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File:Reeb foliation half-torus POV-Ray.png
3-dimensional model of Reeb foliation

In mathematics (differential geometry), a foliation is an equivalence relation on an n-manifold, the equivalence classes being connected, injectively immersed submanifolds, all of the same dimension p, modeled on the decomposition of the real coordinate space Rn into the cosets x + Rp of the standardly embedded subspace Rp. The equivalence classes are called the leaves of the foliation.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> If the manifold and/or the submanifolds are required to have a piecewise-linear, differentiable (of class Cr), or analytic structure then one defines piecewise-linear, differentiable, or analytic foliations, respectively. In the most important case of differentiable foliation of class Cr it is usually understood that r ≥ 1 (otherwise, C0 is a topological foliation).<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> The number p (the dimension of the leaves) is called the dimension of the foliation and Template:Nowrap is called its codimension.

In some papers on general relativity by mathematical physicists, the term foliation (or slicing) is used to describe a situation where the relevant Lorentz manifold (a (p+1)-dimensional spacetime) has been decomposed into hypersurfaces of dimension p, specified as the level sets of a real-valued smooth function (scalar field) whose gradient is everywhere non-zero; this smooth function is moreover usually assumed to be a time function, meaning that its gradient is everywhere time-like, so that its level-sets are all space-like hypersurfaces. In deference to standard mathematical terminology, these hypersurface are often called the leaves (or sometimes slices) of the foliation.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> Note that while this situation does constitute a codimension-1 foliation in the standard mathematical sense, examples of this type are actually globally trivial; while the leaves of a (mathematical) codimension-1 foliation are always locally the level sets of a function, they generally cannot be expressed this way globally,<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref name="Lawson"/> as a leaf may pass through a local-trivializing chart infinitely many times, and the holonomy around a leaf may also obstruct the existence of a globally-consistent defining functions for the leaves. For example, while the 3-sphere has a famous codimension-1 foliation discovered by Reeb, a codimension-1 foliation of a closed manifold cannot be given by the level sets of a smooth function, since a smooth function on a closed manifold necessarily has critical points at its maxima and minima.

Foliated charts and atlasesEdit

In order to give a more precise definition of foliation, it is necessary to define some auxiliary elements.

File:Foliated chart.svg
A 3-dimensional foliated chart with n = 3 and q = 1. The plaques are 2-dimensional and the transversals are 1-dimensional.

A rectangular neighborhood in Rn is an open subset of the form B = J1 × ⋅⋅⋅ × Jn, where Ji is a (possibly unbounded) relatively open interval in the ith coordinate axis. If J1 is of the form (a,0], it is said that B has boundary<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

<math>\partial B = \left \{ \left(0,x^2, \ldots, x^n \right ) \in B \right \}.</math>

In the following definition, coordinate charts are considered that have values in Rp × Rq, allowing the possibility of manifolds with boundary and (convex) corners.

A foliated chart on the n-manifold M of codimension q is a pair (U,φ), where UM is open and <math>\varphi: U \to B_{\tau} \times B_{\pitchfork}</math> is a diffeomorphism, <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math> being a rectangular neighborhood in Rq and <math>B_{\tau}</math> a rectangular neighborhood in Rp. The set Py = φ−1(Bτ × {y}), where <math>y \in B_{\pitchfork}</math>, is called a plaque of this foliated chart. For each x ∈ Bτ, the set Sx = φ−1({x} × <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math>) is called a transversal of the foliated chart. The set τU = φ−1(Bτ × (<math>B_{\pitchfork}</math>)) is called the tangential boundary of U and <math>\partial_{\pitchfork}U</math> = φ−1((∂Bτ) × <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math>) is called the transverse boundary of U.<ref name="Foliations I p. 20">Template:Harvnb</ref>

The foliated chart is the basic model for all foliations, the plaques being the leaves. The notation Bτ is read as "B-tangential" and <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math> as "B-transverse". There are also various possibilities. If both <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math> and Bτ have empty boundary, the foliated chart models codimension-q foliations of n-manifolds without boundary. If one, but not both of these rectangular neighborhoods has boundary, the foliated chart models the various possibilities for foliations of n-manifolds with boundary and without corners. Specifically, if <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math> ≠ ∅ = ∂Bτ, then ∂U = τU is a union of plaques and the foliation by plaques is tangent to the boundary. If ∂Bτ ≠ ∅ = <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math>, then ∂U = <math>\partial_{\pitchfork}U</math> is a union of transversals and the foliation is transverse to the boundary. Finally, if <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math> ≠ ∅ ≠ ∂Bτ, this is a model of a foliated manifold with a corner separating the tangential boundary from the transverse boundary.<ref name="Foliations I p. 20"/>

File:Foliated chart boundaries.svg
(a) Foliation tangent to the boundary <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math> ≠ ∅ = ∂Bτ; (b) Foliation transverse to the boundary ∂Bτ ≠ ∅ = <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math>; (c) Foliation with a corner separating the tangential boundary from the transverse boundary <math>B_{\pitchfork}</math> ≠ ∅ ≠ ∂Bτ.

