<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Geometry and the imagination]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://lamington.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Danny Calegari]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://lamington.wordpress.com/author/dannycaltech/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Slightly elevated Teichmuller&nbsp;theory]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>Last week at my invitation, David Dumas spoke in the U Chicago geometry seminar and gave a wonderful introductory talk on the theory of convex real projective structures on surfaces. This is the first step on the road to what is colloquially known as &#8220;Higher Teichmüller theory&#8221;, and the talk made such an impression on me that I felt compelled to summarize it in a blog post, just to organize and clarify the material in my own mind.</p>
<p>Fix a surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> (for convenience closed, oriented of genus at least 2). We are interested in the space <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%28S%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C(S)" title="C(S)" class="latex" /> of <em>convex real projective structures</em> on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" />. This has at least 3 incarnations:</p>
<ol>
<li>it is a connected component of the <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" /> character variety <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X%28S%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X(S)" title="X(S)" class="latex" />, the space of homomorphisms from <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpi_1%28S%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;pi_1(S)" title="&#92;pi_1(S)" class="latex" /> into <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" /> up to conjugacy (note: since all representations in this component are irreducible, one can really take the naive quotient by the conjugation action rather than the usual quotient in the sense of geometric invariant theory);</li>
<li>it is topologically a cell, homeomorphic to <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%5E%7B16g-16%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbf{R}^{16g-16}" title="&#92;mathbf{R}^{16g-16}" class="latex" />, and can be given explicit coordinates (analogous to Fenchel-Nielsen coordinates for hyperbolic structures) in such a way that a coordinate describes an explicit method to build such a structure from simple pieces by gluing; and</li>
<li>it has the natural structure of a complex variety; explicitly it is a bundle over the Teichmuller space of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> whose fiber is isomorphic to the vector space of cubic differentials on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" />.</li>
</ol>
<p>This last identification is quite remarkable and subtle, since <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" /> is not a complex Lie group, and its action on the projective plane does not leave invariant a complex structure. Here one should think of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BTeich%7D%28S%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{Teich}(S)" title="&#92;mathrm{Teich}(S)" class="latex" /> as the space of (marked) <em>conformal structures</em> on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" />, rather than as the space of (marked) hyperbolic structures on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" />.</p>
<p>Following Dumas, we explain these three incarnations in turn. Some references for this material are <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1053346">Goldman</a>, <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=2464391">Benoist</a>, and <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1828223">Loftin</a>.</p>
<p><!--more--></p>
<p><strong>1. Real projective structures</strong></p>
<p>Let&#8217;s start with the definition of a real projective structure. This is an example of what is called a <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28G%2CX%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(G,X)" title="(G,X)" class="latex" /> structure in the sense of Ehresmann; i.e. an atlas of charts modeled on some real analytic manifold <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> with transition functions in some (pseudo)group of real analytic transformations <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" />. Here <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> is the real projective plane <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbf%7BRP%7D%5E2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbf{RP}^2" title="&#92;mathbf{RP}^2" class="latex" />, which can be thought of as the ordinary plane together with a circle at infinity, or as the space of lines through the origin in ordinary 3-space; and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> is the group <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" />, acting linearly on 3-space and thereby projectively on the (projective) plane.</p>
<p>Associated to such a structure is a <em>developing map</em> <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=D%3A%5Ctilde%7BS%7D+%5Cto+%5Cmathbf%7BRP%7D%5E2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="D:&#92;tilde{S} &#92;to &#92;mathbf{RP}^2" title="D:&#92;tilde{S} &#92;to &#92;mathbf{RP}^2" class="latex" /> defined as follows. Pick a basepoint and a chart around that point, and use the chart to identify the chart with a subset of the projective plane. Extend the map along each path based at the basepoint by analytic continuation, using the transition functions to move from chart to chart. The result is well-defined on homotopy classes of paths rel. endpoints and determines a map from the universal cover &#8212; this is the developing map. It is independent of choices, up to composition with a projective automorphism. In particular, the deck group of the covering acts on the projective plane in a unique manner which makes <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="D" title="D" class="latex" /> equivariant. Thus a projective structure determines a <em>holonomy </em>representation <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Crho%3A%5Cpi_1%28S%29+%5Cto+%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;rho:&#92;pi_1(S) &#92;to &#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;rho:&#92;pi_1(S) &#92;to &#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" />.</p>
<p>It follows from a general theorem of Ehresmann-Thurston (valid for any <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28G%2CX%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(G,X)" title="(G,X)" class="latex" /> structure) that projective structures on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> near any given structure are parameterized (locally) by the conjugacy class of the representation associated to the developing map; technically, the map from the space of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28G%2CX%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(G,X)" title="(G,X)" class="latex" /> structures to the space of representations up to conjugacy is a <em>local homeomorphism</em>. There are two parts to this claim: first, that any deformation of the representation is associated to a deformation of the structure; and second, that nearby <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28G%2CX%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(G,X)" title="(G,X)" class="latex" /> structures with the same holonomy are isomorphic.</p>
