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Article

Remarkable Classes of Almost 3-Contact Metric Manifolds

Department of Mathematics, University of Bari Aldo Moro, Via E. Orabona 4, 70125 Bari, Italy
Submission received: 9 December 2020 / Revised: 5 January 2021 / Accepted: 7 January 2021 / Published: 11 January 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Special Metrics)

Abstract

:
We introduce a new class of almost 3-contact metric manifolds, called 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds. We show fundamental geometric properties of these manifolds, analyzing analogies and differences with the known classes of 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki ( α 0 ) and 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds.

1. Introduction

An almost 3-contact metric manifold is a ( 4 n + 3 ) -dimensional differentiable manifold M endowed with three almost contact metric structures ( φ , ξ i , η i , g ) , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , sharing the same Riemannian metric g and satisfying suitable compatibility conditions, equivalent to the existence of a sphere of almost contact metric structures. In the recent paper [1], new classes of almost 3-contact metric manifolds were introduced and studied. The first remarkable class is given by 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds defined as almost 3-contact metric manifolds ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) such that
d η i = 2 α Φ i + 2 ( α δ ) η j η k , α R * , δ R ,
for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) . This is a generalization of 3-Sasaki manifolds, which correspond to the values α = δ = 1 . A second class introduced in [1] is given by 3-δ-cosymplectic manifolds defined by the conditions
d η i = 2 δ η j η k , d Φ i = 0 , δ R ,
generalizing 3-cosymplectic manifolds which correspond to the value δ = 0 .
In the present paper we will introduce a third class of almost 3-contact metric manifolds, which is in fact a second (and alternative) generalization of 3-cosymplectic manifolds. We will consider almost 3-contact metric manifolds whose structure tensor fields satisfy
d η i = 2 δ η j η k , d Φ i = 2 δ ( η j Φ k η k Φ j ) , δ R
for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) . When δ = 0 we recover a 3-cosymplectic manifold. We will call these manifolds 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds. The choice of name is due to the fact that for a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold, Equation (1) implies
d Φ i = 2 ( α δ ) ( η j Φ k η k Φ j ) ,
so that the two equations in (2) formally correspond to (1) and (3) with α = 0 , although in this case the second equation is no more a consequence of the first one. In fact the two conditions in (2) are not completely independent (see Remark 1). Examples of 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki structures can be defined on the semidirect products SO ( 3 ) R 4 n . The structure on these Lie groups was introduced in [2] as an example of canonical abelian almost 3-contact metric structure. It is also shown in [2] that the Lie group SO ( 3 ) R 4 n admits co-compact discrete subgroups, so that the corresponding compact quotients admit almost 3-contact metric structures of the same type.
One can show that for all the above three classes of manifolds, 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki, 3- δ -cosymplectic, and 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds, the structure is hypernormal, the characteristic vector fields ξ i , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , are Killing and they span an integrable distribution, called vertical, with totally geodesic leaves. Nevertheless, there are remarkable geometric differences between the three classes. In the 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki case the 1-forms η i are all contact forms, i.e., η i ( d η i ) n 0 everywhere on M, while for the other two classes, the horizontal distribution defined by η i = 0 , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , is integrable. Both 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds and 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds are locally isometric to the Riemannian product of a 3-dimensional Lie group, tangent to the vertical distribution, and a 4 n -dimensional manifold tangent to the horizontal distribution. The Lie group is either isomorphic to SO ( 3 ) or flat depending on wether δ 0 or δ = 0 . Each horizontal leaf is endowed with a hyper-Kähler structure. The difference between 3- δ -cosymplectic and 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds lies in the projectability of the structure tensor fields φ i , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , with respect to the vertical foliation. They are always projectable for 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds, but not for 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds with δ 0 . In this case one can project a transverse quaternionic structure, as it happens for 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds. Finally, for the three classes of manifolds, we analyze the existence of a canonical metric connection with totally skew-symmetric torsion.

