Moving Frame Method
Moving Frame Method
Moving Frame Method
Preface ix
Chapter 1. Moving Frames and Exterior Differential Systems 1
§1.1. Geometry of surfaces in E3 in coordinates 2
§1.2. Differential equations in coordinates 5
§1.3. Introduction to differential equations without coordinates 8
§1.4. Introduction to geometry without coordinates:
curves in E2 12
§1.5. Submanifolds of homogeneous spaces 15
§1.6. The Maurer-Cartan form 16
§1.7. Plane curves in other geometries 20
§1.8. Curves in E3 23
§1.9. Exterior differential systems and jet spaces 26
Chapter 2. Euclidean Geometry and Riemannian Geometry 35
§2.1. Gauss and mean curvature via frames 36
§2.2. Calculation of H and K for some examples 39
§2.3. Darboux frames and applications 42
§2.4. What do H and K tell us? 43
§2.5. Invariants for n-dimensional submanifolds of En+s 45
§2.6. Intrinsic and extrinsic geometry 47
§2.7. Space forms: the sphere and hyperbolic space 57
§2.8. Curves on surfaces 58
§2.9. The Gauss-Bonnet and Poincaré-Hopf theorems 61
v
vi Contents
In this book, we use moving frames and exterior differential systems to study
geometry and partial differential equations. These ideas originated about
a century ago in the works of several mathematicians, including Gaston
Darboux, Edouard Goursat and, most importantly, Elie Cartan. Over the
years these techniques have been refined and extended; major contributors
to the subject are mentioned below, under “Further Reading”.
The book has the following features: It concisely covers the classical
geometry of surfaces and basic Riemannian geometry in the language of
moving frames. It includes results from projective differential geometry that
update and expand the classic paper [69] of Griffiths and Harris. It provides
an elementary introduction to the machinery of exterior differential systems
(EDS), and an introduction to the basics of G-structures and the general
theory of connections. Classical and recent geometric applications of these
techniques are discussed throughout the text.
This book is intended to be used as a textbook for a graduate-level
course; there are numerous exercises throughout. It is suitable for a one-
year course, although it has more material than can be covered in a year, and
parts of it are suitable for one-semester course (see the end of this preface for
some suggestions). The intended audience is both graduate students who
have some familiarity with classical differential geometry and differentiable
manifolds, and experts in areas such as PDE and algebraic geometry who
want to learn how moving frame and EDS techniques apply to their fields.
In addition to the geometric applications presented here, EDS techniques
are also applied in CR geometry (see, e.g., [98]), robotics, and control theory
(see [55, 56, 129]). This book prepares the reader for such areas, as well as
ix
x Preface
for more advanced texts on exterior differential systems, such as [20], and
papers on recent advances in the theory, such as [58, 117].
“works out right” (in a way explained precisely in the chapter), then exis-
tence of solutions follows.
There are four appendices, covering background material for the main
part of the book: linear algebra and rudiments of representation theory,
differential forms and vector fields, complex and almost complex manifolds,
and a brief discussion of initial value problems and the Cauchy-Kowalevski
Theorem, of which the Cartan-Kähler Theorem is a generalization.
xii Preface
Dependence of Chapters
1.1−1.7
1.8−1.9 3.1−3.3
2 4 3.4−3.17
8 5
6.1
6.2−6.5 7
1
2 1. Moving Frames and Exterior Differential Systems
will call such coordinates adapted to p. At this point we have used up all
our freedom of motion except for a rotation in the xy-plane.
Once one has found invariants for a given submanifold geometry, one
may ask questions about submanifolds with special invariants. For surfaces
in E3 , one might ask which surfaces have K constant or H constant. These
can be treated as questions about solutions to certain partial differential
equations (PDE). For example, from (1.3) we see that surfaces with K ≡ 1
are locally given by solutions to the PDE
2
(1.4) zxx zyy − zxy = (1 + zx2 + zy2 )2 .
