Average scalar curvature: Difference between revisions

From Diffgeom
No edit summary
m (2 revisions)
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 19:33, 18 May 2008

This article defines a notion of curvature for a differential manifold equipped with a Riemannian metric

This article defines a scalar value (viz, a real number) associated with a Riemannian manifold. This real number depends both on the underlying differential manifold and the Riemannian metric

Definition

Given data

A compact connected differential manifold M with a Riemannian metric g.

Definition part

The average scalar curvature of M is defined as the volume-averaged value of the scalar curvature over the manifold. That is, if R denotes the scalar curvature and dμ the volume element, we have that:

r=Rdμdμ

Here, the volume element dμ is the natural choice of volume-element arising from the Riemannian metric.

Facts

For surfaces

For the two-dimensional case, viz surfaces, in the special event that the surface is orientable, we can use the Gauss-Bonnet theorem to determine the average value of scalar curvature over the manifold. That is, we use the fact that Kdμ=2πχ(M) where χ denotes the Euler characteristic, which is a topological invariant (and hence, specifically, a property intrinsic to the differential manifold).

Since R=2K, this gives:

r=4πχ(M)A

where A denotes the total volume of the manifold.