On the geometric theory of the simplest singular variational problem for a $(n-1)$-fold integral
N. I. KABANOV
Submitted 1961-01-01 | SovietRxiv: ru-196101.90699 | Translated from Russian

Abstract Generated abstract

This note develops a geometric framework for a singular parametric variational problem defined by an invariant hypersurface hyperarea integral. It focuses on the case of singularity class one, interpreting the indicatrices as singular hypersurfaces in a centro-affine setting and deriving the associated differential equations, normalized quantities, and Pfaff forms. Under nondegeneracy and noncylindrical or nonconical assumptions, it proves uniqueness of an invariant linear connection in the corresponding composite manifold and states necessary and sufficient conditions for reducing the field of indicatrices, and hence the variational problem, to the case where the integrand is independent of the base variables.

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MATHEMATICS

N. I. KABANOV

ON THE GEOMETRIC THEORY OF THE SIMPLEST SINGULAR VARIATIONAL PROBLEM FOR AN \((n-1)\)-FOLD INTEGRAL

(Presented by Academician I. G. Petrovskii, 20 IV 1961)

Let us consider the variational problem for an \((n-1)\)-fold integral in parametric form:

\[ I=\int_{Q(t^a)}\cdots\int \Phi\left(\xi^\lambda,\xi_a^\lambda\right)\,dt^1\ldots dt^{n-1} \quad \left(\xi_a^\lambda=\frac{\partial \xi^\lambda}{\partial t^a}\right). \tag{1} \]

The requirement that the value of the integral (1) be invariant with respect to a transformation of the parameters,

\[ {}^{*}t^a=C^a(t^b) \quad \left(\operatorname{Det}|C_b^a|>0,\ C_b^a=\frac{\partial C^a}{\partial t^b}\right), \tag{2} \]

imposes a restriction on the integrand \(\Phi\):

\[ \Phi\left(\xi^\alpha,\xi_b^\alpha C_a^b\right) = \operatorname{Det}|C_a^b|\,\Phi\left(\xi^\alpha,\xi_c^\alpha\right). \tag{3} \]

It is easy to show that a function \(\Phi\) satisfying condition (3) has the form

\[ \Phi\left(\xi^\alpha,\xi_a^\lambda\right) = \mathfrak{H}\left(\xi^\lambda,\varepsilon_{\alpha\beta_1\ldots\beta_{n-1}} \xi_1^{\beta_1}\ldots \xi_{n-1}^{\beta_{n-1}}\right), \tag{4} \]

where the function \(\mathfrak{H}\) is positive and positively homogeneous of the first degree with respect to the second group of arguments, and \(\varepsilon_{\alpha\beta_1\ldots\beta_{n-1}}\) is the unit fundamental \(n\)-vector density of weight \(-1\). For the function (4), the integral (1) has the following form:

\[ \sigma=\int_{Q(t^a)}\cdots\int \mathfrak{H}\left(\xi^\lambda,\eta_\alpha\right)\,dt^1\ldots dt^{n-1} \quad \left(\eta_\alpha= \varepsilon_{\alpha\beta_1\ldots\beta_{n-1}} \xi_1^{\beta_1}\ldots \xi_{n-1}^{\beta_{n-1}}\right). \tag{5} \]

Interpreting the variables \(\xi^\alpha\) as coordinates of points in an \(n\)-dimensional geometric space \(X_n\), we shall call every hypersurface of the form

\[ \xi^\alpha=\xi^\alpha(t^a) \tag{6} \]

measurable if along it the integral (5) is meaningful. The value of the integral (5) for the hypersurface (6) is called its hyperarea\(^1\).

The concept of the indicatrix of the variational problem (5) is introduced essentially in the same way as for a variational problem expressed by an ordinary integral\(^2\). For fixed \(\xi^\lambda\), consider the equation

\[ \mathfrak{H}\left(\xi^\lambda,\eta_\alpha\right)=1, \tag{7} \]

which defines a hypersurface in the hyperplane coordinates \(x\) in the space \(\mathfrak{E}_n\) of all contravariant vector densities of weight \(+1\).