We will soon free ourselves of coordinates and use moving frames and dif-
ferential forms. As a provisional definition, a moving frame is a smoothly
varying basis of the tangent space to E3 defined at each point of our sur-
face. In general, using moving frames one can obtain formulas valid at every
point analogous to coordinate formulas valid at just one preferred point. In
the present context, the Gauss and mean curvatures will be described at all
points by expressions like (1.2) rather than (1.3); see §2.1.
Another reason to use moving frames is that the method gives a uni-
form procedure for dealing with diverse geometric settings. Even if one is
originally only interested in Euclidean geometry, other geometries arise nat-
urally. For example, consider the warp of a surface, which is defined to be
(k1 − k2 )2 , where the kj are the eigenvalues of (1.1). It turns out that this
1.2. Differential equations in coordinates 5
arise because mixed partials must commute, i.e., (ux )y = (uy )x . In our
example,
∂ ∂u
(ux )y = A(x, y, u) = Ay (x, y, u) + Au (x, y, u) = Ay + BAu ,
∂y ∂y
(uy )x = Bx + ABu ,
so setting (ux )y = (uy )x reveals a “hidden equation”, the compatibility
condition
(1.9) Ay + BAu = Bx + ABu .
We will prove in §1.9 that the commuting of second-order partials in this case
implies that all higher-order mixed partials commute as well, so that there
are no further hidden equations. In other words, if (1.9) is an identity in
x, y, u, then solving the ODE’s (1.7) and (1.8) in succession gives a solution
to (1.6), and solutions depend on one constant.
Exercise 1.2.4: Show that, if (1.9) is an identity, then one gets the same
solution by first solving for ũ(y) = u(0, y).
Under what condition does this function u satisfy (1.6)? Verify that the
resulting condition is equivalent to (1.9) in this special case.
2. Rewrite (1.10) as a line integral involving the 1-form
ω := A(x, y)dx + B(x, y)dy,
and determine the condition which ensures that the integral is independent
of path.
3. Determine the space of solutions to (1.6) in the following special cases:
(a) A = − ux , B = − uy .
(b) A = B = ux .
(c) A = − ux , B = y.
One begins with a “universal space” (J 1 in the above example) where the
various partial derivatives are represented by independent variables. Then
one restricts to the subset Σ of the universal space defined by the system of
PDE by considering it as a set of equations among independent variables.
10 1. Moving Frames and Exterior Differential Systems
The Frobenius Theorem. In §1.9 we will prove the following result, which
is a generalization, both of Theorem 1.3.1 and of the asserted existence of
solutions to Example 1.2.3 when (1.9) holds, to an existence theorem for
certain systems of PDE:
Theorem 1.3.2 (Frobenius Theorem, first version). Let Σ be a C ∞ man-
ifold of dimension m, and let θ 1 , . . . , θm−n ∈ Ω1 (Σ) be pointwise linearly
independent. If there exist 1-forms αji ∈ Ω1 (Σ) such that dθ j = αij ∧ θi for
all j, then through each p ∈ Σ there exists a unique n-dimensional manifold
i : N ,→ Σ such that i∗ (θj ) = 0 for 1 ≤ j ≤ m − n.
In order to motivate our study of exterior differential systems, we re-
word the Frobenius Theorem more geometrically as follows: Let Σ be an
m-dimensional manifold such that through each point x ∈ Σ there is an
n-dimensional subspace Ex ⊂ Tx Σ which varies smoothly with x (such a
structure is called a distribution). We consider the problem of finding sub-
manifolds X ⊂ Σ such that Tx X = Ex for all x ∈ X.
Consider Ex ⊥ ⊂ Tx∗ Σ. Let θxa , 1 ≤ a ≤ m − n, be a basis of Ex ⊥ . We
may choose the θxa to vary smoothly to obtain m − n linearly independent
forms θ a ∈ Ω1 (Σ). Let I = {θ 1 , . . . , θm−n }diff denote the differential ideal
they generate in Ω∗ (Σ) (see §B.4). The submanifolds X tangent to the
distribution E are exactly the n-dimensional submanifolds i : N ,→ Σ such
that i∗ (α) = 0 for all α ∈ I. Call such a submanifold an integral manifold
of I.
