Riemannian geometry Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In mathematics, Riemannian geometry has at least two meanings, one of which is described in this article and another also called elliptic geometry.In differential geometry, Riemannian geometry is the study of smooth manifolds with Riemannian metrics; i.e. a choice of positive-definite quadratic form on a manifold's tangent spaces which varies smoothly from point to point. This gives in particular local ideas of angle, length of curves, and volume. From those some other global quantities can be derived, by integrating local contributions.
It was first put forward in generality by Bernhard Riemann in the nineteenth century. As particular special cases there occur the two standard types (spherical geometry and hyperbolic geometry) of Non-Euclidean geometry, as well as Euclidean geometry itself. These are all treated on the same basis, as are a broad range of geometries whose metric properties vary from point to point.
Any smooth manifold admits a Riemannian metric and this additional structure often helps to solve problems of differential topology. It also serves as an entry level for the more complicated structure of pseudo-Riemannian manifolds, which (in dimension four) are the main objects of general relativity theory.
There is no easy introduction to Riemannian geometry. One should work quite a while to build some geometric intuition here; it is usually done by doing enormous amounts of calculations. The following articles might serve as a rough introduction:
The following articles might be also useful:
| Table of contents |
|
2 External links |
What follows is an incomplete list of the most classical theorems in Riemannian geometry. The choice is made depending on its importance, beauty, and simplicity of formulation.
The formulations given are far from being very exact or the most general.
This list is oriented to those who already know the basic definitions and want to know what these definitions are about.
In all of the following theorems we assume some local behavior of the space (usually formulated using curvature assumption) to derive some information about the global structure of the space, including either some information on the topological type of the manifold or on the behavior of points at "sufficiently large" distances.
This is an Article on Riemannian geometry. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Riemannian geometry Classical theorems in Riemannian geometry
General theorems
Local to Global Theorems
Pinched sectional curvature
Positive curvature
Positive sectional curvature
Positive Ricci curvature
Scalar curvature
Negative curvature
Negative sectional curvature
Negative Ricci curvature
External links
