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On the Pontrjagin classes of spray manifolds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2023

Zhongmin Shen
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematical Sciences, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN 46202-3216, United States e-mail: [email protected]
Runzhong Zhao*
Affiliation:
School of Mathematical Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, China
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Abstract

The characterization of projectively flat Finsler metrics on an open subset in $R^n$ is the Hilbert’s fourth problem in the regular case. Locally projectively flat Finsler manifolds form an important class of Finsler manifolds. Every Finsler metric induces a spray on the manifold via geodesics. Therefore, it is a natural problem to investigate the geometric and topological properties of manifolds equipped with a spray. In this paper, we study the Pontrjagin classes of a manifold equipped with a locally projectively flat spray and show that such manifold must have zero Pontrjagin classes.

Type
Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Canadian Mathematical Society

1 Introduction

The notion of projectively flat metrics in Finsler geometry originated from the famous Hilbert’s fourth problem, that is, to characterize Finsler metrics on an open subset of $\mathbf {R}^n$ whose geodesics are straight lines as sets of points. By Beltrami’s theorem, a Riemannian metric is locally projectively flat if and only if it is of constant sectional curvature. However, things are much more complicated in Finsler geometry. Although every locally projectively flat Finsler metric is of scalar flag curvature, many are not of constant flag curvature [Reference Huang and Mo5, Reference Song and Zhou12]. There are also Finsler metrics of scalar flag curvature but are not locally projectively flat. Therefore, the study of locally projectively flat metrics is of its own interest. The characterization of locally projectively flat Finsler metrics dates back to Hamel’s work [Reference Hamel4] at the beginning of 20th century. In recent years, many more explicit constructions have been found for special types of Finsler metrics. For example, a Randers metric $F = \alpha + \beta $ is locally projectively flat if and only if $\alpha $ is a locally projectively flat Riemannian metric and $\beta $ is a closed one-form [Reference Báscó and Matsumoto1]. Locally projectively flat $(\alpha , \beta )$ metrics [Reference Shen10] and general $(\alpha ,\beta )$ metrics are also studied intensively. In [Reference Yu and Zhu14], Yu and Zhu constructed a class of locally projectively flat general $(\alpha ,\beta )$ metrics. In [Reference Li and Shen6], the first author and Li gave the equivalent conditions for a general $(\alpha , \beta )$ metrics to be locally projectively flat, and constructed some interesting local examples.

Every Finsler metric induces a spray via geodesics. The study of sprays on a manifold will lead to a better understanding on Finsler metrics. The notion of projective flatness can be extended naturally to sprays. We would like to know any topological obstruction to the existence of locally projectively flat sprays on a manifold.

Theorem 1.1 Let G be a locally projectively flat spray on a n-manifold M. Then the Pontrjagin classes $p_k$ of M with rational coefficients are all zero for $k\ne 0$ .

This gives a topological obstruction to the existence of locally projectively flat sprays on a manifold.

Example 1.2 It is well known that spheres have trivial Pontrjagin classes. The standard Riemannian metric $g_{\mathbf {S}^n}$ on an n-dimensional unit sphere has constant sectional curvature $1$ , hence is locally projectively flat. Let $G_0$ be the spray of this metric, a family of locally projectively flat sprays can be constructed using positively homogeneous functions P on the slit tangent bundle $T\mathbf {S}^n{\,\setminus\,} 0$ . See Section 5 for more detailed constructions.

Example 1.3 The cohomology of the complex projective space $\mathbf {C}P^n$ with coefficient G is

$$\begin{align*}H^l(\mathbf{C}P^n,G) = \begin{cases} G, & \text{if }l\text{ is even and }0 \le l \le n, \\ 0, & \text{otherwise,}\end{cases} \end{align*}$$

and the total Pontrjagin class of $\mathbf {C}P^n$ is $p = (1+c^2)^{n+1}$ , where c is the image of the generator of $H^2(\mathbf {C}P^n,\mathbf {Z})$ under the natural map $H^2(\mathbf {C}P^n,\mathbf {Z}) \to H^2(\mathbf {C}P^n,G)$ . In particular, the Pontrjagin classes of $\mathbf {C}P^n(n\ge 2)$ are not zero, hence $\mathbf {C}P^n(n\ge 2)$ does not admit a locally projectively flat spray.