2. Almost Contact and Almost 3-Contact Metric Manifolds

An almost contact manifold is a smooth manifold M of dimension 2 n + 1 , endowed with a structure ( φ , ξ , η ) , where φ is a ( 1 , 1 ) -tensor field, ξ a vector field, and η a 1-form such that
φ 2 = I + η ξ , η ( ξ ) = 1 ,
implying that φ ξ = 0 , η φ = 0 , and φ has rank 2 n . The tangent bundle of M splits as T M = H ξ , where is the 2 n -dimensional distribution defined by = Im ( φ ) = Ker ( η ) . The vector field ξ is called the characteristic or Reeb vector field.
On the product manifold M × R one can define an almost complex structure J by J X , f d d t = φ X f ξ , η ( X ) d d t , where X is a vector field tangent to M, t is the coordinate of R and f is a C function on M × R . If J is integrable, the almost contact structure is said to be normal and this is equivalent to the vanishing of the tensor field N φ : = [ φ , φ ] + d η ξ , where [ φ , φ ] is the Nijenhuis torsion of φ [3]. More precisely, for any vector fields X and Y, N φ is given by
N φ ( X , Y ) = [ φ X , φ Y ] + φ 2 [ X , Y ] φ [ φ X , Y ] φ [ X , φ Y ] + d η ( X , Y ) ξ .
It is known that any almost contact manifold admits a compatible metric, that is a Riemannian metric g such that g ( φ X , φ Y ) = g ( X , Y ) η ( X ) η ( Y ) for every X , Y X ( M ) . Then η = g ( · , ξ ) and H = ξ . The manifold ( M , φ , ξ , η , g ) is called an almost contact metric manifold. The associated fundamental 2-form is defined by Φ ( X , Y ) = g ( X , φ Y ) .
We recall some remarkable classes of almost contact metric manifolds.
  • An α-contact metric manifold is defined as an almost contact metric manifold such that
    d η = 2 α Φ , α R * ,
    When α = 1 , it is called a contact metric manifold; the 1-form η is a contact form, that is η ( d η ) n 0 everywhere on M. An α-Sasaki manifold is a normal α -contact metric manifold, and again such a manifold with α = 1 is called a Sasaki manifold.
  • An almost cosymplectic manifold is defined as an almost contact metric manifold such that
    d η = 0 , d Φ = 0 ;
    if furhermore the structure is normal, M is called a cosymplectic manifold. It is worth remarking that some authors call these manifolds almost coKähler and coKähler, respectively ([4]).
  • A quasi-Sasaki manifold is a normal almost contact metric manifold with closed 2-form Φ . This class includes both α -Sasaki and cosymplectic manifolds. The Reeb vector field of a quasi-Sasaki manifold is always Killing.
Both α -Sasaki manifolds and cosymplectic manifolds can be characterized by means of the Levi-Civita connection g . Indeed, one can show that an almost contact metric manifold ( M , φ , ξ , η , g ) is α -Sasaki if and only if
( X g φ ) Y = α ( g ( X , Y ) ξ η ( X ) Y ) X , Y X ( M ) .
An almost contact metric manifold is cosymplectic if and only if g φ = 0 ; further, this is equivalent to requiring the manifold to be locally isometric to the Riemannian product of a real line (tangent to the Reeb vector field) and a Kähler manifold.
For a comprehensive introduction to almost contact metric manifolds we refer to [3]. For Sasaki geometry, we also recommend the monograph [5]; the survey [4] covers fundamental properties and recent results on cosymplectic geometry.
An almost 3-contact manifold is a differentiable manifold M of dimension 4 n + 3 endowed with three almost contact structures ( φ i , ξ i , η i ) , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , satisfying the following relations,
φ k = φ i φ j η j ξ i = φ j φ i + η i ξ j , ξ k = φ i ξ j = φ j ξ i , η k = η i φ j = η j φ i ,
for any even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) ([3]). The tangent bundle of M splits as T M = H V , where
H : = i = 1 3 Ker ( η i ) , V : = ξ 1 , ξ 2 , ξ 3 .
In particular, has rank 4 n . We call any vector belonging to the distribution horizontal and any vector belonging to the distribution V vertical. The manifold is said to be hypernormal if each almost contact structure ( ϕ i , ξ i , η i ) is normal. In [6] it was proved that if two of the almost contact structures are normal, then so is the third.
The existence of an almost 3-contact structure is equivalent to the existence of a sphere { ( φ x , ξ x , η x ) } x S 2 of almost contact structures such that
φ x φ y η y ξ x = φ x × y ( x · y ) I , φ x ξ y = ξ x × y , η x φ y = η x × y ,
for every x , y S 2 , where · and × denote the standard inner product and cross product on R 3 . In fact, if the structure is hypernormal, then every structure in the sphere is normal ([7]).
Any almost 3-contact manifold admits a Riemannian metric g which is compatible with each of the three structures. Then M is said to be an almost 3-contact metric manifold with structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) , i = 1 , 2 , 3 . For ease of notation, we will denote an almost 3-contact metric manifold by ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) , omitting i = 1 , 2 , 3 . The subbundles and V are orthogonal with respect to g and the three Reeb vector fields ξ 1 , ξ 2 , ξ 3 are orthonormal. In fact, the structure group of the tangent bundle is reducible to Sp ( n ) × { 1 } [8].
Given an almost 3-contact metric structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) , an -homothetic deformation is defined by
η i = c η i , ξ i = 1 c ξ i , φ i = φ i , g = a g + b i = 1 3 η i η i ,
where a , b , c are real numbers such that a > 0 , c 2 = a + b > 0 , ensuring that ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is an almost 3-contact metric structure. In particular, the fundamental 2-forms Φ i and Φ i associated to the structures are related by
Φ i = a Φ i b η j η k ,
where ( i , j , k ) is an even permutation of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) .
An almost 3-contact metric manifold is called
  • 3-α-Sasaki, with α R * , if ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is α -Sasaki for all i = 1 , 2 , 3 , i.e., the structure is hypernormal and
    d η i = 2 α Φ i , i = 1 , 2 , 3 ;
    when α = 1 , it is a 3-Sasaki manifold;
  • 3-cosymplectic if ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is cosymplectic for all i = 1 , 2 , 3 , i.e., the structure is hypernormal and
    d η i = 0 , d Φ i = 0 , i = 1 , 2 , 3 ;
  • 3-quasi-Sasaki manifold if each structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is quasi-Sasaki; this class includes both 3- α -Sasaki and 3-cosymplectic manifolds.
These classes were deeply investigated by various authors. See [5,9,10] and references therein for 3-Sasakian geometry, the papers [7,11,12] for 3-cosymplectic manifolds, and [13,14] for 3-quasi-Sasaki manifolds.
In fact, both for 3-Sasaki and 3-cosymplectic manifolds, the hypernormality is consequence of the structure Equations (7) and (8) respectively. This was proved by Kashiwada in [15] for 3-Sasaki manifolds, and in ([16], Theorem 4.13) for 3-cosymplectic manifolds.
In [1] the new classes of 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds and 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds were introduced, generalizing the classes of 3- α -Sasaki and 3-cosymplectic manifolds, respectively. We will review the definitions and the basic properties of these manifolds in the next section. For both these two classes the hypernormality is a consequence of the defining structure equations for the manifolds, thus generalizing the analogous results for 3-Sasaki and 3-cosymplectic manifolds. This is obtained by using the following Lemma:
Lemma 1
([1]). Let ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) be an almost 3-contact metric manifold. Then the following formula holds X , Y , Z X ( M ) :
g ( N φ i ( X , Y ) , Z ) = = d Φ j ( X , Y , φ j Z ) + d Φ j ( φ i X , φ i Y , φ j Z ) + d Φ k ( X , φ i Y , φ j Z ) + d Φ k ( φ i X , Y , φ j Z ) η i ( X ) [ d η j ( φ i Y , φ j Z ) + d η k ( Y , φ j Z ) ] + η i ( Y ) [ d η j ( φ i X , φ j Z ) + d η k ( X , φ j Z ) ] + η j ( Z ) [ d η j ( X , Y ) d η j ( φ i X , φ i Y ) ] η j ( Z ) [ d η k ( X , φ i Y ) + d η k ( φ i X , Y ) ] .
In the following we will be concerned with various classes of almost 3-contact metric manifolds where the three Reeb vector fields are all Killing. In this case one can show that there exists a function δ C ( M ) such that
η r ( [ ξ s , ξ t ] ) = 2 δ ϵ r s t , r , s , t = 1 , 2 , 3
where ϵ r s t is the totally skew-symmetric symbol, or equivalently d η r ( ξ s , ξ t ) = 2 δ ϵ r s t . We call δ a Reeb commutator function, we refer to [1] for more information on this notion.

