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Nonpositive Curvature: Geometric and Analytic Aspects

  • 1997
  • Book
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About this book

The present book contains the lecture notes from a "Nachdiplomvorlesung", a topics course adressed to Ph. D. students, at the ETH ZUrich during the winter term 95/96. Consequently, these notes are arranged according to the requirements of organizing the material for oral exposition, and the level of difficulty and the exposition were adjusted to the audience in Zurich. The aim of the course was to introduce some geometric and analytic concepts that have been found useful in advancing our understanding of spaces of nonpos­ itive curvature. In particular in recent years, it has been realized that often it is useful for a systematic understanding not to restrict the attention to Riemannian manifolds only, but to consider more general classes of metric spaces of generalized nonpositive curvature. The basic idea is to isolate a property that on one hand can be formulated solely in terms of the distance function and on the other hand is characteristic of nonpositive sectional curvature on a Riemannian manifold, and then to take this property as an axiom for defining a metric space of nonposi­ tive curvature. Such constructions have been put forward by Wald, Alexandrov, Busemann, and others, and they will be systematically explored in Chapter 2. Our focus and treatment will often be different from the existing literature. In the first Chapter, we consider several classes of examples of Riemannian manifolds of nonpositive curvature, and we explain how conditions about nonpos­ itivity or negativity of curvature can be exploited in various geometric contexts.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction
Abstract
In Riemannian geometry, negative curvature usually means negative sectional curvature. Let N be an n-dimensional Riemannian manifold1. All Riemannian manifolds will be assumed to be connected and complete unless the contrary is explicitly stated. The scalar product on T x N, for xN, defined by the Riemannian metric will be denoted by (·,·), the Levi-Civita connection by ∇, and its curvature tensor by R(·,·).
Jürgen Jost
Chapter 2. Spaces of nonpositive curvature
Abstract
We first recall some constructions from Riemannian geometry. A reference is J. Jost, Riemannian geometry and geometric analysis, Springer, 1995.
Jürgen Jost
Chapter 3. Convex functions and centers of mass
Jürgen Jost
Chapter 4. Generalized harmonic maps
Abstract
In § 1.3, we had introduced harmonic maps between Riemannian manifolds. For a map f: MN between Riemannian manifolds M, N, the energy was defined as
$$ {2}\,\int\limits_M {\left\| {df(x)} \right\|^2 d\mu (x)}$$
where dμ is the measure on M induced by the Riemannian metric, df is the differential of f, and the norm ‖ · ‖ is induced by the Riemannian metrics of M and N. Smooth minimizers, or more generally solutions of the associated Euler-Lagrange equations, were called harmonic maps.
Jürgen Jost
Chapter 5. Bochner-Matsushima type identities for harmonic maps and rigidity theorems
Jürgen Jost
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Nonpositive Curvature: Geometric and Analytic Aspects
Author
Jürgen Jost
Copyright Year
1997
Publisher
Birkhäuser Basel
Electronic ISBN
978-3-0348-8918-6
Print ISBN
978-3-7643-5736-8
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-0348-8918-6