<p>The first claim can be proved as follows. Think of a representation from <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpi_1%28S%29+%5Cto+G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;pi_1(S) &#92;to G" title="&#92;pi_1(S) &#92;to G" class="latex" /> as an <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> bundle <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=E&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="E" title="E" class="latex" /> over <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> with a flat <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=G&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="G" title="G" class="latex" /> structure giving a foliation <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathcal%7BF%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathcal{F}" title="&#92;mathcal{F}" class="latex" /> transverse to the fibers. In this language a <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28G%2CX%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(G,X)" title="(G,X)" class="latex" /> structure is determined by a section <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Csigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;sigma" title="&#92;sigma" class="latex" /> of the bundle transverse to <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathcal%7BF%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathcal{F}" title="&#92;mathcal{F}" class="latex" />; charts are given locally by the composition of this section with projection along leaves of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathcal%7BF%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathcal{F}" title="&#92;mathcal{F}" class="latex" /> to a fiber. The key point is that as we deform the flat bundle structure and the foliation <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathcal%7BF%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathcal{F}" title="&#92;mathcal{F}" class="latex" /> by deforming the representation, the section <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Csigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;sigma" title="&#92;sigma" class="latex" /> stays transverse so there is an accompanying deformation of the <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28G%2CX%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(G,X)" title="(G,X)" class="latex" /> structure.</p>
<p>The second claim can be seen by covering <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> by small open charts <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=U_i&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="U_i" title="U_i" class="latex" /> and choosing subcharts <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=V_i&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="V_i" title="V_i" class="latex" /> with <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Coverline%7BV%7D_i+%5Csubset+U_i&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;overline{V}_i &#92;subset U_i" title="&#92;overline{V}_i &#92;subset U_i" class="latex" />, and then noting that if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cphi_i%2C%5Cphi_i%27%3AU_i+%5Cto+X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;phi_i,&#92;phi_i&#039;:U_i &#92;to X" title="&#92;phi_i,&#92;phi_i&#039;:U_i &#92;to X" class="latex" /> are sufficiently close, the image <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cphi_i%27%28V_i%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;phi_i&#039;(V_i)" title="&#92;phi_i&#039;(V_i)" class="latex" /> is contained in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cphi_i%28U_i%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;phi_i(U_i)" title="&#92;phi_i(U_i)" class="latex" />, and we obtain an isomorphism of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28G%2CX%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(G,X)" title="(G,X)" class="latex" /> structures by patching together local isomorphisms <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cphi_i%5E%7B-1%7D+%5Cphi_i%27%7C_%7BV_i%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;phi_i^{-1} &#92;phi_i&#039;|_{V_i}" title="&#92;phi_i^{-1} &#92;phi_i&#039;|_{V_i}" class="latex" />.</p>
<p>Note that the point stabilizers of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" /> acting on the projective plane are noncompact, and there is therefore no canonical metric on a real projective surface. On the other hand, projective transformations permute the set of <em>straight lines</em> in the plane, so that projective surfaces have canonical families of lines through every point in every tangent direction. One refers to these lines as <em>geodesics</em>, even in the absence of a natural metric.</p>
<p><strong>2. Convex structures</strong></p>
<p>A real projective structure on a surface is <em>convex</em> if the developing map <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="D" title="D" class="latex" /> is a homeomorphism onto a <em>proper convex</em> (open) subset <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5COmega&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Omega" title="&#92;Omega" class="latex" /> of the projective plane. Thus all such structures arise from a projective action of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpi_1%28S%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;pi_1(S)" title="&#92;pi_1(S)" class="latex" /> that stabilizes some <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5COmega&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Omega" title="&#92;Omega" class="latex" /> and acts freely, properly discontinuously and cocompactly there.</p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>. Let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=T&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="T" title="T" class="latex" /> be the open triangle in the projective plane with vertices at the (projective) points <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%281%3A0%3A0%29%2C+%280%3A1%3A0%29%2C+%280%3A0%3A1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(1:0:0), (0:1:0), (0:0:1)" title="(1:0:0), (0:1:0), (0:0:1)" class="latex" />. Let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Calpha%2C%5Cbeta&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;alpha,&#92;beta" title="&#92;alpha,&#92;beta" class="latex" /> be the diagonal matrices with entries <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28a%2Ca%5E%7B-1%7D%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(a,a^{-1},1)" title="(a,a^{-1},1)" class="latex" /> and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%281%2Cb%2Cb%5E%7B-1%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(1,b,b^{-1})" title="(1,b,b^{-1})" class="latex" /> for some <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=a%2Cb&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="a,b" title="a,b" class="latex" />. Then the projective action of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Clangle+%5Calpha%2C%5Cbeta%5Crangle&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;langle &#92;alpha,&#92;beta&#92;rangle" title="&#92;langle &#92;alpha,&#92;beta&#92;rangle" class="latex" /> stabilizes <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=T&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="T" title="T" class="latex" /> with quotient a torus. The figure below shows <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=T&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="T" title="T" class="latex" /> together with a tiling by fundamental domains.