3. 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki Manifolds and 3- δ -Cosymplectic Manifolds

This section is a short review of 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds and 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds. These were discussed in detail in [1,17].
Definition 1.
An almost 3-contact metric manifold ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is called a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold if it satisfies
d η i = 2 α Φ i + 2 ( α δ ) η j η k
for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) , where α 0 and δ are real constants.
When α = δ = 1 , we have a 3-contact metric manifold, and hence a 3-Sasaki manifold by Kashiwada’s theorem [15]. In the following, when considering 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds we will always mean α 0 . As an immediate consequences of the definition one obtains the following properties:
  • Each ξ i is an infinitesimal automorphism of the distribution , i.e.,
    d η r ( X , ξ s ) = 0 X Γ ( H ) , r , s = 1 , 2 , 3 ;
  • The constant δ is the Reeb commutator function;
  • The differentials d Φ i are given by
    d Φ i = 2 ( δ α ) ( η k Φ j η j Φ k ) .
Applying Lemma 1 one shows the following
Theorem 1
([1], Theorem 2.2.1). Any 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is hypernormal.
In particular, a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold with α = δ is 3- α -Sasaki. It can be also shown that the vertical distribution of any 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is integrable with totally geodesic leaves and each Reeb vector field ξ i is Killing.
We can distinguish three main classes of 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds. A 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is called degenerate if δ = 0 and non-degenerate otherwise. Quaternionic Heisenberg groups are examples of degenerate 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds (see ([1], Example 2.3.2)). Considering an -homothetic deformation of a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki structure, as in (5), one can verify that the obtained structure ( φ , ξ , η , g ) is a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki with
α = α c a , δ = δ c .
In particular, -homothetic deformations preserve the class of degenerate manifolds. In the nondegenerate case, one sees immediately that α δ has the same sign as α δ . This justifies the distinction between positive 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds, with α δ > 0 , and negative 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds, with α δ < 0 . In fact, it can be shown that a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is positive if and only if it is -homothetic to a 3-Sasaki manifold, and negative if and only if it is -homothetic to a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold with α = 1 , δ = 1 .
Examples of negative 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds can be obtained in the following way. It is known that quaternionic Kähler (not hyper-Kähler) manifolds with negative scalar curvature admit a canonically associated principal SO ( 3 ) -bundle P ( M ) which is endowed with a negative 3-Sasaki structure [18,19]. This is a 3-structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ˜ ) , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , where ( φ i , ξ i , η i ) is a normal almost 3-contact structure, and g ˜ is a compatible semi-Riemannian metric, with signature ( 3 , 4 n ) , where 4 n is the dimension of the base space, and d η i ( X , Y ) = 2 g ˜ ( X , φ i Y ) . Then, one can define the Riemannian metric
g = g ˜ + 2 i = 1 3 η i η i ,
which is compatible with the structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i ) , and satisfies d η i = 2 Φ i 4 η j η k , where Φ i ( X , Y ) = g ( X , φ i Y ) (see also [19]). Therefore ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki structure with α = 1 and δ = 1 .
The following Theorem regarding the transverse geometry with respect to the vertical foliation of a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is proved in [17]:
Theorem 2.
Any 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold M admits a locally defined Riemannian submersion π : M N along its horizontal distribution H such that N carries a quaternionic Kähler structure given by
φ i ˇ = π * φ i s * , i = 1 , 2 , 3 ,
where s : U M is any local smooth section of the Riemannian submersion. The covariant derivatives of the almost complex structures φ ˇ i are given by
X g N φ ˇ i = 2 δ ( η ˇ k ( X ) φ ˇ j η ˇ j ( X ) φ ˇ k )
where η ˇ i ( X ) = η i ( s * X ) s for i = 1 , 2 , 3 . The scalar curvature of the base space N is 16 n ( n + 2 ) α δ .
The Riemannian Ricci tensor of any 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is computed in [1]:
