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Following Aubin's book "Some nonlinear problems in Riemannian geometry", we use the notation $$ |\nabla^r \psi|^2 = \nabla_{\alpha_1}\cdots \nabla_{\alpha_r}\psi \nabla^{\alpha_1}\cdots \nabla^{\alpha_r}\psi $$ where $\nabla_\alpha$ is the covariant derivative and $\nabla^\alpha :=g^{\alpha\beta} \nabla_\beta$.

The statement is the first part of the proof of proposition 2.11 on page 36. For simplicity, let me quote the statement for $r=1$ of the proposition:

Let $r=1$ and let $\psi\in C^{r+1}(M)$, then $$ |\nabla |\nabla^r \psi|| \le |\nabla^{r+1} \psi|. $$ To establish this inequality, it is sufficient to develop $$ (\nabla_\nu \nabla_\alpha \psi \nabla_\beta\psi - \nabla_\nu\nabla_\beta\psi\nabla_\alpha\psi) \times g^{\nu\mu} g^{\alpha \lambda} g^{\beta\gamma} (\nabla_\mu \nabla_\lambda \psi \nabla_\gamma\psi - \nabla_\mu\nabla_\gamma\psi\nabla_\lambda\psi) \ge 0. $$ We find $4|\nabla^{2} \psi|^2|\nabla \psi|^2 - |\nabla |\nabla \psi|^2|^2 \le 0$.

I must admit that I don't understand his line of deduction at all. Why is establishing the long inequality help? How do we deduce/use the last inequality?

Any help is very appreciated.

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The line Aubin says to "develop" is the inner product of the $(0, 3)$ tensor $T_{\nu\alpha\beta} = \nabla_\nu \nabla_\alpha \psi \nabla_\beta \psi - \nabla_\nu \nabla_\beta \psi \nabla_\alpha \psi$ with itself, i.e. $|T|^2_{g}$. That's why it's positive.

By "develop" Aubin means "distribute out the multiplication", which lands us at \begin{align} |T|^2_{g} &= g^{\nu \mu}g^{\alpha \lambda}g^{\beta \gamma} \nabla_\nu \nabla_\alpha \psi \nabla_\beta \psi \nabla_{\mu}\nabla_\lambda\psi\nabla_{\gamma}\psi \\ &- g^{\nu \mu}g^{\alpha \lambda}g^{\beta \gamma} \nabla_\nu \nabla_\alpha \psi \nabla_\beta \psi \nabla_\mu\nabla_\gamma \psi \nabla_\lambda \psi \\ &- g^{\nu \mu}g^{\alpha \lambda}g^{\beta \gamma} \nabla_\nu \nabla_{\beta} \psi \nabla_\alpha {\psi} \nabla_{\mu}\nabla_\lambda\psi\nabla_{\gamma}\psi \\ &+ g^{\nu \mu}g^{\alpha \lambda}g^{\beta \gamma} \nabla_\nu \nabla_{\beta} \psi \nabla_\alpha {\psi} \nabla_\mu\nabla_\gamma \psi \nabla_\lambda \psi. \end{align} We can recognize the first and last lines as $|\nabla \nabla \psi|^2|\nabla \psi|^2$.

For the other lines, it's easier to do the calculation backwards: note \begin{align} |\nabla |\nabla \psi|^2|^2 &= g^{ab} \nabla_a(g^{cd}\nabla_c\psi\nabla_d\psi) \nabla_b(g^{ef}\nabla_e\psi\nabla_f\psi)\\ \end{align} since I can switch $c,d$ in the inverse-metric we get the same term when the $\nabla_a$ hits either $\nabla_c$ or $\nabla_d$. Similarly with $\nabla_b$. So \begin{align} |\nabla |\nabla \psi|^2|^2 &= 4g^{ab}g^{cd}g^{ef} (\nabla_a\nabla_c\psi\nabla_d\psi) (\nabla_b\nabla_e\psi\nabla_f\psi)\\ \end{align} Now, you can match the terms above with the two terms which come with a minus sign in our big calculation of $|T|^2_g$. We find, $$|T|^2_g = 2|\nabla \nabla \psi|^2 |\nabla \psi|^2 - (1/2)|\nabla |\nabla \psi|^2|^2.$$ This proves the claim at the end.

To use the claim, let $f = |\nabla \psi|$ and note $$|T|^2_g = 2|\nabla \nabla \psi|^2 f^2 - (1/2)|\nabla f^2|^2$$ Now do the derivative, divided by $f^2$, and find what you want.

If you're reading this inequality for the first time, it may be useful to note the exact constant of $1$ in the inequality is sometimes important in geometric analysis for elliptic pde. It comes up when calculating the laplacian of norms of $u$ or norms of derivatives of $u$, assuming you know something about the laplacian of $u$. Say $u$ is a tensor, if we calculate $\Delta |u|^2$ we get a positive term $2|\nabla u|^2$. If you then use that to calculate $\Delta |u|$ you pick up a negative term (since $|u| = \sqrt{|u|^2}$ and $x \mapsto \sqrt{x}$ is concave) which is always beat by the positive term $2|\nabla u|^2$, using the inequality.

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  • $\begingroup$ Terrific! I didn't expect this kind of detailed answer, thank you very much for your time. You are correct, I am only a beginner in geometric analysis so I will take some time to digest this answer. Your remark is also very interesting. $\endgroup$
    – BigbearZzz
    Commented Apr 1, 2018 at 20:40
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    $\begingroup$ I would add that if you assume more symmetry such as a traceless condition then the constant can be less than 1. This is crucial in well known removable singularity theorems such as as Uhlenbeck’s for self dual Yang-Mills connections. $\endgroup$
    – Deane Yang
    Commented Apr 1, 2018 at 21:03

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