1. Introduction and main results
The Yamabe flow
where $ R_{g(t)}$ is the scalar curvature of $ g(t)$ and
is the mean value of $ R_{g(t)}$ along $ M^{n}$ , it was introduced by R. Hamilton [Reference Hamilton1] and has become one of the standard tools of recent differential geometry. Yamabe solitons arise as self-similar solutions of (1).
Definition 1. A self-similar solution $g(t)$ of (1) is a Yamabe soliton if there exists a scalar factor $\alpha \;:\;[0,\varepsilon )\rightarrow (0,\infty )$ , $\varepsilon \gt 0$ , and a $1$ -parameter family $\{\psi _t\}$ of diffeomorphisms of $M^{n}$ such that
One gets
by substituting $ g(t)=\alpha (t)\psi _t^\ast (g_0)$ into (1) and evaluating the resulting expression at $ t=0$ , where $ \mathcal{L}_Xg$ is the Lie derivative of $ g$ with respect to the field $ X$ of directions associated with the $ 1$ -parameter family $ \{ \psi _t \}$ and $ \lambda =\alpha '(0)+r_{g}$ . Equation (2) is the fundamental equation of Yamabe solitons. Since their beginning, a lot of results were proved on the nature of Yamabe solitons. For example, Chow [Reference Chow2] proved that compact Yamabe solitons have constant scalar curvature (see also [Reference Di Cerbo and Disconzi3,Reference Hsu4]). Daskalopoulos and Sesum [Reference Daskalopoulos and Sesum5] proved that complete locally conformally flat Yamabe solitons with positive sectional curvature are rotationally symmetric and must belong to the conformal class of flat Euclidean space.
A new notion of soliton is born if one replaces the scalar curvature in (1) by functions of the higher order scalar curvatures. As is the case with any generalization, it is hoped that one recovers the old objects as particular instances of the new ones, while open up room for new and exciting phenomena to happen. In what follows, we give formal definitions and even before we state our main results, we examine a few examples. We included a section containing the lemmas that we have used in the text for the convenience of the reader and a separate section with the proofs of our statements can be found right after it.
The Riemann curvature tensor $\textrm{Rm}$ of $ (M^{n},g)$ admits the following decomposition
where $ W_g$ and $ A_g$ are the tensors of Weyl and Schouten, respectively, and $\bigcirc \,\!\!\!\!\!\!\wedge\;$ is the Kulkarni–Nomizu product of $ (M^{n},g)$ . Recall that the Schouten tensor is given by
The $ \sigma _k$ -curvature of $ g$ is defined as the $ k$ th elementary symmetric function of the eigenvalues $\lambda _{1},\dots,\lambda _{n}$ of the endomorphism $ g^{-1}A_g$ , that is,
Here, we set $\sigma _{0}(g)=1$ for convenience. A simple calculation shows that $\sigma _{1}(g)=\frac{R_g}{2(n-1)}$ , which indicates that the $\sigma _{k}$ -curvature is a reasonable substitute for the scalar curvature of $ (M^{n},g)$ in (1).
Guan and Guofang introduced [Reference Guan and Guofang6] the fully nonlinear flow
where
was defined as to make the flow preserve the quantities
where $u\in C^\infty (M)$ , $g=e^{-2u}g_0$ , and $g(t)=e^{-2tu}g_0$ . The convergence of the fully nonlinear flow was then proved under certain conditions to be satisfied by the eigenvalues of the Schouten tensor. The authors also provided geometric inequalities such as the Sobolev-type inequality in case $0\leqslant l\lt k\lt \frac{n}{2}$ , the conformal quasimass-integral-type inequality for $\frac{n}{2}\leqslant k\leqslant n$ , $1\leqslant l \lt k$ , and the Moser–Trudinger-type inequality for $k=\frac{n}{2}$ .
