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In [[differential geometry]], the '''Ricci curvature tensor''', named after [[Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro]], represents the amount by which the [[volume element|volume]] of a [[geodesic]] [[ball (mathematics)|ball]] in a curved [[Riemannian manifold]] deviates from that of the standard ball in [[Euclidean space]].  As such, it provides one way of measuring the degree to which the geometry determined by a given [[Riemannian metric]] might differ from that of ordinary Euclidean ''n-''space. The Ricci tensor is defined on any [[pseudo-Riemannian manifold]], as a [[trace (mathematics)|trace]] of the [[Riemann curvature tensor]].  Like the metric itself, the Ricci tensor is a [[symmetric bilinear form]] on the [[tangent space]] of the manifold {{harv|Besse|1987|p=43}}.<ref>It is assumed that the manifold carries its unique [[Levi-Civita connection]]. For a general [[affine connection]], the Ricci tensor need not be symmetric.</ref>
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In [[relativity theory]], the Ricci tensor is the part of the [[curvature of space-time]] that determines the degree to which matter will tend to converge or diverge in time (via the [[Raychaudhuri equation]]).  It is related to the matter content of the universe by means of the [[Einstein field equation]].  In differential geometry, lower bounds on the Ricci tensor on a Riemannian manifold allow one to extract global geometric and topological information by comparison (cf. [[comparison theorem]]) with the geometry of a constant curvature [[space form]].  If the Ricci tensor satisfies the vacuum Einstein equation, then the manifold is an [[Einstein manifold]], which have been extensively studied (cf. {{harvnb|Besse|1987}}).  In this connection, the [[Ricci flow]] equation governs the evolution of a given metric to an Einstein metric, the precise manner in which this occurs ultimately leads to the [[solution of the Poincaré conjecture]].
 
==Definition==
Suppose that <math>(M,g)</math> is an ''n-''dimensional [[Riemannian manifold]], equipped with its [[Levi-Civita connection]] <math>\nabla</math>.  The [[Riemannian curvature tensor]] of <math>M</math> is the <math>(1,3)</math> tensor defined by
:<math>R(X,Y)Z = \nabla_X\nabla_Y Z - \nabla_Y\nabla_XZ - \nabla_{[X,Y]}Z</math>
on [[vector field]]s <math>X,Y,Z</math>. Let <math>T_pM</math> denote the [[tangent space]] of ''M'' at a point ''p''. For any  pair <math>\xi, \eta\in T_pM</math> of tangent vectors at ''p'', the Ricci tensor <math>\mathrm{Ric} (\xi , \eta )</math> evaluated at <math>(\xi, \eta )</math> is defined to be the [[trace (linear algebra)|trace]] of the linear map <math>T_pM\to T_pM</math> given by
:<math>\zeta \mapsto R(\zeta,\eta) \xi.</math>
In [[local coordinates]] (using the [[Einstein summation convention]]), one has
:<math>\operatorname{Ric} = R_{ij}\,dx^i \otimes dx^j</math>
where
:<math>R_{ij} = {R^k}_{ikj}.</math>
 
In terms of the [[Riemann curvature tensor]] and the [[Christoffel symbols]], one has
:<math>
R_{\alpha\beta} = {R^\rho}_{\alpha\rho\beta} =
\partial_{\rho}{\Gamma^\rho_{\beta\alpha}} - \partial_{\beta}\Gamma^\rho_{\rho\alpha}
+ \Gamma^\rho_{\rho\lambda} \Gamma^\lambda_{\beta\alpha}
- \Gamma^\rho_{\beta\lambda}\Gamma^\lambda_{\rho\alpha}
=2 \Gamma^{\rho}_{{\alpha[\beta,\rho]}} +
2 \Gamma^\rho_{\lambda [\rho} \Gamma^\lambda_{\beta]\alpha}
.</math>
 
==Properties==
 
As a consequence of the [[Bianchi identities]],  the Ricci tensor
of a Riemannian manifold is [[symmetric tensor|symmetric]], in the sense that
:<math>\operatorname{Ric}(\xi ,\eta) = \operatorname{Ric}(\eta ,\xi).</math>
It thus follows that the Ricci tensor is completely determined by knowing the quantity <math>\operatorname{Ric} (\xi , \xi )</math>
for all vectors <math>\xi</math> of unit length. This function on the set of unit tangent vectors is often simply called
the '''Ricci curvature''', since knowing it is equivalent to knowing the Ricci curvature tensor.
 