</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg"><img data-attachment-id="2445" data-permalink="https://lamington.wordpress.com/2015/03/15/slightly-elevated-teichmuller-theory/projective_torus/" data-orig-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg" data-orig-size="458,416" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;0&quot;}" data-image-title="projective_torus" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg?w=300&#038;h=272" data-large-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg?w=458" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2445" src="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg?w=300&#038;h=272" alt="projective_torus" width="300" height="272" srcset="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg?w=300&amp;h=272 300w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg?w=150&amp;h=136 150w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_torus.jpg 458w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Example</strong>. Not every real projective structure is convex. Here is the image under the developing map of another real projective torus; a fundamental domain is the immersed annulus between the green and red curves. Observe that the holonomy representation is <em>not</em> faithful (as it must be for a convex projective structure):</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg"><img data-attachment-id="2448" data-permalink="https://lamington.wordpress.com/2015/03/15/slightly-elevated-teichmuller-theory/windy_torus/" data-orig-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg" data-orig-size="833,562" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;0&quot;}" data-image-title="windy_torus" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg?w=300" data-large-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg?w=833" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-2448" src="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg?w=1024&#038;h=691" alt="windy_torus" srcset="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg 833w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg?w=150&amp;h=101 150w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg?w=300&amp;h=202 300w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/windy_torus.jpg?w=768&amp;h=518 768w" sizes="(max-width: 833px) 100vw, 833px"   /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>I love how a picture like this lets you &#8220;see&#8221; a surface immersed in 3-space in terms of the projective impression it leaves on your retina.</p>
<p>Notice that the core of the immersed annulus is not homotopic in the projective torus to a &#8220;geodesic&#8221; representative. On the other hand, every essential loop in a surface has a geodesic representative in any convex structure. On a nonconvex surface, some loops have geodesic representatives, and some don&#8217;t. A fundamental theorem of <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1293655">Choi</a> says that there is always a canonical collection of disjoint simple geodesics which decompose the surface into convex pieces:</p>
<p><strong>Theorem (Choi):</strong> Every real projective surface with negative Euler characteristic has a unique collection of disjoint simple closed geodesics whose complementary pieces are either annuli covered by an affine half-space, or the interior of a compact convex real projective manifold of negative Euler characteristic.</p>
<p>Building on this result, <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1414974">Choi-Goldman</a> obtained a complete classification of real projective structures on a surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> into combinatorial data (associated to the decomposing curves) and moduli (associated to the convex pieces):</p>
<p><strong>Theorem (Choi-Goldman):</strong> The space of real projective structures on a surface of genus <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=g%3E1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="g&gt;1" title="g&gt;1" class="latex" /> is a countable disjoint union of open cells of dimension <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=16g-16&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="16g-16" title="16g-16" class="latex" />. The space of convex structures can be identified with a connected component of the moduli space of representations of the fundamental group.</p>
<p><strong>3. Hilbert metric</strong></p>
<p>Although an arbitrary real projective surface does not carry a canonical metric, the convex ones do. Equivalently, a convex, compact domain <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> carries a canonical metric invariant under projective automorphisms, namely the <em>Hilbert metric</em>.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s start with the simplest case, that of an interval in the projective line. For concreteness, think of this interval as the projectivization of the positive orthant in the plane, so that the endpoints have projective coordinates <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%281%3A0%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(1:0)" title="(1:0)" class="latex" /> and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%280%3A1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(0:1)" title="(0:1)" class="latex" />, and a typical point has coordinates <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28x%3Ay%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(x:y)" title="(x:y)" class="latex" /> with <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=x&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="x" title="x" class="latex" /> and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=y&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="y" title="y" class="latex" /> both non-negative, and at least one positive. The group of projective automorphisms of this interval (preserving orientation) is just <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbf{R}" title="&#92;mathbf{R}" class="latex" />, acting by <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Clambda%5Ccdot+%28x%3Ay%29+%3D+%28e%5E%5Clambda+x%3Ay%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;lambda&#92;cdot (x:y) = (e^&#92;lambda x:y)" title="&#92;lambda&#92;cdot (x:y) = (e^&#92;lambda x:y)" class="latex" />. Thus we can use this action to define a distance, by <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_H%28%28x_1%3Ay_1%29%2C%28x_2%3Ay_2%29%29+%3D+%5Clog%28x_1y_2%2Fx_2y_1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_H((x_1:y_1),(x_2:y_2)) = &#92;log(x_1y_2/x_2y_1)" title="d_H((x_1:y_1),(x_2:y_2)) = &#92;log(x_1y_2/x_2y_1)" class="latex" />. If