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Sub-Riemannian manifold

In mathematics, a sub-Riemannian manifold is a certain type of generalization of a Riemannian manifold. Roughly speaking, to measure distances in a sub-Riemannian manifold, you are allowed to go only along curves tangent to so-called horizontal subspaces.

Sub-Riemannian manifolds (and so, a fortiori, Riemannian manifolds) carry a natural intrinsic metric called the metric of Carnot-Caratheodory. The Hausdorff dimension of such metric spaces is always an integer and larger than its topological dimension (unless it is actually a Riemannian manifold).

Formal definition

By a distribution on M we mean a subbundle of the tangent bundle of M.

Given a distribution H(M)\subset T(M) a vector field in H(M)\subset T(M) is called horizontal. A curve γ on M is called horizontal if \dot\gamma(t)\in H_{\gamma(t)}(M) for any t.

A distribution on H(M) is called completely non-integrable if for any x\in M we have that any tangent vector can be presented as a linear combination of vectors of the following types A(x),\ [A,B](x),\ [A,[B,C]](x),\ [A,[B,[C,D]]](x),...\in T_x(M) where all vector fields A,B,C,D,... are horizontal.

A sub-Riemannian manifold is a triple (M,H,g), where M, is a differentiable manifold, H is a completely non-integrable "horizontal" distribution and g is a section of positive-definite quadratic forms on H.

Any sub-Riemannian manifold carries the natural intrinsic metric, called the metric of Carnot-Caratheodory, defined as

d(x, y) = \inf\int_0^1 \sqrt{g(\dot\gamma(t),\dot\gamma(t))} ,

where infimum is taken along all horizontal curves \gamma: [0, 1] \to M such that γ(0) = x, γ(1) = y.

Last updated: 10-23-2005 02:01:18
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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