1. Introduction
Distributions (subbundles of the tangent bundle) on a manifold are used to build up notions of integrability, and specifically, of a foliation, e.g., [
1,
2,
3]. There is definite interest of pure and applied mathematicians to singular distributions and foliations, i.e., having varying dimension, e.g., [
4,
5]. Another popular mathematical concept is a statistical structure, i.e., a Riemannian manifold endowed with a torsionless linear connection
such that the tensor
is symmetric in all its entries, e.g., [
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12]. The theory of affine hypersurfaces in
is a natural source of such manifolds; they also find applications in theory of probability and statistics as well as in information geometry.
Recall (e.g., [
13]) that a
singular distribution on a manifold
M assigns to each point
a linear subspace
of the tangent space
in such a way that, for any
, there exists a smooth vector field
V defined in a neighborhood
U of
x and such that
and
for all
y of
U. A priori, the dimension of
is not constant and depends on
. If
, then
is regular.Singular foliations are defined as families of maximal integral submanifolds (leaves) of integrable singular distributions (certainly, regular foliations correspond to integrable regular distributions). Singular distributions also arise when considering irregular mappings of manifolds, since at the point where the rank of the mapping is less than the dimension of the manifold—the inverse image, the kernel of the mapping arises. Its dimension can vary from point to point. Therefore, the theory presented in the article has applications to differential topology and mathematical analysis.
Let M be a connected smooth n-dimensional manifold, —the tangent bundle, —the Lie algebra of smooth vector fields on M, and —the space of all smooth endomorphisms of . Let be a Riemannian metric on M and ∇—the Levi–Civita connection of g.
In this paper, we apply the almost Lie algebroid structure (see a short survey in
Section 8) to singular distributions on
M, and in the rest of paper assume
and
.
Definition 1 (see [
14])
. An image of under a smooth endomorphism will be called a generalized vector subbundle of or a singular distribution. Example 1. (a) Let on be of constant rank, , satisfyingwhere is adjoint endomorphism to P, i.e., , then we have an almost product structure on , see [3]. In this case, P and are orthoprojectors onto vertical distribution and horizontal distribution , which are complementary orthogonal and regular, but none of which is in general integrable. Many popular geometrical structures belong to the case of almost product structure, e.g., f-structure (i.e., ) and para-f-structure (i.e., ); such structures on singular distributions were considered in [13]. Almost product structures on statistical manifolds were studied in [11,12]. (b) Let be a singular Riemannian foliation of , i.e., the leaves are smooth, connected, locally equidistant submanifolds of M. e.g., [5]. Then is a singular distribution parameterized by the orthoprojector . In this article, we generalize Bochner’s technique to a Riemannian manifold endowed with a singular (or regular) distribution and a statistical type connection, continue our study [
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18] and generalize some results of other authors in [
9]. Recall that the Bochner technique works for skew-symmetric tensors lying in the kernel of the Hodge Laplacian
on a closed manifold: using maximum principles, one proves that such tensors are parallel, e.g., [
19]. Here
d is the exterior differential operator, and
is its adjoint operator for the
inner product. The elliptic differential operator
can be decomposed into two terms,
one is the Bochner Laplacian
, and the second term (depends linearly on the Riemannian curvature tensor) is called the Weitzenböck curvature operator on
-tensors
S,e.g., [
19].
Here
is a local orthonormal frame on
and
is the
-adjoint of the Levi–Civita connection ∇. Note that
ℜ reduces to
when evaluated on (0,1)-tensors, i.e.,
. According to the well-known formula
for the action of the curvature tensor
R on
-tensors, for
the formula from (
2) has the form
or, in coordinates,
. The Weitzenböck decomposition Formula (
1) allows us to extend the Hodge Laplacian to arbitrary tensors and is important in the study of interactions between the geometry and topology of manifolds.
Our work has an Introduction section and eight subsequent sections, the References include 25 items. In
Section 3, we generalize the notion of statistical structure for the case of distributions. In
Section 2,
Section 4 and
Section 5, following an almost Lie algebroid construction (
Section 8 with Appendix) we define the derivatives
and
, the modified divergence and their
adjoint operators on tensors, and modified Laplacians on tensors and forms. In
Section 6, making some assumptions about
P (which are trivial when
), we define the curvature type operator
of
. In
Section 7, we define the Weitzenböck type curvature operator on tensors, prove the Bochner–Weitzenböck type formula and obtain vanishing results. The assumptions that we use are reasonable, as illustrated by examples.
