Valuation (geometry)

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Template:For In geometry, a valuation is a finitely additive function from a collection of subsets of a set X to an abelian semigroup. For example, Lebesgue measure is a valuation on finite unions of convex bodies of โ„n. Other examples of valuations on finite unions of convex bodies of โ„n are surface area, mean width, and Euler characteristic.

In geometry, continuity (or smoothness) conditions are often imposed on valuations, but there are also purely discrete facets of the theory. In fact, the concept of valuation has its origin in the dissection theory of polytopes and in particular Hilbert's third problem, which has grown into a rich theory reliant on tools from abstract algebra.

Definition

Let X be a set, and let ๐’ฎ be a collection of subsets of X. A function ฯ• on ๐’ฎ with values in an abelian semigroup R is called a valuation if it satisfies ฯ•(AโˆชB)+ฯ•(AโˆฉB)=ฯ•(A)+ฯ•(B) whenever A, B, AโˆชB, and AโˆฉB are elements of ๐’ฎ. If โˆ…โˆˆ๐’ฎ, then one always assumes ฯ•(โˆ…)=0.

Examples

Some common examples of ๐’ฎ are


Let ๐’ฆ(โ„n) be the set of convex bodies in โ„n. Then some valuations on ๐’ฆ(โ„n) are


Some other valuations are

  • the lattice point enumerator Pโ†ฆ|โ„คnโˆฉP|, where P is a lattice polytope
  • cardinality, on the family of finite sets

Valuations on convex bodies

From here on, let V=โ„n, let ๐’ฆ(V) be the set of convex bodies in V, and let ฯ• be a valuation on ๐’ฆ(V).

We say ฯ• is translation invariant if, for all Kโˆˆ๐’ฆ(V) and xโˆˆV, we have ฯ•(K+x)=ฯ•(K).

Let (K,L)โˆˆ๐’ฆ(V)2. The Hausdorff distance dH(K,L) is defined as dH(K,L)=inf{ฮต>0:KโŠ‚Lฮต and LโŠ‚Kฮต}, where Kฮต is the ฮต-neighborhood of K under some Euclidean inner product. Equipped with this metric, ๐’ฆ(V) is a locally compact space.

The space of continuous, translation-invariant valuations from ๐’ฆ(V) to โ„‚ is denoted by Val(V).

The topology on Val(V) is the topology of uniform convergence on compact subsets of ๐’ฆ(V). Equipped with the norm โ€–ฯ•โ€–=max{|ฯ•(K)|:KโŠ‚B}, where BโŠ‚V is a bounded subset with nonempty interior, Val(V) is a Banach space.

Homogeneous valuations

A translation-invariant continuous valuation ฯ•โˆˆVal(V) is said to be i-homogeneous if ฯ•(ฮปK)=ฮปiฯ•(K) for all ฮป>0 and Kโˆˆ๐’ฆ(V). The subset Vali(V) of i-homogeneous valuations is a vector subspace of Val(V). McMullen's decomposition theorem[1] states that

Val(V)=โจi=0nVali(V),n=dimV.

In particular, the degree of a homogeneous valuation is always an integer between 0 and n=dimV.

Valuations are not only graded by the degree of homogeneity, but also by the parity with respect to the reflection through the origin, namely Vali=Vali+โŠ•Valiโˆ’, where ฯ•โˆˆValiฯต with ฯตโˆˆ{+,โˆ’} if and only if ฯ•(โˆ’K)=ฯตฯ•(K) for all convex bodies K. The elements of Vali+ and Valiโˆ’ are said to be even and odd, respectively.

It is a simple fact that Val0(V) is 1-dimensional and spanned by the Euler characteristic ฯ‡, that is, consists of the constant valuations on ๐’ฆ(V).

In 1957 Hadwiger[2] proved that Valn(V) (where n=dimV) coincides with the 1-dimensional space of Lebesgue measures on V.

