i know what a Laplacian is but i do not know what is the author referring to when he talks about 'Closed Geodesic' i know what the Geodesic of a surface is
but i do not know what means 'closed' or why the geodesic of a torus would have the lenght (?) l_n =na a=radius ??
tiny-tim
Sep14-08, 06:10 AM
i know what a Laplacian is but i do not know what is the author referring to when he talks about 'Closed Geodesic' i know what the Geodesic of a surface is
but i do not know what means 'closed' or why the geodesic of a torus would have the lenght (?) l_n =na a=radius ??
Hi mhill! :smile:
"closed" simply means that the geodesic meets itself, so it has a finite length.
If the tangent of the angle to one axis is a rational multiple of the ratio of the axes, then it will meet itself. If irrational, it will go on for ever. :smile:
n is the number of turns "through the hole" before the geodesic joins up. The more turns, the longer the geodesic (though I must admit, I don't see why it's proportional :redface:).
mhill
Sep16-08, 08:46 AM
thanks tiny-tim, then you mean that a geodesic will be closed if for example x(a)=x(b) , so there is a point where the geodesic intersect itself.
and for the 'Selberg Trace' is there a pedestrian proof or a proof that a profane non-mathematician could understand ??
tiny-tim
Sep16-08, 08:52 AM
thanks tiny-tim, then you mean that a geodesic will be closed if for example x(a)=x(b) , so there is a point where the geodesic intersect itself.
Hi mhill! :smile:
"a point" is rather an understatement … it intersects itself everywhere, an infinite number of times. :wink:
and for the 'Selberg Trace' is there a pedestrian proof or a proof that a profane non-mathematician could understand ??
Sorry … I've no idea what a Selberg trace is. :redface:
mhill
Sep16-08, 08:55 AM
' Selberg Trace' is related to the fact that you can express a sum f(E_n )
with -\nabla f(x)= E_n f(x) using the 'length' of the closed geodesics
For a cylinder the closed geodesics are the circles perpendicular to the axis of the cylinder.
For a sphere the closed geodesics are the great circles.
tiny-tim
Sep17-08, 04:41 AM
For a cylinder the closed geodesics are the circles perpendicular to the axis of the cylinder.
For a sphere the closed geodesics are the great circles.
Hi HallsofIvy! :smile:
You missed the torus :wink::
i have been reading about 'Selberg Trace formula'
…
but i do not know what means 'closed' or why the geodesic of a torus would have the lenght (?) l_n =na a=radius ??