2 Preliminaries

A spray G on a manifold M is a smooth vector field on the slit tangent bundle $TM{\,\setminus\,} 0$ expressed in a standard local coordinate system $(x^i, y^i)$ on $TM$ as

(1) $$ \begin{align} G = y^i \frac\partial{\partial x^i} - 2G^i(x,y)\frac\partial{\partial y^i}, \end{align} $$

where $G^i(y)$ are local functions on $TM$ satisfying

$$\begin{align*}G^i(x,\lambda y) = \lambda^2 G^i(x,y) \end{align*}$$

for all $\lambda> 0$ . The $G^i$ s are also called the spray coefficients.

Let $\tilde {\gamma }$ be an integral curve of G on $TM{\,\setminus\,} 0$ , and $\gamma = \pi \circ \tilde {\gamma }$ be its projection on M, where $\pi : TM{\,\setminus\,} 0\to M$ is the canonical projection. $\gamma $ satisfies the equation

$$\begin{align*}\ddot{\gamma}^i + 2G^i(\gamma, \dot{\gamma}) = 0 \end{align*}$$

and it is called a geodesic of G. We say that two sprays G and $\tilde {G}$ are (pointwise) projectively related if their geodesics are the same as sets of points on the manifold. Equivalently, this is characterized by the condition

$$\begin{align*}\tilde{G}^i = G^i + Py^i, \end{align*}$$

where $P = P(x,y)$ satisfies the homogeneity property

$$\begin{align*}P(x,\lambda y) = \lambda P(x,y) \end{align*}$$

for $\lambda> 0$ . A spray G is said to be flat if at every point, there is a local coordinate system in which

$$\begin{align*}G = y^i\frac{\partial}{\partial x^i}. \end{align*}$$

It is said to be locally projectively flat if it is projectively related to a flat spray. A quantity is said to be projectively invariant if it is the same for projectively related sprays.

In order to study the Pontrjagin classes of $\pi ^*TM$ and $TM$ , we shall use the Berwald connection on the pullback bundle $\pi ^*TM$ . Let

$$\begin{align*}N^i_j := \frac{\partial G^i}{\partial y^j}, \quad\Gamma^i_{jk} := \frac{\partial^2 G^i}{\partial y^j\partial y^k}, \end{align*}$$

the local connection one-forms of the Berwald connection are given by

(2) $$ \begin{align} \omega_j^{\;i} = \Gamma^i_{jk}dx^k, \end{align} $$

and its curvature forms are

(3) $$ \begin{align} \Omega_j^{\;i} := d\omega_j^{\;i} - \omega_j^{\;k}\wedge \omega_k^{\;i}. \end{align} $$

Put $\omega ^i := dx^i$ and $\omega ^{n+i} := dy^i + N^i_jdx^j$ , we have

$$\begin{align*}d\omega^i = \omega^j \wedge \omega_j^{\;i} \end{align*}$$

and

(4) $$ \begin{align} \Omega_j^{\;i} = \frac12R_{j\;kl}^{\;i}\omega^k\wedge \omega^l - B_{j\;kl}^{\;i}\omega^k\wedge\omega^{n+l}, \end{align} $$

where R is the Riemann curvature and B is the Berwald curvature. In local coordinates, they are given by

$$ \begin{align*} &R_{j\;kl}^{\;i} = \frac{\delta\Gamma^i_{jl}}{\delta x^k} - \frac{\delta\Gamma^i_{jk}}{\delta x^l} + \Gamma^i_{km}\Gamma^m_{jl} - \Gamma^i_{lm}\Gamma^m_{jk}, \\ &B_{j\;kl}^{\;i} = \frac{\partial^3G^i}{\partial y^j\partial y^k\partial y^l}, \end{align*} $$

where $\frac {\delta }{\delta x^i} = \frac {\partial }{\partial x^i} - N^j_i\frac {\partial }{\partial y^j}$ is the horizontal covariant derivative. For the simplicity of notation, we will denote $A^*_{\;*|j} = \frac {\delta }{\delta x^j}A^*_{\;*}$ and $A^*_{\;*\cdot j} = \frac {\partial }{\partial y^j}A^*_{\;*}$ .

