Riemannian submersion

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In differential geometry, a branch of mathematics, a Riemannian submersion is a submersion from one Riemannian manifold to another that respects the metrics.

Let (M, g) and (N, h) be two Riemannian manifolds and

f:M\to N

a submersion.

Then f is a Riemannian submersion if and only if the isomorphism

df : \mathrm{ker}(df)^{\perp} \rightarrow TN

is an isometry.

[edit] Examples

An example of a Riemannian submersion arises when a Lie group G acts isometrically, freely and properly on a Riemannian manifold (M,g). The projection \pi: M \rightarrow N to the quotient space N = M / G equipped with the quotient metric is a Riemannian submersion.

[edit] Properties

The sectional curvature of the target space of a Riemannian submersion can be calculated from the curvature of the total space by O'Neill's formula:

K_N(X,Y)=K_M(\tilde X, \tilde Y)+\tfrac34|[\tilde X,\tilde Y]^\top|^2

where X,Y are orthonormal vector fields on N, \tilde X, \tilde Y their horizontal lifts to M, [ * , * ] is the Lie brackets and Z^\top is the projection of the vector field Z to the vertical distribution.

In particular the lower bound for the sectional curvature of N is at least as big as the lower bound for the sectional curvature of M.

[edit] Generalizations and variations