A valuation ฯ•โˆˆVal(โ„n) is simple if ฯ•(K)=0 for all convex bodies with dimK<n. Schneider[3] in 1996 described all simple valuations on โ„n: they are given by ฯ•(K)=cvol(K)+โˆซSnโˆ’1f(ฮธ)dฯƒK(ฮธ), where cโˆˆโ„‚, fโˆˆC(Snโˆ’1) is an arbitrary odd function on the unit sphere Snโˆ’1โŠ‚โ„n, and ฯƒK is the surface area measure of K. In particular, any simple valuation is the sum of an n- and an (nโˆ’1)-homogeneous valuation. This in turn implies that an i-homogeneous valuation is uniquely determined by its restrictions to all (i+1)-dimensional subspaces.

Embedding theorems

The Klain embedding is a linear injection of Vali+(V), the space of even i-homogeneous valuations, into the space of continuous sections of a canonical complex line bundle over the Grassmannian Gri(V) of i-dimensional linear subspaces of V. Its construction is based on Hadwiger's characterization[2] of n-homogeneous valuations. If ฯ•โˆˆVali(V) and EโˆˆGri(V), then the restriction ฯ•|E is an element Vali(E), and by Hadwiger's theorem it is a Lebesgue measure. Hence Klฯ•(E)=ฯ•|E defines a continuous section of the line bundle Dens over Gri(V) with fiber over E equal to the 1-dimensional space Dens(E) of densities (Lebesgue measures) on E.

Theorem (Klain[4]). The linear map Kl:Vali+(V)โ†’C(Gri(V),Dens) is injective.

A different injection, known as the Schneider embedding, exists for odd valuations. It is based on Schneider's description of simple valuations.[3] It is a linear injection of Valiโˆ’(V), the space of odd i-homogeneous valuations, into a certain quotient of the space of continuous sections of a line bundle over the partial flag manifold of cooriented pairs (FiโŠ‚Ei+1). Its definition is reminiscent of the Klain embedding, but more involved. Details can be found in.[5]

The Goodey-Weil embedding is a linear injection of Vali into the space of distributions on the i-fold product of the (nโˆ’1)-dimensional sphere. It is nothing but the Schwartz kernel of a natural polarization that any ฯ•โˆˆValk(V) admits, namely as a functional on the k-fold product of C2(Snโˆ’1), the latter space of functions having the geometric meaning of differences of support functions of smooth convex bodies. For details, see.[5]

Irreducibility Theorem

The classical theorems of Hadwiger, Schneider and McMullen give fairly explicit descriptions of valuations that are homogeneous of degree 1, nโˆ’1, and n=dimV. But for degrees 1<i<nโˆ’1 very little was known before the turn of the 21st century. McMullen's conjecture is the statement that the valuations ฯ•A(K)=voln(K+A),Aโˆˆ๐’ฆ(V), span a dense subspace of Val(V). McMullen's conjecture was confirmed by Alesker in a much stronger form, which became known as the Irreducibility Theorem:

Theorem (Alesker[6]). For every 0โ‰คiโ‰คn, the natural action of GL(V) on the spaces Vali+(V) and Valiโˆ’(V) is irreducible.

Here the action of the general linear group GL(V) on Val(V) is given by (gโ‹…ฯ•)(K)=ฯ•(gโˆ’1K). The proof of the Irreducibility Theorem is based on the embedding theorems of the previous section and Beilinson-Bernstein localization.

Smooth valuations

A valuation ฯ•โˆˆVal(V) is called smooth if the map gโ†ฆgโ‹…ฯ• from GL(V) to Val(V) is smooth. In other words, ฯ• is smooth if and only if ฯ• is a smooth vector of the natural representation of GL(V) on Val(V). The space of smooth valuations Valโˆž(V) is dense in Val(V); it comes equipped with a natural Frรฉchet-space topology, which is finer than the one induced from Val(V).