The Ricci curvature is determined by the [[sectional curvature]]s of a Riemannian manifold, but generally contains less information. Indeed, if <math>\xi</math> is a vector of unit length on a Riemannian ''n-''manifold, then Ric(ξ,ξ) is precisely  (''n''−1)  times the average  value of the sectional curvature, taken  over all the 2-planes containing <math>\xi</math>.  There is an (''n''&minus;2)-dimensional family of such 2-planes, and so only in dimensions 2 and 3 does the Ricci tensor determine the full curvature tensor. A notable exception is when the manifold is given a priori as a [[hypersurface]] of Euclidean space. The [[second fundamental form]], which determines the full curvature via the [[Gauss–Codazzi equations|Gauss–Codazzi equation]], is itself determined by the Ricci tensor and the [[principal directions]] of the hypersurface are also the eigendirections of the Ricci tensor. The tensor was introduced by Ricci for this reason.
 
If the Ricci curvature function Ric(ξ,ξ) is constant on the set of unit tangent vectors ξ, the Riemannian manifold is said to have constant Ricci curvature, or to be an [[Einstein manifold]].  This happens if and only if the Ricci tensor Ric is a constant multiple of the metric tensor ''g''.
 
The Ricci curvature is usefully thought of as a multiple of the [[Laplacian]] of the metric tensor {{harv|Chow|Knopf|2004|loc=Lemma 3.32}}.  Specifically, if ''x''<sup>''i''</sup> are [[harmonic coordinates|harmonic]] local coordinates, then
:<math>R_{ij} = -\frac{1}{2}\Delta (g_{ij}) + \text{lower order terms}</math>
where Δ is the [[Laplace–Beltrami operator]] regarded here as acting on the functions ''g''<sub>''ij''</sub>.  This fact motivates, for instance, the introduction of the [[Ricci flow]] equation as a natural extension of the [[heat equation]] for the metric.  Alternatively, in a [[normal coordinates|normal coordinate system]] based at ''p'', at the point ''p''
:<math>R_{ij} = -\frac{3}{2}\Delta (g_{ij}).</math>
 
==Direct geometric meaning==
 
Near any point ''p'' in a Riemannian manifold (''M'',''g''), one
can define preferred local
coordinates, called [[geodesic normal coordinates]]. These are adapted
to the metric so that geodesics through ''p'' corresponds to straight lines through the origin,
in  such a manner that the geodesic distance from ''p'' corresponds to the  Euclidean distance from the origin.
In these coordinates, the metric tensor is well-approximated by the Euclidean metric, in the precise sense that
:<math>g_{ij}  = \delta_{ij}+ O (|x|^2).\,</math>
In fact, by taking the [[Taylor expansion]] of the metric applied to a [[Jacobi field]] along a radial geodesic in the normal coordinate system, one has
:<math>g_{ij} = \delta_{ij} - \frac{1}{3}R_{ikj\ell}x^kx^\ell + O(|x|^3).</math>
In these coordinates, the metric [[volume element]] then has the following expansion at ''p'':
 
:<math>d\mu_g = \Big[ 1 - \frac{1}{6}R_{jk}x^jx^k+ O(|x|^3) \Big] d\mu_{{\rm Euclidean}}</math>
 
which follows by expanding the square root of the [[determinant]] of the metric.
 
Thus, if the Ricci curvature Ric(ξ,ξ) is positive in the direction of a  vector ξ,
the conical region in ''M'' swept out by a tightly focused family of
short geodesic segments emanating from ''p'' with initial velocity inside a small cone around ξ
will have smaller volume than the corresponding conical region in Euclidean space, just as the surface of a small [[spherical wedge]] has lesser area than a corresponding circular sector. Similarly, if the Ricci curvature is negative in the direction of a given vector ξ, such a conical region in the manifold will instead have larger volume than it would in Euclidean space.
 
The Ricci curvature is essentially an average of curvatures in the planes including ξ. Thus if a cone emitted with an initially circular (or spherical) cross-section becomes distorted into an ellipse (ellipsoid), it is possible for the volume distortion to vanish if the distortions along the [[principal axes]] counteract one another. The Ricci curvature would then vanish along ξ. In physical applications, the presence of a nonvanishing sectional curvature does not necessarily indicate the presence of any mass locally; if an initially circular cross-section of a cone of world-lines later becomes elliptical, without changing its volume, then this is due to tidal effects from a mass at some other location.
 
== Applications ==
 
Ricci curvature plays an important role in [[general relativity]], where it is the key term in the [[Einstein field equation]]s.
 