A foliated atlas of codimension q and class Cr (0 ≤ r ≤ ∞) on the n-manifold M is a Cr-atlas <math>\mathcal{U} = \{(U_{\alpha}, \varphi_{\alpha})\mid \alpha \in A\}</math> of foliated charts of codimension q which are coherently foliated in the sense that, whenever P and Q are plaques in distinct charts of <math>\mathcal{U}</math>, then PQ is open both in P and Q.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

A useful way to reformulate the notion of coherently foliated charts is to write for wUαUβ <ref name="Foliations I p. 25">Template:Harvnb</ref>

<math>\varphi_{\alpha} (w) = \left ( x_{\alpha} (w), y_{\alpha} (w) \right ) \in B_{\tau}^{\alpha} \times B_{\pitchfork}^{\alpha},</math>
<math>\varphi_{\beta} (w) = \left ( x_{\beta} (w), y_{\beta} (w) \right ) \in B_{\tau}^{\beta} \times B_{\pitchfork}^{\beta}.</math>

The notation (Uα,φα) is often written (Uα,xα,yα), with <ref name="Foliations I p. 25"/>

<math>x_{\alpha} = \left (x_{\alpha}^1, \dots,x_{\alpha}^p \right ), </math>
<math>y_{\alpha} = \left (y_{\alpha}^1, \dots,y_{\alpha}^q \right ). </math>

On φβ(UαUβ) the coordinates formula can be changed as <ref name="Foliations I p. 25"/>

<math>g_{\alpha \beta} \left ( x_{\beta},y_{\beta} \right ) = \varphi_{\alpha} \circ \varphi_{\beta}^{-1} \left ( x_{\beta}, y_{\beta} \right ) = \left ( x_{\alpha} \left ( x_{\beta}, y_{\beta} \right ), y_{\alpha} \left ( x_{\beta}, y_{\beta} \right ) \right ).</math>
File:Two plaques meeting.svg
Plaques of Uα each meet two plaques of Uβ.

The condition that (Uα,xα,yα) and (Uβ,xβ,yβ) be coherently foliated means that, if PUα is a plaque, the connected components of PUβ lie in (possibly distinct) plaques of Uβ. Equivalently, since the plaques of Uα and Uβ are level sets of the transverse coordinates yα and yβ, respectively, each point zUαUβ has a neighborhood in which the formula

<math>y_\alpha = y_\alpha(x_\beta, y_\beta) = y_\alpha(y_\beta)</math>

is independent of xβ.<ref name="Foliations I p. 25"/>

The main use of foliated atlases is to link their overlapping plaques to form the leaves of a foliation. For this and other purposes, the general definition of foliated atlas above is a bit clumsy. One problem is that a plaque of (Uα,φα) can meet multiple plaques of (Uβ,φβ). It can even happen that a plaque of one chart meets infinitely many plaques of another chart. However, no generality is lost in assuming the situation to be much more regular as shown below.

Two foliated atlases <math>\mathcal{U}</math> and <math>\mathcal{V}</math> on M of the same codimension and smoothness class Cr are coherent <math>\left ( \mathcal{U} \thickapprox \mathcal{V} \right )</math> if <math>\mathcal{U} \cup \mathcal{V}</math> is a foliated Cr-atlas. Coherence of foliated atlases is an equivalence relation.<ref name="Foliations I p. 25"/>

File:Regular foliated atlas.svg
Sample charts in a regular foliated atlas.

Plaques and transversals defined above on open sets are also open. But one can speak also of closed plaques and transversals. Namely, if (U,φ) and (W,ψ) are foliated charts such that <math>\overline{U}</math> (the closure of U) is a subset of W and φ = ψ|U then, if <math>\varphi(U) = B_{\tau} \times B_{\pitchfork},</math> it can be seen that <math>\psi|\overline{U}</math>, written <math>\overline{\varphi}</math>, carries <math>\overline{U}</math> diffeomorphically onto <math>\overline{B}_{\tau} \times \overline{B}_{\pitchfork}.</math>

A foliated atlas is said to be regular if

  1. for each α ∈ A, <math>\overline{U}_{\alpha}</math> is a compact subset of a foliated chart (Wα,ψα) and φα = ψα|Uα;
  2. the cover {Uα | α ∈ A} is locally finite;
  3. if (Uα,φα) and (Uβ,φβ) are elements of the foliated atlas, then the interior of each closed plaque P ⊂ <math>\overline{U}_{\alpha}</math> meets at most one plaque in <math>\overline{U}_{\beta}.</math> <ref name="Foliations I p. 27">Template:Harvnb</ref>

By property (1), the coordinates xα and yα extend to coordinates <math>\overline{x}_{\alpha}</math> and <math>\overline{y}_{\alpha}</math> on <math>\overline{U}_{\alpha}</math> and one writes <math>\overline{\varphi}_{\alpha} = \left (\overline{x}_{\alpha},\overline{y}_{\alpha} \right ).</math> Property (3) is equivalent to requiring that, if UαUβ ≠ ∅, the transverse coordinate changes <math>\overline{y}_{\alpha} = \overline{y}_{\alpha} \left ( \overline{x}_{\beta}, \overline{y}_{\beta} \right )</math> be independent of <math>\overline{x}_{\beta}.</math> That is

<math>\overline{g}_{\alpha \beta} = \overline{\varphi}_{\alpha} \circ \overline{\varphi}_{\beta}^{-1} : \overline{\varphi}_{\beta} \left ( \overline{U}_{\alpha} \cap \overline{U}_{\beta} \right ) \rightarrow \overline{\varphi}_{\alpha} \left ( \overline{U}_{\alpha} \cap \overline{U}_{\beta} \right )</math>

has the formula <ref name="Foliations I p. 27"/>

<math>\overline{g}_{\alpha \beta} \left ( \overline{x}_{\beta}, \overline{y}_{\beta} \right ) = \left ( \overline{x}_{\alpha} \left ( \overline{x}_{\beta}, \overline{y}_{\beta} \right ), \overline{y}_{\alpha} \left ( \overline{y}_{\beta} \right ) \right ).</math>

Similar assertions hold also for open charts (without the overlines). The transverse coordinate map yα can be viewed as a submersion

<math>y_{\alpha} : U_{\alpha} \rightarrow \mathbb{R}^q</math>

and the formulas yα = yα(yβ) can be viewed as diffeomorphisms

<math>\gamma_{\alpha \beta} : y_{\beta} \left ( U_{\alpha} \cap U_{\beta} \right ) \rightarrow y_{\alpha} \left ( U_{\alpha} \cap U_{\beta} \right ).</math>

These satisfy the cocycle conditions. That is, on yδ(UαUβUδ),

<math>\gamma_{\alpha \delta} = \gamma_{\alpha \beta} \circ \gamma_{\beta \delta}</math>

and, in particular,<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

<math>\gamma_{\alpha \alpha} \equiv y_{\alpha} \left ( U_{\alpha} \right ),</math>
<math>\gamma_{\alpha \beta} = \gamma_{\beta \alpha}^{-1}.</math>

Using the above definitions for coherence and regularity it can be proven that every foliated atlas has a coherent refinement that is regular.<ref name="Foliations I p. 29">Template:Harvnb</ref>

Foliation definitionsEdit

Several alternative definitions of foliation exist depending on the way through which the foliation is achieved. The most common way to achieve a foliation is through decomposition reaching to the following

File:Foliation definition.svg
Decomposition through the coordinates function x : URn.

Definition. A p-dimensional, class Cr foliation of an n-dimensional manifold M is a decomposition of M into a union of disjoint connected submanifolds {Lα}α∈A, called the leaves of the foliation, with the following property: Every point in M has a neighborhood U and a system of local, class Cr coordinates x=(x1, ⋅⋅⋅, xn) : URn such that for each leaf Lα, the components of ULα are described by the equations xp+1=constant, ⋅⋅⋅, xn=constant. A foliation is denoted by <math>\mathcal{F}</math>={Lα}α∈A.<ref name="Lawson">Template:Harvnb</ref>

The notion of leaves allows for an intuitive way of thinking about a foliation. For a slightly more geometrical definition, a Template:Mvar-dimensional foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> of an Template:Mvar-manifold Template:Mvar may be thought of as simply a collection Template:Math of pairwise-disjoint, connected, immersed Template:Mvar-dimensional submanifolds (the leaves of the foliation) of Template:Mvar, such that for every point Template:Mvar in Template:Mvar, there is a chart <math>(U,\varphi)</math> with Template:Mvar homeomorphic to Template:Math containing Template:Mvar such that every leaf, Template:Math, meets Template:Mvar in either the empty set or a countable collection of subspaces whose images under <math>\varphi</math> in <math>\varphi (M_a \cap U)</math> are Template:Mvar-dimensional affine subspaces whose first Template:Math coordinates are constant.

Locally, every foliation is a submersion allowing the following

Definition. Let M and Q be manifolds of dimension n and qn respectively, and let f : MQ be a submersion, that is, suppose that the rank of the function differential (the Jacobian) is q. It follows from the Implicit Function Theorem that ƒ induces a codimension-q foliation on M where the leaves are defined to be the components of f−1(x) for xQ.<ref name="Lawson" />

This definition describes a dimension-Template:Mvar foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> of an Template:Mvar-dimensional manifold Template:Mvar that is a covered by charts Template:Math together with maps

<math>\varphi_i:U_i \to \mathbb{R}^n</math>

such that for overlapping pairs Template:Math the transition functions Template:Math defined by

<math>\varphi_{ij} =\varphi_j \varphi_i^{-1}</math>

take the form

<math>\varphi_{ij}(x,y) = (\varphi_{ij}^1(x),\varphi_{ij}^2(x,y))</math>

where Template:Mvar denotes the first Template:Mvar = Template:Math coordinates, and Template:Mvar denotes the last Template:Mvar co-ordinates. That is,

<math>\begin{align}

\varphi_{ij}^1:{} &\mathbb{R}^q\to\mathbb{R}^q \\ \varphi_{ij}^2:{} &\mathbb{R}^n\to\mathbb{R}^p \end{align}</math> The splitting of the transition functions φij into <math>\varphi_{ij}^1(x)</math> and <math>\varphi_{ij}^2(x,y)</math> as a part of the submersion is completely analogous to the splitting of <math>\overline{g}_{\alpha \beta}</math> into <math>\overline{y}_{\alpha} \left ( \overline{y}_{\beta} \right )</math> and <math> \overline{x}_{\alpha} \left ( \overline{x}_{\beta}, \overline{y}_{\beta} \right )</math> as a part of the definition of a regular foliated atlas. This makes possible another definition of foliations in terms of regular foliated atlases. To this end, one has to prove first that every regular foliated atlas of codimension q is associated to a unique foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> of codimension q.<ref name="Foliations I p. 29"/>

As shown in the proof, the leaves of the foliation are equivalence classes of plaque chains of length ≤ p which are also topologically immersed Hausdorff Template:Mvar-dimensional submanifolds. Next, it is shown that the equivalence relation of plaques on a leaf is expressed in equivalence of coherent foliated atlases in respect to their association with a foliation. More specifically, if <math>\mathcal{U}</math> and <math>\mathcal{V}</math> are foliated atlases on M and if <math>\mathcal{U}</math> is associated to a foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> then <math>\mathcal{U}</math> and <math>\mathcal{V}</math> are coherent if and only if <math>\mathcal{V}</math> is also associated to <math>\mathcal{F}</math>.<ref name="Foliations I p. 26"/>