For every (complex-valued) smooth function f on Gri(โ„n), ฯ•(K)=โˆซGri(โ„n)voli(PEK)f(E)dE, where PE:โ„nโ†’E denotes the orthogonal projection and dE is the Haar measure, defines a smooth even valuation of degree i. It follows from the Irreducibility Theorem, in combination with the Casselman-Wallach theorem, that any smooth even valuation can be represented in this way. Such a representation is sometimes called a Crofton formula.

For any (complex-valued) smooth differential form ฯ‰โˆˆฮฉnโˆ’1(โ„nร—Snโˆ’1) that is invariant under all the translations (x,u)โ†ฆ(x+t,u) and every number cโˆˆโ„‚, integration over the normal cycle defines a smooth valuation: Template:NumBlk As a set, the normal cycle N(K) consists of the outward unit normals to K. The Irreducibility Theorem implies that every smooth valuation is of this form.

Operations on translation-invariant valuations

There are several natural operations defined on the subspace of smooth valuations Valโˆž(V)โŠ‚Val(V). The most important one is the product of two smooth valuations. Together with pullback and pushforward, this operation extends to valuations on manifolds.

Exterior product

Let V,W be finite-dimensional real vector spaces. There exists a bilinear map, called the exterior product, โŠ :Valโˆž(V)ร—Valโˆž(W)โ†’Val(Vร—W) which is uniquely characterized by the following two properties:

  • it is continuous with respect to the usual topologies on Val and Valโˆž.
  • if ฯ•=volV(โˆ™+A) and ฯˆ=volW(โˆ™+B) where Aโˆˆ๐’ฆ(V) and Bโˆˆ๐’ฆ(W) are convex bodies with smooth boundary and strictly positive Gauss curvature, and volV and volW are densities on V and W, then

ฯ•โŠ ฯˆ=(volVโŠ volW)(โˆ™+Aร—B).

Product

The product of two smooth valuations ฯ•,ฯˆโˆˆValโˆž(V) is defined by (ฯ•โ‹…ฯˆ)(K)=(ฯ•โŠ ฯˆ)(ฮ”(K)), where ฮ”:Vโ†’Vร—V is the diagonal embedding. The product is a continuous map Valโˆž(V)ร—Valโˆž(V)โ†’Valโˆž(V). Equipped with this product, Valโˆž(V) becomes a commutative associative graded algebra with the Euler characteristic as the multiplicative identity.

Alesker-Poincarรฉ duality

By a theorem of Alesker, the restriction of the product Valkโˆž(V)ร—Valnโˆ’kโˆž(V)โ†’Valnโˆž(V)=Dens(V) is a non-degenerate pairing. This motivates the definition of the k-homogeneous generalized valuation, denoted Valkโˆ’โˆž(V), as Valnโˆ’kโˆž(V)โˆ—โŠ—Dens(V), topologized with the weak topology. By the Alesker-Poincarรฉ duality, there is a natural dense inclusion Valkโˆž(V)โ†ชValkโˆ’โˆž(V)/

Convolution

Convolution is a natural product on Valโˆž(V)โŠ—Dens(Vโˆ—). For simplicity, we fix a density vol on V to trivialize the second factor. Define for fixed A,Bโˆˆ๐’ฆ(V) with smooth boundary and strictly positive Gauss curvature vol(โˆ™+A)โˆ—vol(โˆ™+B)=vol(โˆ™+A+B). There is then a unique extension by continuity to a map Valโˆž(V)ร—Valโˆž(V)โ†’Valโˆž(V), called the convolution. Unlike the product, convolution respects the co-grading, namely if ฯ•โˆˆValnโˆ’iโˆž(V), ฯˆโˆˆValnโˆ’jโˆž(V), then ฯ•โˆ—ฯˆโˆˆValnโˆ’iโˆ’jโˆž(V).