The variational problem (5) is called a singular variational problem of singularity class \(r\), if the rank of the matrix

\[ \left\| \mathfrak{H}^{\alpha\beta}\right\|,\qquad \left(\mathfrak{H}^{\alpha\beta}=\frac{\partial^2\mathfrak{H}}{\partial \eta_\alpha \partial \eta_\beta}\right) \tag{8} \]

is equal to \(n-1-r\). For \(r=0\) the variational problem (5) is called regular \((^1)\).

In the present note we shall be interested in the case when \(r=1\). Thus the indicatrices (7) will be hypersurfaces of the first class of singularity \((^2)\) in the composite manifold \((^3)\) \(\mathfrak{E}_n(X_n)\).

The remarks just made show that in considering the geometric theory of a singular variational problem for \((n-1)\)-fold integrals one must know the theory of a singular hypersurface of the 1st class of singularity in \(\mathfrak{E}_n\). Since \(\mathfrak{E}_n\), in a certain sense \((^1)\), is a centro-affine space, one may make use of the centro-affine theory of a singular hypersurface of the 1st class of singularity \((^2)\).

Assuming that the tangent hyperplanes of the singular hypersurface (7) do not pass through the center \(\mathfrak{E}_n\), its equation in hyperplane coordinates can be represented in parametric form:

\[ \eta_\alpha = l_\alpha(\eta^a)\qquad (a,b,\ldots=1,2,\ldots,n-2;\ \alpha,\ldots,\omega=1,2,\ldots,n). \tag{9} \]

The fundamental differential equations of the hypersurface (9) are written as follows \((^2)\):

\[ \nabla_a l_\alpha = l_{aa},\qquad \nabla_b l_{aa}=-h_{ba}l_\alpha-\mathfrak{G}_{ba}\mathfrak{R}_\alpha, \tag{10} \]

\[ \nabla_b \mathfrak{R}_\alpha =-\mathfrak{B}^{c}{}_{b}l_{\alpha c}-\mathfrak{B}_b l_\alpha, \tag{11} \]

where \(h_{ba}\) is a tensor, \(\mathfrak{G}_{ba}\), \(\mathfrak{B}^{c}{}_{b}\), \(\mathfrak{B}_a\) are \(\omega\)-densities of weights \(-\dfrac{2}{n-2}\) and \(\dfrac{2}{n-2}\). The \(n-1\) covariant vectors of the hypersurface \(l_\alpha\), \(l_{\alpha a}\) and the \(\omega\)-density \(\mathfrak{R}_\alpha\) of weight \(\dfrac{2}{n-2}\) are linearly independent. The covariant derivatives in (10) and (11) are taken with respect to the connection with coefficients

\[ G^c_{ba}=\mathfrak{G}^{cd}\mathfrak{n}^{\alpha}_{d}\partial_b l_{\alpha a}, \tag{12} \]

where \(\mathfrak{n}^{\alpha}_{a}\) is an \(\omega\)-density of weight \(-\dfrac{2}{n-2}\), satisfying the equations

\[ l_\alpha \mathfrak{n}^{\alpha}_{a}=0,\qquad l_{\alpha a}\mathfrak{n}^{\alpha}_{b}=\mathfrak{G}_{ab},\qquad \mathfrak{R}_\alpha \mathfrak{n}^{\alpha}_{a}=0, \tag{13} \]

and

\[ \mathfrak{G}_{ab}\mathfrak{G}^{bd}=\delta^d_a. \tag{14} \]

Suppose that for \(n>3\) the tensor \(h_{ba}\) does not degenerate,

\[ \mathfrak{h}=\operatorname{Det}|h_{ba}|\ne 0. \tag{15} \]