Bo et al. [Reference Bo, Ho and Sheng7] presented quotient Yamabe solitons as self-similar solutions of the flow (3) and stated rigidity results for the existence of such objects on top of locally conformally flat manifolds. For example, it was shown that any compact and locally conformally flat manifold with the structure of a quotient Yamabe soliton, where both $\sigma _k\gt 0$ and $\sigma _l\gt 0$ , must have constant quotient curvature $\frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}$ . Also, for the so-called gradient $k$ -Yamabe soliton ( $ l=0$ ), they proved that, for $ k\gt 1$ , any compact gradient $k$ -Yamabe soliton with negative constant scalar curvature has necessarily constant $\sigma _{k}$ -curvature. Almost Yamabe solitons were introduced by Barbosa and Ribeiro [Reference Barbosa and Ribeiro8] as generalizations of self-similar solutions of the Yamabe flow. Essentially, they allowed the parameter $\lambda$ in (2) to be a function on $M$ . The authors then stated rigidity results for almost Yamabe solitons on compact manifolds. We refer the reader to [Reference Barbosa and Ribeiro8–Reference Seko and Maeta11] for further information.
Catino et al. [Reference Catino, Mantegazza and Mazzieri12] proposed the study of conformal solitons. A conformal soliton is a Riemannian manifold $(M^{n},g)$ together with a nonconstant function $ f\in C^\infty (M)$ satisfying $\nabla ^2f=\lambda g$ for some $ \lambda \in \mathbb{R}$ . They provided classification results according to the number of critical points of $f$ . It should be noticed that solitons of Yamabe, $k$ -Yamabe, and quotient Yamabe types are examples of conformal solitons.
We introduce almost quotient Yamabe solitons in extension to the quotient Yamabe solitons.
Definition 2. A solution $ g(t)$ of (3) is an almost quotient Yamabe soliton if there exist a scalar factor $ \alpha \;:\;M\times [0,\varepsilon )\rightarrow (0,\infty )$ , $ \varepsilon \gt 0$ , and a $ 1$ -parameter family $ \{\psi _t\}$ of diffeomorphisms of $ M^{n}$ such that
Equivalently, $(M^{n},g)$ is an almost quotient Yamabe soliton if there exists a pair $X\in \mathfrak{X}(M)$ , $\lambda \in C^\infty (M)$ satisfying
We will write the soliton in (4) as $(M^{n}, g, X, \lambda )$ for the sake of simplicity. Following the terminology already in use with almost Yamabe solitons, a soliton $ (M^{n},g,X,\lambda )$ will be called:
-
a. expanding if $ \lambda \lt 0$ ,
-
b. steady if $ \lambda =0$ ,
-
c. shrinking if $ \lambda \gt 0$ and, finally,
-
d. indefinite if $ \lambda$ change signs on $ M^{n}$ .
Definition 3. An almost gradient quotient Yamabe soliton is an almost quotient Yamabe soliton $(M^{n},g,X,\lambda )$ such that $ X=\nabla f$ is the gradient field of a function $ f\in C^\infty (M)$ .
Since
it follows from (4) that an almost gradient quotient Yamabe soliton $(M^{n},g,\nabla f,\lambda )$ is characterized by the equation
Almost quotient Yamabe solitons, gradient or not, are regarded as trivial if their defining equation vanishes identically. Thus, $(M^{n},g,X,\lambda )$ is trivial if $\mathcal{L}_Xg=0$ and $(M^{n},g,\nabla f,\lambda )$ if $\nabla ^2 f=0$ . In either case, $\log{\frac{\sigma _k}{\sigma _l}}-\lambda =0$ . Let us take a look at a few examples.
Example 1. The product manifold $(\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{S}^{n},g=dt^2+g_{\mathbb{R}^n})$ alongside the function
is, for $ k=l=1$ , a trivial almost gradient quotient Yamabe soliton with $\lambda =0$ , since $\sigma _{1}(g^{-1}A_{g})=\frac{n}{2}$ and $\nabla ^{2}f=0$ .