The two-index Riemannian curvature tensor is then given by $R^i_{\;k} = R^{\;i}_{j\;kl}y^jy^l$ . We have

(5) $$ \begin{align} R^{\;i}_{j\;kl} = \frac13\left(R^i_{\;k\cdot l\cdot j} - R^i_{\;l\cdot k\cdot j}\right) \end{align} $$

so the two-index Riemann curvature tensor and the four-index Riemann curvature tensor basically contain the same geometric data. The Riemann curvature can be computed directly using the spray coefficients as

(6) $$ \begin{align} R^i_{\;k} = 2\frac{\partial G^i}{\partial x^k} - y^j\frac{\partial^2G^i}{\partial x^j\partial y^k} + 2G^j\frac{\partial^2G^i}{\partial y^j\partial y^k} - \frac{\partial G^i}{\partial y^j}\frac{\partial G^j}{\partial y^k}. \end{align} $$

We will also use $R = \frac 1{n-1}R^m_{\;m}$ .

In the case when G is a Berwald spray, where $B_{j\;kl}^{\;i} = 0$ , the spray coefficients $G^i$ s are quadratic in $y^i$ s, and so are the Riemann curvature $R^i_{\;k}$ . In particular, $\Gamma ^i_{jk}$ and $R^{\;i}_{j\;kl}$ are independent of $y^i$ s. Therefore, the differential forms $\omega ^{\;i}_j$ and $\Omega ^{\;i}_j$ can be viewed as differential forms on M, and the connection can be viewed as a connection of the tangent bundle $TM$ . In fact, we have

$$\begin{align*}\Omega^{\;i}_j = \dfrac12R_{j\;kl}^{\;i}dx^k\wedge dx^l. \end{align*}$$

In dimension $n \geq 3$ , locally projectively flat sprays are characterized by two projectively invariant quantities. The Douglas curvature is constructed from the Berwald curvature:

(7) $$ \begin{align} D_{j\;kl}^{\;i} = B_{j\;kl}^{\;i} - \frac2{n+1}\left[ E_{jk}\delta^i_l + E_{jl}\delta^i_k + E_{kl}\delta^i_j + \frac{\partial E_{jk}}{\partial y^l}y^i \right]\!, \end{align} $$

where $E_{ij} =\frac {1}{2} B^{\;m}_{m\;ij}$ is called the mean Berwald curvature.

The Weyl tensor is the spray analog of the projective curvature tensor in Riemannian geometry. It is defined by

(8) $$ \begin{align} W^i_{\;k} = A^i_{\;k} - \frac1{n+1}\frac{\partial A^m_{\;k}}{\partial y^m}y^i, \end{align} $$

where $A^i_{\;k} = R^i_{\;k} - R\delta ^i_k$ . The followings are well-known [Reference Shen8].

Lemma 2.1 A spray G is of scalar curvature, in the sense that

$$\begin{align*}R^i_{\;k} = R\delta^i_k - \tau_ky^i \end{align*}$$

for some one-form $\tau $ on $TM{\,\setminus\,} 0$ with $\tau _k y^k = R$ , if and only if $W = 0$ .

Lemma 2.2 A spray G on a manifold M of dimension $\ge 3$ is locally projectively flat if and only if $W = 0$ and $D = 0$ .

For convenience in discussing the projective change by the S-curvature, we will also use another formula for the Weyl tensor. Let $dV = \sigma (x)dx^1\wedge \cdots \wedge dx^n$ be a volume form on M, the quantity

$$\begin{align*}\tau(x,y) := \ln \frac{\sqrt{\det g_{ij}(x,y)}}{\sigma(x)} \end{align*}$$

is called the distortion and its rate of change along geodesics is measured by S-curvature. Namely, let $\gamma (t)$ be a geodesic with $\gamma (0) = x$ and $\dot {\gamma }(0) = y\in T_xM{\,\setminus\,} 0$ , we have

