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?
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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