Ric g = 2 α 2 δ ( n + 2 ) 3 α g + 2 ( α δ ) ( 2 n + 3 ) α δ i = 1 3 η i η i .
In particular, a 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is Riemannian Einstein if and only if δ = α , in which case the structure is 3- α -Sasaki, or δ = ( 2 n + 3 ) α .
Notice that, by Theorem 2, a non-degenerate 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold locally fibers over a quaternionic Kähler space of positive or negative scalar curvature, according to α δ > 0 or α δ < 0 , respectively. In [17] a systematic study of homogeneous non-degenerate 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds has been carried out, obtaining a complete classification in the positive case, where the base space of the homogeneous fibration turns out to be a symmetric Wolf space. In the case α δ < 0 , one can provide a general construction of homogeneous 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds fibering over nonsymmetric Alekseevsky spaces.
We recall now the definition and some basic facts on 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds.
Definition 2.
A 3- δ -cosymplectic manifold is an almost 3-contact metric manifold satisfying
d η i = 2 δ η j η k , d Φ i = 0 ,
for some δ R and for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) .
When δ = 0 , the fact that the forms η i and Φ i are all closed implies that the structure is hypernormal ([16], Theorem 4.13). In fact this immediately follows from (9). Therefore, a 3- δ -cosymplectic manifold with δ = 0 is 3-cosymplectic. In particular, it is 3-quasi-Sasaki and the Reeb vector fields are all Killing. The local structure of these manifolds is described by the following:
Proposition 1
([12]). Any 3-cosymplectic manifold of dimension 4 n + 3 is locally the Riemannian product of a hyper-Kähler manifold of dimension 4 n and a 3-dimensional flat abelian Lie group.
As a consequence, since every hyper-Kähler manifold is Ricci flat, even the Riemannian Ricci tensor of any 3-cosymplectic manifold vanishes.
As regards 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds with δ 0 , even in this case one can show that the structure is hypernormal, the Reeb vector fields are Killing, and the manifold locally decomposes as a Riemannian product [1]. In particular,
Proposition 2.
Any 3-δ-cosymplectic manifold with δ 0 is locally the Riemannian product of a hyper-Kähler manifold and a 3-dimensional Lie group isomorphic to SO ( 3 ) , with constant curvature δ 2 . Consequently, the Riemannian Ricci tensor is Ric g = 2 δ 2 i = 1 3 η i η i .
In both cases, i.e., δ = 0 or δ 0 , the hyper-Kähler manifold is tangent to the horizontal distribution, while the 3-dimensional Lie group is tangent to the vertical distribution. In fact, examples of these manifolds can be obtained taking Riemannian products N × G , where ( N , J i , h ) , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , is a hyper-Kähler manifold, and G is a 3-dimensional Lie group, which is either abelian, or isomorphic to SO ( 3 ) . If ξ 1 , ξ 2 , ξ 3 are generators of the Lie algebra g of G, satisfying [ ξ i , ξ j ] = 2 δ ξ k , δ R , then one can define in a natural manner an almost 3-contact metric structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) on the product N × G , setting
φ i | T N = J i , φ i ξ i = 0 , φ i ξ j = ξ k , φ i ξ k = ξ j ,
η i | T N = 0 , η i ( ξ i ) = 1 , η i ( ξ j ) = η i ( ξ k ) = 0 ,
and g the product metric of h and the left invariant Riemannian metric on G with respect to which ξ 1 , ξ 2 , ξ 3 are an orthonormal basis of g .
For a comparison with the class of 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds, which will be introduced in the next section, it is worth remarking that for a 3- δ -cosymplectic manifold ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) the Lie derivatives of the structure tensor fields φ i , i = 1 , 2 , 3 with respect to the Reeb vector fields are given by
L ξ i φ i = 0 , L ξ i φ j = 2 δ ( η i ξ j η j ξ i ) = L ξ j φ i
for every i , j = 1 , 2 , 3 . Indeed, in a 3- δ -cosymplectic manifold the Levi-Civita connection satisfies ([1], Proposition 2.1.1):
ξ i g φ i = 0 ,
( ξ i g φ j ) X = δ ( η i ( X ) ξ j η j ( X ) ξ i ) = ( ξ j g φ i ) X ,
X g ξ i = δ ( η k ( X ) ξ j η j ( X ) ξ k ) ,
where ( i , j , k ) is an even permutation of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) and X X ( M ) . Therefore,
( L ξ i φ i ) X = [ ξ i , φ i X ] φ i [ ξ i , X ] = ξ i g ( φ i X ) φ i X g ξ i φ i ( ξ i g X ) + φ i ( X g ξ i ) = ( ξ i g φ i ) X φ i X g ξ i + φ i ( X g ξ i ) = δ ( η k ( φ i X ) ξ j η j ( φ i X ) ξ k ) + δ ( η k ( X ) φ i ξ j η j ( X ) φ i ξ k ) = 0 .
In the same way,
( L ξ i φ j ) X = ( ξ i g φ j ) X φ j X g ξ i + φ j ( X g ξ i ) = δ ( η i ( X ) ξ j η j ( X ) ξ i ) δ η k ( φ j X ) ξ j δ η j ( X ) φ j ξ k = 2 δ ( η i ( X ) ξ j η j ( X ) ξ i ) = ( L ξ j φ i ) X .

