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It is often used implicitly that the maps which associate to metrics curvature quantities (Riemann, Ricci, scalar curvature) and Differential operators like the Laplacian are analytic maps between certain $C^{k,\alpha}$ spaces.

This seems quite clear to me from local formulas. Even so, I would like to ask if there is a reference where this is explicitly mentioned or discussed.

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    $\begingroup$ Why do you want a reference if you've just given the proof? I imagine that this sort of things are discussed in Besse "Einstein Manifolds",(because I think that fact is used) but I couldn't find with a brief glance. $\endgroup$ Commented May 24, 2013 at 18:10
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    $\begingroup$ I'm curious about this. Probably I don't know what "analytic" means in this context. Could one of you explain how "analytic" is used in this setting? $\endgroup$
    – Deane Yang
    Commented May 24, 2013 at 19:59
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    $\begingroup$ This is not discussed in Besse's book. I had a look before. It is not explicitly mentioned in the Paper by Sun and Wang (on the Kähler-Ricci flow near a Kähler-Einstein metric) but I think analytic means that the map $g\mapsto scal_g$ is analytic between the Banach spaces C^{k,\alpha}\to C^{k-2,\alpha}$ if it is $C^{\infty}$ Gateaux differentiable and around each metric, there is a neighborhood where the power series converges to the functional. $\endgroup$ Commented May 27, 2013 at 7:40
  • $\begingroup$ @Deane Yang, I've added an explanation. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 4, 2013 at 18:13

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I find it strange that Besse does not discuss this! Here's my understanding of the issue:

Sun and Wang care about analyticity because they want to apply the Łojasiewicz--Simon inequality. This inequality was discovered in the finite dimensional setting by Łojasiewicz. Leon Simon later figured out how to use it in an amazing way to treat uniqueness of asymptotic limits of parabolic and elliptic problems (the original application was to the uniqueness of tangent cones at certain singularities of minimal surfaces and harmonic maps). Lately it has been applied to Ricci flow in a few places, including Sun--Wang.

The Łojasiewicz--Simon inequality was originally proven in L. Simon "Asymptotics for a class of nonlinear evolution equations, with applications to geometric problems" Ann. Math. 1983 http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=727703.

The key fact is that the Łojasiewicz inequality for finite dimensional analytic functions $f:\mathbb{R}^n\to \mathbb{R}$ says that there if $\nabla f (0)= 0$ and $f(0) = 0$ then is some neighborhood of $0$, say $U\subset \mathbb{R}^n$, some constants $C>0$ and $\theta\in(0,\frac 12)$ so that $$ |\nabla f(x)| \geq C|f(x)|^{1-\theta} $$ for $x \in U$. However, this is FALSE for $f$ merely smooth. It's fun to try to find a counterexample.


@Deane Yang, the basic idea behind this is as follows: suppose that $x(t)$ is the (negative) gradient flow of $f$ and $f \geq 0$ on $U$. Then, we claim that $x(t)$ converges to some $x_\infty$ in $U$ as long as $x(0) \in V$ (some smaller neighborhood of $0$ $U$).

To see this, we first claim that the Łojasiewicz inequality will be valid along the entire flow $x(t)$, as long as we start very close to $0$ $$ \frac{d}{dt} f(x(t))^{\theta} = \theta f^{\theta - 1} \nabla f(x(t)) \cdot \dot x(t) = -\theta f^{\theta - 1} |\nabla f(x(t))|^2 \leq -\theta C|\nabla f(x(t)) = -\theta C |\dot x(t)| $$ Integrate this from $0$ to $T$, so $$ f(x(T))^\theta - f(x(0))^\theta \geq - \theta C \int_0^T |\dot x(t)| $$ This shows that (as long as $f(x(0))$ was close enough to $0$) $x(t)$ cannot have too long of a length. Thus, shrinking $U$ to $V$ if necessary, we can control the length so that $x(t)$ cannot leave $U$. Thus, the Łojasiewicz inequality will be valid along all of $x(t)$.

Now, we can do a similar argument to get the convergence: $$ \frac{d}{dt} f(x(t))^{2\theta -1} = (1-2\theta) f(x(t))^{2\theta -2} |\nabla f(x(t))|^2 \geq C $$ Integrating this gives $$ f(x(t)) \leq Ct^{\frac{1}{2\theta -1}} $$ Now, you can combine the above two inequalities to get a bound on $\int_{T_1}^{T_2} |\dot x(t)|$ which is strong enough to prove convergence to some critical point of $f$.


Simon's argument basically reduces an infinite dimensional "analytic functional" to a finite dimensional piece (i.e. the kernel of the linearization) and then applies Łojasiewicz's result. The key is that this "reduction" is analytic. (In the Sun--Wang paper, there are two additional complications as compared to Simon's paper: (1) There is a gauge group and (2) The $\mu$ functional is an inf over $f$'s)

I think that the simplest definition of analyticity which is sufficient for your purposes is that a map $G:M\to N$ between Banach manifolds is real-analytic if for $x \in M$, there are coordinate neighborhoods $U$ of $x$ and $V$ of $G(x)$ so that $G:U\to V$ is a real analytic map between subsets of a Banach space. What does this mean? For $y\in U$ and $v \in T_yU$ small enough, we require that there are $G_k(y,v)\in V$ (depending in an appropriate way on $y$ and $v$, I'll say more in a minute) so that $$ G(y+\lambda v) = \sum_{k\geq 0\} G_k(y,v) \lambda^k $$ as a convergence sum in $V$. Furthermore we require uniform estimates on the $G_k$. See Simon's paper, p 529, for a version of this (He's only considering real analytic maps from a Banach space to $\mathbb{R}$, because in the end thats all we care about: we'd like to apply the Łojasiewicz inequality to some functional)

Then, as you say, it is obvious that e.g. scalar curvature is a real analytic map $Met^k(M)\to H^{k-2}(M)$, where $Met^k$ is the Sobolev space of "$k$-times differentiable" metrics (for $k$ large). A proof of this would go something like this: scalar curvature is built from the metric from a few pieces, e.g. covariant differentiating and tracing, and you might check that each of these pieces gives a real analytic map between the respective Banach manifolds, and then you might prove that the composition of real analytic maps is real analytic.


I can't seem to find a good reference.. You are right that it does not seem to be in Besse (although they implicitly use this fact in the section on "Moduli Spaces of Einstein Structures" when they say e.g. that the moduli space is an analytic variety. If you find anything, please let me know here, as it would be nice to know where its written down!

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My understanding is that for what is being asked here is much more elementary and does not need the Lowasiewicz inequality. Rather, it is a simple application of the implicit function theorem in the analytic category. See Analytic implicit function theorem for a discussion in the finite dimensional setting. One needs to generalize that to maps between Banach manifolds and that is done in an old Springer lecture notes volume of Lowasiewicz for example (but perhaps also in Lang or some other more elementary reference?)

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  • $\begingroup$ You can find it in Douady's thesis Annales Institut Fourier vol 16 pages 1 to 95 especially pages 13 to 15. For the finite dimensional case there is a proof in Serre's book Lie algebras and Lie groups Springer LNM 1500. The proof uses method of majorants . $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 23, 2015 at 19:11

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