It is now obvious that the correspondence between foliations on M and their associated foliated atlases induces a one-to-one correspondence between the set of foliations on M and the set of coherence classes of foliated atlases or, in other words, a foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> of codimension q and class Cr on M is a coherence class of foliated atlases of codimension q and class Cr on M.<ref name="Foliations I p. 31">Template:Harvnb</ref> By Zorn's lemma, it is obvious that every coherence class of foliated atlases contains a unique maximal foliated atlas. Thus,

Definition. A foliation of codimension q and class Cr on M is a maximal foliated Cr-atlas of codimension q on M.<ref name="Foliations I p. 31"/>

In practice, a relatively small foliated atlas is generally used to represent a foliation. Usually, it is also required this atlas to be regular.

In the chart Template:Math, the stripes Template:Math match up with the stripes on other charts Template:Math. These submanifolds piece together from chart to chart to form maximal connected injectively immersed submanifolds called the leaves of the foliation.

If one shrinks the chart Template:Math it can be written as Template:Math, where Template:Math, Template:Math is homeomorphic to the plaques, and the points of Template:Math parametrize the plaques in Template:Math. If one picks Template:Math in Template:Math, then Template:Math is a submanifold of Template:Math that intersects every plaque exactly once. This is called a local transversal section of the foliation. Note that due to monodromy global transversal sections of the foliation might not exist.

The case r = 0 is rather special. Those C0 foliations that arise in practice are usually "smooth-leaved". More precisely, they are of class Cr,0, in the following sense.

Definition. A foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is of class Cr,k, r > k ≥ 0, if the corresponding coherence class of foliated atlases contains a regular foliated atlas {Uα,xα,yα}α∈A such that the change of coordinate formula

<math>g_{\alpha \beta}(x_\beta, y_\beta) = ( x_\alpha( x_\beta, y_\beta), y_\alpha ( y_\beta)).</math>

is of class Ck, but xα is of class Cr in the coordinates xβ and its mixed xβ partials of orders ≤ r are Ck in the coordinates (xβ,yβ).<ref name="Foliations I p. 31"/>

The above definition suggests the more general concept of a foliated space or abstract lamination. One relaxes the condition that the transversals be open, relatively compact subsets of Rq, allowing the transverse coordinates yα to take their values in some more general topological space Z. The plaques are still open, relatively compact subsets of Rp, the change of transverse coordinate formula yα(yβ) is continuous and xα(xβ,yβ) is of class Cr in the coordinates xβ and its mixed xβ partials of orders ≤ r are continuous in the coordinates (xβ,yβ). One usually requires M and Z to be locally compact, second countable and metrizable. This may seem like a rather wild generalization, but there are contexts in which it is useful.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>

HolonomyEdit

Let (M, <math>\mathcal{F}</math>) be a foliated manifold. If L is a leaf of <math>\mathcal{F}</math> and s is a path in L, one is interested in the behavior of the foliation in a neighborhood of s in M. Intuitively, an inhabitant of the leaf walks along the path s, keeping an eye on all of the nearby leaves. As they (hereafter denoted by s(t)) proceed, some of these leaves may "peel away", getting out of visual range, others may suddenly come into range and approach L asymptotically, others may follow along in a more or less parallel fashion or wind around L laterally, etc. If s is a loop, then s(t) repeatedly returns to the same point s(t0) as t goes to infinity and each time more and more leaves may have spiraled into view or out of view, etc. This behavior, when appropriately formalized, is called the holonomy of the foliation.

Holonomy is implemented on foliated manifolds in various specific ways: the total holonomy group of foliated bundles, the holonomy pseudogroup of general foliated manifolds, the germinal holonomy groupoid of general foliated manifolds, the germinal holonomy group of a leaf, and the infinitesimal holonomy group of a leaf.

Foliated bundlesEdit

The easiest case of holonomy to understand is the total holonomy of a foliated bundle. This is a generalization of the notion of a Poincaré map.

File:Holonomy.svg
A cross section N and first return map f where M = S1 × D2 and N = D2.

The term "first return (recurrence) map" comes from the theory of dynamical systems. Let Φt be a nonsingular Cr flow (r ≥ 1) on the compact n-manifold M. In applications, one can imagine that M is a cyclotron or some closed loop with fluid flow. If M has a boundary, the flow is assumed to be tangent to the boundary. The flow generates a 1-dimensional foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math>. If one remembers the positive direction of flow, but otherwise forgets the parametrization (shape of trajectory, velocity, etc.), the underlying foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is said to be oriented. Suppose that the flow admits a global cross section N. That is, N is a compact, properly embedded, Cr submanifold of M of dimension n – 1, the foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is transverse to N, and every flow line meets N. Because the dimensions of N and of the leaves are complementary, the transversality condition is that

<math>T_y (M) = T_y(\mathcal{F}) \oplus T_y(N) \text{ for each } y\in N.</math>

Let yN and consider the ω-limit set ω(y) of all accumulation points in M of all sequences <math>\left \{\Phi_{t_k}(y)\right\}_{k=1}^\infty</math>, where tk goes to infinity. It can be shown that ω(y) is compact, nonempty, and a union of flow lines. If <math>z = \lim_{k \rightarrow \infty} \Phi_{t_k} \in \omega(y),</math> there is a value t* ∈ R such that Φt*(z) ∈ N and it follows that

<math>\lim_{k \to \infty} \Phi_{t_k + t^\ast} (y) = \Phi_{t^\ast}(z) \in N.</math>

Since N is compact and <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is transverse to N, it follows that the set {t > 0 | Φt(y) ∈ N} is a monotonically increasing sequence <math>\{\tau_k(y)\}_{k=1}^\infty</math> that diverges to infinity.