1.3. Introduction to differential equations without coordinates 11
To find integral manifolds, we already know that if there are any, their
tangent space at any point x ∈ Σ is already uniquely determined, namely
it is Ex . The question is whether these n-planes can be “fitted together” to
obtain an n-dimensional submanifold. This information is contained in the
derivatives of the θ a ’s, which indicate how the n-planes “move” infinitesi-
mally.
If we are to have i∗ (θa ) = 0, we must also have d(i∗ θa ) = i∗ (dθa ) = 0. If
there is to be an integral manifold through x, or even an n-plane Ex ⊂ Tx Σ
on which α |Ex = 0, ∀α ∈ I, the equations i∗ (dθa ) = 0 cannot impose any
additional conditions, i.e., we must have dθ a |Ex = 0 because we already have
a unique n-plane at each point x ∈ Σ. To recap, for all a we must have
(1.13) dθa = α1a ∧ θ1 + . . . + αm−n
a
∧ θm−n
for some αba ∈ Ω1 (Σ), because the forms θxa span Ex ⊥ .
Notation 1.3.3. Suppose I is an ideal and φ and ψ are k-forms. Then we
write φ ≡ ψ mod I if φ = ψ + β for some β ∈ I.
Exercises 1.3.6:
1. Which of the following ideals are Frobenius?
2. Show that the differential forms and vector field conditions for being
Frobenius are equivalent, i.e., ∆ ⊂ Γ(T Σ) satisfies [∆, ∆] ⊆ ∆ if and only if
∆⊥ ⊂ T ∗ Σ satisfies dθ ≡ 0 mod ∆⊥ for all θ ∈ Γ(∆⊥ ).
3. On R3 let θ = Adx + Bdy + Cdz, where A = A(x, y, z), etc. Assume
the differential ideal generated by θ is Frobenius, and explain how to find a
function f (x, y, z) such that the differential systems {θ}diff and {df }diff are
equivalent.
Consider v(t) = |c0 (t)|, called the speed of the curve. It is invariant under
Euclidean motions and thus is a differential invariant. However, it is only
an invariant of the mapping, not of the image curve (see Exercise 1.4.2.2).
The speed measures how much (internal) distance is being distorted under
the mapping c.
Consider de de1
dt . We must have dt = λ(t)e2 (t) for some function λ(t) be-
1
cause |e1 (t)| ≡ 1 (see Exercise 1.4.2.1 below). Thus λ(t) is a differential in-
variant, but it again depends on the parametrization of the curve. To deter-
mine an invariant of the image alone, we let c̃(t) be another parametrization
of the same curve. We calculate that λ̃(t) = ṽ(t) λ(t)
v(t) λ(t), so we set κ(t) = v(t) .
This κ(t), called the curvature of the curve, measures how much c is in-
finitesimally moving away from its tangent line at c(t).
A necessary condition for two curves c, c̃ to have equivalent images is that
there exists a diffeomorphism ψ : R → R such that κ(t) = κ̃(ψ(t)). It will
follow from Corollary 1.6.13 that the images of curves are locally classified
up to congruence by their curvature functions, and that parametrized curves
are locally classified by κ, v.
Exercises 1.4.2:
1. Let V be a vector space with a nondegenerate inner product h, i. Let
v(t) be a curve in V such that F (t) := hv(t), v(t)i is constant. Show that
v 0 (t) ⊥ v(t) for all t. Show the converse is also true.
Rt
2. Suppose that c is regular. Let s(t) = 0 |c0 (τ )|dτ and consider c paramet-
rized by s instead of t. Since s gives the length of the image of c : [0, s] → E2 ,
s is called an arclength parameter. Show that in this preferred parametriza-
tion, κ(s) = | deds |.
1
3. Show that κ(t) is constant iff the curve is an open subset of a line (if
κ = 0) or circle of radius κ1 .