(9) $$ \begin{align} S(x,y) := \left.\frac{d}{dt}\right|{}_{t=0}\left[\tau(\gamma(t), \dot{\gamma}(t))\right]\!. \end{align} $$

The S-curvature can be expressed as

$$\begin{align*}S(x,y) = \frac{\partial G^m}{\partial y^m}(x,y) - y^m\frac{\partial}{\partial x^m}[\ln \sigma ](x) \end{align*}$$

and satisfies the homogeneity property

$$\begin{align*}S(x,\lambda y) = \lambda S(x, y) \end{align*}$$

for $\lambda> 0$ . The non-Riemannian quantity $\chi $ -curvature

$$\begin{align*}\chi_k := -\frac16\left(2R^m_{\;k\cdot m} + R^m_{\;m\cdot k}\right)\!. \end{align*}$$

relates the S-curvature and the Weyl tensor. Indeed, it can be computed using the S-curvature by

$$\begin{align*}\chi_k = \frac12\left(S_{\cdot k|m}y^m - S_{|k}\right)\!, \end{align*}$$

and the Weyl tensor can be expressed as

$$\begin{align*}W^i_{\;k} = R^i_{\;k} - \left(R\delta^i_k - \frac12R_{\cdot k}y^i\right) + \frac3{n+1}\chi_ky^i. \end{align*}$$

Thus, for a spray $(G, dV)$ whose S-curvature is vanishing, we have $\chi _k = 0$ and

(10) $$ \begin{align} W^i_{\;k} = R^i_{\;k} - \left(R\delta^i_k - \frac12R_{\cdot k}y^i\right)\!. \end{align} $$

3 Pontrjagin classes

The Pontrjagin classes were originally introduced by Lev Pontrjagin in 1940s in the study of the Grassmannian manifolds. In modern texts, it is most often described using the Chern class of a complexified bundle. Let $\xi $ be a real vector bundle, and let $\xi _{\mathbf {C}} := \xi \otimes _{\mathbf {R}}\mathbf {C}$ be its complexification, then the ith Pontrjagin class of $\xi $ is given by

$$\begin{align*}p_i = (-1)^ic_{2i}(\xi_{\mathbf{C}}), \end{align*}$$

where $c_{j}(\xi _{\mathbf {C}})$ is the jth Chern class of the complex vector bundle $\xi _{\mathbf {C}}$ .

Using a connection D on the vector bundle $\xi $ , we can express the Pontrjagin classes of $\xi $ as a differential form representing a de Rham cohomology class. Let $U\subset M$ be an open subset on which there is trivialization $\psi : \xi |_U \cong U\times \mathbf {R}^n$ of the bundle $\xi $ , and $e_i = \psi ^{-1}\partial _i$ . The connection D, viewed as a covariant derivative, can be described by

$$\begin{align*}D_X \eta := \left[d\eta^i(X) + \eta^j\omega^{\;i}_j(X)\right]e_i, \end{align*}$$

where X is a vector field on U, $\eta $ is a section of $\xi $ given by $\eta = \eta ^ie_i$ on U, and the $\omega _j^{\;i}$ s are $n^2$ local one-forms on U. The curvature of D is hence described by an $n\times n$ matrix of (real-valued) two-forms

$$\begin{align*}\Omega = (\Omega_j^{\;i}), \end{align*}$$

where $\Omega _j^{\;i}$ s are given as in (3). The differential forms $\omega _j^{\;i}$ s and $\Omega _j^{\;i}$ s, viewed as complex-valued forms, define a connection on the complexified bundle $\xi _{\mathbf {C}}$ and its curvature, which we will still denote by D and $\Omega $ , respectively.

Given an $n\times n$ complex matrix T, we have

(11) $$ \begin{align} \det(I+tT) = 1 + t\sigma_1(T)+ \cdots + t^n\sigma_n(T), \end{align} $$

where $\sigma _i(T)$ is the ith elementary symmetric polynomial evaluated on the n eigenvalues of T. The following can be found on most textbooks covering characteristic classes (see, for example, [Reference Milnor and Stasheff7]).

