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mathematics Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
, Mostow's rigidity theorem, or strong rigidity theorem, or Mostow–Prasad rigidity theorem, essentially states that the geometry of a complete, finite-volume hyperbolic manifold of dimension greater than two is determined by the fundamental group and hence unique. The theorem was proven for
closed manifold In mathematics, a closed manifold is a manifold Manifold with boundary, without boundary that is Compact space, compact. In comparison, an open manifold is a manifold without boundary that has only ''non-compact'' components. Examples The onl ...
s by and extended to finite volume manifolds by in 3 dimensions, and by in all dimensions at least 3. gave an alternate proof using the Gromov norm. gave the simplest available proof. While the theorem shows that the deformation space of (complete) hyperbolic structures on a finite volume hyperbolic n-manifold (for n >2) is a point, for a hyperbolic surface of
genus Genus (; : genera ) is a taxonomic rank above species and below family (taxonomy), family as used in the biological classification of extant taxon, living and fossil organisms as well as Virus classification#ICTV classification, viruses. In bino ...
g>1 there is a moduli space of dimension 6g-6 that parameterizes all metrics of constant curvature (up to
diffeomorphism In mathematics, a diffeomorphism is an isomorphism of differentiable manifolds. It is an invertible function that maps one differentiable manifold to another such that both the function and its inverse are continuously differentiable. Definit ...
), a fact essential for Teichmüller theory. There is also a rich theory of deformation spaces of hyperbolic structures on ''infinite'' volume manifolds in three dimensions.


The theorem

The theorem can be given in a geometric formulation (pertaining to finite-volume, complete manifolds), and in an algebraic formulation (pertaining to lattices in
Lie group In mathematics, a Lie group (pronounced ) is a group (mathematics), group that is also a differentiable manifold, such that group multiplication and taking inverses are both differentiable. A manifold is a space that locally resembles Eucli ...
s).


Geometric form

Let \mathbb H^n be the n-dimensional hyperbolic space. A complete hyperbolic manifold can be defined as a quotient of \mathbb H^n by a group of isometries acting freely and properly discontinuously (it is equivalent to define it as a Riemannian manifold with sectional curvature -1 which is complete). It is of finite volume if the integral of a volume form is finite (which is the case, for example, if it is compact). The Mostow rigidity theorem may be stated as: :''Suppose M and N are complete finite-volume hyperbolic manifolds of dimension n \ge 3. If there exists an
isomorphism In mathematics, an isomorphism is a structure-preserving mapping or morphism between two structures of the same type that can be reversed by an inverse mapping. Two mathematical structures are isomorphic if an isomorphism exists between the ...
f\colon \pi_1(M) \to \pi_1(N) then it is induced by a unique isometry from M to N.'' Here \pi_1(X) is the fundamental group of a manifold X. If X is an hyperbolic manifold obtained as the quotient of \mathbb H^n by a group \Gamma then \pi_1(X) \cong \Gamma. An equivalent statement is that any homotopy equivalence from M to N can be homotoped to a unique isometry. The proof actually shows that if N has greater dimension than M then there can be no homotopy equivalence between them.


Algebraic form

The group of isometries of hyperbolic space \mathbb H^n can be identified with the Lie group \mathrm(n,1) (the projective orthogonal group of a quadratic form of signature (n,1). Then the following statement is equivalent to the one above. :''Let n \ge 3 and \Gamma and \Lambda be two lattices in \mathrm(n,1) and suppose that there is a group isomorphism f\colon \Gamma \to \Lambda. Then \Gamma and \Lambda are conjugate in \mathrm(n,1). That is, there exists a g \in \mathrm(n,1) such that \Lambda = g \Gamma g^. ''


In greater generality

Mostow rigidity holds (in its geometric formulation) more generally for fundamental groups of all complete, finite volume, non-positively curved (without Euclidean factors) locally symmetric spaces of dimension at least three, or in its algebraic formulation for all lattices in simple Lie groups not locally isomorphic to \mathrm_2(\R).


Applications

It follows from the Mostow rigidity theorem that the group of isometries of a finite-volume hyperbolic ''n''-manifold ''M'' (for ''n''>2) is finite and isomorphic to \operatorname(\pi_1(M)). Mostow rigidity was also used by Thurston to prove the uniqueness of circle packing representations of triangulated planar graphs. A consequence of Mostow rigidity of interest in geometric group theory is that there exist hyperbolic groups which are quasi-isometric but not commensurable to each other.


See also

* Superrigidity, a stronger result for higher-rank spaces * Local rigidity, a result about deformations that are not necessarily lattices.


Notes


References

* * * * * * *. ''(Provides a survey of a large variety of rigidity theorems, including those concerning Lie groups, algebraic groups and dynamics of flows. Includes 230 references.)'' *{{citation, first=William, last=Thurston, author-link=William Thurston, url=http://www.msri.org/publications/books/gt3m/, title=The geometry and topology of 3-manifolds, publisher=Princeton lecture notes, year=1978–1981. (Gives two proofs: one similar to Mostow's original proof, and another based on the Gromov norm) Hyperbolic geometry Theorems in differential geometry