2
$\begingroup$

Let $S$ be a symmetric $(0, 2)$ tensor on a Riemannian manifold $M$. Define $E_S : M \to \mathbb{Z}$ by $E_S(x) = \left(\text{the number of distinct eigenvalues of } S_x\right)$. I've seen the following claims in several papers (also see 16.10 in Besse's Einstein Manifolds):

  • $M_S \doteq \left\{x \in M \ \vert \ E_S \text{ is constant in a neighbourhood of } x \right\}$ is an open and dense subset of $M$
  • The eigenvalues of $S$ are distinct and smooth in each connected component $U$ of $M_S$.

I'm a having a hard time proving these facts in a rigorous enough manner (openness is clear, but I'm having a hard time with denseness). It "feels" true since in some sense the eigenvalues should be smooth, but I can't see how to formalize this precisely (smooth from where to where? how to prove smoothness?). I'd appreciate any help.

$\endgroup$
4
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ There is no way this is true using only smoothness. For instance take a compactly supported one form $\theta$ and consider $\theta^2$. However, if $S$ satisfies a nice enough PDE, then this should be some sort of unique continuation result. $\endgroup$
    – RBega2
    Commented Aug 29, 2023 at 21:42
  • 2
    $\begingroup$ @RBega2: You are not providing a counterexample. In what you say, the complementary of the set $M_S$ is the frontier of the support of $\theta$. Outside the support of $\theta$, $S$ only has one eigenvalue (namely zero) but this set is open so it provides a neighborhood for all its points. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 29, 2023 at 21:57
  • 3
    $\begingroup$ There certainly is something wrong with the second claim: If $S\equiv0$ and $\mathrm{dim}(M)>1$, then $M_S = M$ is open and connected (if $M$ is connected), but the eigenvalues of $S$ are not distinct. I think you are being careless about the statement of the second property. I think it should be something like "The $E_S$ distinct eigenvalues of $S$ on a connected component of $M_S$ are smooth". $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 29, 2023 at 22:54
  • $\begingroup$ @RobertBryant Thanks a lot! You're absolutely right. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 29, 2023 at 23:20

1 Answer 1

4
$\begingroup$

I claim that the function $E_S$ is lower semi-continuous, meaning that for any sequence $x_k \in M$ converging to some $x \in M$, $\lim_{k \to \infty} E_S(x_k) \geq E_S(x)$.

We want to show that the complement of $M_S$ has empty interior. Points $x$ in this complement are characterized by the fact that there exists a sequence of points $(x_k)_k$ converging to $x$ which is not eventually constant.

Assume by contradiction that there exists an open subset $U$ contained in $\overline{M_S}$.

Let $n = \max_{y \in U} E_S(y)$ (this max is finite because $E_S(y) \leq \dim(M)$. As $E_S$ is lower semi-continuous, the set $V = E_S^{-1}(n) \cap U = E_S^{-1}(n-1, \infty) \cap U$ is open and non-empty.

But all points in $V$ belong to $M_S$ as the number of distinct eigenvalues of $S$ is constant on $V$ and $V$ is open. This contradicts the fact that $\overline{M_S}$ has non-empty interior.

Let us now return to the lower semi-continuity of $E_S$. I guess this is more or less standard stuff. A nice way to see it is via Rouché's theorem.

Let me work in a coordinate chart.

Assume given a point $x_0 \in M$ and let $n_0 = E_S(x_0)$. Let $\lambda_1, \ldots, \lambda_{n_0}$ be the distinct eigenvalues of $S$ at $x_0$. You can consider small disjoint intervals $I_k$ centered at the eigenvalues and view them as the restriction to $\mathbb{R}$ of balls $B_1, \ldots B_k$ in the complex plane.

If $x$ is close enough to $x_0$, the characteristic polynomial $\chi_{S(x)}$ of $S$ at $x$ will be close (in the sup-norm over some large compact set encompassing all the balls) to $\chi_{S(x_0)}$. Hence, the number of eigenvalues in each ball $B_i$ fox $S(x)$ (counted with multiplicity) will be the same as for $S(x_0)$.

This means that locally, distinct eigenvalues cannot merge, i.e. $E_S(x) \geq E_S(x_0)$ for $x$ close enough to $x_0$.

Rouché's theorem is a very nice tool to prove continuity of the eigenvalues even assuming multiplicity. What you also see is that multiplicity of each of the eigenvalues are locally constant on $M_S$.

To prove differentiability of an eigenvalue $\lambda = \lambda(x)$ with multiplicity $k \geq 1$, the easiest way is to remark that the derivatives of the characteristic polynomial satisfy $\chi_{S(x)}^{(k-1)}(\lambda) = 0$ while $\chi_{S(x)}^{(k)}(\lambda) \neq 0$. So you can just apply the implicit function theorem to $(x, \lambda) \mapsto \chi_{S(x)}^{(k-1)}(\lambda)$.

Let me know if you need a more detailed answer.

$\endgroup$

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .