Flat manifold


In mathematics, a Riemannian manifold is said to be flat if its Riemann curvature tensor is everywhere zero. Intuitively, a flat manifold is one that "locally looks like" Euclidean space in terms of distances and angles, e.g. the interior angles of a triangle add up to 180°.
The universal cover of a complete flat manifold is Euclidean space. This can be used to prove the theorem of
that all compact flat manifolds are finitely covered by tori; the 3-dimensional case was proved earlier by.

Examples

The following manifolds can be endowed with a flat metric. Note that this may not be their 'standard' metric.

Dimension 1

Every one-dimensional Riemannian manifold is flat. Conversely, given that every connected one-dimensional smooth manifold is diffeomorphic to either or it is straightforward to see that every connected one-dimensional Riemannian manifold is isometric to one of the following :
Only the first and last are complete. If one includes Riemannian manifolds-with-boundary, then the half-open and closed intervals must also be included.
The simplicity of a complete description in this case could be ascribed to the fact that every one-dimensional Riemannian manifold has a smooth unit-length vector field, and that an isometry from one of the above model examples is provided by considering an integral curve.

Dimension 2

The five possibilities, up to diffeomorphism

If is a smooth two-dimensional connected complete flat Riemannian manifold, then must be diffeomorphic to the Möbius strip, or the Klein bottle. Note that the only compact possibilities are and the Klein bottle, while the only orientable possibilities are and
It takes more effort to describe the distinct complete flat Riemannian metrics on these spaces. For instance, even has many different flat product metrics, since one could take the two factors to have different radii; hence this space even has different flat product metrics which are not isometric up to a scale factor. In order to talk uniformly about the five possibilities, and in particular to work concretely with the Möbius strip and the Klein bottle as abstract manifolds, it is useful to use the language of group actions.

The five possibilities, up to isometry

Given let denote the translation given by Let denote the reflection given by Given two positive numbers consider the following subgroups of the group of isometries of with its standard metric.
These are all groups acting freely and properly discontinuously on and so the various coset spaces all naturally have the structure of two-dimensional complete flat Riemannian manifolds. None of them are isometric to one another, and any smooth two-dimensional complete flat connected Riemannian manifold is isometric to one of them.

Orbifolds

There are 17 compact 2-dimensional orbifolds with flat metric, listed in the article on orbifolds, that correspond to the 17 wallpaper groups.

Remarks

Note that the standard 'picture' of the torus as a doughnut does not present it with a flat metric, since the points furthest from the center have positive curvature while the points closest to the center have negative curvature. According to Kuiper's formulation of the Nash embedding theorem, there is a embedding which induces any of the flat product metrics which exist on but these are not easily visualizable. Since is presented as an embedded submanifold of any of the product structures on are naturally presented as submanifolds of Likewise, the standard three-dimensional visualizations of the Klein bottle do not present a flat metric. The standard construction of a Möbius strip, by gluing ends of a strip of paper together, does indeed give it a flat metric, but it is not complete.

Dimension 3

For the complete list of the 6 orientable and 4 non-orientable compact examples see Seifert fiber space.

Higher dimensions

Among all closed manifolds with non-positive sectional curvature, flat manifolds are characterized as precisely those with an amenable fundamental group.
This is a consequence of the Adams-Ballmann theorem, which establishes this characterization in the much more general setting of discrete cocompact groups of isometries of Hadamard spaces. This provides a far-reaching generalisation of Bieberbach's theorem.
The discreteness assumption is essential in the Adams-Ballmann theorem: otherwise, the classification must include symmetric spaces, Bruhat-Tits buildings and Bass-Serre trees in view of the "indiscrete" Bieberbach theorem of Caprace-Monod.