- Projective connection
In
differential geometry , a projective connection is a type ofCartan connection on adifferentiable manifold .The structure of a projective connection is modeled on the geometry of
projective space , rather than theaffine space corresponding to anaffine connection . Much like affine connections, though, projective connections also definegeodesics . However, these geodesics are not affinely parametrized. Rather they are projectively parametrized, meaning that their preferred class of parameterizations is acted upon by the group offractional linear transformation s.Like an affine connection, projective connections have associated torsion and curvature.
Projective space as the model geometry
The first step in defining any Cartan connection is to consider the flat case: in which the connection corresponds to the
Maurer-Cartan form on ahomogeneous space .In the projective setting, the underlying manifold "M" of the homogeneous space is the projective space RPn which we shall represent by
homogeneous coordinates ["x"0,...,"x"n] . The symmetry group of "M" is "G" = PSL("n"+1,R). [It is also possible to use PGL("n"+1,R), but PSL("n"+1,R) is more convenient because it is connected.] Let "H" be theisotropy group of the point [1,0,0,...,0] . Thus, "M" = "G"/"H" presents "M" as a homogeneous space.Let be the
Lie algebra of "G", and that of "H". Note that . As matrices relative to the homogeneous basis, consists oftrace-free ("n"+1)×("n"+1) matrices::.
And consists of all these matrices with ("w"j) = 0. Relative to the matrix representation above, the Maurer-Cartan form of "G" is a system of 1-forms (ζ, αj, αji, αi) satisfying the structural equations [Cartan's approach was to derive the structural equations from the volume-preserving condition on "SL"("n"+1) so that explicit reference to the Lie algebra was not required.] :"d"ζ + ∑i αi∧αi = 0:"d"αj + αj∧ζ + ∑k αjk∧αk = 0:"d"αji + αi∧αj + ∑k αki∧αjk = 0:"d"αi + ζ∧αi + ∑kαk∧αki = 0 [A point of interest is this last equation is completely integrable, which means that the fibres of "G" → "G"/"H" can be defined using only the Maurer-Cartan form, by the
Frobenius integration theorem .]Projective structures on manifolds
A projective structure is a "linear geometry" on a manifold in which two nearby points are connected by a line (i.e., an unparametrized "geodesic") in a unique manner. Furthermore, an infinitesimal neighborhood of each point is equipped with a class of "
projective frame s". According to Cartan (1924), :"Une variété (ou espace) à connexion projective est une variété numérique qui, au voisinage immédiat de chaque point, présente tous les caractères d'un espace projectif et douée de plus d'une loi permettant de raccorder en un seul espace projectif les deux petits morceaux qui entourent deux points infiniment voisins. ..":"Analytiquement, on choisira, d'une manière d'ailleurs arbitraire, dans l'espace projectif attaché à chaque point a de la variété, un "repére" définissant un système de coordonnées projectives. .. Le raccord entre les espaces projectifs attachés à deux points infiniment voisins a et a' se traduira analytiquement par une transformation homographique. .." [A variety (or space) with projective connection is a numerical variety which, in the immediate neighbourhood of each point, possesses all the characters of a projective space and is moreover endowed with a law making it possible to connect in a single projective space the two small regions which surround two infinitely close points.Analytically, we choose, in a way otherwise arbitrary, a frame defining a projective frame of reference in the projective space attached to each point of the variety. .. The connection between the projective spaces attached to two infinitely close points a and a' will result analytically in a homographic (projective) transformation. ..]
This is analogous to Cartan's notion of an "
affine connection ", in which nearby points are thus connected and have an affineframe of reference which is transported from one to the other (Cartan, 1923)::"La variété sera dite à "connexion affine" lorsqu'on aura défini, d'une manière d'ailleurs arbitraire, une loi permettant de repérer l'un par rapport à l'autre les espaces affines attachés à deux points "infiniment voisins" quelconques m et m' de la variété; cete loi permettra de dire que tel point de l'espace affine attaché au point m' correspond à tel point de l'espace affine attaché au point m, que tel vecteur du premier espace es parallèle ou équipollent à tel vecteur du second espace." [The variety will be said to "affinely connected" when one defines, in a way otherwise arbitrary, a law making it possible to place the affine spaces, attached to two arbitrary infinitely close points m and m' of the variety, in correspondence with each other; this law will make it possible to say that a particular point of the affine space attached to the point m' corresponds to a particular point of the affine space attached to the point m, in such a way that a vector of the first space is parallel or equipollent with the corresponding vector of the second space.]In modern language, a projective structure on an "n"-manifold "M" is a
Cartan geometry modelled on projective space, where the latter is viewed as a homogeneous space for PSL("n"+1,R). In other words it is a PSL("n"+1,R)-bundle equipped with
* a PSL("n"+1,R)-connection (theCartan connection )
* areduction of structure group to the stabilizer of a point in projective spacesuch that thesolder form induced by these data is an isomorphism.Notes
References
*
*
* Hermann, R., Appendix 1-3 in Cartan, E. "Geometry of Riemannian Spaces", Math Sci Press, Massachusetts, 1983.
*
*External links
*springer|id=p/p075180|title=Projective connection|author=Ü. Lumiste
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.