As is known \((^1)\), with each \(\mathfrak{E}_n\) one may associate a centro-affine space \(E_n\), and conversely; moreover, if densities in these spaces of covariant, contravariant valencies and weights respectively \(p,q,\mathfrak{k}\) and \(p,q,k\) are involved, then the equality holds:

\[ k=q-p-(n-1)\mathfrak{k}. \tag{16} \]

With the aid of the quantity

\[ \mathfrak{A}= \left( \frac{1}{(n-1)!}\, \mathfrak{E}^{\alpha\beta\alpha_1\ldots \alpha_{n-2}} \mathfrak{E}^{a_1\ldots a_{n-2}} l_\alpha \mathfrak{R}_\beta l_{\alpha_1 a_1}\cdots l_{\alpha_{n-2}a_{n-2}} \right)^2, \tag{17} \]

which is a scalar density of weight \(2\) in \(\mathfrak{E}_n\), and, according to (16), of weight \(-2(n-1)\) in \(E_n\) and of weight \(\dfrac{2n}{n-2}\) on the hypersurface, we shall put in corres—

quantities from \(\mathfrak{E}_n\) to the improper quantities from \(E_n\) (1) by means of the equalities

\[ \tilde l_\alpha = |\mathfrak h|^{\frac{n}{2(n-1)(n-2)}}\, \mathfrak A^{-\frac{1}{2(n-1)}}\,l_\alpha(\eta^a), \tag{18} \]

\[ {}^{*}\tilde l_{aa} = |\mathfrak h|^{\frac{n}{2(n-1)(n-2)}}\, \mathfrak A^{-\frac{1}{2(n-1)}}\,l_{aa}(\eta^b), \tag{19} \]

\[ \tilde N_\alpha = |\mathfrak h|^{-\frac{1}{2(n-1)}}\, \mathfrak A^{-\frac{1}{2(n-1)}}\, \mathfrak R_\alpha(\eta^b), \tag{20} \]

for which the derivational equations (10) and (11) take the form:

\[ \nabla_a \tilde l_\alpha = {}^{*}\tilde l_{aa} - \frac{n}{(n-1)(n-2)} A_a \tilde l_\alpha, \tag{21} \]

\[ \nabla_b {}^{*}\tilde l_{aa} = -\frac{n}{(n-1)(n-2)} A_b {}^{*}\tilde l_{aa} - h_{ba}\tilde l_\alpha - \tilde g_{ba}\tilde N_\alpha, \tag{22} \]

\[ \nabla_a \tilde N_\alpha = -\tilde V^c_{\cdot a}\,{}^{*}\tilde l_{ac} - \tilde W_a \tilde l_\alpha + \frac{1}{n-1} A_a \tilde N_\alpha, \tag{23} \]

where

\[ \tilde g_{ba} = |\mathfrak h|^{-\frac{1}{n-2}}\mathfrak G_{ba}, \tag{24} \]

\[ \tilde V^c_{\cdot a} = |\mathfrak h|^{-\frac{1}{n-2}}\mathfrak V^c_{\cdot a}, \tag{25} \]

\[ \tilde W_a = |\mathfrak h|^{-\frac{1}{n-2}}\mathfrak W_a, \tag{26} \]

\[ A_a=-\frac{1}{2}\nabla_a \ln |\mathfrak h|. \tag{27} \]

Alongside the tangent composite manifold of the first order \(E_n(X_n)\), consider the composite manifold \(\mathfrak E_n(X_n)\). The specification of the singular variational problem (5) entails the specification of a field of singular hypersurfaces in the composite manifold \(\mathfrak E_n(X_n)\). Assuming now that, in (9)—(27), all the quantities considered also depend on \(\xi^\alpha\), the equations of the field of singular hypersurfaces may be written in the form

\[ \eta_\alpha=l_\alpha(\xi^\lambda,\eta^a) \tag{28} \]

in hyperplane coordinates. Considering each hypersurface of the field (28) as \(X_{n-2}\), we arrive at consideration of the composite manifold \(X_{n+(n-2)}\). The principal task in studying this composite manifold is to find an invariant linear connection, determined by solving the Pfaff equations

\[ d\eta^a+\Gamma^a=0, \tag{29} \]

where \(\Gamma^a_\alpha(\xi^\lambda,\eta^b)\,d\xi^\alpha\) are the required Pfaff forms.