Theorem 3.1 Let $\xi $ be a complex vector bundle of rank n with connection D. Then the cohomology class $[\sigma _r(\Omega )]\in H^{2r}(X;\mathbf {C})$ is equal to $(2\pi i)^rc_r(\xi )$ , for all $r = 1, \ldots , n$ , where $c_r(\xi )$ is the rth Chern class with coefficient $\mathbf {C}$ .

In the study of Riemannian manifolds of constant curvature, Chern obtained a consequence of this theorem [Reference Chern3, Reference Milnor and Stasheff7].

Corollary 3.2 Let $\xi $ be a real vector bundle of rank n with connection D. Then the de Rham cocycle $\sigma _{2k}(\Omega )$ represents the cohomology class $(2\pi )^{2k}p_k(\xi )\in H^{4k}(M;\mathbf {R})$ , while $[\sigma _{2k+1}(\Omega )] = 0$ in $H^{4k+2}(M;\mathbf {R})$ , where $p_k(\xi )$ is the kth Pontrjagin class of $\xi $ with coefficient $\mathbf {R}$ .

Chern proved the following.

Theorem 3.3 Suppose that for a Riemannian manifold M, the sectional curvature $K(V_x, W_x)$ of the plane $\mathrm{span}\{V_x, W_x\}\subset T_xM$ depends on the point $x\in M$ only. Then all its Pontrjagin classes with rational coefficients are zero.

We shall remark that such manifolds are said to have isotropic curvature in Finsler geometry.

In terms of the local curvature forms $\Omega _j^{\;i}$ s defined in some neighborhood of $x\in M$ , a direct computation using (11) gives

$$ \begin{align*} \sigma_{2k}(\Omega)(x) =& \sum_{i_1 < \cdots < i_{2k}, \sigma\in S_{2k}} \operatorname{\mathrm{sign}}{\sigma}\cdot \Omega_{i_1}^{\;i_{\sigma(1)}}(x) \wedge \cdots\wedge \Omega_{i_{2k}}^{\;i_{\sigma(2k)}}(x) \\ =& \dfrac1{(2k)!}\sum_{i_1, \ldots, i_{2k}, \sigma\in S_{2k}}\operatorname{\mathrm{sign}}{\sigma}\cdot \Omega_{i_1}^{\;i_{\sigma(1)}}(x) \wedge \cdots\wedge \Omega_{i_{2k}}^{\;i_{\sigma(2k)}}(x), \end{align*} $$

where $S_{2k}$ is the symmetric group on $2k$ elements.

4 Pontrjagin classes of Douglas sprays

In this section, we study the Pontrjagin classes of Douglas sprays. The main tool will be a projective change by the S-curvature.

Let G be a spray, and let $dV$ be a volume form on an n-dimensional manifold M. We define another spray $\hat {G}$ by

(12) $$ \begin{align} \hat{G}^i = G^i - \frac{S}{n+1}y^i, \end{align} $$

where S is the S-curvature of $(G, dV)$ . In the sequel, a letter with a hat over it will always represent a quantity of the spray $\hat {G}$ . We have the following.

Lemma 4.1 [Reference Shen11]

(13) $$ \begin{align} \hat{B}_{j\;kl}^{\;i} =& D_{j\;kl}^{\;i}, \nonumber\\ \hat{S} =& 0. \end{align} $$

Thus, if G is Douglas, then $\hat {G}$ is a Berwald spray. As an immediate consequence, we have the following lemma.

Lemma 4.2 Let G be a Douglas spray on a manifold M. The Pontrjagin classes of M with coefficient $\mathbf {R}$ are represented by the forms

$$\begin{align*}\frac1{(4\pi)^{2k}(2k)!}\sum_{i_1, \ldots ,i_{2k}, \sigma\in S_{2k}} \operatorname{\mathrm{sign}} \sigma\cdot \prod_{s=1}^{2k}\hat{R}^{\;i_{\sigma(s)}}_{i_s\;m_sl_l}\bigwedge_{s=1}^{2k}dx^{m_s}\wedge dx^{l_s}, \end{align*}$$

where $\hat {R}$ is the Riemann curvature of the associated spray $\hat {G}$ .