Example 2. Identities
stand for the Ricci tensor, scalar curvature, and Schouten tensor, respectively, of the Euclidean sphere $ (\mathbb{S}^n,g_{\mathbb{S}^n})$ . Therefore, we have that
Consider the height function
on $ \mathbb{S}^n$ with respect to a given $ v\in \mathbb{S}^n$ . It then follows that
which shows that $(\mathbb{S}^{n},g_{\mathbb{S}^{n}}, \nabla h_{v},\lambda )$ is a compact almost quotient Yamabe soliton with
Example 3. On the hyperbolic space $(\mathbb{H}^{n},g_{\mathbb{H}^{n}})$ , we consider
to denote the Ricci tensor, scalar curvature, and Schouten tensor, respectively. Therefore, we have that
We consider the model $\mathbb{H}^{n}=\{x\in \mathbb{R}^{n,1}\;:\; \langle x,x\rangle _{0}=-1, x_{1}\gt 0\}$ of the hyperbolic space, where $\mathbb{R}^{n,1}$ denotes the Euclidean space $\mathbb{R}^{n+1}$ endowed with Lorentzian inner product $\langle x,x\rangle _{0}=-x_{1}^2+x_{2}^{2}+\dots +x_{n+1}^{2}$ . As in our previous example, we consider the height function
on $ \mathbb{H}^n$ with respect to a given $ v\in \mathbb{H}^n$ . Because
we conclude that $(\mathbb{H}^{n},g_{\mathbb{H}^{n}}, \nabla h_{v},\lambda )$ is an almost quotient Yamabe soliton with
as long as we have $ k\equiv l\pmod 2$ .
Example 4. Consider $ \mathbb{R}^n$ endowed with a metric tensor of the form
so given in cartesian coordinates $ x=(x_1,\ldots,x_n)$ of $ \mathbb{R}^n$ , where $ u_1,\ldots,u_n\in C^\infty (\mathbb{R}^n)$ . Then, the Ricci tensor of $ (\mathbb{R}^n,g)$ is given in [Reference Landau, Lifšic and and Landau13] by the formulas
where
and
for every $1\leqslant i,j,k,l\leqslant n$ . Assume that $n\geqslant 4$ . Also, let $ \tau$ be the $ n$ -cycle $ (1,2,3,\ldots,n)$ in the symmetric group $ S_n$ of degree $n$ . It turns out that by choosing functions
we simplify the situation quite a little bit as the Ricci tensor of $ (\mathbb{R}^n,g)$ ends up being a constant multiple of the metric, $ \textrm{Ric}_g=-g$ . Therefore, $ (\mathbb{R}^n,g)$ is a complete Einstein manifold and, as such, $ A_g=\frac{-1}{2(n-1)}g$ . Then, we have that
Because $ X=(0,1,\ldots,0,1)$ is a Killing field on $ (\mathbb{R}^n,g)$ we know that $ (\mathbb{R}^n,g,X,\lambda )$ is a trivial almost quotient Yamabe soliton whenever $ k\equiv l\pmod 2$ . It should be noticed that $ X$ is not a gradient field with respect to the metric $ g$ .
Any smooth vector field $ X$ on a compact Riemannian manifold $ (M^{n},g)$ can be written in the form
where $Y\in \mathfrak{X}(M)$ is divergence free and $h\in C^\infty (M)$ . In fact, by the Hodge-de Rham Theorem [Reference Warner14], we have that
Now, take $Y = (\delta \beta +\gamma )^{\sharp },\,\nabla h=(d\alpha )^{\sharp }$ and we are done. The function $ h$ is called the Hodge-de Rham potential of $ X$ . Our first theorem states the triviality of a compact almost quotient Yamabe soliton under certain integral assumptions.
Theorem 1. A compact almost quotient Yamabe soliton $(M^{n},g, X,\lambda )$ is trivial if one of the following assertions holds:
-
a) $\displaystyle \int _{M}e^{\lambda }\sigma _{l}\langle \nabla \lambda,X\rangle dv_{g}= -\int _{M}e^{\lambda }\langle \nabla \sigma _{l}, X\rangle dv_{g}$ , plus any of these:
-
i. $\nabla \textrm{Ric}_g=0$ ;
-
ii. $div\,{C_g}=0$ , where $C_g$ is the Cotton tensor of $(M^{n},g)$ ;
-
iii. $X=\nabla f$ is a gradient vector field;
-
-
b) $\displaystyle \int _{M}\langle \nabla h,X\rangle dv_{g}\leqslant 0$ , where $h$ is the Hodge-de Rham potential of $ X$ .
The next two corollaries deal with quotient Yamabe solitons ( $ \lambda$ is a real constant) and constitute direct applications of Theorem 1. In [Reference Bo, Ho and Sheng7], Bo et al. proved that $\sigma _k/\sigma _l$ must be constant on any compact and locally conformally flat quotient Yamabe soliton. We extend Bo’s result.
Corollary 1. Let $(M^{n},g, X,\lambda )$ be any compact quotient Yamabe soliton with a vanishing cotton tensor. Then, $\sigma _{k}/\sigma _{l}$ is constant and, as such, the soliton is trivial.
In [Reference Catino, Mantegazza and Mazzieri12], Catino et al. proved that any compact gradient $k$ -Yamabe soliton with a nonnegative Ricci tensor is trivial. Bo et al. [Reference Bo, Ho and Sheng7] also proved that any compact gradient $k$ -Yamabe soliton with constant negative scalar curvature is trivial. In [Reference Tokura and Batista15], it was shown that any compact gradient $k$ -Yamabe soliton must be trivial. We extend all these results at once.
Corollary 2. Let $(M^{n},g, \nabla f,\lambda )$ be any compact quotient gradient Yamabe soliton. Then, $\sigma _k/\sigma _l$ is constant and, as such, the soliton is trivial.
Yet another triviality result holds for almost quotient Yamabe solitons if one drops compacity on $ M^{n}$ in favor of a decay condition on the norm of the soliton field $ X$ .
Theorem 2. Let $(M^{n},g,X,\lambda )$ be a complete and noncompact almost quotient Yamabe soliton satisfying
where $d$ is the distance function with respect to $g$ and $B_{r}(x_{0})$ is the ball of radius $r\gt 0$ centered at $x_{0}$ . Then, $(M^{n},g,X,\lambda )$ is trivial.
Next, we give a sufficient condition for a compact almost quotient gradient Yamabe soliton to be isometric with an Euclidean sphere.
Theorem 3. Let $(M^{n},g, \nabla f,\lambda )$ be a nontrivial compact quotient gradient almost Yamabe soliton with constant scalar curvature $R_g=R\gt 0$ . Then $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric to the Euclidean sphere $\mathbb{S}^{n}(\sqrt{r})$ , $ r=R/n(n-1)$ . Moreover, up to a rescaling, the potential $f$ is given by $f=h_{v}+c$ where $h_{v}$ is the height function on the sphere and $c$ is a real constant.
Another situation in which an almost gradient quotient Yamabe soliton must be isometric with an Euclidean sphere is described below.
Theorem 4. Let $(M^{n},g, \nabla f,\lambda )$ be a nontrivial compact quotient gradient almost Yamabe soliton with constant $\sigma _{k}$ -curvature, for some $k=2,\dots,n$ , and $A_g\gt 0$ . Then, $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric with an Euclidean sphere $\mathbb{S}^{n}$ .
Remark 1. A similar result concerning almost Ricci solitons can be found in [Reference Barros and Evangelista16].
Finally, we investigate the structure of noncompact almost quotient gradient Yamabe solitons satisfying reasonable conditions on its potential function and both Ricci and scalar curvatures.
Theorem 5. Let $(M^{n},g, \nabla f,\lambda )$ be a nontrivial and noncompact almost quotient gradient Yamabe soliton. Assume that
Then, $(M^{n},g)$ has constant scalar curvature $R_g=R\leqslant 0$ and $f$ has at most one critical point. Moreover, we have that:
-
a) If $R=0$ , then $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric with a Riemannian product manifold $(\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{F}^{n-1},dt^2+g_{\mathbb{F}})$ ;
-
b) If $R\lt 0$ and $f$ has no critical points, then $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric with a warped product manifold $(\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{F}^{n-1},dt^2+\xi (t)^2g_{\mathbb{F}})$ such that
\begin{equation*} \xi ''+\frac {R}{n(n-1)}\xi =0; \end{equation*} -
c) If $R\lt 0$ and $f$ has only one critical point, then $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric with a hyperbolic space.
Remark 2. Einstein manifolds satisfy the hypothesis of Theorem (5) quite naturally for if
for some $\rho \in \mathbb{R}$ , then $R$ is constant over $M$ and, as such, we have that
Furthermore, the traceless Ricci tensor
vanishes identically, thus giving $|\overset{\circ }{Ric}(\nabla f^{2})|\in L^{1}(M)$ .
2. Key Lemmas
In this section, we collect some useful lemmas that will used in the proof of the main results.
