Contact geometry and isosystolic inequalities (Q2449833): Difference between revisions
From MaRDI portal
ReferenceBot (talk | contribs) Changed an Item |
Normalize DOI. |
||
Property / DOI | |||
Property / DOI: 10.1007/s00039-014-0250-2 / rank | |||
Property / DOI | |||
Property / DOI: 10.1007/S00039-014-0250-2 / rank | |||
Normal rank |
Latest revision as of 17:17, 18 December 2024
scientific article
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
---|---|---|---|
English | Contact geometry and isosystolic inequalities |
scientific article |
Statements
Contact geometry and isosystolic inequalities (English)
0 references
12 May 2014
0 references
It is a long-standing open problem whether every Riemannian metric on the real projective space \(\mathbb RP^n\) with the same volume as the canonical metric admits a periodic geodesic with length at most \(\pi\). The authors investigate the local maximality of the length of the shortest periodic geodesic. Namely, they consider a smooth constant-volume deformation \((\mathbb RP^n,g_s)\) with \(g_0\) being the canonical metric. A deformation is trivial if it amounts to the pullback of \(g_0\) by some isotopies. The authors prove that either \(g_s\) is tangent of all orders to trivial deformations, or the length of the shortest periodic geodesic has a strict local maximum at \(s=0\). More generally, they consider Zoll Finsler manifolds, which are those Finsler manifold on which all geodesics are periodic with the same prime period. The canonical metric on \(\mathbb RP^n\) gives an example of such a manifold. A smooth Finsler deformation \(F_s\) of a Zoll manifold \((M,F_0)\) is called formally trivial if for every positive integer \(m\) there exists a deformation by Zoll Finsler metrics that has \(m\)-th order contact with \(F_s\). The authors prove that for a deformation that is not formally trivial, the length of the shortest periodic geodesic has a strict local maximum at \(s=0\). The article achieves the results stated above through an original approach that brings the tools of contact geometry into systolic problems. The proofs are thoughtfully laid out, making the paper a pleasure to read.
0 references
systolic inequalities
0 references
Zoll manifolds
0 references
regular contact manifold
0 references
Lie transforms
0 references
method of averaging
0 references
normal forms
0 references
0 references