4. 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki Manifolds

In this section we introduce the class of 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds.
Definition 3.
An almost 3-contact metric manifold ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) will be called 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold if
d η i = 2 δ η j η k , d Φ i = 2 δ ( η j Φ k η k Φ j )
for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) , and for some real constant δ R .
In particular, the structure is not 3-quasi-Sasaki when δ 0 , and we have the following basic properties for a 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold:
  • The horizontal distribution is integrable;
  • Each ξ i is an infinitesimal automorphism of the distribution , i. e.
    d η r ( X , ξ s ) = 0 X Γ ( H ) , r , s = 1 , 2 , 3 ;
  • The constant δ is the Reeb commutator function.
Remark 1.
In case δ 0 , the two equations in (12) are not completely independent. Indeed, if one assumes d Φ i = 2 γ ( η j Φ k η k Φ j ) , γ R * , differentiating this equation, and combining with d η i = 2 δ η j η k , a straightforward computation gives γ = δ . Thus, there is no freedom for the choice of constant in the second equation.
If ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is a 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki structure, applying an -homothetic deformation as in (5), an easy computation using (6) shows that the new structure ( φ i , η i , ξ i , g ) is again 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki, with δ = δ c .
Example 1.
Consider the abelian Lie algebra R 4 n spanned by vectors v r , v n + r , v 2 n + r , v 3 n + r , r = 1 , , n , and endowed with the hypercomplex structure { J 1 , J 2 , J 3 } defined by
J i ( v r ) = v i n + r , J i ( v i n + r ) = v r , J i ( v j n + r ) = v k n + r , J i ( v k n + r ) = v j n + r ,
for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) . Let us consider also the Lie algebra so ( 3 ) spanned by ξ 1 , ξ 2 , ξ 3 with Lie brackets given by [ ξ i , ξ j ] = 2 δ ξ k , δ 0 . Let ρ be the representation of so ( 3 ) on R 4 n given by
ρ : so ( 3 ) gl ( 4 n , R ) , ρ ( ξ i ) = δ J i , i = 1 , 2 , 3 .
On the Lie algebra g = so ( 3 ) ρ R 4 n on can define in a natural way an almost 3-contact metric structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) , with
φ i | R 4 n = J i , φ ( ξ i ) = 0 , φ i ( ξ j ) = ξ k = φ j ( ξ k ) ,
η i | R 4 n = 0 , η i ( ξ i ) = 1 , η i ( ξ j ) = η i ( ξ k ) = 0 ,
and where g is the inner product such that the vectors ξ i , v l , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , l = 1 , , 4 n are orthonormal. In particular, the non zero brackets on g are given by
[ ξ i , ξ j ] = 2 δ ξ k , [ ξ i , X ] = δ φ i ( X ) , X R 4 n .
The representation ρ : so ( 3 ) gl ( 4 n , R ) can be integrated to a representation ρ ˜ : SO ( 3 ) GL ( 4 n , R ) . Therefore, identifying R 4 n with H n in a natural way, the simply connected Lie group G = SO ( 3 ) ρ ˜ H n , with Lie algebra g , admits a left invariant almost 3-contact metric structure ( φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) . One can easily verify that this structure satisfies (12).
Remark 2.
For more details on the above example we refer to [2], where g is described as a remarkable example of a Lie algebra endowed with an abelian almost 3-contact metric structure. In fact, the structure defined on g belongs to the class of canonical abelian structures, so that the Lie group G admits a unique metric connection with totally skew symmetric torsion such that
X φ i = 2 δ ( η k ( X ) φ j η j ( X ) φ k )
for every vector field X and for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) . The torsion of the canonical connection is T = 2 δ η 1 η 2 η 3 , which satisfies T = 0 .
It is also shown in [2] that the Lie group G admits co-compact discrete subgroups, so that the corresponding compact quotients admit almost 3-contact metric structures of the same type.
Proposition 3.
Let ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) be a 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold. Then the structure is hypernormal.
Proof. 