2. The Modified Covariant Derivative and Bracket
Here, we define the map
satisfying Koszul conditions, see (
48) in
Section 8,
called a
P-connection, which depends on
P and a
-tensor
K (called
contorsion tensor), but generally is not a linear connection on
M. Set
for
(the
P-gradient of
f). In particular, for
, we have the
P-connection
defined in [
13] by
which plays, in our study, the same role as the Levi–Civita connection in metric-affine geometry. Using
, we construct the
P-derivative of
-tensor
S, where
, as
-tensor
:
We use the standard notation . A tensor S is called P-parallel if .
A linear connection
on a Riemannian manifold
is metric if
, e.g., [
7]; in this case,
, where
is adjoint to
with respect to
g. This concept of metric-affine geometry can be applied for our
P-connections. Recall that
is metric, see [
13].
Proposition 1. The P-connection has a metric property, i.e., , if and only if the map , see (3), is skew-symmetric for any , that is . Proof. Since ∇ has the metric property, then , and the claim follows. □
Using (
3), define a skew-symmetric
P-bracket
by
By (
7) and according to definition (
49), first formula, in
Section 8, the
P-connection
is torsion free. According to (
47) in
Section 8, we use the bracket (
7) to define the following operator:
Note that the equality
corresponds to (
46), third formula, with
of a skew-symmetric bracket. The following result generalizes Proposition 3 in [
16].
Proposition 2. Condition is equivalent to the symmetry on covariant components of the -tensor , where ∇
is the Levi–Civita connection of g, that is Proof. Thus,
and the conclusion follows. □
Theorem 1. If (8) holds for a P-connection (3), then the endomorphism P and the bracket given in (7) define an almost algebroid structure on . Proof. This follows from Proposition 2, according to Definition 7 in
Section 8. □
Example 2. If (the Nijenhuis tensor of P) and (where and ∇
is the Levi–Civita connection of g), then the tensor (given in Proposition 2) is symmetric, thus the condition (8) holds. 3. The Statistical -Structure
A linear connection
on a Riemannian manifold
is called statistical if it is torsionless and tensor
is symmetric in all its entries, e.g., [
6,
9]. Such a pair
is called a statistical structure on
M. In this case,
equivalently, the statistical cubic form
is symmetric. We generalize this concept for singular distributions.
Definition 2. A P-connection on will be called statistical if the statistical cubic form is symmetric, or, equivalently, (10) holds. In this case, the pair is called a statistical P-structure on M. Proposition 3. If is a statistical P-connection for g then the (3,0)-tensor is symmetric in all its entries, i.e., the following Codazzi type condition holds: Proof. The theory of Codazzi tensors is well described in [
7]. By (
6), (
10) and the property
, we have
, thus all three terms in (
11) are equal. □
Since
for the Levi–Civita connection ∇, condition (
11) does not impose restrictions on
P and it is equivalent to the property “the cubic form
A is symmetric".
By (
9) and (
10), the
P-bracket of a statistical
P-structure does not depend on
K:
If
is statistical then
, see (
4), has the same
P-bracket and
. Proposition 2 yields the following result for a statistical
P-structure.
Corollary 1. For a statistical P-structure, condition , see (8), is equivalent to Proof. We can put
and reduce (
8) to a simpler view (
13). □
The notion of conjugate connection is important for statistical manifolds, see [
9,
20].
Definition 3. For a P-connection on , its conjugate P-connection is defined by the following equality: One may show that holds in general, thus, for a statistical P-connection the conjugate connection is given by . In turn, the statistical P-connection is conjugate to . Note that .
Remark 1. For a conjugate statistical P-connection , we can define the P-bracket by and the tensor . By (10), we have From Proposition 3, using Remark 1, we obtain the following corollaries.
Corollary 2. The pairs and are simultaneously statistical P-structures on M.