Corresponding to the quantities (18)—(20) and (28), introduce into consideration \(n\) independent Pfaff forms:

\[ \tilde l=\tilde l_\alpha(\xi^\lambda,\eta^b)\,d\xi^\alpha,\qquad {}^{*}\tilde l_a={}^{*}\tilde l_{aa}(\xi^\lambda,\eta^b)\,d\xi^\alpha,\qquad \tilde N=\tilde N_\alpha(\xi^\lambda,\eta^a)\,d\xi^\alpha . \tag{30} \]

Representing the operator of base differentiation \((^3)\) in the form of the symbolic equality

\[ D = {}^{*}\tilde l_a D^a + \tilde l\,D_{(n-1)} + \tilde N\,D_{(n)}, \tag{31} \]

and the required forms in the form of the expansion

\[ \Gamma^a = \gamma^{ab*}\tilde l_b + \gamma^a \tilde l + \delta^a \tilde N, \tag{32} \]

one can prove the following assertion.

If the indicatrices of the singular variational problem for an \((n-1)\)-fold integral are not cylindrical or conical surfaces, and their asymptotic cones are hypercones, while the tensor \(h_{ab}\) is nondegenerate, then the invariant linear connection in the composite manifold determined by the field of indicatrices, for \(n>3\), is uniquely determined from the conditions

\[ [\tilde l D\tilde l]=0,\qquad [\tilde N D\tilde l]=0,\qquad \underset{(n)}{D}\,\tilde g_{ab}=0, \tag{33} \]

where the square brackets denote the exterior product of forms in the sense of Cartan. For \(n=3\) the third condition is replaced by the condition

\[ \underset{(N)}{D}\,\mathfrak{W}^{(3)}=0, \tag{34} \]

where \(\mathfrak{W}^{(3)}\) is a scalar density of weight 3, replacing the \(w\)-density \(\mathfrak{W}_a\).

The linear connection in \(X_{n+(n-2)}\) found in this way can be used to find conditions for reducibility of the field of singular hypersurfaces in \(\mathfrak{E}_n(X_n)\) to a constant one, i.e. essentially the conditions for reducibility of the variational problem (5) to the case when the integrand contains no variables \(\xi^a\). The conditions found are indicated by the following

Theorem. In order that the field of singular hypersurfaces of the type under consideration in \(\mathfrak{E}_n(X_n)\) be reducible, by means of a suitable choice of coordinate systems, to a constant one, it is necessary and sufficient that, for \(n>3\), the linear connection in the composite manifold be a connection of zero curvature, that the fields of local objects \(G^c_{ab}, \tilde g_{ab}\), and \(h_{ab}\) be constant with respect to this connection, and that the scalar \(\varphi\) be identically equal to zero, where \(\varphi\) is the coefficient of the bracket \([\tilde l\tilde N]\) in the expansion of \([D\tilde l]\).

For \(n=3\) the indicated conditions are simplified.

Saratov State University
named after N. G. Chernyshevsky

Received
15 IV 1961

REFERENCES

¹ V. V. Wagner, Tr. seminara po vektorn. i tenzorn. analizu, 8, 144 (1950).
² V. V. Wagner, Matem. sborn., 21 (63), No. 3, 321 (1947).
³ V. V. Wagner, Tr. seminara po vektorn. i tenzorn. analizu, 8, 11 (1950).

Submission history

On the geometric theory of the simplest singular variational problem for a $(n-1)$-fold integral