For instance, let V(K1,โ€ฆ,Kn) denote the mixed volume of the convex bodies K1,โ€ฆ,KnโŠ‚โ„n. If convex bodies A1,,Anโˆ’i in โ„n with a smooth boundary and strictly positive Gauss curvature are fixed, then ฯ•(K)=V(K[i],A1,,Anโˆ’i) defines a smooth valuation of degree i. The convolution two such valuations is V(โˆ™[i],A1,,Anโˆ’i)โˆ—V(โˆ™[j],B1,,Bnโˆ’j)=ci,jV(โˆ™[nโˆ’jโˆ’i],A1,,Anโˆ’i,B1,,Bnโˆ’j), where ci,j is a constant depending only on i,j,n.

Fourier transform

The Alesker-Fourier transform is a natural, GL(V)-equivariant isomorphism of complex-valued valuations ๐”ฝ:Valโˆž(V)โ†’Valโˆž(Vโˆ—)โŠ—Dens(V), discovered by Alesker and enjoying many properties resembling the classical Fourier transform, which explains its name.

It reverses the grading, namely ๐”ฝ:Valkโˆž(V)โ†’Valnโˆ’kโˆž(Vโˆ—)โŠ—Dens(V), and intertwines the product and the convolution: ๐”ฝ(ฯ•โ‹…ฯˆ)=๐”ฝฯ•โˆ—๐”ฝฯˆ.

Fixing for simplicity a Euclidean structure to identify V=Vโˆ—, Dens(V)=โ„‚, we have the identity ๐”ฝ2ฯ•(K)=ฯ•(โˆ’K). On even valuations, there is a simple description of the Fourier transform in terms of the Klain embedding: Kl๐”ฝฯ•(E)=Klฯ•(EโŠฅ). In particular, even real-valued valuations remain real-valued after the Fourier transform.

For odd valuations, the description of the Fourier transform is substantially more involved. Unlike the even case, it is no longer of purely geometric nature. For instance, the space of real-valued odd valuations is not preserved.

Pullback and pushforward

Given a linear map f:Uโ†’V, there are induced operations of pullback fโˆ—:Val(V)โ†’Val(U) and pushforward fโˆ—:Val(U)โŠ—Dens(U)โˆ—โ†’Val(V)โŠ—Dens(V)โˆ—. The pullback is the simpler of the two, given by fโˆ—ฯ•(K)=ฯ•(f(K)). It evidently preserves the parity and degree of homogeneity of a valuation. Note that the pullback does not preserve smoothness when f is not injective.

The pushforward is harder to define formally. For simplicity, fix Lebesgue measures on U and V. The pushforward can be uniquely characterized by describing its action on valuations of the form vol(โˆ™+A), for all Aโˆˆ๐’ฆ(U), and then extended by continuity to all valuations using the Irreducibility Theorem. For a surjective map f, fโˆ—vol(โˆ™+A)=vol(โˆ™+f(A)). For an inclusion f:Uโ†ชV, choose a splitting V=UโŠ•W. Then fโˆ—vol(โˆ™+A)(K)=โˆซWvol(Kโˆฉ(U+w)+A)dw. Informally, the pushforward is dual to the pullback with respect to the Alesker-Poincarรฉ pairing: for ฯ•โˆˆVal(V) and ฯˆโˆˆVal(U)โŠ—Dens(U)โˆ—, โŸจfโˆ—ฯ•,ฯˆโŸฉ=โŸจฯ•,fโˆ—ฯˆโŸฉ. However, this identity has to be carefully interpreted since the pairing is only well-defined for smooth valuations. For further details, see.[7]

Valuations on manifolds

In a series of papers beginning in 2006, Alesker laid down the foundations for a theory of valuations on manifolds that extends the theory of valuations on convex bodies. The key observation leading to this extension is that via integration over the normal cycle (Template:EquationNote), a smooth translation-invariant valuation may be evaluated on sets much more general than convex ones. Also (Template:EquationNote) suggests to define smooth valuations in general by dropping the requirement that the form ฯ‰ be translation-invariant and by replacing the translation-invariant Lebesgue measure with an arbitrary smooth measure.