Lemma 1. ([Reference Barbosa and Freitas17,Reference Gover and Ørsted18]). Let $ (M^{n},g)$ be a compact Riemannian manifold with a possibly empty boundary $ \partial M$ . Then,
for every symmetric $ (0,2)$ -tensor $ T$ and every vector field $ X$ on $M$ , where
and $\nu$ is the outward unit normal field on $ \partial M$ .
Proof. First, notice that integration by parts yields
and because
we get that
On the other hand, we have that
The result now follows from (7) and (8) above.
We now recall a useful result established in [Reference Barros and Gomes19].
Lemma 2. ([Reference Barros and Gomes19]) Let $ (M^{n},g)$ be a Riemannian manifold and $ T$ be a symmetric $ (0,2)$ -tensor field on $ M^{n}$ . Then
for any $X\in \mathfrak{X}(M)$ and $\varphi \in C^\infty (M)$ where $T(X)$ is the vector field $ g$ -equivalent to $ T$ .
For locally conformally flat manifolds, a proposition similar to the next one can be found in [Reference Han20]. Recall that a vector field $ X$ on a Riemannian manifold $ (M^{n},g)$ is a conformal field in case
for some $ \varphi \in C^\infty (M)$ .
Recall that the $k$ -Newton tensor field associated with $g^{-1}A_g$ is defined by
Among the identities satisfied by $ T_k(g^{-1}A_g)$ one finds (see [Reference Barros and Evangelista16])
for every $1\leqslant k\leqslant n$ .
Proposition 1. If $ X$ is a conformal vector field on a compact Riemannian manifold $(M^{n},g)$ with null Cotton tensor, then
for every $ k=1,2,\ldots,n$ .
Proof. Let $ \varphi \in C^\infty (M)$ be such that
and take $ T_k=T_k(g^{-1}A_g)$ where $ k\in \{1,2,\ldots,n-1\}$ . Now a direct application of Lemma 1 yields
It follows from Corollary 1 of [Reference Barros and Evangelista16] that $ \textrm{div}\,{T_k}=0$ and because
Equation (9) can rewritten in the simpler form
which proves the proposition in case $k\neq n$ . As for the remaining case, it follows from [Reference Han20] that
where $T_{b}^{a}$ are the components of $T_{n-1}(g^{-1}A_g)$ . Therefore, if we go there and write
we get that
which proves the proposition also for $k=n$ .
Our next lemma states some structural equations for almost quotient gradient Yamabe solitons.
Lemma 3. Let $(M^{n},g,\nabla f,\lambda )$ be an almost gradient quotient Yamabe soliton. Then, we have that:
-
a) $\Delta f= n\left (\log \dfrac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right )$ ;
-
b) $(n-1)\nabla \left (\log \dfrac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right )+\textrm{Ric}(\nabla f)=0$ ;
-
c) $(n-1)\Delta \left (\log \dfrac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right )+ \dfrac{1}{2}\langle \nabla R,\nabla f\rangle + \left (\log \dfrac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right )R=0$ .
Proof.
-
a) The first assertion is obtained by tracing (5);
-
b) Next, we differentiate (5) to get
\begin{equation*} \nabla _{j}\nabla _{r}\nabla _{i}f= \nabla _{j}\left (\log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right )g_{ri}, \end{equation*}from what we see that\begin{equation*} \nabla _{i}\nabla _{j}\nabla _{r}f+ \sum _{s}R_{rijs}\nabla _{s}f= \nabla _{j}\left (\log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right )g_{ri}, \end{equation*}with the help of the Ricci identity that can be found in ([Reference Aubin21], pg. 4). Now, we only need to contract this equation on the indices $j,r$ in order to get\begin{equation*} \nabla _{i}\Delta f+ \sum _{s}Ric_{is}\nabla _{s}f= \nabla _{i}\left (\log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right ), \end{equation*}then yielding(10) \begin{equation} (n-1)\nabla _{i}\left (\log \frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}- \lambda \right )+\sum _{s}Ric_{is}\nabla _{s}f=0, \end{equation}by $ \textrm{a)}$ , which proves the second assertion; -
c) Now, we deal with the third one. We apply the divergence operator on both sides of (10) and use the twice contracted second Bianchi’s identity to obtain
\begin{equation*} (n-1)\Delta \left ( \log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right )+ \frac {1}{2}\langle \nabla R,\nabla f\rangle + \sum _{sl}Ric_{sl}\nabla _{s}\nabla _{l}f=0, \end{equation*}which is equivalent to\begin{equation*} (n-1)\Delta \left ( \log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right )+ \frac {1}{2}\langle \nabla R,\nabla f\rangle + \left ( \log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right )R =0, \end{equation*}by using the fundamental equation (5), one concludes the asserted result.
