Lecture Notes 11: 2.4 Intrinsic Metric and Isometries of Surfaces
Lecture Notes 11: 2.4 Intrinsic Metric and Isometries of Surfaces
Lecture Notes 11
for all t ∈ [0, 1] and > 0. Let γ : [0, 1] → R3 be the curve given by
1
Then, since γ is a curve on M ,
distM (p, pi ) ≤ Length[γ]
1
= x2i + yi2 + ∇h(txi , tyi ), (xi , yi ) 2 dt
0 1
≤ x2i + yi2 + (x2i + yi2 )2 dt
√
0
≤ 1 + x2i + yi2
≤ (1 + )p − pi
So, for any > 0 we have
distM (p, pi )
1≤ ≤1+
p − pi
provided that pi is sufficiently close to p. We conclude then that F is con-
tinuous. So U := F −1 ([1, 1 + ]) is an open subset of M × M which contains
the diagonal ∆M := {(p, p) | p ∈ M }. Since ∆X ⊂ ∆M is compact, we may
then choose δ so small that Vδ (∆X ) ⊂ U , where Vδ (∆X ) denotes the open
neighborhood of ∆X in M × M which consists of all pairs of points (p, q)
with distM (p, q) ≤ δ.
Exercise 3. Does the above lemma hold also for C 0 surfaces?
If γ : [a, b] → M is any curve then we may define
LengthM [γ] :=
k
sup distM (γ(ti ), γ(ti−1 )) {t0 , . . . , tk } ∈ Partition[a, b] .
i=1
2
We say that f : M → M is an isometry provided that
Taking the limit of both sides as → 0 and applying the mean value theorem
for integrals, yields then that
v = γ (0) = (f ◦ γ) (0) = dfp (v).
Thus df preserves the norm, which implies that it must preserve the inner-
product as well (see the following exercise).
Conversely, suppose that v = dfp (v). Then, if γ : [a, b] → M is any
curve, we have
b b b
(f ◦ γ) (t)dt = dfγ(t) (γ (t))dt = γ (t)dt.
a a a
So f preserves the length of all curves, which, by the previous Lemma, shows
that f is an isometry.
Exercise 8. Show that a function F : Rn → Rn preserves the norm · if
and only if it preserves the inner product ·, · .
3
2.5 Gauss’s Theorema Egregium
Lemma 9. Let X : U → M be a proper regular chart. Then X := f ◦
X : U → M is a proper regular chart as well and gij = g ij on U .
Proof. Using the last theorem we have
Exercise 10. Justify the third equality in the last displayed expression above.
Let F denote the set of functions f : U → R where U ⊂ R2 is an open
neighborhood of the orgin.
Lemma 11. There exists a mapping Briochi : F × F × F → F such that for
any chart X : U → M centered at p ∈ M ,
X1 × X2 1
lij = Xij , = Xij , X1 × X2 ,
X1 × X2 det gij
4
The right hand side of the last expression may be rewritten as
det(X11 , X1 , X2 ) det(X22 , X1 , X2 ) − (det(X12 , X1 , X2 ))2 ,
where (u, v, w) here denotes the matrix with columns u, v, and w. Recall
that if A is a square matrix with transpose AT , then det A = det AT . Thus
the last expression displayed above is equivalent to
det((X11 , X1 , X2 )T (X22 , X1 , X2 )) − det((X12 , X1 , X2 )T (X12 , X1 , X2 )),
which in turn can be written as
X11 , X22 X11 , X1 X11 , X2
det X1 , X22 X1 , X1 X1 , X2
X2 , X22 X2 , X1 X2 , X2
X12 , X12 X12 , X1 X12 , X2
− det X1 , X12 X1 , X1 X1 , X2 .
X2 , X12 X2 , X1 X2 , X2
If we expand the above determinants along their first rows, then X11 , X22
and X12 , X22 will have the same coefficients. This implies that we can
rewrite the last expression as
X11 , X22 − X12 , X12 X11 , X1 X11 , X2
det X1 , X22 X1 , X1 X1 , X2
X2 , X22 X2 , X1 X2 , X2
0 X12 , X1 X12 , X2
− det X1 , X12 X1 , X1 X1 , X2 .
X2 , X12 X2 , X1 X2 , X2
Now note that each of the entries in the above matrices can be expressed
purely in terms of gij , since
1 1
Xii , Xj = Xi , Xi j = (gii )j ,
2 2
1
Xij , Xi = Xi , Xj i − Xi , Xji = (gij )i − (gii )j ,
2
and
X11 , X22 − X12 , X12 = X1 , X22 1 − X1 , X12 2
1 1
= (g21 )21 − (g11 )21 − (g11 )2 .
2 2
5
Substituting the above values in the previous matrices, we define