Let X be an n-dimensional smooth manifold and let โ„™X=โ„™+(Tโˆ—X) be the co-sphere bundle of X, that is, the oriented projectivization of the cotangent bundle. Let ๐’ซ(X) denote the collection of compact differentiable polyhedra in X. The normal cycle N(A)โŠ‚โ„™X of Aโˆˆ๐’ซ(X), which consists of the outward co-normals to A, is naturally a Lipschitz submanifold of dimension nโˆ’1.

For ease of presentation we henceforth assume that X is oriented, even though the concept of smooth valuations in fact does not depend on orientability. The space of smooth valuations ๐’ฑโˆž(X) on X consists of functions ฯ•:๐’ซ(X)โ†’โ„‚ of the form ฯ•(A)=โˆซAฮผ+โˆซN(A)ฯ‰,Aโˆˆ๐’ซ(X), where ฮผโˆˆฮฉn(X) and ฯ‰โˆˆฮฉnโˆ’1(โ„™X) can be arbitrary. It was shown by Alesker that the smooth valuations on open subsets of X form a soft sheaf over X.

Examples

The following are examples of smooth valuations on a smooth manifold X:

  • Smooth measures on X.
  • The Euler characteristic; this follows from the work of Chern[8] on the Gauss-Bonnet theorem, where such ฮผ and ฯ‰ were constructed to represent the Euler characteristic. In particular, ฮผ is then the Chern-Gauss-Bonnet integrand, which is the Pfaffian of the Riemannian curvature tensor.
  • If X is Riemannian, then the Lipschitz-Killing valuations or intrinsic volumes V0X=ฯ‡,V1X,โ€ฆ,VnX=volX are smooth valuations. If f:Xโ†’โ„m is any isometric immersion into a Euclidean space, then ViX=fโˆ—Viโ„m, where Viโ„m denotes the usual intrinsic volumes on โ„m (see below for the definition of the pullback). The existence of these valuations is the essence of Weyl's tube formula.[9]
  • Let โ„‚Pn be the complex projective space, and let Grkโ„‚ denote the Grassmannian of all complex projective subspaces of fixed dimension k. The function

ฯ•(A)=โˆซGrkโ„‚ฯ‡(AโˆฉE)dE,Aโˆˆ๐’ซ(โ„‚Pn), where the integration is with respect to the Haar probability measure on Grkโ„‚, is a smooth valuation. This follows from the work of Fu.[10]

Filtration

The space ๐’ฑโˆž(X) admits no natural grading in general, however it carries a canonical filtration ๐’ฑโˆž(X)=W0โŠƒW1โŠƒโ‹ฏโŠƒWn. Here Wn consists of the smooth measures on X, and Wj is given by forms ฯ‰ in the ideal generated by ฯ€โˆ—ฮฉj(X), where ฯ€:โ„™Xโ†’X is the canonical projection.

The associated graded vector space โจi=0nWi/Wi+1 is canonically isomorphic to the space of smooth sections โจi=0nCโˆž(X,Valiโˆž(TX)), where Valiโˆž(TX) denotes the vector bundle over X such that the fiber over a point xโˆˆX is Valiโˆž(TxX), the space of i-homogeneous smooth translation-invariant valuations on the tangent space TxX.

Product

The space ๐’ฑโˆž(X) admits a natural product. This product is continuous, commutative, associative, compatible with the filtration: Wiโ‹…WjโŠ‚Wi+j, and has the Euler characteristic as the identity element. It also commutes with the restriction to embedded submanifolds, and the diffeomorphism group of X acts on ๐’ฑโˆž(X) by algebra automorphisms.

For example, if X is Riemannian, the Lipschitz-Killing valuations satisfy ViXโ‹…VjX=Vi+jX.

The Alesker-Poincarรฉ duality still holds. For compact X it says that the pairing ๐’ฑโˆž(X)ร—๐’ฑโˆž(X)โ†’โ„‚, (ฯ•,ฯˆ)โ†ฆ(ฯ•โ‹…ฯˆ)(X) is non-degenerate. As in the translation-invariant case, this duality can be used to define generalized valuations. Unlike the translation-invariant case, no good definition of continuous valuations exists for valuations on manifolds.