Corollary 3. A statistical P-structure on and its conjugate simultaneously define almost algebroid structures (see definition in Section 8) on . To simplify the calculations, for the rest of this article we will restrict ourselves to statistical
P-structures, see (
10), and to use the concept of almost Lie algebroid, assume (
13).
Define the vector field
. Using (
10), we get
For any
-form
, set
Throughout the paper, we use also the operator of contraction : if is a k-form and Y is a vector field, then is a -form given by , where .
Lemma 1 (see Lemmas 6.2 and 6.3 in [9]). For any local orthonormal frame and any k-form ω we haveand for any -form, , and an index be fixed, we have 4. The Modified Divergence
Define the
P-divergence of a vector field
X on
using a local orthonormal frame
by
The following result on the Stokes Theorem for distributions generalizes Lemma 1 in [
13].
Lemma 2. On a Riemannian manifold with a statistical P-structure, the conditionis equivalent to the following equality: Proof. Using this, definition (
3) and (
10), we have
From this and (
10) the claim follows. □
The following theorem is a direct consequence of Lemma 2.
Theorem 2. Let there be a statistical P-structure on a compact Riemannian manifold with boundary satisfies (17). Then for any we havewhere, as in the classical case, ν is the unit inner normal to . In particular, on a Riemannian manifold without boundary, for any with compact support, we have . Example 3. For the tensor where , the property (17) follows from . The same holds for a more general (1,2)-tensor with any . The following pointwise inner products and norms for
-tensors are used:
while, for
k-forms, we set
For
-product of compactly supported tensors on a Riemannian manifold, we set
The following
maps
-tensor, where
, to
-tensor:
and similarly for
and
. Using (
15), we relate
and
for any
k-form
:
Thus, .
The “musical" isomorphisms and are used for rank one tensors, e.g., if is a 1-form and then .
The
is related to the
P-
divergence (
16) of
by
To simplify the calculations and use the results of [
13] with
, we will also consider statistical
P-structures with stronger conditions than (
17),
In Example 4 in [
14] we showed that (
21)(a) is reasonable:
with
holds for an
f-structure with parallelizable kernel if and only if both distributions
and
are harmonic.
The next result generalizes Proposition 1 in [
13] and shows that
is
-adjoint to
on
k-forms.
Proposition 4. If conditions (21) hold for a statistical P-connection , then for any compactly supported k-form and -form , we have Proof. Define a compactly supported 1-form
by
It was shown in Proposition 1 in [
13] using assumption
that
To simplify further calculations, assume that
. Then, using (
19) and (
23), we obtain
where
is a local orthonormal frame on
M. By symmetry of
K and skew-symmetry of
, the last term in (
24) vanishes. By (
24), (
20) and Theorem 2 with
, we obtain (
22). □
The differential operator
is called the
P-
Bochner Laplacian for a statistical
P-structure. The following maximum principle generalizes Proposition 2 in [
13].
Proposition 5. Let condition (17) hold for a statistical P-connection on a closed Riemannian manifold . Suppose that ω is a k-form such that . Then, ω is P-parallel. Proof. We apply formula (
22),
hence,
. □
5. The Modified Hodge Laplacian
Using a statistical
P-connection
, we define the
exterior P-derivative of a differential form
by
For a
k-form
, the
-form
, see (
5),
is not skew-symmetric, but the form
is skew-symmetric. For a function
f on
M, we have
and
.
The next proposition (see also Remark 1) generalizes Proposition 5 in [
13] and shows that
.
Proposition 6. The is a 1-degree derivation, see Section 8, that is Proof. This is similar to the proof of Proposition 5 in [
13]. For the convenience of a reader we give it here. Using (
5) and (
25) with
, we obtain
Using (
7), we complete the proof of (
26). □
Put
for the
P-codifferential
. Similarly, we define
Proposition 7. On a closed with a statistical P-structure, the P-codifferential is -adjoint to , i.e., for any differential forms and we have Proof. We derive
as in the classical case. It appears as a
factor, that finally is absorbed in the definition of
. Using this and (
22), which requires (
17), we obtain (
27). □
Definition 4. Define the Hodge type Laplacians and for differential forms ω by A differential form ω is said to be P-harmonic if and (similarly for ).