Proof of Theorem 1.1

We will assume that the dimension of the manifold is $n\ge 4$ , for otherwise, there is nothing to prove. We already have that $\hat {G}$ is a Berwald spray. On the other hand, $\hat {S} = 0$ implies that $\hat {\chi }_k = 0$ for the spray $\hat {G}$ . The expression for the Weyl tensor (10) now becomes

$$\begin{align*}\hat{W}^i_{\;k} = \hat{R}^i_{\;k} - \left(\hat{R}\delta^i_k - \frac{1}{2}\hat{R}_{\cdot k}y^i\right) = 0, \end{align*}$$

hence

$$\begin{align*}\hat{R}^i_{\;k} = \left(\hat{R}\delta^i_k - \frac{1}{2}\hat{R}_{\cdot k}y^i\right)\!. \end{align*}$$

A straightforward calculation yields

$$\begin{align*}\hat{R}^{\;i}_{j\;kl} = \frac{1}{3}\left(\hat{R}^i_{\;k\cdot l\cdot j} - \hat{R}^i_{\;l\cdot k\cdot j}\right) = \frac12\left(\hat{R}_{\cdot l\cdot j}\delta^i_k - \hat{R}_{\cdot k\cdot j}\delta^i_l \right)\!. \end{align*}$$

It follows that the curvature forms of the Berwald connection of $\hat {G}$ is given by

$$\begin{align*}\hat{\Omega}_j^{\;i} = \frac14\left(\hat{R}_{\cdot l\cdot j}\delta^i_k - \hat{R}_{\cdot k\cdot j}\delta^i_l\right)dx^k\wedge dx^l = \frac{1}{2} \hat{R}_{\cdot l\cdot j}\; dx^i\wedge dx^l. \end{align*}$$

Then

$$ \begin{align*} \sigma_{2k}(\hat{\Omega}) &= \frac1{(2k!)}\sum_{i_1, \ldots ,i_{2k}, \sigma\in S_{2k}} \operatorname{\mathrm{sign}}{\sigma}\cdot \hat{\Omega}_{i_1}^{\;i_{\sigma(1)}} \wedge \cdots\wedge \hat{\Omega}_{i_{2k}}^{\;i_{\sigma(2k)}} \\ & = \frac{1}{2^{2k}(2k)!} \sum_{i_1, \ldots ,i_{2k}, \sigma\in S_{2k}} \operatorname{\mathrm{sign}}{\sigma} \cdot \hat{R}_{\cdot l_1\cdot i_1} \ldots \hat{R}_{\cdot l_{2k}\cdot i_{2k}} dx^{i_{\sigma(1)}}\wedge dx^{l_1} \ldots dx^{i_{\sigma(2k)}}\wedge dx^{l_{2k}}\\ & = \frac{(-1)^{k}}{2^{2k}(2k)!} \sum_{i_1, \ldots ,i_{2k}, \sigma\in S_{2k}} \operatorname{\mathrm{sign}}\sigma \cdot \hat{R}_{\cdot l_1\cdot i_1} \ldots \hat{R}_{\cdot l_{2k}\cdot i_{2k}} dx^{i_{\sigma(1)}}\wedge\cdots \wedge dx^{i_{\sigma(2k)}}\wedge dx^{l_1}\wedge \cdots \wedge dx^{l_{2k}}\\ & = \frac{(-1)^{k}}{2^{2k}} \sum_{i_1, \ldots ,i_{2k}} \hat{R}_{\cdot l_1\cdot i_1} \ldots \hat{R}_{\cdot l_{2k}\cdot i_{2k}} dx^{i_{1}}\wedge\cdots \wedge dx^{i_{2k}} \wedge dx^{l_1}\wedge \cdots \wedge dx^{l_{2k}}. \end{align*} $$

Since $\hat {R}_{\cdot i\cdot j} = \hat {R}_{\cdot j\cdot i}$ , we obtain $0$ after summing over $i_1$ and $l_1$ . We conclude that

$$\begin{align*}\sigma_{2k}(\hat{\Omega}) = 0. \end{align*}$$

Since $\hat {G}$ is Berwald, these curvature forms can be viewed as curvature forms on $TM$ . Therefore, the Pontrjagin classes of M with real coefficients are identically zero. It follows from naturality of cohomology in coefficients that the Pontrjagin classes of M with rational coefficients are zero.