3. Proofs of the main results
This section contains proofs for the main results in this paper.
Proof of Theorem 1.
-
a) Integrating by parts, one sees that
\begin{equation*} \int _{M}\textrm {Ric}_{jk}\nabla _{i}C_{ijk}dv_{g}= -\int _{M}\nabla _{i}\textrm {Ric}_{jk}C_{ijk}dv_{g}=0, \end{equation*}if either $\nabla \textrm{Ric}_g=0$ or $\textrm{div}\,{C_g}=0$ and because(11) \begin{equation} \begin{split} \int _{M}&\nabla _{i}\textrm{Ric}_{jk}C_{ijk}dv_{g} = \\[5pt] &=\int _{M} \left [ C_{ijk}+ \frac{1}{2(n-1)} \left ( g_{jk}\nabla _{i}R_g-g_{ij}\nabla _{j}R_g \right ) \right ]C_{ijk}dv_{g} \\[5pt] &= \int _{M}|C_g|^{2}dv_{g}+ \frac{1}{2(n-1)} \int _{M} \left ( C_{ijk}g_{jk}\nabla _{i}R_g- C_{ijk}g_{ij}\nabla _{j}R_g \right )dv_{g} \\[5pt] &=\int _{M}|C_g|^{2}dv_{g}, \end{split} \end{equation}we conclude that $C_g=0$ . Equation (5) implies that $ X$ is a conformal field and so we can apply Proposition 1 to conclude that\begin{equation*} \int _{M^{n}} \sigma _{k}\left (\log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right ) dv_{g} = -\dfrac {1}{n} \int _{M^{n}} \langle \nabla \sigma _{k},X\rangle dv_{g} =0. \end{equation*}Therefore, we have(12) \begin{equation} \begin{split} \int _{M^{n}} \frac{\sigma _{l}}{n} &\left ( \frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-e^\lambda \right ) \left ( \log \frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right ) dv_{g} = \\[5pt] &= -\int _{M^{n}} \frac{e^{\lambda }\sigma _{l}}{n} \left ( \log \frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right ) dv_{g} \\[5pt] &= \int _{M^{n}} e^{\lambda }\sigma _{l}\langle \nabla \lambda, X\rangle dv_{g}+ \int _{M^{n}} e^{\lambda }\langle \nabla \sigma _{l}, X\rangle dv_{g}=0, \end{split} \end{equation}by our hypothesis on the nullity of the integral at the right hand of (12). Since $\sigma _{l}\neq 0$ does not change sign on $ M^{n}$ , we then admit that $\sigma _{k}/\sigma _{l}=e^\lambda$ , which proves our assertion in case of parallel Ricci curvature or divergence free Cotton tensor. On the other hand, if $ X=\nabla f$ , we argue by contradiction to show that $ f$ is a constant function. Should $f$ not be constant on $ M^{n}$ , the manifold $(M^{n},g)$ could not lie in any conformal class other than that of the Euclidean sphere $(\mathbb{S}^n,g_{\mathbb{S}^n})$ , by Theorem 1.1 of [Reference Catino, Mantegazza and Mazzieri12]. So, just as it happens with any locally conformally flat manifold, the Cotton tensor of $(M^{n},g)$ would then vanish identically and by what has been said above $(M^{n},g,\nabla{f},\lambda )$ ought to be trivial. This contradiction shows that $ f$ is indeed a constant function, now concluding a); -
b) Because the fields $ \nabla h,Y$ in the Hodge-de Rham decomposition $ X=\nabla h+Y$ of $ X$ are orthogonal to one another in $ L^2(M)$ , we get that
\begin{equation*} \int _{M^{n}}|\nabla h|^{2}dv_{g}= \int _{M^{n}}\langle \nabla h,\nabla h+Y\rangle dv_{g}= \int _{M^{n}}\langle \nabla h, X\rangle dv_{g}\leqslant 0, \end{equation*}the inequality is part of the hypothesis. Then, $ \nabla h=0$ and $ X=Y$ . Since $Y$ is divergence free, we conclude that\begin{equation*} n\left (\log \frac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right )= \textrm {div}\,X=0, \end{equation*}and, as such, the soliton is trivial. So, the proof of the theorem is complete.