Remark 2. The P-harmonic forms have similar properties as in the classical case, e.g., (Lemma 9.1.1 in [19]). Let condition (17) hold on a closed . For , using Proposition 7 and (28), we havethus, ω is P-harmonic (and similarly for -harmonic) if and only if and . Observe that, if and , then . It follows that Thus, if is P-harmonic and for some , then .
We also consider the Hodge type Laplacian related to
, defined in [
13] by
where
Similarly to Equations (58) and (59) in [
9], we can state the following
Lemma 3. For a statistical P-structure the following equalities are satisfied:where is the modified Lie derivative. Proof. From (
12) and (
26) we get equalities (
29) (a). Next, we obtain
For the second term, we have used (
14). From this and
the equalities (
29) (b) follow. Finally, we calculate the following:
From this and
equalities (
29) (c) follow. □
The following proposition extends result for regular case,
and
in [
21].
Proposition 8. Let be a complete non-compact Riemannian manifold endowed with a vector field X such that (or , where such that conditions (17) and hold. Then, . Proof. Let
be the
-form in
M given by
, i.e., the contraction of the volume form
in the direction of
. If
is an orthonormal frame on an open set
with coframe
, then
Since the
-forms
are orthonormal in
, we get
. Thus,
and
see (
18). There exists a sequence of domains
on
M such that
,
and
, see [
22]. Then
But since on M, it follows that on M. □
We call
the
P-
Laplacian for functions. Using (
3), we have
that generalizes Lemma 6.1 in [
9] for regular case,
.
Consider the following system of singular distributions on a smooth manifold
M:
,
, etc. The distribution
is said to be
bracket-generating of the step
if
, e.g., [
2]. Note that integrable distributions, i.e.,
, are not bracket-generating. The condition
means that
is constant along the (integral curves of)
; moreover, if
is bracket-generating then
on
M.
The next theorem extends the well-known classical result on subharmonic functions and generalizes Theorem 1 in [
13] (see also [
21] for
and
).
Theorem 3. Let conditions (17) hold for a statistical P-connection , and let satisfy either or . Suppose that any of the following conditions hold: (a) is closed;
(b) is complete non-compact, and belong to .
Then, ; moreover, if is bracket-generating, then .
Proof. This is as for Theorem 1 in [
13]. Set
, then
.
(a) Using Theorem 2, we get
. By the equality with
,
and again Theorem 2 with
, we get
, hence
.
(b) By Proposition 8 with
and condition
, we get
. Using (
31) with
, Proposition 8 with
and condition
, we get
, hence
. If the distribution
is bracket-generating, then using Chow’s theorem [
23] completes the proof for both cases. □
6. The Modified Curvature Tensor
Definition 5. Define the second P-derivative of an -tensor S as the -tensor Define the P-curvature tensor of bysee (49), second formula, with , and set The P-Ricci curvature tensor of is defined by the standard way: The formula of the action of
on
-tensor fields is similar to the formula of the action of
R (mentioned in the Introduction),
To simplify the calculations, in the rest of the article we assume that the tensor
K satisfies the following Codazzi type condition:
Here, . Note that is a skew-symmetric endomorphism for a statistical P-structure.
The following result generalizes Proposition 6 in [
16].
Proposition 9. For a statistical P-structure, we have
- 1.
; ;
hence, ,
- 2.
for any ; ;
- 3.
for every -tensor S we have - 4.
;
- 5.
, where , and .
Proof. 1. Since
, see definition of
, we have
From this and (
35) the first claim follows. Since
is skew-symmetric, then
is also skew-symmetric.
Similarly,
. By this and (
34), we get
Using
and the property (
10), we obtain
.
3. From the above and (
34) the claim follows.
4. The equality follows from (
32) and 1.
5. Since
, see 1., the first equality follows. For the second one, we use 2:
thus, the claim follows from the equality
. □
Similarly, we define the
P-curvature tensor of the conjugate
P-connection
,
The following curvature type tensor (depending on
P only) has been introduced in [
13]:
Since we assume
then
holds. By the above,
Thus,
and
when (
35) holds. The Ricci tensor of
was defined in [
13] by
Proposition 10. For a statistical P-structure, we have Thus, is symmetric if and only if is symmetric.