4. Let c(t) = (x(t), y(t)) be given in coordinates. Calculate κ(t) in terms
of x(t), y(t) and their derivatives.
5. Calculate the function κ(t) for an ellipse. Characterize the points on the
ellipse where the maximum and minimum values of κ(t) occur.
6. Can κ(t) be unbounded if c(t) is the graph of a polynomial?
Exercise 1.4.3 (Osculating circles):
(a) Calculate the equation of a circle passing through three points in the
plane.
(b) Calculate the equation of a circle passing through two points in the
plane and having a given tangent line at one of the points.
Parts (a) and (b) may be skipped; the exercise proper starts here:
(c) Show that for any curve c ⊂ E2 , at each point x ∈ c one can define an
osculating circle by taking the limit of the circle through the three points
1.5. Submanifolds of homogeneous spaces 15
A homogeneous space G/H has a natural (left) G-action on it; the sub-
group stabilizing [e] is H, and the stabilizer of any point is conjugate to
H. Conversely, a manifold X is a homogeneous space if it admits a smooth
transitive action by a Lie group G. If H is the isotropy group of a point
x0 ∈ X, then X ' G/H, and x0 corresponds to [e] ∈ G/H, the coset of
the identity element. (See [77, 142] for additional facts about homogeneous
spaces.)
In the spirit of Klein’s Erlanger Programm (see [76, 92] for historical
accounts), we will consider G as the group of motions of G/H. We will
study the geometry of submanifolds M ⊂ G/H, where two submanifolds
M, M 0 ⊂ G/H will be considered equivalent if there exists a g ∈ G such that
g(M ) = M 0 .
To determine necessary conditions for equivalence we will find differential
invariants as we did in §1.1 and §1.4. (Note that we need to specify whether
we are interested in invariants of a mapping or just of the image.) After
finding invariants, we will then interpret them as we did in the exercises in
§1.4.
Chapter 2
Euclidean Geometry
and Riemannian
Geometry
35
36 2. Euclidean Geometry and Riemannian Geometry
Projective Geometry
71
72 3. Projective Geometry
3.1. Grassmannians
In projective geometry, Grassmannians play a central role, so we begin with
a study of Grassmannians and the Plücker embedding. We also give appli-
cations to Euclidean geometry.
We fix index ranges 1 ≤ i, j ≤ k, and k + 1 ≤ s, t, u ≤ n for this section.
Let V be a vector space over R or C and let G(k, V ) denote the Grass-
mannian of k-planes that pass through the origin in V . To specify a k-plane
E, it is sufficient to specify a basis v1 , . . . , vk of E. We continue our nota-
tional convention that {v1 , . . . , vk } denotes the span of the vectors v1 , . . . , vk .
After fixing a reference basis, we identify GL(V ) with the set of bases for
V , and define a map
π : GL(V ) → G(k, V ),
(e1 , . . . , en ) 7→ {e1 , . . . , ek },
If we let ẽ1 , . . . , ẽn denote the standard basis of V , i.e., ẽA is a column vector
with a 1 in the A-th slot and zeros elsewhere, the fiber of this mapping over
π(Id) = {ẽ1 , . . . , ẽk }, is the subgroup
½ µ i ¶ ¾
gj gsi
Pk = g = | det(g) 6= 0 ⊂ GL(V ).
0 gst
More generally, for g ∈ GL(V ), π −1 (π(g)) = gPk g −1 .
Of particular importance is projective space PV = G(1, V ), the space
of all lines through the origin in V . We define a line in PV to be the
Chapter 4
Cartan-Kähler I:
Linear Algebra and
Constant-Coefficient
Homogeneous Systems
We have seen that differentiating the forms that generate an exterior dif-
ferential system often reveals additional conditions that integral manifolds
must satisfy (e.g., the Gauss and Codazzi equations for a surface in Eucli-
dean space). The conditions are consequences of the fact that mixed partials
must commute. What we did not see was a way of telling when one has dif-
ferentiated enough to find all hidden conditions. We do know the answer
in two cases: If a system is in Cauchy-Kowalevski form there are no extra
conditions. In the case of the Frobenius Theorem, if the system passes a
first-order test, then there are no extra conditions.