we parameterize this interval instead as <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5B0%2C1%5D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="[0,1]" title="[0,1]" class="latex" /> then the relationship to the projective coordinates is <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28x%3Ay%29+%5Cto+y%2F%28x%2By%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(x:y) &#92;to y/(x+y)" title="(x:y) &#92;to y/(x+y)" class="latex" /> with inverse <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=t+%5Cto+%281-t%3At%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="t &#92;to (1-t:t)" title="t &#92;to (1-t:t)" class="latex" /> and we obtain the formula <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_H%28s%2Ct%29+%3D+%5Clog%28%281-s%29t%2F%281-t%29s%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_H(s,t) = &#92;log((1-s)t/(1-t)s)" title="d_H(s,t) = &#92;log((1-s)t/(1-t)s)" class="latex" />. More generally, if 4 points <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq%2Cr%2Cs&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q,r,s" title="p,q,r,s" class="latex" /> lie (in order) on a straight line in projective space, the interval <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Bp%2Cq%5D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="[p,q]" title="[p,q]" class="latex" /> carries a Hilbert metric in which</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_H%28q%2Cr%29+%3D+%5Clog%28%28s-q%29%28r-p%29%2F%28s-r%29%28q-p%29%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_H(q,r) = &#92;log((s-q)(r-p)/(s-r)(q-p))" title="d_H(q,r) = &#92;log((s-q)(r-p)/(s-r)(q-p))" class="latex" /></p>
<p style="text-align:left;">i.e. the logarithm of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-ratio">cross-ratio</a> of the four points.</p>
<p style="text-align:left;">If <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> is an arbitrary bounded convex domain, then we can define the Hilbert metric on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> as follows: for each pair <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> of points in the interior of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" />, let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell" title="&#92;ell" class="latex" /> with endpoints <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell%280%29%2C%5Cell%281%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell(0),&#92;ell(1)" title="&#92;ell(0),&#92;ell(1)" class="latex" /> be the maximal straight line in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> containing <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> in the interior. The (Hilbert) distance from <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" /> to <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=q&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="q" title="q" class="latex" /> is the logarithm of the cross ratio of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell%280%29%2Cp%2Cq%2C%5Cell%281%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell(0),p,q,&#92;ell(1)" title="&#92;ell(0),p,q,&#92;ell(1)" class="latex" />. This function is <em>monotone</em> in the sense that if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C+%5Csubset+C%27&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C &#92;subset C&#039;" title="C &#92;subset C&#039;" class="latex" /> is an inclusion of convex domains, then for any <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> there is an inequality <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_C%28p%2Cq%29+%5Cge+d_%7BC%27%7D%28p%2Cq%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_C(p,q) &#92;ge d_{C&#039;}(p,q)" title="d_C(p,q) &#92;ge d_{C&#039;}(p,q)" class="latex" /> with equality if and only if the maximal straight segments through <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> and in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%27&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C&#039;" title="C&#039;" class="latex" /> are equal. Note further that when <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> is the region bounded by a conic, the Hilbert metric becomes the hyperbolic metric in the Klein model. From this and monotonicity the triangle inequality follows (showing that this is an honest metric): if <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> are arbitrary and contained in a maximal segment <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell+%5Csubset+C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell &#92;subset C" title="&#92;ell &#92;subset C" class="latex" /> we can projectively embed <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> in the interior of a region <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%27&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C&#039;" title="C&#039;" class="latex" /> bounded by a conic in such a way that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell" title="&#92;ell" class="latex" /> is still properly embedded in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%27&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C&#039;" title="C&#039;" class="latex" />. The Hilbert metrics for <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%27&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C&#039;" title="C&#039;" class="latex" /> agree on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell" title="&#92;ell" class="latex" />, and the triangle inequality is satisfied in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%27&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C&#039;" title="C&#039;" class="latex" /> (because it is satisfied for the usual hyperbolic metric) so for any <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=r&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="r" title="r" class="latex" /> we have</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_C%28p%2Cq%29+%3D+d_%7BC%27%7D%28p%2Cq%29+%5Cle+d_%7BC%27%7D%28p%2Cr%29+%2B+d_%7BC%27%7D%28r%2Cq%29+%5Cle+d_C%28p%2Cr%29+%2B+d_C%28r%2Cq%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_C(p,q) = d_{C&#039;}(p,q) &#92;le d_{C&#039;}(p,r) + d_{C&#039;}(r,q) &#92;le d_C(p,r) + d_C(r,q)" title="d_C(p,q) = d_{C&#039;}(p,q) &#92;le d_{C&#039;}(p,r) + d_{C&#039;}(r,q) &#92;le d_C(p,r) + d_C(r,q)" class="latex" /></p>
<p style="text-align:left;">Because of this monotonicity, a (geodesic) triangle <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CDelta&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Delta" title="&#92;Delta" class="latex" /> in any domain <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C" title="C" class="latex" /> is thinner than the same triangle in any <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%27&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C&#039;" title="C&#039;" class="latex" /> with <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CDelta+%5Csubset+C%27+%5Csubset+C&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Delta &#92;subset C&#039; &#92;subset C" title="&#92;Delta &#92;subset C&#039; &#92;subset C" class="latex" />. By comparison with suitable quadrics, Benoist <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=2010741">showed</a> that the Hilbert metric is <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cdelta&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;delta" title="&#92;delta" class="latex" />-hyperbolic if and only if the boundary is &#8220;quasisymmetrically convex&#8221;; this is a slightly technical condition, which can be expressed prosaically as saying that the limits of projective rescalings near a point on the boundary are strictly convex. It implies, in particular, that the boundary is <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%5E%7B1%2B%5Cepsilon%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C^{1+&#92;epsilon}" title="C^{1+&#92;epsilon}" class="latex" /> for some <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cepsilon&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;epsilon" title="&#92;epsilon" class="latex" />. Note that this part of the story is dimension-independent (and even makes sense in infinite dimensional projective spaces).</p>