In order to compute the tensor fields N φ i , we apply Lemma 1. We always denote by X , Y , Z horizontal vector fields and by ( i , j , k ) an even permutation of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) .
Being d Φ i ( X , Y , Z ) = 0 , then N φ i ( X , Y , Z ) = 0 for every i = 1 , 2 , 3 . Furthermore, since the horizontal distribution is integrable, by the definition of the tensor field N φ i (see (4)), one has N φ i ( X , Y , ξ r ) = 0 for all r = 1 , 2 , 3 . Notice that, since
ξ i Φ i = 0 , ξ j Φ i = η k , ξ k Φ i = η j ,
from the second equation in (12), we have,
ξ i d Φ i = 0 , ξ j d Φ i = 2 δ ( Φ k + η i j ) , ξ k d Φ i = 2 δ ( Φ j + η k i ) .
Therefore, form Lemma 1, applying (12) and (13), we have
N φ i ( X , ξ i , Z ) = d Φ j ( X , ξ i , φ j Z ) + d Φ k ( φ i X , ξ i , φ j Z ) + d η j ( φ i X , φ j Z ) + d η k ( X , φ j Z ) = 2 δ Φ k ( φ j Z , X ) 2 δ Φ j ( φ j Z , φ i X ) = 2 δ Φ j ( φ i X , φ j Z ) + 2 δ Φ k ( X , φ j Z ) = 2 δ g ( φ i X , Z ) 2 δ g ( X , φ i Z ) = 0 , N φ i ( X , ξ j , Z ) = d Φ j ( φ i X , ξ k , φ j Z ) + d Φ k ( φ i X , ξ j , φ j Z ) = 2 δ Φ i ( φ j Z , φ i X ) + 2 δ Φ i ( φ j Z , φ i X ) = 0 , N φ i ( X , ξ k , Z ) = d Φ j ( X , ξ k , φ j Z ) d Φ k ( X , ξ j , φ j Z ) = 2 δ Φ i ( φ j Z , X ) 2 δ Φ i ( φ j Z , X ) = 0 .
Equations (13) implies d Φ r ( X , ξ s , ξ t ) = 0 for every r , s , t = 1 , 2 , 3 and X Γ ( H ) . Taking also into account that d η r ( X , ξ s ) = 0 , we deduce from (9) that
N φ r ( X , ξ s , ξ t ) = N φ r ( ξ s , ξ t , X ) = 0 .
Finally, (9) implies together with d η r ( ξ s , ξ t ) = 2 δ ϵ r s t that
N φ i ( ξ i , ξ j , ξ k ) = N φ i ( ξ i , ξ k , ξ j ) = N φ i ( ξ j , ξ k , ξ i ) = 0 ,
completing the proof that M is hypernormal. □
Proposition 4.
Let ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) be a 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold. Then the Levi-Civita connection satisfies for all X , Y X ( M ) and any cyclic permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) :
( X g φ i ) Y = 2 δ η k ( X ) φ j Y η j ( X ) φ k Y δ η j ( X ) η j ( Y ) + η k ( X ) η k ( Y ) ξ i + δ η i ( Y ) η j ( X ) ξ j + η k ( X ) ξ k
and
X g ξ i = δ ( η k ( X ) ξ j η j ( X ) ξ k ) ,
ξ i g ξ i = 0 , ξ i g ξ j = ξ j g ξ i = δ ξ k .
In particular, each ξ i is a Killing vector field.
Proof. 
Since the structure is hypernormal, by ([3], Lemma 6.1), the Levi-Civita connection satisfies
2 g ( ( X g φ i ) Y , Z ) = d Φ i ( X , φ i Y , φ i Z ) d Φ i ( X , Y , Z ) + d η i ( φ i Y , X ) η i ( Z ) d η i ( φ i Z , X ) η i ( Y ) .
Further, an easy computation (see [1]) shows that for every cyclic permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) ,
Φ j ( φ i X , φ i Y ) = Φ j ( X , Y ) ( η k η i ) ( X , Y ) , Φ k ( φ i X , φ i Y ) = Φ k ( X , Y ) ( η i η j ) ( X , Y ) , Φ j ( φ i X , Y ) = Φ k ( X , Y ) η i ( X ) η j ( Y ) , Φ k ( φ i X , Y ) = Φ j ( X , Y ) η i ( X ) η k ( Y ) .
Then, using the second equation in (12) and the above equations, we have
d Φ i ( X , φ i Y , φ i Z ) = = 2 δ [ η j ( X ) Φ k ( φ i Y , φ i Z ) + η j ( φ i Y ) Φ k ( φ i Z , X ) + η j ( φ i Z ) Φ k ( X , φ i Y ) η k ( X ) Φ j ( φ i Y , φ i Z ) η k ( φ i Y ) Φ j ( φ i Z , X ) η k ( φ i Z ) Φ j ( X , φ i Y ) ] = 2 δ [ η j ( X ) Φ k ( Y , Z ) η j ( X ) ( η i η j ) ( Y , Z ) η k ( Y ) Φ j ( Z , X ) + η k ( Y ) η i ( Z ) η k ( X ) + η k ( Z ) Φ j ( Y , X ) η k ( Z ) η i ( Y ) η k ( X ) + η k ( X ) Φ j ( Y , Z ) + η k ( X ) ( η k η i ) ( Y , Z ) + η j ( Y ) Φ k ( Z , X ) + η j ( Y ) η i ( Z ) η j ( X ) η j ( Z ) Φ k ( Y , X ) η j ( Z ) η i ( Y ) η j ( X ) ] = d Φ i ( X , Y , Z ) + 4 δ [ η j ( X ) Φ k ( Y , Z ) η k ( X ) Φ j ( Y , Z ) ] + 4 δ η j ( X ) [ η i ( Y ) η j ( Z ) η j ( Y ) η i ( Z ) ] + 4 δ η k ( X ) [ η i ( Y ) η k ( Z ) η k ( Y ) η i ( Z ) ] .
On the other hand, again using the first equation in (12), we obtain
d η i ( φ i Y , X ) η i ( Z ) d η i ( φ i Z , X ) η i ( Y ) = = 2 δ ( η j η k ) ( φ i Y , X ) η i ( Z ) + 2 δ ( η j η k ) ( φ i Z , X ) η i ( Y ) = 2 δ η i ( Z ) [ η k ( Y ) η k ( X ) η j ( X ) η j ( Y ) ] + 2 δ η i ( Y ) [ η k ( Z ) η k ( X ) η j ( X ) η j ( Z ) ] .
Inserting the above computations in (17), we conclude that
g ( ( X g φ i ) Y , Z ) = 2 δ [ η k ( X ) g ( φ j Y , Z ) η j ( X ) g ( φ k Y , Z ) ] δ η i ( Z ) [ η k ( Y ) η k ( X ) + η j ( X ) η j ( Y ) ] + δ η i ( Y ) [ η k ( Z ) η k ( X ) + η j ( X ) η j ( Z ) ]