What will emerge over the next few chapters is a test, called Cartan’s
Test, that will tell us when we have differentiated enough.
The general version of Cartan’s Test is described in Chapter 7. For a
given integral element E ∈ Vn (I)x of an exterior differential system I on
a manifold Σ, it guarantees existence of an integral manifold to the system
with tangent plane E if E passes the test.
In Chapter 5, we present a version of Cartan’s Test valid for a class
of exterior differential systems with independence condition called linear
Pfaffian systems. These are systems that are generated by 1-forms and
have the additional property that the variety of integral elements through a
143
144 4. Constant-Coefficient Homogeneous Systems
4.1. Tableaux
Let x = xi vi , u = ua wa denote elements of V and W respectively. We will
consider (x1 , . . . , xn ), respectively (u1 , . . . , un ), as coordinate functions on
V and W respectively. Any first-order, constant-coefficient, homogeneous
system of PDE for maps f : V → W is given in coordinates by equations
∂ua
(4.1) Bari = 0, 1 ≤ r ≤ R,
∂xi
where the Bari are constants. For example, the Cauchy-Riemann system
u1x1 − u2x2 = 0, u1x2 + u2x1 = 0 has B111 = 1, B212 = −1, B112 = 0, B211 = 0,
B221 = 1, B122 = 1, B121 = 0 and B222 = 0.
Chapter 5
Cartan-Kähler II:
The Cartan Algorithm
for Linear Pfaffian
Systems
We now generalize the test from Chapter 4 to a test valid for a large class of
exterior differential systems called linear Pfaffian systems, which are defined
in §5.1. In §§5.2–5.4 we present three examples of linear Pfaffian systems that
lead us to Cartan’s algorithm and the definitions of torsion and prolongation,
all of which are given in §5.5. For easy reference, we give a summary and
flowchart of the algorithm in §5.6. Additional aspects of the theory, includ-
ing characteristic hyperplanes, Spencer cohomology and the Goldschmidt
version of the Cartan-Kähler Theorem, are given in §5.7. In the remainder
of the chapter we give numerous examples, beginning with elementary prob-
lems coming mostly from surface theory in §5.8, then an example motivated
by variation of Hodge structure in §5.9, then the Cartan-Janet Isometric Im-
mersion Theorem in §5.10, followed by a discussion of isometric embeddings
of space forms in §5.11 and concluding with a discussion of calibrations and
calibrated submanifolds in §5.12.
163
164 5. The Cartan Algorithm for Linear Pfaffian Systems
Applications to PDE
203
204 6. Applications to PDE
Cartan-Kähler III:
The General Case
243
244 7. Cartan-Kähler III: The General Case
Geometric Structures
and Connections
We study the equivalence problem for geometric structures. That is, given
two geometric structures (e.g., pairs of Riemannian manifolds, pairs of man-
ifolds equipped with foliations, etc.), we wish to find differential invariants
that determine existence of a local diffeomorphism preserving the geometric
structures. We begin in §8.1 with two examples, 3-webs in the plane and Rie-
mannian geometry, before concluding the section by defining G-structures.
In order to find differential invariants, we will need to take derivatives in
some geometrically meaningful way, and we spend some time (§§8.2–8.4)
figuring out just how to do this. In §8.3 we define connections on coframe
bundles and briefly discuss a general algorithm for finding differential in-
variants of G-structures. In §8.5 we define and discuss the holonomy of
a Riemannian manifold. In §8.6 we present an extended example of the
equivalence problem, finding the differential invariants of a path geometry.
Finally, in §8.7 we discuss generalizations of G-structures and recent work
involving these generalizations.
8.1. G-structures
In this section we present two examples of G-structures and then give a
formal definition.
267
268 8. Geometric Structures and Connections
To see that Problems 8.1.1, 8.1.2 are the same, note that any two trans-
verse foliations can be used to give local coordinates x, y, and the space of
integral curves of an ODE in coordinates provides the third foliation. The
diffeomorphisms of R2 that preserve the two coordinate foliations are exactly
those of the form of ψ.