<p style="text-align:left;">If <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> is a real projective manifold which is not necessarily convex, it still carries a canonical Hilbert pseudo-metric defined as follows: for any points <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> define <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_H%28p%2Cq%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_H(p,q)" title="d_H(p,q)" class="latex" /> to be the infimum of sums <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Csum_i+d_%7B%5Cell_i%7D%28p_i%2Cp_%7Bi%2B1%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;sum_i d_{&#92;ell_i}(p_i,p_{i+1})" title="&#92;sum_i d_{&#92;ell_i}(p_i,p_{i+1})" class="latex" /> over all finite sequences <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%3D%3Ap_0%2Cp_1%2C%5Ccdots%2Cp_n%3A%3Dq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p=:p_0,p_1,&#92;cdots,p_n:=q" title="p=:p_0,p_1,&#92;cdots,p_n:=q" class="latex" /> such that each successive pair <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p_i%2Cp_%7Bi%2B1%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p_i,p_{i+1}" title="p_i,p_{i+1}" class="latex" /> is contained in a straight segment <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell_i&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell_i" title="&#92;ell_i" class="latex" />, and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=d_%7B%5Cell_i%7D%28p_i%2Cp_%7Bi%2B1%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="d_{&#92;ell_i}(p_i,p_{i+1})" title="d_{&#92;ell_i}(p_i,p_{i+1})" class="latex" /> means the distance from <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p_i&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p_i" title="p_i" class="latex" /> to <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p_%7Bi%2B1%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p_{i+1}" title="p_{i+1}" class="latex" /> in the Hilbert metric on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cell_i&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;ell_i" title="&#92;ell_i" class="latex" />. This construction is the analog of the construction of the Kobayashi metric on a complex manifold, and the monotonicity of the Hilbert metric plays the role of the Schwarz Lemma. If <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> is convex, this recovers the ordinary Hilbert metric, but otherwise it is necessarily degenerate (the degeneracy, when <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> is compact, is equivalent to the existence of an entire straight line in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" />; i.e. a real projective immersion of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbf{R}" title="&#92;mathbf{R}" class="latex" />; this is the analog of Brody&#8217;s Lemma in the projective context). I <em>believe</em> that for a surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> this metric should be degenerate precisely on the decomposing annuli in Choi&#8217;s theorem, but I have not checked this carefully (note: I am not saying this should give a new proof of Choi&#8217;s theorem (although maybe it does?), but that <em>a posteriori</em> one could use the Hilbert pseudo-metric to understand the canonical decomposition).</p>
<p><strong>4. Construction of examples</strong></p>
<p>Now let&#8217;s explicitly construct some examples of convex projective structures on surfaces of positive genus. The simplest examples are simply the hyperbolic structures: the region enclosed by a quadric is stabilized by a conjugate of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSO%7D%282%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SO}(2,1)" title="&#92;mathrm{SO}(2,1)" class="latex" /> in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" />, and can be thought of as the ordinary hyperbolic plane in the Klein model. Such domains are <em>symmetric</em>, since the group of projective symmetries acts transitively on the interior.</p>
<p>Some genuinely new examples can be obtained from this one by <em>bending</em>, much as one obtains quasifuchsian deformations of fuchsian groups. Let&#8217;s start with a hyperbolic structure on a surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> (which is a special case of a real projective structure) and pick an essential closed curve <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cgamma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;gamma" title="&#92;gamma" class="latex" /> which divides <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> into two subsurfaces <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=A%2CB&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="A,B" title="A,B" class="latex" />. Thus <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpi_1%28S%29+%3D+%5Cpi_1%28A%29+%2A_%7B%5Clangle+%5Cgamma+%5Crangle%7D+%5Cpi_1%28B%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;pi_1(S) = &#92;pi_1(A) *_{&#92;langle &#92;gamma &#92;rangle} &#92;pi_1(B)" title="&#92;pi_1(S) = &#92;pi_1(A) *_{&#92;langle &#92;gamma &#92;rangle} &#92;pi_1(B)" class="latex" />. Choose some <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cbeta&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;beta" title="&#92;beta" class="latex" /> which is in the centralizer of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cgamma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;gamma" title="&#92;gamma" class="latex" /> in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" />. Then we can deform the representation by conjugating <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpi_1%28B%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;pi_1(B)" title="&#92;pi_1(B)" class="latex" /> by <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cbeta&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;beta" title="&#92;beta" class="latex" />. Appealing to Ehresmann-Thurston, this deformation of representations is accompanied by a deformation of projective structures.</p>