which implies (14). As regards the proof (15), applying (14) for Y = ξ i , we get
( X g φ i ) ξ i = δ ( η j ( X ) ξ j + η k ( X ) ξ k ) .
Applying φ i on both hand-sides, we obtain (15). Equations (16) are immediate consequences of (15). Furthermore, we also get
g ( X g ξ i , Y ) = δ ( η j η k ) ( X , Y )
for every X , Y X ( M ) . Since g ξ i is skew-symmetric, ξ i is Killing. □
Corollary 1.
Let ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) be a 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold. Then for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) we have
L ξ i φ i = 0 , L ξ i φ j = L ξ j φ i = 2 δ φ k .
Proof. 
For the first Lie derivative, notice that by (14) we have ξ i g φ i = 0 . Then, applying also (15), for every vector field X we have
( L ξ i φ i ) X = ( ξ i g φ i ) X φ i X g ξ i + φ i ( X g ξ i ) = δ ( η k ( φ i X ) ξ j η j ( φ i X ) ξ k ) + δ ( η k ( X ) φ i ξ j η j ( X ) φ i ξ k ) = 0 .
Now, using (14) for the covariant derivative g φ j , for every vector field Y, we have
( ξ i g φ j ) Y = 2 δ φ k Y δ η i ( Y ) ξ j η j ( Y ) ξ i .
Therefore, applying also (15), we get
( L ξ i φ j ) X = ( ξ i g φ j ) X φ j X g ξ i + φ j ( X g ξ i ) = 2 δ φ k X δ η i ( X ) ξ j η j ( X ) ξ i δ η k ( φ j X ) ξ j δ η j ( X ) φ j ξ k = 2 δ φ k X .
Analogously, L ξ j φ i = 2 δ φ k . □
Theorem 3.
Let ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) be a 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold. Then both the horizontal and the vertical distribution are integrable with totally geodesic leaves. Each leaf of the vertical distribution is locally isomorphic to the Lie group SO ( 3 ) , with constant sectional curvature δ 2 ; each leaf of the horizontal distribution is endowed with a hyper-Kähler structure. Consequently, the Riemannian Ricci tensor of M is given by
Ric g = 2 δ 2 i = 1 3 η i η i .
Proof. 
We already know that the horizontal distribution is integrable. From (15), for every X , Y Γ ( H ) and i = 1 , 2 , 3 , we have
g ( X g Y , ξ i ) = g ( X g ξ i , Y ) = 0 ,
so that the distribution has totally geodesic leaves. Furthermore, Equation (16) implies that the vertical distribution V is also integrable with totally geodesic leaves. In particular [ ξ i , ξ j ] = 2 δ ξ k for an even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) , so that the leaves of V are locally isomorphic to the Lie group SO ( 3 ) and have constant sectional curvature δ 2 . On each leaf of the horizontal distribution one can consider the almost hyper-Hermitian structure defined by ( J i : = φ i | H , g ) , which turns out to be hyper-Kähler due to (14). Consequently, M is locally the Riemannnian product of 3-dimensional sphere of curvature δ 2 and a 4 n -dimensional manifold M , which is endowed with a hyper-Kähler structure. Since any hyper-Kähler manifold is Ricci flat, we obtain that the Riemannian Ricci tensor of M is given by (19). □
Remark 3.
From Theorem 3 it follows that any 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is locally isometric to the Riemannnian product of 3-dimensional sphere and a 4 n -dimensional manifold M , which is endowed with a hyper-Kähler structure. We recall that 3-δ-cosymplectic manifolds are also locally isometric to the Riemannian product of a 3-dimensional sphere of constant curvature δ 2 and a hyper-Kähler manifold. Nevertheless, there is a difference between the two geometries. Looking at the transverse geometry of the foliation defined by the vertical distribution V , in both cases the Riemannian metric g is projectable, being the vector fields ξ i , i = 1 , 2 , 3 , all Killing. In the case of 3-δ-cosymplectic manifolds, each tensor field φ i is also projectable, as by (11), the Lie derivatives with respect to the Reeb vector fields satisfy ( L ξ i φ j ) X = 0 for every i , j = 1 , 2 , 3 and for every horizontal vector field X. In the case of 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds, owing to (18), the tensor fields are not projectable. Nevertheless, taking into account the horizontal parts Φ i : = Φ i + η j η k of the fundamental 2-forms Φ i , one can verify that horizontal 4-form
Φ 1 H Φ 1 H + Φ 2 H Φ 2 H + Φ 3 H Φ 3 H
is projectable and defines a transversal quaternionic structure, which turns out to be locally hyper-Kähler.