5 Locally projectively flat sprays on the sphere

In this section, we describe in more detail, some known locally projectively flat sprays on the unit sphere.

Example 5.1 Let $G_0$ be the spray of the standard Riemannian metric on the unit sphere, and let $P: T\mathbf {S}^n{\,\setminus\,} 0\to \mathbf {R}$ be a smooth function satisfying

$$\begin{align*}P(x, \lambda y) = \lambda P(x,y) \end{align*}$$

for all $x\in \mathbf {S}^n$ , $y\in T_x\mathbf {S}^n{\,\setminus\,} \{0\}$ , and $\lambda> 0$ . Then the spray $G_P = G_0 - 2PY$ is locally projectively flat, where Y is the vector field expressed as $y^i\frac {\partial }{\partial x^i}$ in local coordinates $(x^i, y^i)$ for the slit tangent bundle $T\mathbf {S}^n{\,\setminus\,} 0$ .

Among this family are a collection of sprays induced by Randers metrics $F(y) = \sqrt {g_{\mathbf {S}^n}(y,y)} + df(y),$ where f is a smooth function on $\mathbf {S}^n$ and $y\in T\mathbf {S}^n{\,\setminus\,} 0$ . In this case, we have

$$\begin{align*}P(y) = \dfrac{\operatorname{\mathrm{Hess}} f(y,y)}{2F(y)}. \end{align*}$$

Example 5.2 According to the characterizations of locally projectively flat general $(\alpha ,\beta )$ metrics studied in [Reference Li and Shen6, Reference Yu and Zhu14], a general $(\alpha ,\beta )$ metric $F = \alpha \phi \left (b^2,\frac {\beta }{\alpha } \right )$ is locally projectively flat if $\alpha $ is locally projectively flat, $\beta $ is closed and conformal with respect to $\alpha $ , and $\phi = \phi (b^2, s)$ satisfies

(14) $$ \begin{align} \phi_{22} = 2(\phi_1 - s\phi_{12}). \end{align} $$

On the sphere $\mathbf {S}^n$ , let $\alpha $ be the standard Riemannian metric of constant sectional curvature $1$ , written as

$$\begin{align*}\alpha^2 = dr^2 + \sin^2rds_{n-1}^2, \end{align*}$$

where $r\in [0,\pi ]$ and $ds_{n-1}^2$ is the standard Riemannian metric on the $(n-1)$ -dimensional sphere $\mathbf {S}^{n-1}$ . It is well known that the one-form $\beta = \sin rdr$ is closed and conformal with

$$\begin{align*}b_{i;j} = \cos ra_{ij}. \end{align*}$$

Using the example constructed in [Reference Yu and Zhu14], namely

$$\begin{align*}\phi = (\sqrt{1+b^2} + s)^2, \end{align*}$$

which satisfies the equation (14), we see that the general $(\alpha ,\beta )$ metric

$$\begin{align*}F(y) = \alpha(y)\left(\sqrt{1+\sin^2r} + \frac{\sin rdr(y)}{\alpha(y)}\right)^2 \end{align*}$$

is locally projective flat with the projective factor

$$\begin{align*}P(y) = \frac{2\alpha(y)\cos r}{\sqrt{1+\sin^2r}}. \end{align*}$$

Example 5.3 Another interesting class of locally projectively flat Finsler metrics on the sphere are the Bryant metrics [Reference Bryant, Bao, Chern and Shen2, Reference Shen9]. In gnomonic coordinates, it is given by

$$\begin{align*}F(y) = \sqrt{\dfrac{\sqrt{A}+B}{2D}+\left(\dfrac{C}{D}\right)^2} + \dfrac{C}{D}, \end{align*}$$

where

$$ \begin{align*} A =& \left(\cos (2\alpha) {\left|{y}\right|}^2 +\left({\left|{x}\right|}^2{\left|{y}\right|}^2 - \langle x,y\rangle^2\right)\right)^2 + \left(\sin (2\alpha) {\left|{y}\right|}^2\right)^2\!, \\ B =& \cos (2\alpha) {\left|{y}\right|}^2 +\left({\left|{x}\right|}^2{\left|{y}\right|}^2 - \langle x,y\rangle^2\right), \\ C =& \sin (2\alpha) \langle x,y\rangle, \\ D =& {\left|{x}\right|}^4 + 2\cos (2\alpha) {\left|{x}\right|}^2 + 1, \end{align*} $$