<p>A hyperbolic element of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSO%7D%282%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SO}(2,1)" title="&#92;mathrm{SO}(2,1)" class="latex" /> has three real eigenvectors; two correspond to the fixed points <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> on the quadric at infinity, and one corresponding to the point which is the intersection of the tangents to the quadric at <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p" title="p" class="latex" /> and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=q&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="q" title="q" class="latex" />. Thus we may always conjugate <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cgamma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;gamma" title="&#92;gamma" class="latex" /> to a diagonal matrix with entries <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28a%2Ca%5E%7B-1%7D%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(a,a^{-1},1)" title="(a,a^{-1},1)" class="latex" />. The centralizer of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cgamma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;gamma" title="&#92;gamma" class="latex" /> is thus isomorphic to the diagonal matrices; these are spanned by <em>shears</em> <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28%5Clambda%2C%5Clambda%5E%7B-1%7D%2C1%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(&#92;lambda,&#92;lambda^{-1},1)" title="(&#92;lambda,&#92;lambda^{-1},1)" class="latex" /> (these fix the given quadric, and just deform the hyperbolic structure) and <em>bends</em> <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%28b%2Cb%5E%7B-2%7D%2Cb%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="(b,b^{-2},b)" title="(b,b^{-2},b)" class="latex" />.</p>
<p>Geometrically, choose coordinates in which the quadric looks like a round circle in the plane, and the fixed points <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" /> are the top and bottom points (i.e. the intersections with the <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=y&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="y" title="y" class="latex" /> axis). The centralizer of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cgamma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;gamma" title="&#92;gamma" class="latex" /> preserves the eigenvectors, which is to say it preserves the two horizontal tangencies to the circle. Thus the image of the &#8220;right hand side&#8221; of the circle under conjugation is a new convex curve which fits together with the &#8220;left hand side&#8221; of the circle to make a <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%5E1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C^1" title="C^1" class="latex" /> convex curve (in general it will no longer be <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%5E2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C^2" title="C^2" class="latex" /> at <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=p%2Cq&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="p,q" title="p,q" class="latex" />). For example, in these specific coordinates, conjugating the right hand side by a &#8220;bend&#8221; as above turns the half-circle into half an ellipse, sliced along one of its axes. Propagating this bending to the other images of the axis of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cgamma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;gamma" title="&#92;gamma" class="latex" />, we obtain the new limit set as a limit of a sequence of uniformly convex, <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%5E1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C^1" title="C^1" class="latex" /> domains (since the deformations are uniform on all scales, the limit is automatically Hölder, which is to say <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%5E%7B1%2B%5Cepsilon%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C^{1+&#92;epsilon}" title="C^{1+&#92;epsilon}" class="latex" />, as Benoist says it must be). This new domain is (by construction) invariant under a proper cocompact group of projective transformations (namely <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpi_1%28S%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;pi_1(S)" title="&#92;pi_1(S)" class="latex" />) but generically, by no other symmetries; one says the domain is <em>divisible</em>.</p>
<p>The figure below shows the &#8220;before&#8221; and &#8220;after&#8221; picture for a hyperbolic structure on a once-punctured torus bent along the edges of an ideal square fundamental domain (yes I know a once-punctured torus is not closed, and I am bending along proper geodesics rather than closed ones, but this is easier to draw and gives the essential idea).</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><a href="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg"><img data-attachment-id="2463" data-permalink="https://lamington.wordpress.com/2015/03/15/slightly-elevated-teichmuller-theory/hyperbolic_surface/" data-orig-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg" data-orig-size="854,854" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;0&quot;}" data-image-title="hyperbolic_surface" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg?w=300&#038;h=300" data-large-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg?w=854" class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-2463" src="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg?w=300&#038;h=300" alt="hyperbolic_surface" width="300" height="300" srcset="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg?w=300&amp;h=300 300w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg?w=600&amp;h=600 600w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/hyperbolic_surface.jpg?w=150&amp;h=150 150w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px" /></a>  <a href="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg"><img data-attachment-id="2464" data-permalink="https://lamington.wordpress.com/2015/03/15/slightly-elevated-teichmuller-theory/projective_bend/" data-orig-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg" data-orig-size="937,916" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;0&quot;}" data-image-title="projective_bend" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg?w=319&#038;h=312" data-large-file="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg?w=937" class="alignnone wp-image-2464" src="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg?w=319&#038;h=312" alt="projective_bend" width="319" height="312" srcset="https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg?w=319&amp;h=312 319w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg?w=638&amp;h=624 638w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg?w=150&amp;h=147 150w, https://lamington.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/projective_bend.jpg?w=300&amp;h=293 300w" sizes="(max-width: 319px) 100vw, 319px" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align:left;">Although it seems hard to believe, the existence of a divisible but non-symmetric convex bounded projective domain was (apparently) unknown until <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=208470">Kac-Vinberg</a> constructed examples in 1967.</p>
<p><strong>5. Goldman&#8217;s coordinates</strong></p>
