Extrinsic and Intrinsic Curvature

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concepts of extrinsic and intrinsic curvature, exploring their definitions, mathematical contexts, and educational resources. Participants share insights on where to learn about these topics, including references to specific texts in mathematics and physics.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant inquires about the appropriate courses or texts for learning about extrinsic and intrinsic curvature, noting their background in physics.
  • Another participant describes extrinsic geometry as the study of curves and surfaces embedded in higher-dimensional spaces, while intrinsic geometry focuses on curvature without reference to higher dimensions.
  • A different participant suggests that extrinsic curvature is defined in terms of an embedding, providing an example involving the Gauss map and Jacobian determinants.
  • Participants discuss the difficulty of defining intrinsic curvature, mentioning the need for a scalar product on tangent spaces and the use of coordinate systems.
  • One participant references Gauss's Theorema Egregium, suggesting that extrinsic curvature can be an intrinsic invariant dependent on the Riemannian metric.
  • Another participant elaborates on the concept of a connection in Riemannian geometry, explaining covariant differentiation and its relation to curvature.
  • There is a discussion about the distinction between Gaussian curvature and Riemannian curvature, with examples involving cylinders and spheres to illustrate differences in intrinsic and extrinsic curvature.
  • One participant expresses confusion about the relationship between Riemannian curvature and Gaussian curvature, particularly in higher dimensions.
  • Another participant suggests the need for books on Riemannian and spinorial geometry to further understand these concepts.
  • A participant notes that the topic of curvature may not be widely covered in standard mathematics texts, indicating its specialized nature.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the definitions and relationships between various types of curvature, including Gaussian and Riemannian curvature. There is no consensus on the exact nature of these concepts, and some participants seek clarification on their understanding.

Contextual Notes

Some participants highlight limitations in existing texts and the specialized nature of the topic, suggesting that it may not be adequately covered in most mathematics courses.

quantumdude
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Those of you who know me know that my formal education is in physics, not mathematics. So hopefully you'll excuse the dumb question, but in what course would one learn about extrinsic and intrinsic curvature? I have books on tensors, differential forms, topology, analysis, and advanced calculus. And yet the only 2 books I own that cover this material are 2 books on general relativity.

What math books am I missing? :confused:
 
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I would call them Extrinsic and Intrinsic methods, because they have more to do with the point of view then the geometry itself.

Extrinsic geometry is the description of curves, survaces, and generalizations viewed as embedded in a space of higher dimension then themselves.

Intrinsic geometry is a way of describing curvature without appeal to higher dimensions, hence it is appropriate for GTR.

These are covered in many texts on advanced calculus (Courant or Spivak, I believe).
 
they sound like concepts from differential geometry to me tom. spivak's big set of volumes on diff geom, particularly volume 2, would do it. look for "curvature".

extrinsic curvature i would guess would be curvature defiend in terms of an embedding. for instance tha gauss map of a surface in R^3 sending a pointp to the unit notmal vector to the surface at p, translated to the origin. That defines a natural map from your surface to the surface of a standard surface of constant curvature, name;ly the unit sphere. then the way that map contortsa area locally, i.e. the jacobian determinant of the totalt differential at p, measires the curvature of the surface at p, extrinsically.


to measure curvature intrinsically is harder. one defiens a scalar product on the tanegnt spaces to the surface, either using an embedding to restrict the notion of scalar productf rom the ambient space, or simply imposes one locally via a coordinate system and then glues these together smoothly using a "partition of unity". Once you havea way to lengths of tangent vectors, you can define curvature "intrinsically" i.e. depending only on the notion of length of tangent vectors you have assumed given.

this fact is gauss' theorema egregium. there are elermentary notes available for free from the following website, by an expert on the topic: Theodore Shifrin, student of Chern.

http://www.math.uga.edu/~shifrin/


now i myself am not an expert on this topic. my ignorant opinion would be however that there is only one notion of curvature, but there are extrinsic and intrinsic ways of defining it. gauss theorem would be phrased as saying that extrinsically defined curvature is in fact an intrinsic invariant, dependent only on the riemannian metric. i think i am in agreement here with crosson's first sentence.
 