As yN varies, let τ(y) = τ1(y), defining in this way a positive function τCr(N) (the first return time) such that, for arbitrary yN, Φt(y) ∉ N, 0 < t < τ(y), and Φτ(y)(y) ∈ N.

Define f : NN by the formula f(y) = Φτ(y)(y). This is a Cr map. If the flow is reversed, exactly the same construction provides the inverse f−1; so f ∈ Diffr(N). This diffeomorphism is the first return map and τ is called the first return time. While the first return time depends on the parametrization of the flow, it should be evident that f depends only on the oriented foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math>. It is possible to reparametrize the flow Φt, keeping it nonsingular, of class Cr, and not reversing its direction, so that τ ≡ 1.

The assumption that there is a cross section N to the flow is very restrictive, implying that M is the total space of a fiber bundle over S1. Indeed, on R × N, define ~f to be the equivalence relation generated by

<math>(t,y) \sim_f (t-1,f(y)).</math>

Equivalently, this is the orbit equivalence for the action of the additive group Z on R × N defined by

<math>k \cdot (t,y) = (t - k,f^k(y) ),</math>

for each kZ and for each (t,y) ∈ R × N. The mapping cylinder of f is defined to be the Cr manifold

<math>M_f = (\mathbb{R} \times N)/{\sim_f}.</math>

By the definition of the first return map f and the assumption that the first return time is τ ≡ 1, it is immediate that the map

<math>\Phi : \mathbb{R} \times N \rightarrow M.</math>

defined by the flow, induces a canonical Cr diffeomorphism

<math>\varphi : M_f \rightarrow M.</math>

If we make the identification Mf = M, then the projection of R × N onto R induces a Cr map

<math>\pi : M \rightarrow \mathbb{R} / \mathbb{Z} = S^1</math>

that makes M into the total space of a fiber bundle over the circle. This is just the projection of S1 × D2 onto S1. The foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is transverse to the fibers of this bundle and the bundle projection Template:Pi, restricted to each leaf L, is a covering map Template:Pi : LS1. This is called a foliated bundle.

Take as basepoint x0S1 the equivalence class 0 + Z; so π−1(x0) is the original cross section N. For each loop s on S1, based at x0, the homotopy class [s] ∈ π1(S1,x0) is uniquely characterized by deg sZ. The loop s lifts to a path in each flow line and it should be clear that the lift sy that starts at yN ends at fk(y) ∈ N, where k = deg s. The diffeomorphism fk ∈ Diffr(N) is also denoted by hs and is called the total holonomy of the loop s. Since this depends only on [s], this is a definition of a homomorphism

<math>h : \pi_1(S^1,x_0) \rightarrow \operatorname{Diff}^{\,r}(N),</math>

called the total holonomy homomorphism for the foliated bundle.

Using fiber bundles in a more direct manner, let (M,<math>\mathcal{F}</math>) be a foliated n-manifold of codimension q. Let Template:Pi : MB be a fiber bundle with q-dimensional fiber F and connected base space B. Assume that all of these structures are of class Cr, 0 ≤ r ≤ ∞, with the condition that, if r = 0, B supports a C1 structure. Since every maximal C1 atlas on B contains a C subatlas, no generality is lost in assuming that B is as smooth as desired. Finally, for each xB, assume that there is a connected, open neighborhood UB of x and a local trivialization

<math>\begin{matrix}

\pi^{-1}(U) & \xrightarrow{\varphi} & U\times{F} \\ \scriptstyle{\pi} \Bigg\downarrow & {\qquad} & \Bigg\downarrow{\scriptstyle{p}} \\ U & \xrightarrow{\text{id}} & U \end{matrix} </math> where φ is a Cr diffeomorphism (a homeomorphism, if r = 0) that carries <math display="inline"> \mathcal{F} \mid \pi^{-1}(U) </math> to the product foliation {U × {y}}y ∈ F. Here, <math display="inline"> \mathcal{F} \mid \pi^{-1}(U) </math> is the foliation with leaves the connected components of L ∩ π−1(U), where L ranges over the leaves of <math>\mathcal{F}</math>. This is the general definition of the term "foliated bundle" (M,<math>\mathcal{F}</math>,π) of class Cr.

<math>\mathcal{F}</math> is transverse to the fibers of π (it is said that <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is transverse to the fibration) and that the restriction of π to each leaf L of <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is a covering map π : LB. In particular, each fiber Fx = Template:Pi−1(x) meets every leaf of <math>\mathcal{F}</math>. The fiber is a cross section of <math>\mathcal{F}</math> in complete analogy with the notion of a cross section of a flow.

The foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> being transverse to the fibers does not, of itself, guarantee that the leaves are covering spaces of B. A simple version of the problem is a foliation of R2, transverse to the fibration

<math>\pi : \mathbb{R}^2 \rightarrow \mathbb{R},</math>
<math>\pi(x,y) = x,</math>

but with infinitely many leaves missing the y-axis. In the respective figure, it is intended that the "arrowed" leaves, and all above them, are asymptotic to the axis x = 0. One calls such a foliation incomplete relative to the fibration, meaning that some of the leaves "run off to infinity" as the parameter xB approaches some x0B. More precisely, there may be a leaf L and a continuous path s : [0,a) → L such that limtaπ(s(t)) = x0B, but limtas(t) does not exist in the manifold topology of L. This is analogous to the case of incomplete flows, where some flow lines "go to infinity" in finite time. Although such a leaf L may elsewhere meet π−1(x0), it cannot evenly cover a neighborhood of x0, hence cannot be a covering space of B under Template:Pi. When F is compact, however, it is true that transversality of <math>\mathcal{F}</math> to the fibration does guarantee completeness, hence that <math display="inline">(M,\mathcal{F},\pi)</math> is a foliated bundle.