<p>Suppose that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> is a closed surface with a convex projective structure. A maximal collection of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=3g-3&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="3g-3" title="3g-3" class="latex" /> essential non-parallel simple closed curves can be realized by a family of disjoint geodesics, which decompose <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> into <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=2g-2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="2g-2" title="2g-2" class="latex" /> pairs of pants <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=P_i&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="P_i" title="P_i" class="latex" />. Each cuff of a pair of pants has three real eigenvectors, and it is determined up to conjugacy by two numbers: its trace, and the trace of the inverse.</p>
<p>The centralizer of a cuff is 2-dimensional (as explained above), so there are an additional two parameters for each geodesic explaining how adjacent pants are glued along each cuff. Finally, Goldman showed that there are two additional real parameters describing the geometry of each pair of pants (once the cuff parameters have been prescribed). Thus, after choosing a pair of pants decomposition, one determines a system of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=16g-16&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="16g-16" title="16g-16" class="latex" /> real numbers which describe the structure up to isomorphism. In other words, the space of convex projective structures is homeomorphic to <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%5E%7B16g-16%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbf{R}^{16g-16}" title="&#92;mathbf{R}^{16g-16}" class="latex" />.</p>
<p>Notice that the dimension of the space of convex projective structures on a pair of pants is easily seen to be 8, since this is just the dimension of the character variety: a pair of pants has fundamental group which is free on two generators, so the space of representations has twice the dimension of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" />, i.e. 16, while the conjugation action cuts down this dimension by 8.</p>
<p>How to describe the parameters for a pair of pants geometrically? Thurston showed how to understand hyperbolic structures on surfaces with geodesic boundary by decomposing them into ideal triangles which can be &#8220;spun&#8221; around the boundary components (thus finessing the issue of where the ideal vertices should land). A similar construction makes sense for convex projective structures on surfaces with boundary. Goldman obtains his coordinates by understanding the way in which two projective triangles can be glued along their edges in pairs in such a way that the resulting (incomplete) structure on a pair of pants is convex. There does not seem to be a straightforward way to see that these conditions cut out a (topological) cell, fibering naturally over the space of cuff lengths.</p>
<p><strong>6. Complex structure</strong></p>
<p>Now let <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> be a strictly convex domain in the projective plane (we have in mind that this is the image of the universal cover of our convex projective surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> under the developing map). Put it in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%5E3&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathbf{R}^3" title="&#92;mathbf{R}^3" class="latex" /> as a convex subset of the horizontal plane <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=z%3D1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="z=1" title="z=1" class="latex" />. Each point <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=x+%5Cin+X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="x &#92;in X" title="x &#92;in X" class="latex" /> determines a ray <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=r_x&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="r_x" title="r_x" class="latex" /> through the origin and passing through <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=x&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="x" title="x" class="latex" />, and the union of these rays sweeps out a (strictly convex) cone. We would like to construct, in a &#8220;natural&#8221; (i.e. projectively invariant) way, a surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> intersecting each ray <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=r_x&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="r_x" title="r_x" class="latex" /> at a point <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=u%5E%7B-1%7D%28x%29%5Ccdot+x&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="u^{-1}(x)&#92;cdot x" title="u^{-1}(x)&#92;cdot x" class="latex" /> (so that we can think of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=u&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="u" title="u" class="latex" /> as a function on the domain <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> in the projective plane going to zero at the boundary). The surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> will be strictly convex exactly when the hessian <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BHess%7D%28u%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{Hess}(u)" title="&#92;mathrm{Hess}(u)" class="latex" /> (i.e. the matrix of 2nd partial derivatives) is positive definite. Such a positive definite form determines a Riemannian metric, and thereby an <em>area form</em> on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" />, and we would like equal area regions to subtend equal volume cones to the origin. Since volume is preserved by <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" />, this is a projectively invariant notion. As a formula, this says that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=u&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="u" title="u" class="latex" /> solves the following <em>Monge-Ampère</em> equation in <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" />:</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7Bdet%7D%28%5Cmathrm%7BHess%7D%28u%29%29%3Du%5E%7B-4%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{det}(&#92;mathrm{Hess}(u))=u^{-4}" title="&#92;mathrm{det}(&#92;mathrm{Hess}(u))=u^{-4}" class="latex" /></p>
<p style="text-align:left;">The existence and uniqueness of a (smooth) solution <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=u&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="u" title="u" class="latex" /> when <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> is strictly convex was established by <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=437805">Cheng-Yau</a>.