In order to study the local equivalence of webs, we would like to associate
a coframe to a 3-web. For example, we could take a coframe {ω 1 , ω 2 } such
that
(a) ω 1 annihilates L1 ,
(b) ω 2 annihilates L2 , and
(c) ω 1 − ω 2 annihilates L3 .
In the case of an ODE in coordinates, we could similarly take ω 1 =
F (x, y)dx, ω 2 = dy.
Remark 8.1.4. Note that we are imitating the flat model (L0 ) on the in-
finitesimal level. This is what we did in Chapter 2 for Riemannian geometry
when we took a basis of the cotangent space corresponding to the standard
flat structure on the infinitesimal level. Just as any Riemannian metric looks
flat to first order, so does any 3-web in the plane.
ω̃ 1 = λ−1 ω 1 ,
ω̃ 2 = µ−1 ω 2
Exercise 8.1.5: Show that these tautological forms are the pullbacks of
the tautological forms of FGL (U ). Thus, they are independent of our initial
choice of ω 1 , ω 2 .
363
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Index
371
372 Index
flag projective, 77
A-generic, 154 varieties with degenerate, 89
complete, 85 Gauss’ theorema egregium, 48
derived, 216 Gauss-Bonnet formula, 64
partial, 85 Gauss-Bonnet theorem, 62
flag variety, 85, 316 for compact hypersurfaces, 64
flat local, 60
G-structure, 275 Gauss-Bonnet-Chern Theorem, 65
3-web, 268 general point, 83
path geometry, 296 generalized conformal structure, 309
Riemannian manifold, 52 generalized Monge system, 139
isometric immersions of, 194 generic point, 83
surface, 41 geodesic, 59
flow of a vector field, 6 of affine connection, 285
flowbox coordinates, 6 geodesic curvature, 59
flowchart for Cartan’s algorithm, 178 geodesic torsion, 60
focal hypersurface, 89 Grassmann bundle, 177
focal surface, 237, 266 canonical system on, 177
frame Grassmannian, 72, 316
Darboux, 42 isotropic, 84
frame bundle tangent space of, 73
general, 49
orthonormal, 50 half-spin representation, 107
Frenet equations, 25 Hartshorne’s conjecture, 140
Frobenius ideal, 11 heat equation, 350
Frobenius structure, 308 helicoid, 39
Frobenius system Hermitian form, 319
tableau of, 146 Hermitian inner product, 319
Frobenius Theorem, 10–12, 30 hexagonality, 271
proof, 30 higher associated hypersurface, 124
Fubini cubic form, 94 holomorphic map, 345
Fubini forms, 94, 107 holonomy, 286–295
Fulton-Hansen Theorem, 130 holonomy bundle, 287
fundamental form holonomy group, 287
effective calculation of, 97 homogeneous space, 15
k-th, 97 Hopf differential, 230
prolongation property of, 97 horizontal curve, 287
via spectral sequences, 98 horizontal lift, 287
hyperbolic space, 58
G-structure, 267–275 isometric immersions of, 197
1-flat, 280 hyperplane section of a variety, 88
2-flat, 281 hypersurfaces in EN
curvature, 280, 282 fundamental theorem for, 55
definition, 274
flat, 275 ideal
prolongation, 281 algebraic, 340
G/H-structure of order two, 296 differential, 340
Gauss curvature Frobenius, 11
geometric interpretation of, 47 incidence correspondence, 88
in coordinates, 4 independence condition, 27
via frames, 36–38 index of a vector field, 61
Gauss equation, 47 index of relative nullity, 80
Gauss image, 77 induced vector bundle, 283
characterization of, 93 initial data, 349
Gauss map initial value problem, 349
algebraic, 55 integrable extension, 232
Euclidean, 46 via conservation law, 233
Index 375
Zak’s theorem
on linear normality, 128
on Severi varieties, 128
on tangencies, 131