How Do Isometries of the n-Torus Relate to R^n?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Palindrom
  • Start date Start date
Palindrom
Messages
263
Reaction score
0
How does one start this kind of question? I'm completely stumped.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The set of all isometries on any riemannian manifold M forms a group called the isometry group on M. For R^n this is the set of all rigid motions each of which has the form f(x) = Ax + b where A is in O(n) and b is in R^n. For S^n this is the set of all orthagonal transformations, i.e. O(n). Now here is my guess. Since T^n = S^1 X ... X S^1 (n times) then perhaps it's isometry group is O(1) X ... X O(1) with the product group structure. If this fails perhaps you could use the fact that T^n is homeomorphic to R^n/Z^n. Good luck
 
First of all, thanks a lot for taking the time.

I'd already figured out that T^n being isometric to R^n/Z^n might be helpful. But it is true that in this case, every isometry of R^n/Z^n extends to an isometry of R^n?

This is actually what's bothering me.

I'll admit I hadn't thought of the S^1 X...X S^1 idea, but it looks like I have a similar problem in this case.
 
Lifting from torus to plane

Palindrom said:
I'd already figured out that T^n being isometric to R^n/Z^n might be helpful. But it is true that in this case, every isometry of R^n/Z^n extends to an isometry of R^n?

"Lift", not "extend". The textbook by Boothby, An Introduction to Differentiable Manifolds and Riemannian Geometry should help.

Chris Hillman
 

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
1K
Replies
36
Views
4K
Replies
2
Views
3K
Replies
16
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
3
Views
2K
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
5
Views
2K
Back
Top