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s consider the special case where <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" /> is the unit disk <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=x%5E2%2By%5E2%3C1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="x^2+y^2&lt;1" title="x^2+y^2&lt;1" class="latex" />. In this case we expect <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> to be the hyperboloid <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=x%5E2%2By%5E2-z%5E2%3D-1&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="x^2+y^2-z^2=-1" title="x^2+y^2-z^2=-1" class="latex" /> and the area form on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> should be the hyperbolic area. In this case we have an explicit formula <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=u%28x%2Cy%29+%3D+%281-x%5E2-y%5E2%29%5E%7B1%2F2%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="u(x,y) = (1-x^2-y^2)^{1/2}" title="u(x,y) = (1-x^2-y^2)^{1/2}" class="latex" />. Thus <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpartial+u%2F%5Cpartial+x+%3D+-x%2Fu&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;partial u/&#92;partial x = -x/u" title="&#92;partial u/&#92;partial x = -x/u" class="latex" /> and <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cpartial+u%2F%5Cpartial+y+%3D+-y%2Fu&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;partial u/&#92;partial y = -y/u" title="&#92;partial u/&#92;partial y = -y/u" class="latex" />, and we see that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=u&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="u" title="u" class="latex" /> solves the Monge-Ampère equation. A similar calculation shows that <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=1%2Fu%5Ccdot+%5Cmathrm%7BHess%7D%28u%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="1/u&#92;cdot &#92;mathrm{Hess}(u)" title="1/u&#92;cdot &#92;mathrm{Hess}(u)" class="latex" /> gives the hyperbolic metric on the unit disk (in the Klein model).</p>
<p style="text-align:left;">The surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> with its Riemannian metric is invariant under projective symmetries, and gives rise to a canonical Riemannian metric on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> associated to the projective structure. The conformal class of this metric thus determines a map from the space of convex projective structures to the Teichmüller space of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" />.</p>
<p style="text-align:left;">The surface <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> carries two natural connections &#8212; a flat affine connection <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cnabla&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;nabla" title="&#92;nabla" class="latex" /> coming from the projection to <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=X&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="X" title="X" class="latex" />, whose straight lines are the intersection of <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> with planes through the origin, and a Levi-Civita connection <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Chat%7B%5Cnabla%7D&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;hat{&#92;nabla}" title="&#92;hat{&#92;nabla}" class="latex" /> coming from the Riemannian metric defined as above. The difference of these two connections defines a <em>cubic</em> form on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" />, by the formula</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=C%28u%2Cv%2Cw%29+%3D+%5Clangle+u%2C%5Cnabla_v+w+-+%5Chat%7B%5Cnabla%7D_v+w%5Crangle&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="C(u,v,w) = &#92;langle u,&#92;nabla_v w - &#92;hat{&#92;nabla}_v w&#92;rangle" title="C(u,v,w) = &#92;langle u,&#92;nabla_v w - &#92;hat{&#92;nabla}_v w&#92;rangle" class="latex" /></p>
<p>and it turns out that this cubic form is symmetric, and holomorphic with respect to the conformal structure associated to the metric on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5CSigma&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;Sigma" title="&#92;Sigma" class="latex" /> (for a longer discussion of cubic forms see <a href="https://lamington.wordpress.com/2009/08/16/cubic-forms-in-differential-geometry/">this post</a>). Thus, the space of convex projective structures on <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=S&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="S" title="S" class="latex" /> is isomorphic to the total space of the bundle of holomorphic cubic differentials over Teichmuller space!</p>
<p>As a sanity check, let&#8217;s verify that dimensions work out. Teichmuller space is a complex manifold of complex dimension <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=3g-3&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="3g-3" title="3g-3" class="latex" />. The Riemann-Roch formula says for any line bundle <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=L&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="L" title="L" class="latex" /> there is a formula</p>
<p style="text-align:center;"><img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=h%5E0%28L%29+-+h%5E0%28L%5E%7B-1%7D%5Cotimes+K%29+%3D+%5Cmathrm%7Bdeg%7D%28L%29+%2B+1+-+g&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="h^0(L) - h^0(L^{-1}&#92;otimes K) = &#92;mathrm{deg}(L) + 1 - g" title="h^0(L) - h^0(L^{-1}&#92;otimes K) = &#92;mathrm{deg}(L) + 1 - g" class="latex" /></p>
<p style="text-align:left;">where <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=K&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="K" title="K" class="latex" /> is the bundle of holomorphic 1-forms (which is the cotangent bundle on a Riemann surface). Now, <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7Bdeg%7D%28K%29%3D-%5Cchi%28S%29%3D2g-2&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{deg}(K)=-&#92;chi(S)=2g-2" title="&#92;mathrm{deg}(K)=-&#92;chi(S)=2g-2" class="latex" /> so taking <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=L%3DK%5E3&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="L=K^3" title="L=K^3" class="latex" /> we get <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=h%5E0%28K%5E3%29+%3D+5g-5&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="h^0(K^3) = 5g-5" title="h^0(K^3) = 5g-5" class="latex" />. Thus the space of convex projective structures has complex dimension <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=8g-8&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="8g-8" title="8g-8" class="latex" />, and real dimension <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=16g-16&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="16g-16" title="16g-16" class="latex" />.</p>
<p>Monge-Ampère equations arise in minimal surface theory, and one may think of this instance in a similar way. A convex real projective structure determines a holonomy representation of the fundamental group into <img src="https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5Cmathrm%7BSL%7D%283%2C%5Cmathbf%7BR%7D%29&#038;bg=ffffff&#038;fg=000&#038;s=0" alt="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" title="&#92;mathrm{SL}(3,&#92;mathbf{R})" class="latex" />, and one may look for a harmonic equivariant map from the universal cover to the symmetric space. A harmonic map is a minimal surface if it is conformal; thus an equivariant minimal surface in the symmetric space picks out a conformal class. Associated to such a minimal surface one obtains a holomorphic cubic differential, much as a suitable triple of holomorphic 1-forms determine a minimal surface in Euclidean 3-space by the Weierstrass parameterization.</p>
<p>This construction is due (independently) to <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=1828223">Loftin</a> and <a href="http://www.ams.org/mathscinet-getitem?mr=2402597">Labourie</a>.</p>
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