, C. Sormanibr>"The Topology of Open Manifolds with Nonnegative Ricci Curvature"
(a survey) *G. Wei
"Manifolds with A Lower Ricci Curvature Bound"
(a survey) {{tensors Curvature (mathematics) Differential geometry Riemannian geometry Riemannian manifolds Tensors in general relativity