Chow–Rashevskii theorem
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Short description: On horizontal paths in a sub-Riemannian manifold
In sub-Riemannian geometry, the Chow–Rashevskii theorem (also known as Chow's theorem) asserts that any two points of a connected sub-Riemannian manifold, endowed with a bracket generating distribution, are connected by a horizontal path in the manifold. It is named after Wei-Liang Chow who proved it in 1939, and Petr Konstanovich Rashevskii, who proved it independently in 1938.
The theorem has a number of equivalent statements, one of which is that the topology induced by the Carnot–Carathéodory metric is equivalent to the intrinsic (locally Euclidean) topology of the manifold. A stronger statement that implies the theorem is the ball–box theorem. See, for instance, (Montgomery 2006) and (Gromov 1996).
See also
References
- Chow, W.L. (1939), "Über Systeme von linearen partiellen Differentialgleichungen erster Ordnung", Mathematische Annalen 117: 98–105, doi:10.1007/bf01450011
- Gromov, M. (1996), "Carnot-Carathéodory spaces seen from within", in A. Bellaiche, Proc. Journées nonholonomes: géométrie sous-riemannienne, théorie du contrôle, robotique, Paris, France, June 30--July 1, 1992., Prog. Math., 144, Birkhäuser, Basel, pp. 79–323, https://www.ihes.fr/~gromov/PDF/carnot_caratheodory.pdf, retrieved January 27, 2013
- Montgomery, R. (2006), A tour of sub-Riemannian geometries: their geodesics and applications, American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0821841655
- Rashevskii, P.K. (1938), "About connecting two points of complete non-holonomic space by admissible curve (in Russian)", Uch. Zapiski Ped. Inst. Libknexta (2): 83–94
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chow–Rashevskii theorem.
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