5. Connections with Totally Skew-Symmetric Torsion

In this section we will show that every 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is canonical in the sense of the definition given in [1], thus admitting a special metric connection with totally skew-symmetric torsion, called canonical. Recall that a metric connection ∇ with torsion T on a Riemannian manifold ( M , g ) is said to have totally skew-symmetric torsion, or skew torsion for short, if the ( 0 , 3 ) -tensor field T defined by T ( X , Y , Z ) : = g ( T ( X , Y ) , Z ) is a 3-form. The relation between ∇ and the Levi-Civita connection g is then given by
X Y = X g Y + 1 2 T ( X , Y ) .
For more details we refer to [20]. We recall now the definition and the characterization of canonical almost 3-contact metric manifolds.
Definition 4
([1]). An almost 3-contact metric manifold ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is called canonical if the following conditions are satisfied:
(i)
each N φ i is totally skew-symmetric on H ,
(ii)
each ξ i is a Killing vector field,
(iii)
for any X , Y , Z Γ ( H ) and any i , j = 1 , 2 , 3 ,
N φ i ( X , Y , Z ) d Φ i ( φ i X , φ i Y , φ i Z ) = N φ j ( X , Y , Z ) d Φ j ( φ j X , φ j Y , φ j Z ) ,
(iv)
M admits a Reeb Killing function β C ( M ) , that is the tensor fields A i j defined on H by
A i j ( X , Y ) : = g ( ( L ξ j φ i ) X , Y ) + d η j ( X , φ i Y ) + d η j ( φ i X , Y ) ,
satisfy
A i i ( X , Y ) = 0 , A i j ( X , Y ) = A j i ( X , Y ) = β Φ k ( X , Y ) ,
for every X , Y Γ ( H ) and every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) .
Here N φ i also denotes the ( 0 , 3 ) -tensor field defined by N φ i ( X , Y , Z ) : = g ( N φ i ( X , Y ) , Z ) and we say that N φ i is totally skew-symmetric on H if the ( 0 , 3 ) -tensor is a 3-form on H .
Theorem 4
([1]). An almost 3-contact metric manifold ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) is canonical, with Reeb Killing function β, if and only if it admits a metric connection with skew torsion such that
X φ i = β ( η k ( X ) φ j η j ( X ) φ k )
for every vector field X on M and for every even permutation ( i , j , k ) of ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) . If such a connection exists, it is unique and its torsion is given by
T ( X , Y , Z ) = N φ i ( X , Y , Z ) d Φ i ( φ i X , φ i Y , φ i Z ) , T ( X , Y , ξ i ) = d η i ( X , Y ) , T ( X , ξ i , ξ j ) = g ( [ ξ i , ξ j ] , X ) , T ( ξ 1 , ξ 2 , ξ 3 ) = 2 ( β δ ) ,
for every X , Y , Z Γ ( H ) , and i , j = 1 , 2 , 3 , and where δ is the Reeb commutator function.
The connection ∇ is called the canonical connection of M, and also satisfies
X ξ i = β ( η k ( X ) ξ j η j ( X ) ξ k ) , X η i = β ( η k ( X ) η j η j ( X ) η k )
for every vector field X on M. Therefore, when β = 0 the canonical connection parallelizes all the structure tensor fields, in which case we call the almost 3-contact metric manifold parallel.
Both 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds and 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds turn out to be canonical. In particular,
Theorem 5
([1]). Every 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is a canonical almost 3-contact metric manifold, with constant Reeb Killing function β = 2 ( δ 2 α ) . The torsion T of the canonical connection ∇ is given by
T = i = 1 3 η i d η i + 8 ( δ α ) η 123 = 2 α i = 1 3 η i Φ i + 2 ( δ 4 α ) η 123
and satisfies T = 0 .
We denote by η 123 the 3-form η 1 η 2 η 3 . From the above theorem, it follows that any 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is a parallel canonical manifold if and only if δ = 2 α , in which case the 3- ( α , δ ) -Sasaki structure is positive ( α δ > 0 ).
Regarding 3- δ -cosymplectic manifolds, we have:
Proposition 5
([1]). Any 3-δ-cosymplectic manifold is a parallel canonical almost 3-contact metric manifold. The torsion of the canonical connection is given by
T = 2 δ η 123 .
For the class of 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifolds, we have the following
Proposition 6.
Every 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold is a canonical almost 3-contact metric manifold, with constant Reeb Killing function β = 2 δ . The torsion T of the canonical connection is given by
T = 2 δ η 123 ,
which satisfies T = 0 .
Proof. 
Let ( M , φ i , ξ i , η i , g ) be a 3- ( 0 , δ ) -Sasaki manifold. We showed that the structure is hypernormal and the Reeb vector fields are Killing. Furthermore, by the second equation in (12), d Φ i ( X , Y , Z ) = 0 for every X , Y , Z Γ ( H ) . Therefore, conditions (i), (ii) and (iii) in Definition 4 are easily verified. As regards condition (iv), applying the first equation in (4) and Corollary 1, for every X , Y Γ ( H ) we have
A i i ( X , Y ) = 0 , A i j ( X , Y ) = A j i ( X , Y ) = 2 δ Φ k ( X , Y ) .
Hence, the structure is canonical with Reeb commutator function β = 2 δ . Now, by Theorem 4, taking also into account the fact that the vertical distribution is integrable, the only non-vanishing term of the canonical connection is T ( ξ 1 , ξ 2 , ξ 3 ) = 2 δ , so that T = 2 δ η 123 . Although the structure is not parallel when δ 0 , the torsion satisfies T = 0 , as by (20), the 3-form η 123 is parallel with respect to ∇. □
The above result generalizes the result obtained in [2] for the Lie group described in Example 1 (see also Remark 2).

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

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