Dragonfall
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What sort of structure must a manifold possesses in order to talk about minimal geodesics between two points on it? When can we extend the minimal geodesics indefinitely?
The discussion revolves around the conditions under which minimal geodesics can be extended indefinitely on manifolds, particularly focusing on closed (compact without boundary) Riemannian manifolds. Participants explore the implications of the Hopf-Rinow theorem, the uniqueness of geodesic extensions, and the relationship between geodesics and the topology of the manifold.
Participants express differing views on the uniqueness of geodesic extensions and the conditions under which they can fill a manifold. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the criteria for determining if a maximal geodesic is closed and the implications of dimension on geodesics.
Participants note that certain assumptions about the manifold's structure and properties are necessary for the discussion, and there are unresolved mathematical steps regarding the relationship between local and global properties of geodesics.
Dragonfall said:Given a minimal geodesic between two points, is there a unique way to extend it past the points? Indefinitely?
Dragonfall said:Can a geodesic really not fill a manifold for dimension reasons? What about space-filling curves?
Dragonfall said:Can a geodesic really not fill a manifold for dimension reasons? What about space-filling curves? Like Peano's space filling curve. A geodesic can self-intersect, and having it fill a space doesn't make it a homeomorphism.
The billiard ball problem is actually what motivated me to ask this. But I am still too uncomfortable with manifolds to fully understand your answers. I'm going to work on learning the basics some more.
mathwonk said:I guess any time the exponential map is surjective one onto a compact manifold, could look at the shape of a "fundamental polygon" in the tangent space, that maps almost isomorphically onto the manifold, and it may become a question related to the billiard table problem of when a ball struck returns to its original position, or whether the course of the ball is closed or not. But the billiard table here is a non euclidean multidimensional polyhedron.
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