Ricci curvature  also appears in  the [[Ricci flow]] equation, where a time-dependent Riemannian
metric is deformed in the direction of minus its Ricci curvature. This system of partial differential equations is a non-linear analog of the [[heat equation]], and was first
introduced by [[Richard Hamilton (professor)|Richard Hamilton]] in the early 1980s. Since heat tends to spread through a solid until the body reaches an equilibrium state of constant temperature, Ricci flow may be hoped to produce an equilibrium geometry for a manifold for which the Ricci curvature is constant. Recent contributions to the subject due to [[Grigori Perelman]] now show that this program works well enough in dimension three  to lead to a complete classification of compact 3-manifolds, along lines
first conjectured by [[William Thurston]] in the 1970s.
 
On a [[Kähler manifold]], the  Ricci curvature determines the first [[Chern class]]
of the manifold (mod torsion). However, the Ricci curvature has no analogous topological interpretation
on a generic Riemannian manifold.
 
==Global geometry and topology==
 
Here is a short list of global results concerning manifolds with positive Ricci curvature; see also [[Riemannian_geometry#Local_to_global_theorems|classical theorems of Riemannian geometry]]. Briefly, positive Ricci curvature of a Riemannian manifold has strong topological consequences, while (for dimension at least 3), negative Ricci curvature has ''no'' topological implications.  (The Ricci curvature is said to be '''positive''' if the Ricci curvature function Ric(ξ,ξ) is positive on the set of non-zero tangent vectors ξ.)  Some results are also known for pseudo-Riemannian manifolds.
 
#[[Myers theorem|Myers' theorem]] states that if the Ricci curvature is bounded from below on a complete Riemannian manifold by <math>\left(n-1\right)k > 0 \,\!</math>, then the manifold  has diameter <math>\le \pi/\sqrt{k}</math>, with equality only if the manifold is [[Isometry|isometric]] to a sphere of a constant curvature ''k''. By a covering-space argument, it follows that any compact  manifold of positive Ricci curvature must  have  finite [[fundamental group]].
#The [[Bishop–Gromov inequality]] states that if  a complete ''m''-dimensional Riemannian manifold has non-negative Ricci curvature,  then the volume of a ball is smaller or equal to the volume of a ball of the same radius in Euclidean ''m''-space. Moreover, if <math>v_p(R)</math> denotes the volume of the ball with center ''p'' and radius <math>R</math> in the manifold and <math>V(R)=c_m R^m</math> denotes the volume of the ball of radius ''R'' in Euclidean ''m''-space then function <math>v_p(R)/V(R)</math> is nonincreasing. (The last inequality can be generalized to arbitrary curvature bound and is the key point in the proof of [[Gromov's compactness theorem (geometry)|Gromov's compactness theorem]].)
#The Cheeger-Gromoll [[splitting theorem]] states that if a complete Riemannian manifold with <math>\operatorname{Ric} \ge 0</math> contains a  ''line'', meaning  a geodesic γ such that  <math>d(\gamma(u),\gamma(v))=|u-v|</math> for all <math>v,u\in\mathbb{R}</math>, then it is isometric to a product space <math>\mathbb{R}\times L</math>. Consequently, a complete manifold of positive Ricci curvature can have at most one topological end.  The theorem is also true under some additional hypotheses for complete Lorentzian manifolds (of metric signature (+&minus;&minus;...)) with non-negative Ricci tensor ({{harvnb|Galloway|2000}}).
 
These results show that positive Ricci curvature has strong topological consequences.  By contrast, excluding the case of surfaces,  negative
Ricci curvature is now known to have ''no''  topological implications;  {{harvtxt| Lohkamp|1994}} has shown that any manifold of dimension greater than two admits a Riemannian metric of negative Ricci curvature. (For  surfaces, negative Ricci curvature implies negative sectional curvature; but the point
is that this fails rather dramatically in all higher dimensions.)
 
== Behavior under conformal rescaling ==
 
If you change the metric g by multiplying it by a conformal factor <math>e^{2f}</math>, the Ricci tensor of the new, conformally related metric <math>\tilde{g}= e^{2f}g</math> is given  {{harv|Besse|1987|p=59}} by
<!--
PLEASE DON'T CHANGE \Delta TO -\Delta.  The sign is correct for our Laplacian convention (and agrees with the cited source).
-->
:<math>\widetilde{\operatorname{Ric}}=\operatorname{Ric}+(2-n)[ \nabla df-df\otimes df]+[\Delta f -(n-2)\|df\|^2]g ,</math>
<!--
 
-->
where Δ&nbsp;=&nbsp;''d''<sup>∗</sup>''d'' is the (positive spectrum) Hodge Laplacian, i.e., the ''opposite'' of the usual trace of the Hessian.
 
