gvk said:
The knowing merely the gramatically correct name of something is the same as not knowing
anything at all about it. It seems, you did not get my point about "nonconformally flat".
I'll try to explain again and keep in mind that astronomia84 asked about specific 2-D metrics and deviations in the area of high dimentions can only be helpful if it demonstrates some general properties of the subject. Otherwise it's irrelevant, at best, and distracting for learning, at worst.
Quite honestly, you're determined to ignore my point that conformal flatness is a ubiquitous concept in physics. If you don't believe me, think about what you know about string theory. Consider the Brink-Di Vecchia-Howe action for a bosonic string:
S_{\textrm{BDH}} = <br />
-\frac{1}{4\pi\alpha}\int d\tau d\sigma<br />
(-\gamma)^{1/2} \gamma^{ab}\partial_a X^\mu\partial_b X^\nu\eta_{\mu\nu}
where X^\mu are fields on the world-sheet, \eta_{\mu\nu} is the D-dimensional Minkowski metric, and \gamma_{ab} is a metric on the world-sheet. The
entire damn point of bosonic string theory is that the world-sheet is conformally flat:
\gamma_{ab} = e^{2\phi}\eta_{ab}
Being able to choose this conformal gauge is then crucial in all of the nice results that you're familiar with in elementary bosonic string theory. Seriously, this is basic stuff.
gvk said:
Yes, "conformally flatness" is the wide using term. But, in the same time, its name contains ambiguity and the simple terms "conformal metric" or "conformally equivalent" metric sound more lucid.
No, no, no, no! There is no ambiguity in the name whatsoever. Conformal flatness is an implicit definition of an equivalence class of metrics, where the equivalence relation is defined by the existence of some smooth positive scalar function. This is not up for debate: the term is accepted by everyone I know and I have
never seen it disputed in the literature.
gvk said:
However, it's not a big deal.
You're correct: ultimately, it's not a big deal. However, for the purposes of the discussion at hand, it
is crucial since it demonstrates that what you're claiming is verifiably wrong.
gvk said:
The most important that this term is usefull only for the (n>2)-dimensional manifolds, where are not too much conformal metrics and variety of others. It does not make sense to use "conformally flatness" for 1- and 2-dimensional manifolds, because 1- and 2-dimensional manifolds are always "conformally flat".
This was not your point at all. Your claim was that conformal flatness is
always a meaningless term. I've demonstrated that this is untrue.
gvk said:
There are no nonconformal manifolds (is that gramatically correct?). This was my point.
It doesn't matter whether it's gramatically correct or not since talking about "nonconformal manifolds" is meaningless. You can talk only about a conformal relationship between
metric structures on a given manifold.
gvk said:
Now let's come back what Astronomia84 askedThere are 3 questions. First was answered by cristo:
"Calculate the Riemann curvature tensor, and show that it vanishes."
The answer to the second question is:
Euclidian or psuedo-Euclidian are the only flat spaces.
Third one was unanswered.
Your hints for the third question are very vague and did not help.
On the contrary. My hints were perfectly obvious and, more importantly, in keeping with the guidelines of the forum about homework questions.
gvk said:
Your deviation in the area of "a very famous relationship called the Lichnerowicz equation:" would be very interested for graduates, but nothing to do with those questions. By the way, you are not quite correct here too. The relation between scalar curvatures of two conformal spaces was received long before Lichnerowicz (1925) by Eisenhart.
Again, no. What I presented was a specific form of the conformal factor, \phi^{4/(m-2)} on an m-dimensional manifold. The appearance of the m in the exponent is crucial; Lichnerowicz chose a different, m-independent expression for the conformal factor, hence my reference to the equation as the "Lichnerowicz" equation. If you compare it to eq. (28.8) in the 1949 printing of Eisenhart's
Riemannian Geometry you'll see that the two expressions are fundamentally different. Please try to keep up.
Regardless, this thread has gone far enough off topic. Should you wish to argue the point more, please open a new thread.