There is an atlas <math>\mathcal{U}</math> = {Uα,xα}α∈A on B, consisting of open, connected coordinate charts, together with trivializations φα : π−1(Uα) → Uα × F that carry <math>\mathcal{F}</math>|π−1(Uα) to the product foliation. Set Wα = π−1(Uα) and write φα = (xα,yα) where (by abuse of notation) xα represents xα <math>\circ</math> π and yα : π−1(Uα) → F is the submersion obtained by composing φα with the canonical projection Uα × FF.

The atlas <math>\mathcal{W}</math> = {Wα,xα,yα}αA plays a role analogous to that of a foliated atlas. The plaques of Wα are the level sets of yα and this family of plaques is identical to F via yα. Since B is assumed to support a C structure, according to the Whitehead theorem one can fix a Riemannian metric on B and choose the atlas <math>\mathcal{U}</math> to be geodesically convex. Thus, UαUβ is always connected. If this intersection is nonempty, each plaque of Wα meets exactly one plaque of Wβ. Then define a holonomy cocycle <math>\gamma = \left \{ \gamma_{\alpha \beta} \right \}_{\alpha,\beta \in A}</math> by setting

<math>\gamma_{\alpha \beta} = y_\alpha \circ y_\beta^{-1} : F \rightarrow F.</math>

ExamplesEdit

Flat spaceEdit

Consider an Template:Mvar-dimensional space, foliated as a product by subspaces consisting of points whose first Template:Math coordinates are constant. This can be covered with a single chart. The statement is essentially that Template:Math with the leaves or plaques Template:Math being enumerated by Template:Math. The analogy is seen directly in three dimensions, by taking Template:Math and Template:Math: the 2-dimensional leaves of a book are enumerated by a (1-dimensional) page number.

BundlesEdit

A rather trivial example of foliations are products Template:Math, foliated by the leaves Template:Math. (Another foliation of Template:Mvar is given by Template:Math.)

A more general class are flat Template:Mvar-bundles with Template:Math for a manifold Template:Mvar. Given a representation Template:Math, the flat Template:Math-bundle with monodromy Template:Mvar is given by <math>M=\left(\widetilde{B}\times F\right)/\pi_1B</math>, where Template:Math acts on the universal cover <math>\widetilde{B}</math> by deck transformations and on Template:Mvar by means of the representation Template:Mvar.

Flat bundles fit into the framework of fiber bundles. A map Template:Math between manifolds is a fiber bundle if there is a manifold F such that each Template:Math has an open neighborhood Template:Mvar such that there is a homeomorphism <math>\varphi:\pi^{-1}(U)\to U\times F</math> with <math>\pi = p_1 \varphi </math>, with Template:Math projection to the first factor. The fiber bundle yields a foliation by fibers <math>F_b:=\pi^{-1}(\{b\}), b\in B</math>. Its space of leaves L is homeomorphic to Template:Mvar, in particular L is a Hausdorff manifold.

CoveringsEdit

If Template:Math is a covering map between manifolds, and Template:Mvar is a foliation on Template:Mvar, then it pulls back to a foliation on Template:Mvar. More generally, if the map is merely a branched covering, where the branch locus is transverse to the foliation, then the foliation can be pulled back.

SubmersionsEdit

If Template:Math is a submersion of manifolds, it follows from the inverse function theorem that the connected components of the fibers of the submersion define a codimension Template:Mvar foliation of Template:Mvar. Fiber bundles are an example of this type.

An example of a submersion, which is not a fiber bundle, is given by

<math>\begin{cases} f:[-1,1]\times \mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R} \\f(x,y)=(x^2-1) e^y\end{cases}</math>

This submersion yields a foliation of Template:Math which is invariant under the Template:Math-actions given by

<math>z(x, y)= (x,y+n ), \quad \text{or} \quad z(x, y)=\left((-1)^nx, y\right)</math>

for Template:Math and Template:Math. The induced foliations of Template:Math are called the 2-dimensional Reeb foliation (of the annulus) resp. the 2-dimensional nonorientable Reeb foliation (of the Möbius band). Their leaf spaces are not Hausdorff.

Reeb foliationsEdit

Define a submersion

<math>\begin{cases} f:D^{n}\times \mathbb{R}\to \mathbb{R} \\ f(r,\theta,t):=(r^2-1)e^t\end{cases}</math>

where Template:Math are cylindrical coordinates on the Template:Mvar-dimensional disk Template:Math. This submersion yields a foliation of Template:Math which is invariant under the Template:Math-actions given by

<math>z(x,y)=(x,y+z)</math>

for Template:Math. The induced foliation of Template:Math is called the Template:Mvar-dimensional Reeb foliation. Its leaf space is not Hausdorff.