Proof of Theorem 2. As we already know, the fundamental equation
leads to
and because we suppose that $ \mathcal{L}_Xg\geqslant 0$ we must then admit that $ \log{\frac{\sigma _k}{\sigma _l}}-\lambda \geqslant 0$ . So, if we now take a cutoff function $\psi \;:\;M\rightarrow \mathbb{R}$ satisfying
where $ K\gt 0$ is a real constant, we are in place to conclude that
from what it follows that
Henceforth, we have that $ \mathcal{L}_Xg=\log{\frac{\sigma _k}{\sigma _l}}-\lambda =0$ which proves the Theorem.
Proof of Theorem 3. It follows from Lemma 3 $\textrm{(c)}$ that if the scalar curvature of $ (M^{n},g,\nabla f,\lambda )$ is a constant function on $ M^{n}$ , then
and, by the min-max principle, we must have $ R\gt 0$ . By using that
we then get
and since $ (M^{n},g)$ is a compact Riemannian manifold, one see that
for a certain $ c\in \mathbb{R}$ , by the maximum principle. Hence,
and so
We can now apply Obata’s theorem ([Reference Obata22], Theorem 1) to conclude that $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric with an Euclidean sphere of radius $ \sqrt{r}$ , $r=R/n(n-1)$ . To prove our last claim, we notice that we can assume that $R=n(n-1)$ possibly at the cost of rescaling the metric $ g$ . From equations (14) and (15), it is seen that $\frac{\Delta f}{n}$ is an eigenfunction of the Laplacian on $(\mathbb{S}^n,g)$ and so there must exist a $v\in \mathbb{S}^n$ such that $\frac{1}{n}\Delta f=h_{v}=-\frac{1}{n}\Delta h_{v}$ . Hence, $\Delta (f+ h_{v})=0$ but then $f=h_{v}+c$ for some real $c$ .
Proof of Theorem 4. By Theorem 1.1 of [Reference Catino, Mantegazza and Mazzieri12] the only nontrivial compact almost gradient quotient Yamabe solitons reside in the conformal class of the Euclidean sphere and because of that we can assume that
where $ \varphi \in C^\infty (\mathbb{S}^n)$ is strictly positive. Then, the Ricci tensors of $ g$ and $ g_{\mathbb{S}^n}$ are correlated by the equation [Reference Besse23]
which we algebraically manipulate in order to get the similar equation
for the Schouten tensors. But then we have
from what it follows that
Notice that Lemma 1 applied to $ T=T_k(g^{-1}A_g)$ and $ X=\nabla \varphi$ gives
because $ \textrm{tr}\,{T_k(g^{-1}A_g)}=(n-k)\sigma _k(g)$ is constant on $ \mathbb{S}^n$ by hypothesis and $ \textrm{div}\,{T_k(g^{-1}A_g)}=0$ . A combination of (18) and (17) above leads to
where we have used the identity $\textrm{tr}\,{T_k(g^{-1}A_g\circ A_g)}=(k+1)\sigma _{k+1}(g)$ [Reference Reilly24]. By Lemma 23 of [Reference Viaclovsky25], we conclude that
implying that $(\mathbb{S}^n,g)$ is an Einstein manifold. In particular, the scalar curvature of $ g$ is constant on $ \mathbb{S}^n$ and by Theorem 3 there is even an isometry between $(\mathbb{S}^n,g)$ and $ (\mathbb{S}^n,g_{\mathbb{S}^n})$ which proves the Theorem.