with $\langle \cdot ,\cdot \rangle $ being the standard inner product in the Euclidean space $\mathbf {R}^n$ and ${\left |{\cdot }\right |}$ being the induced norm. The spray induced by a Bryant metric can also be written in the form $G_0 - 2PY$ , with the function P satisfying

$$\begin{align*}\left[(P + dp(y))^2 + (dq(y)^2)\right]\left[(F(y) - dq(y))^2 - dq(y)^2\right] = (\operatorname{\mathrm{Hess}} r(y,y) + s(x)g_{\mathbf{S}^n}(y,y))^2, \end{align*}$$

where $y\in T\mathbf {S}^n{\,\setminus\,} 0$ and the functions $p,q,s$ can be expressed in the gnomonic coordinates as

$$ \begin{align*} p(x) &= \dfrac14\ln \dfrac{1+2\cos(2\alpha) {\left|{x}\right|}^2 + {\left|{x}\right|}^4}{1 + 2{\left|{x}\right|}^2 + {\left|{x}\right|}^4}, \\q(x) &= \dfrac1{2}\tan^{-1}\dfrac{{\left|{x}\right|}^2 + \cos(2\alpha)}{\sin(2\alpha)}, \\s(x) &= s({\left|{x}\right|}^2) = 4(1+{\left|{x}\right|}^2)^2r"({\left|{x}\right|}^2) + 4(1+{\left|{x}\right|}^2)r'({\left|{x}\right|}^2), \end{align*} $$

and $r = r({\left |{x}\right |}^2)$ satisfies the differential equation

(15) $$ \begin{align} 4r"({\left|{x}\right|}^2)(1+{\left|{x}\right|}^2) + 6r'({\left|{x}\right|}^2) = \dfrac{\sin(2\alpha)}{2(1+2\cos(2\alpha){\left|{x}\right|}^2 + {\left|{x}\right|}^4)}. \end{align} $$

One may check that these functions are indeed smooth on the whole sphere as follows. Let $\varphi $ be the inclination angle in the spherical coordinate. Since the Bryant metrics are invariant under vertical reflection $\varphi \mapsto \pi - \varphi $ , it suffices to check that these functions extend to even smooth functions in $u = 1/\tan \varphi = 1/{\left |{x}\right |}$ . For p and q, this is clear. For s, we have

$$\begin{align*}s(u) = u^2(1+u^2)^2\dfrac{d^2r}{du^2} + (3u^3 + 5u)(u^2 + 1)\dfrac{dr}{du}, \end{align*}$$

so s is even and smooth as long as r is. Finally, the differential equation (15) reads

$$\begin{align*}(1+u^2)\dfrac{d^2r}{du^2} + 3u\dfrac{dr}{du} = \dfrac{\sin (2\alpha)}{2(1 + 2\cos(2\alpha)u^2 + u^4)}. \end{align*}$$

Note that it can be written as

$$\begin{align*}\dfrac{d}{du}\begin{pmatrix} \dot{r} \\ r \end{pmatrix} = f(u,r,\dot{r}) := \begin{pmatrix} \dfrac{3u}{1+u^2}\dot{r} \\ \dot{r} \end{pmatrix} + \begin{pmatrix} \dfrac{\sin (2\alpha)}{2(1 + 2\cos(2\alpha)u^2 + u^4)(1+u^2)} \\ 0 \end{pmatrix}. \end{align*}$$

Since f is uniformly Lipschitz in $(r,\dot {r})$ for all $u\in \mathbf {R}$ , an improved Picard–Lindelöf theorem (see, e.g., [Reference Teschl13]) implies the existence of an even solution for all $u\in \mathbf {R}$ . The solution is smooth since f is smooth. Another application of the theorem to the original equation (15) shows that this solution extends smoothly to the north and south poles of the sphere.

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