The product of valuations closely reflects the geometric operation of intersection of subsets. Informally, consider the generalized valuation ฯ‡A=ฯ‡(Aโˆฉโˆ™). The product is given by ฯ‡Aโ‹…ฯ‡B=ฯ‡AโˆฉB. Now one can obtain smooth valuations by averaging generalized valuations of the form ฯ‡A, more precisely ฯ•(X)=โˆซSฯ‡s(A)ds is a smooth valuation if S is a sufficiently large measured family of diffeomorphisms. Then one has โˆซSฯ‡s(A)dsโ‹…โˆซSฯ‡s(B)ds=โˆซSร—Sฯ‡s(A)โˆฉs(B)dsds, see.[11]

Pullback and pushforward

Every smooth immersion f:Xโ†’Y of smooth manifolds induces a pullback map fโˆ—:๐’ฑโˆž(Y)โ†’๐’ฑโˆž(X). If f is an embedding, then (fโˆ—ฯ•)(A)=ฯ•(f(A)),Aโˆˆ๐’ซ(X). The pullback is a morphism of filtered algebras. Every smooth proper submersion f:Xโ†’Y defines a pushforward map fโˆ—:๐’ฑโˆž(X)โ†’๐’ฑโˆž(Y) by (fโˆ—ฯ•)(A)=ฯ•(fโˆ’1(A)),Aโˆˆ๐’ซ(Y). The pushforward is compatible with the filtration as well: fโˆ—:Wi(X)โ†’Wiโˆ’(dimXโˆ’dimY)(Y). For general smooth maps, one can define pullback and pushforward for generalized valuations under some restrictions.

Applications in Integral Geometry

Let M be a Riemannian manifold and let G be a Lie group of isometries of M acting transitively on the sphere bundle SM. Under these assumptions the space ๐’ฑโˆž(M)G of G-invariant smooth valuations on M is finite-dimensional; let ฯ•1,โ€ฆ,ฯ•m be a basis. Let A,Bโˆˆ๐’ซ(M) be differentiable polyhedra in M. Then integrals of the form โˆซGฯ•i(AโˆฉgB)dg are expressible as linear combinations of ฯ•k(A)ฯ•l(B) with coefficients cikl independent of A and B: Template:NumBlk Formulas of this type are called kinematic formulas. Their existence in this generality was proved by Fu.[10] For the three simply connected real space forms, that is, the sphere, Euclidean space, and hyperbolic space, they go back to Blaschke, Santalรณ, Chern, and Federer.

Describing the kinematic formulas explicitly is typically a difficult problem. In fact already in the step from real to complex space forms, considerable difficulties arise and these have only recently been resolved by Bernig, Fu, and Solanes.[12] [13] The key insight responsible for this progress is that the kinematic formulas contain the same information as the algebra of invariant valuations ๐’ฑโˆž(M)G. For a precise statement, let kG:๐’ฑโˆž(M)Gโ†’๐’ฑโˆž(M)GโŠ—๐’ฑโˆž(M)G be the kinematic operator, that is, the map determined by the kinematic formulas (Template:EquationNote). Let pd:๐’ฑโˆž(M)Gโ†’๐’ฑโˆž(M)Gโˆ— denote the Alesker-Poincarรฉ duality, which is a linear isomorphism. Finally let mGโˆ— be the adjoint of the product map mG:๐’ฑโˆž(M)GโŠ—๐’ฑโˆž(M)Gโ†’๐’ฑโˆž(M)G. The Fundamental theorem of algebraic integral geometry relating operations on valuations to integral geometry, states that if the Poincarรฉ duality is used to identify ๐’ฑโˆž(M)G with ๐’ฑโˆž(M)Gโˆ—, then kG=mGโˆ—:

.

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Bibliography