In particular, given a point p in a Riemannian manifold, it is always possible to find metrics conformal to the given metric g for which the  Ricci tensor vanishes at p. Note, however, that this is only pointwise assertion; it is usually impossible to make the Ricci curvature vanish identically on the entire manifold by a conformal rescaling.
 
For two dimensional manifolds, the above formula shows that if ''f'' is a [[harmonic function]], then the conformal scaling ''g''&nbsp;{{mapsto}}&nbsp;''e''<sup>2''&fnof;''</sup>''g'' does not change the Ricci curvature.
 
==Trace-free Ricci tensor==
In [[Riemannian geometry]] and [[general relativity]], the '''trace-free Ricci tensor''' of a pseudo-Riemannian
manifold <math>(M,g) </math> is the tensor defined by
 
:<math>Z  =\operatorname{Ric}- \frac{S}{n}g</math>
 
where <math>\operatorname{Ric}</math> is the Ricci tensor, <math>S</math> is the [[scalar curvature]],
<math>g</math> is the [[metric tensor]], and <math>n</math> is the dimension of <math>M</math>.
The name of this object  reflects the fact that its [[Trace (linear algebra)|trace]]  automatically vanishes:
 
:<math>Z_{ab}g^{ab}=\, 0.</math>
 
If n<math>\geq</math> 3, the trace-free Ricci tensor vanishes identically if and only if
:<math>\operatorname{Ric} = \lambda g</math>
for some constant <math>\lambda</math>.
In mathematics, this is the condition for
<math>(M,g)</math> to be an [[Einstein manifold]]. In physics, this equation
states that <math>(M,g)</math> is a solution of Einstein's vacuum field
equations with [[cosmological constant]].
 
==Kähler manifolds==
On a [[Kähler manifold]] ''X'', the Ricci curvature determines the [[curvature form]] of the [[canonical bundle|canonical line bundle]] {{harv|Moroianu|2007|loc=Chapter 12}}.  The canonical line bundle is the top [[exterior power]] of the bundle of holomorphic [[Kähler differential]]s:
:<math>\kappa = \wedge^n \Omega_X.</math>
The Levi-Civita connection corresponding to the metric on ''X'' gives rise to a connection on κ.  The curvature of this connection is the two form defined by
:<math>\rho(X,Y)\,\stackrel{\text{def}}{=}\,\operatorname{Ric}(JX,Y)</math>
where ''J'' is the [[complex manifold|complex structure]] map on the tangent bundle determined by the structure of the Kähler manifold.  The Ricci form is a [[closed and exact forms|closed]] two-form.  Its [[cohomology class]] is, up to a real constant factor, the first [[Chern class]] of the canonical bundle, and is therefore a topological invariant of ''X'' (for ''X'' compact) in the sense that it depends only on the topology of ''X'' and the [[homotopy class]] of the complex structure.
 
Conversely, the Ricci form determines the Ricci tensor by
:<math>\operatorname{Ric}(X,Y) = \rho(X,JY).</math>
In local holomorphic coordinates ''z''<sup>α</sup>, the Ricci form is given by
:<math>\rho = -i\partial\overline{\partial}\log\det(g_{\alpha\overline{\beta}})</math>
where <math>\partial</math> is the [[Dolbeault operator]] and
:<math>g_{\alpha\overline{\beta}} = g\left(\frac{\partial}{\partial z^\alpha},\frac{\partial}{\partial \overline{z}^\beta}\right).</math>
 
If the Ricci tensor vanishes, then the canonical bundle is flat, so the [[G-structure|structure group]] can be locally reduced to a subgroup of the special linear group ''SL''(''n'','''C''').  However, Kähler manifolds already possess [[holonomy]] in ''U''(''n''), and so the (restricted) holonomy of a Ricci flat Kähler manifold is contained in ''SU''(''n'').  Conversely, if the (restricted) holonomy of a 2''n''-dimensional Riemannian manifold is contained in ''SU''(''n''), then the manifold is a Ricci-flat Kähler manifold {{harv|Kobayashi|Nomizu|1996|loc=IX, §4}}.
 
