Flag structure
The same as a flag.
A flag structure of type on an
-dimensional manifold
is a field of flags
of type
defined by subspaces
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of the tangent spaces , depending smoothly on the point
. In other words, a flag structure of type
on
is a smooth section of the bundle of flags of type
on
, the typical fibre of which at the point
is the variety
. A flag structure of type
is called complete or full. A flag structure of type
on a manifold is a
-structure, where
is the group of all linear transformations of the
-dimensional vector space preserving some flag of type
. This
-structure is of infinite type. The automorphism group of a flag structure is, generally speaking, infinite-dimensional. The Lie algebra
of infinitesimal automorphisms of a flag structure on
has a chain of ideals
, where
consists of the vector fields
such that
for all
.
An important special case of flag structures are those of type , or
-dimensional distributions (here
,
).
A flag structure of type on
is called locally flat, or integrable, if every point
has a neighbourhood
and a coordinate system
in it such that the subspace
is spanned by the vectors
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for all and all
. This means that
has a collection of foliations
such that for all
the flag
is defined by a collection of subspaces of
tangent to the leaves of these foliations passing through
. A flag structure is locally flat if and only if for every
the distribution
is involutory, that is, if for any two vector fields
and
on
such that
and
for all
, it is true that
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where is the Lie bracket of
and
.
The existence of global (everywhere-defined) flag structures on a manifold imposes fairly-strong restrictions on its topological structure. For example, there is a line field, that is, a flag structure of type , on a simply-connected compact manifold if and only if its Euler characteristic vanishes. There is a complete flag structure on a simply-connected manifold if and only if it is completely parallelizable, that is, if its tangent bundle is trivial. If there is a parallel flag structure of type that is invariant relative to parallel displacements on a complete simply-connected
-dimensional Riemannian manifold
, then
is isomorphic to the direct product of simply-connected Riemannian manifolds of dimensions
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A transitive group of diffeomorphisms of a manifold leaves some flag structure of type
on
invariant if and only if its linear isotropy group preserves some flag of type
in the tangent space to
. In particular, if
is a closed subgroup of a Lie group
such that the restriction to
of the adjoint representation of
gives a triangular linear group, then there is an invariant complete flag structure on the homogeneous space
, and also an invariant flag structure of every other type.
A theory of deformations of flag structures on compact manifolds has been developed [4].
References
[1] | A. Borel, "Linear algebraic groups" , Benjamin (1969) MR0251042 Zbl 0206.49801 Zbl 0186.33201 |
[2] | J.E. Humphreys, "Linear algebraic groups" , Springer (1975) MR0396773 Zbl 0325.20039 |
[3] | I.N. Bernshtein, I.M. Gel'fand, S.I. Gel'fand, "Schubert cells and cohomology of the spaces ![]() |
[4] | K. Kodaira, D.C. Spencer, "Multifoliate structures" Ann. of Math. , 74 (1961) pp. 52–100 MR0148086 Zbl 0123.16401 |
Flag structure. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Flag_structure&oldid=17937