Stiefel manifold

{{Short description|The manifold of all orthonormal k-frames in n-dimensional Euclidean space}}

In mathematics, the Stiefel manifold V_k(\R^n) is the set of all orthonormal k-frames in \R^n. That is, it is the set of ordered orthonormal k-tuples of vectors in \R^n. It is named after Swiss mathematician Eduard Stiefel. Likewise one can define the complex Stiefel manifold V_k(\Complex^n) of orthonormal k-frames in \Complex^n and the quaternionic Stiefel manifold V_k(\mathbb{H}^n) of orthonormal k-frames in \mathbb{H}^n. More generally, the construction applies to any real, complex, or quaternionic inner product space.

In some contexts, a non-compact Stiefel manifold is defined as the set of all linearly independent k-frames in \R^n, \Complex^n, or \mathbb{H}^n; this is homotopy equivalent to the more restrictive definition, as the compact Stiefel manifold is a deformation retract of the non-compact one, by employing the Gram–Schmidt process. Statements about the non-compact form correspond to those for the compact form, replacing the orthogonal group (or unitary or symplectic group) with the general linear group.

Topology

Let \mathbb{F} stand for \R,\Complex, or \mathbb{H}. The Stiefel manifold V_k(\mathbb F^n) can be thought of as a set of n × k matrices by writing a k-frame as a matrix of k column vectors in \mathbb F^n. The orthonormality condition is expressed by A*A = I_k where A* denotes the conjugate transpose of A and I_k denotes the k × k identity matrix. We then have

:V_k(\mathbb F^n) = \left\{A \in \mathbb F^{n\times k} : A^* A = I_k \right\}.

The topology on V_k(\mathbb F^n) is the subspace topology inherited from \mathbb{F}^{n\times k}. With this topology V_k(\mathbb F^n) is a compact manifold whose dimension is given by

:\begin{align}

\dim V_k(\R^n) &= nk - \frac{1}{2}k(k+1) \\

\dim V_k(\Complex^n) &= 2nk - k^2 \\

\dim V_k(\mathbb{H}^n) &= 4nk - k(2k-1)

\end{align}

As a homogeneous space

Each of the Stiefel manifolds V_k(\mathbb F^n) can be viewed as a homogeneous space for the action of a classical group in a natural manner.

Every orthogonal transformation of a k-frame in \R^n results in another k-frame, and any two k-frames are related by some orthogonal transformation. In other words, the orthogonal group O(n) acts transitively on V_k(\R^n). The stabilizer subgroup of a given frame is the subgroup isomorphic to O(nk) which acts nontrivially on the orthogonal complement of the space spanned by that frame.

Likewise the unitary group U(n) acts transitively on V_k(\Complex^n) with stabilizer subgroup U(nk) and the symplectic group Sp(n) acts transitively on V_k(\mathbb{H}^n) with stabilizer subgroup Sp(nk).

In each case V_k(\mathbb F^n) can be viewed as a homogeneous space:

:\begin{align}

V_k(\R^n) &\cong \mbox{O}(n)/\mbox{O}(n-k)\\

V_k(\Complex^n) &\cong \mbox{U}(n)/\mbox{U}(n-k)\\

V_k(\mathbb{H}^n) &\cong \mbox{Sp}(n)/\mbox{Sp}(n-k)

\end{align}

When k = n, the corresponding action is free so that the Stiefel manifold V_n(\mathbb F^n) is a principal homogeneous space for the corresponding classical group.

When k is strictly less than n then the special orthogonal group SO(n) also acts transitively on V_k(\R^n) with stabilizer subgroup isomorphic to SO(nk) so that

:V_k(\R^n) \cong \mbox{SO}(n)/\mbox{SO}(n-k)\qquad\mbox{for } k < n.

The same holds for the action of the special unitary group on V_k(\Complex^n)

:V_k(\Complex^n) \cong \mbox{SU}(n)/\mbox{SU}(n-k)\qquad\mbox{for } k < n.

Thus for k = n − 1, the Stiefel manifold is a principal homogeneous space for the corresponding special classical group.

Uniform measure

The Stiefel manifold can be equipped with a uniform measure, i.e. a Borel measure that is invariant under the action of the groups noted above. For example, V_1(\R^2) which is isomorphic to the unit circle in the Euclidean plane, has as its uniform measure the natural uniform measure (arc length) on the circle. It is straightforward to sample this measure on V_k(\mathbb F^n) using Gaussian random matrices: if A\in\mathbb{F}^{n\times k} is a random matrix with independent entries identically distributed according to the standard normal distribution on \mathbb{F} and A = QR is the QR factorization of A, then the matrices, Q\in\mathbb{F}^{n\times k}, R\in\mathbb{F}^{k\times k} are independent random variables and Q is distributed according to the uniform measure on V_k(\mathbb F^n). This result is a consequence of the Bartlett decomposition theorem.{{cite book | last = Muirhead| first = Robb J. | title = Aspects of Multivariate Statistical Theory | publisher = John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York| year = 1982 | pages = xix+673| isbn = 0-471-09442-0}}

Special cases

A 1-frame in \mathbb{F}^n is nothing but a unit vector, so the Stiefel manifold V_1(\mathbb F^n) is just the unit sphere in \mathbb{F}^n. Therefore:

