quasar_4 said:
What does it mean to say that, given one metric, there is a compatible Riemannian metric?
That is, is there a clear explanation of what "compatibility" means?
I'm just starting a DG course, so I really need a definition without too much rigor. Just looking for a way to understand it (kind of heuristic definition) until I have enough lingo down to understand the rigorous definitions floating around in papers...
Maybe if you tell us the context in which you saw it, or the original statement
that would help.
Otherwise, here are some comments which I hope will help:
A Riemannian metric is not a metric in the same sense as the
metric in a standard topological space. The Riemannian metric is actually a
metric tensor ( or, more accurately, a tensor field), while the standard use of
metric in a topological space X refers to a function d:XxX-->IR_+ U{0}
( i.e., assigns a distance to each pair of points) that satisfies the
axioms of a metric function ( and so that the topology generated by this metric
is usually expected to agree with the original topology of the space, if one is
given.)
A Riemannian metric (RM) allows you to define a geometry in each tangent space,
since an RM assigns to each tangent space T_pM in your manifold, a positive-
definite inner-product, (which is a bilinear map; linear in each tangent vector component,
i.e., a Riemannian metric assigns to each point p a bilinear map f:<X_p,Y_p>-->R
this is what a 2-tensor is: an assignment of bilinear maps. Sometimes this assignment
is needed to be smooth --or smoot, if you're from Brooklyn) and so that the inner-product is bounded in absolute value by 1 .
This last property is expressed as:
-1= < <X_p,Y_p> <=1
which allows you to define an abstract cosine function (since |cost|<=1 )
so that you can define angles in this tangent space. Once you can define
angles, you can talk about geometric properties in your tangent space,
i.e., if the <X_p,Y_p>=0 , then the two vectors are perpendicular, etc.
I hope I did not go far off on my response. Hope it helped.