Let $M$ be a complete finite volume Riemannian manifold and $\gamma : \mathbb{R}^{\geq 0} \to M$ a geodesic. Suppose that $\mathrm{im}(\gamma)$ is dense. Is it equidistributed in the Riemannian measure? That is, does $$ \lim_{T \to +\infty} \frac{1}{T} \int_0^T f(\gamma(t)) \, dt = \frac{1}{\mathrm{vol}(M)} \int_M f \, \mathrm{d vol} $$ for every $f \in C_0(M)$? [False in general; true for Nilmanifolds. True a.e. in negative curvature, where the geodesic flow is ergodic. ]
Let now $N \subset M$ be an (immersed) submanifold and $\gamma$ a geodesic of $M$ which is contained densely in $N$. Is the submanifold $N \subset M$ totally geodesic? [False in general, though true for some variants in constant negative curvature. But what if "totally geodesic" is weakened to "minimal"?]
Added. Asaf's answer nonethtless begs a follow-up question to 1:
- (Revised). If there is a dense geodesic, must there also be an equidistributed one? Could it in fact be that almost every geodesic is then equidistributed? Does a single dense geodesic imply ergodic geodesic flow? And in particular: does one dense geodesic imply almost all geodesics dense?
[A similar revision of 2 would instead involve the condition that almost every geodesic of $M$ that is tangent to $N$ at some point is contained in $N$; but then it should follow trivially (I think) that $N$ is totally geodesic. ]
Note: There is an analogy with the equidistribution and Manin-Mumford theorems, due to Szpiro, Ullmo, and Zhang, for torsion points in abelian varieties $A/\bar{\mathbb{Q}}$: For a sequence of torsion points which is eventually outside of every torsion translate of an abelian subvariety, the Dirac masses at the Galois orbits converge to the normalized Haar measure on $A(\mathbb{C})$ (where an embedding $\bar{\mathbb{Q}} \hookrightarrow \mathbb{C}$ has been fixed). Here, I would be tempted to think of a geodesic as corresponding to a Galois orbit of torsion points (either minimizes an energy functional -- or a canonical height); and of a totally geodesic subvariety as corresponding to a Galois orbit of a translate of an abelian subvariety by a torsion point (note that in the basic case of a flat torus, the totally geodesic submanifolds are precisely the subtori). The analogy is probably only superficial, but I thought it could be worth pointing out (if only because it led me to asking this question).
Added later. One more (final) question along the line of 2.
In algebraic geometry, we have the following general fact: For $L$ a nef line bundle on a projective variety $X$, if $\deg_LC =0$ for a Zariski-dense set of curves $C \subset X$, then $\deg_LX = 0$. (Nef =non-negative intersection numbers, =non-negative on every curve). For if $\deg_LX > 0$, Riemann-Roch and the almost vanishing of the higher cohomology of powers of nef line bundles imply that $L$ is big, hence a power of $L$ is effective. We may also do this in an arithmetic setting.
In the analogy of the preceding note which led me to consider totally geodesic submanifolds, I was misled by the Manin-Mumford theorem, which is specific to commutative group varieties and fails even for algebraic dynamical systems. Instead, subvarieties of minimal height ought to be analogous to minimal immersed submanifolds: the images of harmonic isometric immersions (which include totally geodesic ones as a particular case, and coincide with the geodesics in dimension one). Considering the previous paragraph, then, does the following question make any sense: If the closure of a minimal submanifold happens to be an immersed submanifold, is this submanifold still minimal?
In the same vein: If we have a sequence of complex algebraic curves in $\mathbb{CP}^n$ (images of non-constant holomorphic maps from compact Riemann surfaces) whose supports converge to a compact real-analytic immersed submanifold $M \subset \mathbb{CP}^n$, must $M$ be a complex (algebraic) submanifold?