:\begin{align}

V_1(\R^n) &= S^{n-1}\\

V_1(\Complex^n) &= S^{2n-1}\\

V_1(\mathbb{H}^n) &= S^{4n-1}

\end{align}

Given a 2-frame in \R^n, let the first vector define a point in Sn−1 and the second a unit tangent vector to the sphere at that point. In this way, the Stiefel manifold V_2(\R^n) may be identified with the unit tangent bundle {{nowrap|to Sn−1.}}

When k = n or n−1 we saw in the previous section that V_k(\mathbb{F}^n) is a principal homogeneous space, and therefore diffeomorphic to the corresponding classical group:

:\begin{align}

V_{n-1}(\R^n) &\cong \mathrm{SO}(n)\\

V_{n-1}(\Complex^n) &\cong \mathrm{SU}(n)

\end{align}

:\begin{align}

V_{n}(\R^n) &\cong \mathrm O(n)\\

V_{n}(\Complex^n) &\cong \mathrm U(n)\\

V_{n}(\mathbb{H}^n) &\cong \mathrm{Sp}(n)

\end{align}

Functoriality

Given an orthogonal inclusion between vector spaces X \hookrightarrow Y, the image of a set of k orthonormal vectors is orthonormal, so there is an induced closed inclusion of Stiefel manifolds, V_k(X) \hookrightarrow V_k(Y), and this is functorial. More subtly, given an n-dimensional vector space X, the dual basis construction gives a bijection between bases for X and bases for the dual space X^*, which is continuous, and thus yields a homeomorphism of top Stiefel manifolds V_n(X) \stackrel{\sim}{\to} V_n(X^*). This is also functorial for isomorphisms of vector spaces.

As a principal bundle

There is a natural projection

:p : V_k(\mathbb F^n) \to G_k(\mathbb F^n)

from the Stiefel manifold V_k(\mathbb F^n) to the Grassmannian of k-planes in \mathbb{F}^n which sends a k-frame to the subspace spanned by that frame. The fiber over a given point P in G_k(\mathbb F^n) is the set of all orthonormal k-frames contained in the space P.

This projection has the structure of a principal G-bundle where G is the associated classical group of degree k. Take the real case for concreteness. There is a natural right action of O(k) on V_k(\R^n) which rotates a k-frame in the space it spans. This action is free but not transitive. The orbits of this action are precisely the orthonormal k-frames spanning a given k-dimensional subspace; that is, they are the fibers of the map p. Similar arguments hold in the complex and quaternionic cases.

We then have a sequence of principal bundles:

:\begin{align}

\mathrm O(k) &\to V_k(\R^n) \to G_k(\R^n)\\

\mathrm U(k) &\to V_k(\Complex^n) \to G_k(\Complex^n)\\

\mathrm{Sp}(k) &\to V_k(\mathbb{H}^n) \to G_k(\mathbb{H}^n)

\end{align}

The vector bundles associated to these principal bundles via the natural action of G on \mathbb{F}^k are just the tautological bundles over the Grassmannians. In other words, the Stiefel manifold V_k(\mathbb F^n) is the orthogonal, unitary, or symplectic frame bundle associated to the tautological bundle on a Grassmannian.

When one passes to the n\to \infty limit, these bundles become the universal bundles for the classical groups.

Homotopy

The Stiefel manifolds fit into a family of fibrations:

:V_{k-1}(\R^{n-1}) \to V_k(\R^n) \to S^{n-1},

thus the first non-trivial homotopy group of the space V_k(\R^n) is in dimension n − k. Moreover,

:\pi_{n-k} V_k(\R^n) \simeq \begin{cases} \Z & n-k \text{ even or } k=1 \\ \Z_2 & n-k \text{ odd and } k>1 \end{cases}

This result is used in the obstruction-theoretic definition of Stiefel–Whitney classes.

See also

  • Flag manifold
  • Matrix Langevin distribution{{cite journal |last1=Chikuse |first1=Yasuko |title=Concentrated matrix Langevin distributions |journal=Journal of Multivariate Analysis |date=1 May 2003 |volume=85 |issue=2 |pages=375–394 |doi=10.1016/S0047-259X(02)00065-9 |language=en |issn=0047-259X|doi-access=free }}{{cite journal |last1=Pal |first1=Subhadip |last2=Sengupta |first2=Subhajit |last3=Mitra |first3=Riten |last4=Banerjee |first4=Arunava |title=Conjugate Priors and Posterior Inference for the Matrix Langevin Distribution on the Stiefel Manifold |journal=Bayesian Analysis |date=September 2020 |volume=15 |issue=3 |pages=871–908 |doi=10.1214/19-BA1176 |issn=1936-0975|doi-access=free }}

References

{{reflist}}

  • {{cite book | first = Allen | last = Hatcher | authorlink = Allen Hatcher | year = 2002 | title = Algebraic Topology | publisher = Cambridge University Press | isbn = 0-521-79540-0 | url = http://pi.math.cornell.edu/~hatcher/AT/ATpage.html}}
  • {{cite book | first = Dale | last = Husemoller | year = 1994 | title = Fibre Bundles | edition = (3rd ed.) | publisher = Springer-Verlag | location = New York | isbn = 0-387-94087-1}}
  • {{cite book | first = Ioan Mackenzie | last = James | year = 1976 | title = The topology of Stiefel manifolds | publisher = CUP Archive | isbn = 978-0-521-21334-9 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=9ss7AAAAIAAJ}}
  • {{Springer|id=Stiefel_manifold|title=Stiefel manifold}}

Category:Differential geometry

Category:Homogeneous spaces

Category:Fiber bundles

Category:Manifolds