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 po ...
, the filling radius of a
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 ...
''X'' is a metric invariant of ''X''. It was originally introduced in 1983 by
Mikhail Gromov, who used it to prove his
systolic inequality for essential manifolds, vastly generalizing
Loewner's torus inequality and
Pu's inequality for the real projective plane, and creating
systolic geometry
In mathematics, systolic geometry is the study of systolic invariants of manifolds and polyhedra, as initially conceived by Charles Loewner and developed by Mikhail Gromov, Michael Freedman, Peter Sarnak, Mikhail Katz, Larry Guth, and others, ...
in its modern form.
The filling radius of a simple loop ''C'' in the plane is defined as the largest radius, ''R'' > 0, of a circle that fits inside ''C'':
:
Dual definition via neighborhoods
There is a kind of a dual point of view that allows one to generalize this notion in an extremely fruitful way, as shown by Gromov. Namely, we consider the
-neighborhoods of the loop ''C'', denoted
:
As
increases, the
-neighborhood
swallows up more and more of the interior of the loop. The ''last'' point to be swallowed up is precisely the center of a largest inscribed circle. Therefore, we can reformulate the above definition by defining
to be the infimum of
such that the loop ''C'' contracts to a point in
.
Given a compact manifold ''X'' imbedded in, say, Euclidean space ''E'', we could define the filling radius ''relative'' to the imbedding, by minimizing the size of the neighborhood
in which ''X'' could be homotoped to something smaller dimensional, e.g., to a lower-dimensional polyhedron. Technically it is more convenient to work with a homological definition.
Homological definition
Denote by ''A'' the coefficient ring
or
, depending on whether or not ''X'' is orientable. Then the
fundamental class
In mathematics, the fundamental class is a homology class 'M''associated to a connected orientable compact manifold of dimension ''n'', which corresponds to the generator of the homology group H_n(M,\partial M;\mathbf)\cong\mathbf . The fund ...
, denoted ''
', of a compact ''n''-dimensional manifold ''X'', is a generator of the
homology group
In mathematics, homology is a general way of associating a sequence of algebraic objects, such as abelian groups or modules, with other mathematical objects such as topological spaces. Homology groups were originally defined in algebraic topol ...
, and we set
:
where
is the inclusion homomorphism.
To define an ''absolute'' filling radius in a situation where ''X'' is equipped with a Riemannian metric ''g'', Gromov proceeds as follows.
One exploits
Kuratowski embedding.
One imbeds ''X'' in the Banach space
of bounded Borel functions on ''X'', equipped with the sup norm
. Namely, we map a point
to the function
defined by the formula
for all
, where ''d'' is the distance function defined by the metric. By the triangle inequality we have
and therefore the imbedding is strongly isometric, in the precise sense that internal distance and ambient distance coincide. Such a strongly isometric imbedding is impossible if the ambient space is a Hilbert space, even when ''X'' is the Riemannian circle (the distance between opposite points must be
, not 2!). We then set
in the formula above, and define
:
Properties
* The filling radius is at most a third of the diameter (Katz, 1983).
* The filling radius of
real projective space
In mathematics, real projective space, denoted or is the topological space of lines passing through the origin 0 in It is a compact, smooth manifold of dimension , and is a special case of a Grassmannian space.
Basic properties Construction
...
with a metric of constant curvature is a third of its Riemannian diameter, see (Katz, 1983). Equivalently, the filling radius is a sixth of the systole in these cases.
* The filling radius of the Riemannian circle of length 2π, i.e. the unit circle with the induced Riemannian distance function, equals π/3, i.e. a sixth of its length. This follows by combining the diameter upper bound mentioned above with Gromov's lower bound in terms of the systole (Gromov, 1983)
*The systole of an
essential manifold ''M'' is at most six times its filling radius, see (Gromov, 1983).
**The inequality is optimal in the sense that the boundary case of equality is attained by the real projective spaces as above.
* 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 provid ...
of compact manifold gives a lower bound on filling radius. Namely,
*:
See also
*
Filling area conjecture In differential geometry, Mikhail Gromov's filling area conjecture asserts that the hemisphere has minimum area among the orientable surfaces that fill a closed curve of given length without introducing shortcuts between its points.
Definition ...
*
Gromov's systolic inequality for essential manifolds
References
* Gromov, M.: Filling Riemannian manifolds,
Journal of Differential Geometry 18 (1983), 1–147.
* Katz, M.: The filling radius of two-point homogeneous spaces.
Journal of Differential Geometry 18, Number 3 (1983), 505–511.
*
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