Aspects of overdetermined systems of partial differential equations in projective and conformal geometry
Abstract
This thesis discusses aspects of overdetermined systems of partial differential
equations (PDEs) in projective and conformal geometry. The first part deals with
projective differential geometry. A projective surface is a 2-dimensional smooth
manifold equipped with a projective structure i.e. a class of torsion-free affine
connections that have the same geodesics as unparameterised curves. Given any
projective surface we can ask whether it admits a torsion-free affine connection
(in its projective class) that has skew-symmetric Ricci tensor. This is equivalent
to solving a particular overdetermined system of semi-linear partial differential
equations. It turns out that there are local obstructions to solving the system
of PDEs in two dimensions. These obstructions are constructed out of local invariants
of the projective structure. We give examples of projective surfaces that
admit skew-symmetric Ricci tensor and examples that do not because of nonvanishing
obstructions. We relate projective surfaces admitting skew-symmetric
Ricci tensor to 3-webs in 2 dimensions. We also give examples of projective
structures in higher dimensions that admit skew-symmetric Ricci tensor. The
second part of the thesis deals with conformal differential geometry. On Mobius
surfaces introduced in [5], we can define an analogous overdetermined system of
semi-linear PDEs as in the projective case. This is called the scalar-flat Mobius
Einstein-Weyl equation and is conformally invariant. We derive local algebraic
constraints for Mobius surfaces to admit a solution to this equation and give local
obstructions. These obstructions are similarly constructed out of local conformal
invariants of the Mobius structure. Again we provide examples of Mobius surfaces
that admit a solution and examples that do not because of non-vanishing obstructions.
Finally, we also investigate the conformally Einstein equation on Mobius
surfaces and derive obstructions. In contrast to the previous two equations, the
conformally Einstein equation is linear.
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