==Generalization to affine connections==
The Ricci tensor can also be generalized to arbitrary [[affine connection]]s, where it is an invariant that plays an especially important role in the study of [[projective differential geometry|projective geometry]] (geometry associated to unparameterized geodesics) {{harv|Nomizu|Sasaki|1994}}.  If <math>\nabla</math> denotes an affine connection, then the curvature tensor <math>R</math> is the <math>(1,3)</math> tensor defined by
:<math>R(X,Y)Z = \nabla_X\nabla_Y Z - \nabla_Y\nabla_XZ - \nabla_{[X,Y]}Z</math>
for any vector fields <math>X,Y,Z</math>.  The Ricci tensor is defined to be the trace:
:<math>\operatorname{ric}(X,Y) = \operatorname{tr}(Z\mapsto R(Z,X)Y).</math>
In this more general situation, the Ricci tensor is symmetric if and only if there exist locally a parallel [[volume form]] for the connection.
 
==See also==
*[[Curvature of Riemannian manifolds]]
*[[Scalar curvature]]
*[[Ricci calculus]]
*[[Ricci decomposition]]
*[[Ricci-flat manifold]]
*[[Christoffel symbols]]
*[[Basic introduction to the mathematics of curved spacetime]]
 
== Footnotes ==
{{reflist}}
 
==References==
*{{citation|first=A.L.|last=Besse|title=Einstein manifolds|publisher=Springer|year=1987}}.
*{{Citation | author=Chow, Bennet and Knopf, Dan | title =The Ricci Flow: an introduction| publisher=American Mathematical Society | year=2004| isbn=0-8218-3515-7}}.
*{{citation|first=L.P.|last=Eisenhart|title=Riemannian geometry|publisher=Princeton Univ. Press|year=1949}}.
*{{citation|first=Gregory|last=Galloway|title=Maximum Principles for Null Hypersurfaces and Null Splitting Theorems|journal=Annales Poincare Phys.Theor.|volume=1|year=2000|pages=543–567|arxiv=math/9909158|bibcode = 1999math......9158G }}.
*{{citation|first1=S.|last1=Kobayashi|first2=K.|last2=Nomizu|title=[[Foundations of Differential Geometry]], Volume 1|publisher=Interscience|year=1963}}.
*{{Citation | last1=Kobayashi | first1=Shoshichi | last2=Nomizu | first2=Katsumi | title=Foundations of Differential Geometry, Vol. 2 | publisher=[[Wiley-Interscience]] | isbn=978-0-471-15732-8 | year=1996}}.
*{{Citation | last1=Lohkamp | first1=Joachim | title=Metrics of negative Ricci curvature | id={{MathSciNet | id = 1307899}} | year=1994 | journal=[[Annals of Mathematics|Annals of Mathematics. Second Series]] | issn=0003-486X | volume=140 | issue=3 | pages=655–683 | doi=10.2307/2118620 | publisher=Annals of Mathematics | jstor=2118620}}.
*{{Citation | last1=Moroianu | first1=Andrei | title=Lectures on Kähler geometry | publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] | series=London Mathematical Society Student Texts | isbn=978-0-521-68897-0 | id={{MathSciNet | id = 2325093}} | year=2007 | volume=69}}
*{{citation | first1=Katsumi|last1=Nomizu|first2=Takeshi|authorlink=Katsumi Nomizu|last2=Sasaki|title=Affine differential geometry|year=1994|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-44177-3}}.
*{{citation|first=G.|last=Ricci|authorlink=Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro| title=Direzioni e invarianti principali in una varietà qualunque |journal=Atti R. Inst. Veneto|volume=63 |issue=2 |year=1903–1904|pages=1233–1239}}.
*{{springer|id=r/r081800|title=Ricci tensor|author=L.A. Sidorov}}
*{{springer|id=R/r081780|title=Ricci curvature|author=L.A. Sidorov}}
 
==External links==
*Z. Shen, C. Sormani [http://arxiv.org/abs/math/0606774 "The Topology of Open Manifolds with Nonnegative Ricci Curvature"] (a survey)
*G. Wei, [http://arxiv.org/abs/math/0612107 "Manifolds with A Lower Ricci Curvature Bound"] (a survey)
 
{{curvature}}
{{tensors}}
 
[[Category:Riemannian geometry]]
[[Category:Tensors in general relativity]]
[[Category:Curvature (mathematics)]]
 
[[de:Riemannscher Krümmungstensor#Ricci-Tensor]]

Latest revision as of 05:49, 26 December 2014

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