Proof. Using symmetry of
K, we have
From the above the claim follows. □
The endomorphism
P of
induces endomorphisms
and its adjoint
of
:
see [
13]. The curvature tensor
can be seen as a self-adjoint linear operator
on the space
of bivectors, called the
curvature operator, e.g., [
7,
19]. Similarly, we consider
as a linear operator or as a corresponding bilinear form on
. For this, using skew-symmetry of
for a statistical
P-connection, define a linear operator
on
by
and observe
(symmetry). Put
and
, i.e.,
The above
generalizes
, having the properties, see [
13],
Using known properties of
and property 4. of
, we have
Note that if
then
on
is not self-adjoint:
7. The Weitzenb öck Type Curvature Operator
Here, we use the
P-connection
to introduce the central concept of the paper: the Weitzenböck type curvature operator on tensors. We generalize the Weitzenböck curvature operator (
2), (see also [
9] for statistical manifolds when
, and [
13] for distributions when
) for the case of distributions with statistical structure.
Definition 6. Define the P-Weitzenböck curvature operator
on -tensors S over by The operators and are defined similarly using P-connections and .
For a differential form
, the
is skew-symmetric. Note that
reduces to
when evaluated on (0,1)-tensors, i.e.,
. For
using (
34), the formula from (
37) reads as
or, in coordinates,
.
The following lemma represents using and K.
Lemma 4. For a statistical P-structure, let (21) hold. Then we havewhere the operator acts on k-forms ω over bywhen , and when . Proof. Using 1. of Proposition 9 and (
36), we have
Substituting the above equalities in (
37) (and using linearity in the curvature) yields (
39) with
that is (
40) when
. □
The following theorem generalizes (
1) to the case of distributions and Theorem 2 in [
13] to the case of statistical
P-structure.
Theorem 4. For a statistical P-structure, let (21) hold. Then, the following Weitzenböck type decomposition formula is valid for any k-form ω: Proof. Similarly to the proof of Theorem 9.4.1 in [
19] for
, or Theorem 2 in [
13], we find
where
(see
Section 3), and
Thus, if (
17) is assumed, then using
, we have
Using assumption
, we reduce (
42) to a shorter form (
41). □
Next, we extend the well-known Bochner–Weitzenböck formula (and generalize Proposition 7 in [
13] where
) to the case of distributions with a statistical
P-structure.
Proposition 11. For a statistical P-structure, let (21) hold. Then the following modified Bochner–Weitzenböck formula for k-forms is valid: Proof. Applying Proposition 7 in [
13], (
29) (c) and (
30), we find
Using assumption
, we reduce the above to a shorter form (
43). □
Remark 3. (a) For
, we have
. Thus,
where
for any
.
(b) If
is a
P-harmonic
k-form on a closed manifold
M and
, then
,
and
, see (
43). By Theorem 3,
; moreover, if
is bracket-generating, then
on
M.
Example 4. For vector fields and 1-forms, reduces to the kind of usual Ricci curvature, see (33) and (38). We have for any ; thus, (41) reads as For every bivector
, we build a map
, given by
Since bivectors are generators of the vector space , we obtain in this way a map (similarly to algebraic curvature operator ).
The following lemma generalizes Lemma 3 in [
13].
Lemma 5. The map , where , is skew-symmetric: Proof. It suffices to check the statement for the generators. We have, using Proposition 9,
Thus, the statement follows. □
The associated
P-
curvature operator is given by
To simplify calculations, we assume that
is endowed with metric induced from
, e.g., [
13]. If
, then
Let
be an orthonormal base of skew-symmetric transformations such that
for
x in an open set
. By (
44), for any
-tensor
S,
The on can be decomposed using .
Lemma 6 (see Lemma 4 in [
13] where
)
. We have Proof. Using
and Lemma 5, we have:
Lemma 6 allows us to rewrite the operator (
37). The following result generalizes Proposition 8 in [
13].
Proposition 12. If S is a -tensor on , then In particular, if P is self-adjoint, then is self-adjoint too.
Proof. We follow similar arguments as in the proof of Lemma 9.3.3 in [
19]:
Thus, the first claim follows. Since
is self-adjoint, there is a local orthonormal base
of
such that
. Using this base, for any
-tensors
and
, we get
and, similarly, again using
,
Thus, the second claim follows. □
The following result generalizes Corollary 9.3.4 in [
19] and Proposition 10 in [
13].