For Template:Math, this gives a foliation of the solid torus which can be used to define the Reeb foliation of the 3-sphere by gluing two solid tori along their boundary. Foliations of odd-dimensional spheres Template:Math are also explicitly known.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Lie groupsEdit

If Template:Mvar is a Lie group, and Template:Mvar is a Lie subgroup, then Template:Mvar is foliated by cosets of Template:Mvar. When Template:Mvar is closed in Template:Mvar, the quotient space Template:Mvar/Template:Mvar is a smooth (Hausdorff) manifold turning Template:Mvar into a fiber bundle with fiber Template:Mvar and base Template:Mvar/Template:Mvar. This fiber bundle is actually principal, with structure group Template:Mvar.

Lie group actionsEdit

Let Template:Mvar be a Lie group acting smoothly on a manifold Template:Mvar. If the action is a locally free action or free action, then the orbits of Template:Mvar define a foliation of Template:Mvar.

Linear and Kronecker foliationsEdit

If <math>\tilde{X}</math> is a nonsingular (i.e., nowhere zero) vector field, then the local flow defined by <math>\tilde{X}</math> patches together to define a foliation of dimension 1. Indeed, given an arbitrary point xM, the fact that <math>\tilde{X}</math> is nonsingular allows one to find a coordinate neighborhood (U,x1,...,xn) about x such that

<math>- \varepsilon < x^i < \varepsilon, \quad 1 \le i \le n,</math>

and

<math>\frac{\partial}{\partial x^1} = \tilde{X}\mid U.</math>

Geometrically, the flow lines of <math>\tilde{X} \mid U</math> are just the level sets

<math>x^i = c^i, \quad 2 \le i \le n,</math>

where all <math>|c^i| < \varepsilon.</math> Since by convention manifolds are second countable, leaf anomalies like the "long line" are precluded by the second countability of M itself. The difficulty can be sidestepped by requiring that <math>\tilde{X}</math> be a complete field (e.g., that M be compact), hence that each leaf be a flow line.

File:Linear torus.png
The linear foliation <math>\mathcal{\tilde{F}}</math> on R2 passes to the foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> on T2. a) the slope is rational (linear foliation); b) the slope is irrational (Kronecker foliation).
File:Irrational Rotation on a 2 Torus.png
Irrational rotation on a 2-torus.

An important class of 1-dimensional foliations on the torus T2 are derived from projecting constant vector fields on T2. A constant vector field

<math>\tilde{X} \equiv \begin{bmatrix}a \\ b \end{bmatrix}</math>

on R2 is invariant by all translations in R2, hence passes to a well-defined vector field X when projected on the torus Template:Math. It is assumed that a ≠ 0. The foliation <math>\mathcal{\tilde{F}}</math> on R2 produced by <math>\tilde{X}</math> has as leaves the parallel straight lines of slope θ = b/a. This foliation is also invariant under translations and passes to the foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> on T2 produced by X.

Each leaf of <math>\mathcal{\tilde{F}}</math> is of the form

<math>\tilde{L} = \{(x_0 + ta,y_0 + tb)\}_{t \in \mathbb{R}}.</math>

If the slope is rational then all leaves are closed curves homeomorphic to the circle. In this case, one can take a,bZ. For fixed tR, the points of <math>\tilde{L}</math> corresponding to values of tt0 + Z all project to the same point of T2; so the corresponding leaf L of <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is an embedded circle in T2. Since L is arbitrary, <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is a foliation of T2 by circles. It follows rather easily that this foliation is actually a fiber bundle π : T2S1. This is known as a linear foliation.

When the slope θ = b/a is irrational, the leaves are noncompact, homeomorphic to the non-compactified real line, and dense in the torus (cf Irrational rotation). The trajectory of each point (x0,y0) never returns to the same point, but generates an "everywhere dense" winding about the torus, i.e. approaches arbitrarily close to any given point. Thus the closure to the trajectory is the entire two-dimensional torus. This case is named Kronecker foliation, after Leopold Kronecker and his

Kronecker's Density Theorem. If the real number θ is distinct from each rational multiple of π, then the set {einθ | nZ} is dense in the unit circle.

A similar construction using a foliation of Template:Math by parallel lines yields a 1-dimensional foliation of the Template:Mvar-torus Template:Math associated with the linear flow on the torus.

Suspension foliationsEdit

A flat bundle has not only its foliation by fibres but also a foliation transverse to the fibers, whose leaves are

<math>L_f:= \left\{p\left(\tilde{b},f\right): \tilde{b}\in\widetilde{B}\right\}, \quad \mbox{ for }f\in F,</math>

where <math>p:\widetilde{B}\times F\to M</math> is the canonical projection. This foliation is called the suspension of the representation Template:Math.

In particular, if Template:Math and <math>\varphi:F\to F</math> is a homeomorphism of Template:Mvar, then the suspension foliation of <math>\varphi</math> is defined to be the suspension foliation of the representation Template:Math given by Template:Math. Its space of leaves is Template:Math, where Template:Math whenever Template:Math for some Template:Math.

The simplest example of foliation by suspension is a manifold X of dimension q. Let f : XX be a bijection. One defines the suspension M = S1 ×f X as the quotient of [0,1] × X by the equivalence relation (1,x) ~ (0,f(x)).

M = S1 ×f X = [0,1] × X

Then automatically M carries two foliations: <math>\mathcal{F}</math>2 consisting of sets of the form F2,t = {(t,x)~ : xX} and <math>\mathcal{F}</math>1 consisting of sets of the form F2,x0 = {(t,x) : t ∈ [0,1] ,x ∈ Ox0}, where the orbit Ox0 is defined as

Ox0 = {..., f−2(x0), f−1(x0), x0, f(x0), f2(x0), ...},

where the exponent refers to the number of times the function f is composed with itself. Note that Ox0 = Of(x0) = Of−2(x0), etc., so the same is true for F1,x0. Understanding the foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math>1 is equivalent to understanding the dynamics of the map f. If the manifold X is already foliated, one can use the construction to increase the codimension of the foliation, as long as f maps leaves to leaves.