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a few more remarks, gleaned from perusing works of experts:

a "connection" is a method of differentiating vector fields on manifolds in the direction of tangent vectors. this differentiation is called "covariant" differentiation, [and is denoted by some authors, such as Nomizu, with a del symbol]. The fundamental lemma of riemannian geometry says there is a unique "symmetric" connection which is compatible with a given metric.

Then the curvature can be defined as the extent to which the SECOND covariant derivative fails to be symmetric.

Thus there is a method if defining curvature entirely from the datum of a riemannian metric, i.e. dot product on each tangent space.

In shifrins notes above, the covariant derivative of a surface in three space is given a very simple definition, as ordinary differentiation in R^3, followed by orthogonal projection of the derivative onto the tangent space of the surface, using of course the induced metric from the embedding.

the curvature, unlike the connection it seems, behaves like a "tensor". Moreover curvature can be viewed locally as matrix of 2 forms, just as the connection can be viewed locally as a matrix of one forms.

Anyway, since matrices have various invariants, trace, determinant, etc... so also one can apply these invariant polynomials to the curvature matrices, obtaining globally meaningful objects called "characteristic classes". they are named after famous people like whitney, chern, pontrjagin, euler etc...

[example: at a given point of the surface, there are two mutually orthogonal length minimizing curves, called geodesics, with respectively largest and smallest curvature, i.e. approximable by circles with smallest and largest radii. the product of these two curvatures is called the gauss curvature at the point. locally the curvature form of an embedded surface in R^3, is the product of the gaussian curvature, with the standard oriented area form. the integral of the gaussian curvature over the manifold is the euler characteristic. (times 2pi or something).]

recall the euler class is the primordial characteristic class. the general fact, called the gauss bonnet chern theorem is perhaps that the top chern (characteristic) class equals the euler class.

References: milnor: morse theory pages 43-54, milnor - stasheff: chracteristic classes, appendix C.
 
mathwonk said:
my ... opinion would be however that there is only one notion of curvature, but there are extrinsic and intrinsic ways of defining it. gauss theorem would be phrased as saying that extrinsically defined curvature is in fact an intrinsic invariant, dependent only on the riemannian metric.
Just to clear this one up for the OP, Gaussian curvature and Riemannian curvature are not the same concept, as is emphasized further here:
mathwonk said:
at a given point of the surface, there are two mutually orthogonal length minimizing curves, called geodesics, with respectively largest and smallest curvature, i.e. approximable by circles with smallest and largest radii. the product of these two curvatures is called the gauss curvature at the point.
Note that the one of the principle extrinsic curvatures at any point on the two-dimensional infinite standard cylinder of some radius r would be by definition 1/r, while the intrinsic curvature would be zero (There is no distortion in the parallel transport of a vector on a closed curve embedded in the cylinder). The intrinsic curvature is non-zero on a sphere, where parallel-transport of a vector on a closed curve does result in a disagreement. The motivation is that one does not need to reference an external space or embedding in order to measure the intrinsic curvature of a manifold (ie., measuring the 4-dimensional curvature of spacetime).
I'm probably less knowledgeable about the subject than mathwonk, but I always tend to bring up the cylinder and the sphere when talking about intrinsic vs. extrinsic curvature, so there it is. :biggrin:
 
hypermorphism, you have me a little puzzled. i thought that riemannian curvature was the generalization of gaussian curvature to higher dimensions. in particular that they agree in dimension 3. am i confused??

in particular the curvature of a cylinder is zero in anybody's definition, since one of the principal curvatures is zero.
 
So I think you need a books on Riemannian , spinorial geometry
 
Tom Mattson said:
Those of you who know me know that my formal education is in physics, not mathematics. So hopefully you'll excuse the dumb question, but in what course would one learn about extrinsic and intrinsic curvature? I have books on tensors, differential forms, topology, analysis, and advanced calculus. And yet the only 2 books I own that cover this material are 2 books on general relativity.

What math books am I missing? :confused:
Good question. I'd say that since this concept is a mathematical concept then it would/should be found in math texts. However all books are limited in scope and it seems that this topic is so rare that its not included in most, if not all, math texts.

Pete
 

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