Proposition 13. Let be a statistical P-structure on a manifold M.
(a) If for any -tensor S, then .
(b) Moreover, if for any -tensor S, where , then where a constant C depends only on the type of S.
Proof. Using (
45) and a local orthonormal base
of
such that
, we get
By conditions,
for all
, thus,
, and the first claim follows. There is a constant
depending only on the type of the tensor and
such that
, see Corollary 9.3.4 in [
19]. By conditions,
for all
. The above yields
– thus, the second claim. □
The following result extends Corollary 1 in [
13].
Theorem 5. Let (21) be satisfied for a statistical P-structure on a closed manifold M and for any k-form ω. Then any P-harmonic k-form on M is -parallel. Proof. By conditions and Proposition 13(a),
. By (
41), since
, we get
. By Proposition 5, we have
. □
The following result extends Theorem 3 with
and
in [
13].
Theorem 6. Let (21) be satisfied for a statistical P-connection on a complete non-compact and for some and all . Suppose that for any 1-form ω, where C is defined in Proposition 13(b). If for a P-harmonic 1-form ω, then . Proof. By conditions, Remark 3 and Proposition 13(b),
By (
43) with
, since
, see (
29), we get
. By Proposition 8 with
and
, we get
. Applying Theorem 3(b), we get
. □
Notice that, if in Theorems 5 and 6 is bracket-generating, then on M.
8. Supplement On the Almost Lie Algebroid Structure
Here, for the convenience of a reader, we briefly recall the construction of an almost Lie algebroid, following
Section 2 in [
13] (see also [
15,
16]). Lie algebroids (and Lie groupoids) constitute an active field of research in differential geometry. Roughly speaking, an (almost) Lie algebroid is a structure, where one replaces the tangent bundle
of a manifold
M with a new smooth vector bundle
of rank
k over
M (i.e., a smooth fiber bundle with fiber
) with similar properties. Lie groupoids are related to Lie algebroids similarly as Lie groups are related to Lie algebras, see [
24]. Lie algebroids deal with integrable distributions (foliations). Almost Lie algebroids are closely related to singular distributions, e.g., [
13,
14].
Definition 7. An anchor on is a morphism of vector bundles. A skew-symmetric bracket on is a map such thatfor all and . The anchor and the skew-symmetric bracket give an almost Lie algebroid structure on . Note that axiom (
46), third formula, is equivalent to vanishing of the following operator:
There is a bijection between almost Lie algebroids on
and the exterior differentials of the exterior algebra
,
17]; here
is the set of
k-forms over
. The exterior differential
, corresponding to the almost Lie algebroid structure
, is given by
where
and
for
. For
, we have
, where
and
. Recall that a skew-symmetric bracket defines uniquely an exterior differential
on
, and it gives rise to
- –
an almost algebroid if and only if for ;
- –
a Lie algebroid if and only if and for and .
Definition 8. A
-connection on
is a map
satisfying Koszul conditions
For a
-connection
on
, they define the torsion
and the curvature
by standard formulas
9. Conclusions
The main contribution of this paper is the further development of Bochner’s technique for a regular or singular distribution parameterized by a smooth endomorphism
P of the tangent bundle of a Riemannian manifold with linear connection. In particular, the main results of this paper, Theorems 1–6 are proved. We introduce the concept of a statistical
P-structure, i.e., a pair
of a metric
g and
P-connection
on
M with a totally symmetric contorsion tensor
K, see (
10), and assume (
13) for
P to use the concept of almost Lie algebroids. To generalize some geometrical analysis tools for distributions, we assume the additional conditions (
21) and (
35) for tensors
P and
K. We introduce and study a Weitzenböck type curvature operator on tensors and prove vanishing theorems on the null space of the Hodge type Laplacian on a distribution with a statistical type connection.
We delegate the following for further study: (a) generalize some constructions in the paper, e.g., statistical P-structures, divergence results, to more general almost algebroids or Lie algebroids; (b) use less restrictive conditions on K; (c) find more applications in geometry and physics.