The Kronecker foliations of the 2-torus are the suspension foliations of the rotations Template:Math by angle Template:Math

File:2-Hole Torus-cut.png
Suspension of 2-holed torus after cutting and re-gluing. a) Two-holed torus with the sections to be cut; b) the geometric figure after cutting with the four faces.

More specifically, if Σ = Σ2 is the two-holed torus with C1,C2 ∈ Σ the two embedded circles let <math>\mathcal{F}</math> be the product foliation of the 3-manifold M = Σ × S1 with leaves Σ × {y}, yS1. Note that Ni = Ci × S1 is an embedded torus and that <math>\mathcal{F}</math> is transverse to Ni, i = 1,2. Let Diff+(S1) denote the group of orientation-preserving diffeomorphisms of S1 and choose f1,f2 ∈ Diff+(S1). Cut M apart along N1 and N2, letting <math>N_i^{+}</math> and <math>N_i^{-}</math> denote the resulting copies of Ni, i = 1,2. At this point one has a manifold M' = Σ' × S1 with four boundary components <math>\left \{N_i^{\pm} \right \}_{i=1,2}.</math> The foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math> has passed to a foliation <math>\mathcal{F^{\prime}}</math> transverse to the boundary ∂M' , each leaf of which is of the form Σ' × {y}, yS1.

This leaf meets ∂M' in four circles <math>C_i^{\pm} \times \{y\} \subset N_i^{\pm}.</math> If zCi, the corresponding points in <math>C_i^{\pm}</math> are denoted by z± and <math>N_i^{-}</math> is "reglued" to <math>N_i^{+}</math> by the identification

<math>(z^{-},y) \equiv (z^{+},f_i(y)), \quad i = 1,2.</math>

Since f1 and f2 are orientation-preserving diffeomorphisms of S1, they are isotopic to the identity and the manifold obtained by this regluing operation is homeomorphic to M. The leaves of <math>\mathcal{F^{\prime}}</math>, however, reassemble to produce a new foliation <math>\mathcal{F}</math>(f1,f2) of M. If a leaf L of <math>\mathcal{F}</math>(f1,f2) contains a piece Σ' × {y0}, then

<math>L = \bigcup_{g \in G} \Sigma^{\prime} \times \{ g (y_0) \},</math>

where G ⊂ Diff+(S1) is the subgroup generated by {f1,f2}. These copies of Σ' are attached to one another by identifications

(z,g(y0)) ≡ (z+,f1(g(y0))) for each zC1,
(z,g(y0)) ≡ (z+,f2(g(y0))) for each zC2,

where g ranges over G. The leaf is completely determined by the G-orbit of y0S1 and can he simple or immensely complicated. For instance, a leaf will be compact precisely if the corresponding G-orbit is finite. As an extreme example, if G is trivial (f1 = f2 = idS1), then <math>\mathcal{F}</math>(f1,f2) = <math>\mathcal{F}</math>. If an orbit is dense in S1, the corresponding leaf is dense in M. As an example, if f1 and f2 are rotations through rationally independent multiples of 2π, every leaf will be dense. In other examples, some leaf L has closure <math>\bar{L}</math> that meets each factor {w} × S1 in a Cantor set. Similar constructions can be made on Σ × I, where I is a compact, nondegenerate interval. Here one takes f1,f2 ∈ Diff+(I) and, since ∂I is fixed pointwise by all orientation-preserving diffeomorphisms, one gets a foliation having the two components of ∂M as leaves. When one forms M' in this case, one gets a foliated manifold with corners. In either case, this construction is called the suspension of a pair of diffeomorphisms and is a fertile source of interesting examples of codimension-one foliations.

Foliations and integrabilityEdit

There is a close relationship, assuming everything is smooth, with vector fields: given a vector field Template:Mvar on Template:Mvar that is never zero, its integral curves will give a 1-dimensional foliation. (i.e. a codimension Template:Math foliation).

This observation generalises to the Frobenius theorem, saying that the necessary and sufficient conditions for a distribution (i.e. an Template:Math dimensional subbundle of the tangent bundle of a manifold) to be tangent to the leaves of a foliation, is that the set of vector fields tangent to the distribution are closed under Lie bracket. One can also phrase this differently, as a question of reduction of the structure group of the tangent bundle from Template:Math to a reducible subgroup.

The conditions in the Frobenius theorem appear as integrability conditions; and the assertion is that if those are fulfilled the reduction can take place because local transition functions with the required block structure exist. For example, in the codimension 1 case, we can define the tangent bundle of the foliation as Template:Math, for some (non-canonical) Template:Math (i.e. a non-zero co-vector field). A given Template:Mvar is integrable iff Template:Math everywhere.

There is a global foliation theory, because topological constraints exist. For example, in the surface case, an everywhere non-zero vector field can exist on an orientable compact surface only for the torus. This is a consequence of the Poincaré–Hopf index theorem, which shows the Euler characteristic will have to be 0. There are many deep connections with contact topology, which is the "opposite" concept, requiring that the integrability condition is never satisfied.

Existence of foliationsEdit

Template:Harvtxt gave a necessary and sufficient condition for a distribution on a connected non-compact manifold to be homotopic to an integrable distribution. Template:Harvs showed that any compact manifold with a distribution has a foliation of the same dimension.

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

Template:Manifolds