Proof of Theorem 5. Lemma 2 applied to the data $T=\overset{\circ }{\textrm{Ric}_g}$ , $X=\nabla f$ , and $\varphi =f$ gives
and it then follows from the second contracted Bianchi identity that
A straightforward computation shows that
and equations (19), (20), and (21) together give
Proposition 1 of [Reference Caminha, Souza and Camargo26] tell us that $\textrm{div}\,{\overset{\circ }{\textrm{Ric}_g}(\nabla f^2)}=0$ because $|\overset{\circ }{\textrm{Ric}_g}(\nabla f^2)|\in L^{1}(M)$ . Consequently,
As $(M^{n},g,\nabla f,\lambda )$ is a nontrivial almost quotient gradient Yamabe soliton, any regular level set $\Sigma$ of the potential function $f$ admits a maximal open neighborhood $U\subset M$ in which $ g$ can be written like
where $g^{\Sigma }$ is the restriction of $g$ to $\Sigma$ (see [Reference Catino, Mantegazza and Mazzieri12]). Since $M$ is noncompact, $f$ has at most one critical point. As the Ricci tensor of a warped product metric, $ \textrm{Ric}_g$ now admits the following decomposition
thus giving $\frac{R_g}{n}=-(n-1)\frac{f'''}{f'}$ because $\overset{\circ }{\textrm{Ric}_g}(\nabla f,\nabla f)=0$ . Equation (24) can also be manipulated to show that
of which
is a consequence by Lemma 3 $ \textrm{b)}$ . The divergence of equation (25) is
which we compare with the expression in Lemma 3 $ \textrm{c)}$ to see that $\langle \nabla R_g,\nabla f\rangle =0$ . Since $R_g$ only depends on $r$ we get that
implying that the scalar curvature $R_g=R$ is constant. We claim that $R\leqslant 0$ . As a matter of fact, if we had $R\gt 0$ , then from (25) we would then have that $\log \frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda$ is not constant on $ M^{n}$ and satisfies
From Obata’s theorem [Reference Obata22], the manifold $ M^{n}$ would then be compact, which is absurd. Therefore, $ R\leqslant 0$ .
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a) It follows from (25) that $ \log{\frac{\sigma _k}{\sigma _l}}-\lambda =c$ for some $ c\in \mathbb{R}$ because we now have $ R=0$ . By Theorem 2 of [Reference Tashiro27] $ (M^{n},g)$ must be isometric with flat Euclidean space $ \mathbb{R}^n$ in case $ c\neq 0$ . Since this would leave us with $ \sigma _1(g)=\sigma _2(g)=\cdots =\sigma _n(g)=0$ , the function $ \log{\frac{\sigma _k}{\sigma _l}}$ could not be defined. Then, $ c=0$ and so $ \nabla ^2 f=0$ by the fundamental equation (5). Theorem B of Kanai [Reference Kanai28] then implies that $ (M^{n},g)$ is isometric with a Riemannian product manifold $ \mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{F}^{n-1}$ ;
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b) If $f$ has no critical points and $ R\lt 0$ , then once more by (25) we get that $\log \frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda$ is not constant on $ M^{n}$ and satisfies
\begin{equation*} \nabla _{X}\nabla \left ( \log \dfrac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right ) = -\frac {R}{n(n-1)}\nabla _{X}\nabla f = -\frac {R}{n(n-1)} \left ( \log \dfrac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right )X, \end{equation*}on $ M^{n}$ for every $ X\in \mathfrak{X}(M)$ . In virtue of Theorem D in [Reference Kanai28], the manifold $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric with a warped product manifold $(\mathbb{R}\times \mathbb{F}^{n-1},dr^2+\xi (r)^2g_{\mathbb{F}})$ in which the warping function $\xi$ solves the second-order linear ODE with constant coefficients $\xi ''+\frac{R}{n(n-1)}\xi =0$ ; -
c) In our last call to equation (25), we observe that if $f$ has exactly one critical point and $ R\lt 0$ then $\log \frac{\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda$ is not constant on $ M^{n}$ and must satisfy
\begin{equation*} \nabla _{X}\nabla \left ( \log \dfrac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right ) = -\frac {R}{n(n-1)}\nabla _{X}\nabla f = -\frac {R}{n(n-1)} \left ( \log \dfrac {\sigma _{k}}{\sigma _{l}}-\lambda \right )X, \end{equation*}on $ M^{n}$ for every $ X\in \mathfrak{X}(M)$ . We then apply Theorem C in [Reference Kanai28] to conclude that $(M^{n},g)$ is isometric with a hyperbolic space.
Competing interests
The authors declare that there is no competing interests.
Data availability statement
Data supporting this manuscript is provided in the bibliography.