1547845440-The_Ricci_Flow_-_Techniques_and_Applications_-_Part_III__Chow_

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40 18. GEOMETRIC TOOLS AND POINT PICKING METHODS

In §4 we discuss rough monotonicity of the size of necks in complete
noncompact manifolds with positive sectional curvature. This will be useful
in the study of 11;-solutions.
Finally, in §5 we discuss a local form of the weakened no local collapsing
theorem presented in Chapter 8 of Part I.


1. Estimates for changing distances


Now we turn to some geometric and intuitive aspects that we borrow
from the study of manifolds with nonnegative sectional curvature and which
influence the study of Ricci flow, including 11;-solutions. By definition, 11;-
solutions have nonnegative curvature operator, which implies nonnegative
sectional curvature. Since compact 3-dimensional 11;-solutions must have
positive sectional curvature and hence are diffeomorphic to spherical space
forms, we are most interested in noncompact 11;-solutions.
In relation to nonnegative sectional curvature, Greene wrote the follow-
ing on p. 100 of [7 4]:

'Nonnegativity, and especially positivity, of curvature tends
to make long geodesics nonminimizing. Thus some tension
arises. between the necessary existence of rays and the curva-
ture's nonnegativity.'

Greene went on to write:

'The fact that straight lines in ~n are, in this sense, just
barely minimizing suggests that there should be quantitative
estimates on just how much positivity of curvature could be
possible without forcing a geodesic to be nonminimal.'

An important illustration of this idea is how much positivity of Ricci
curvature a minimal geodesic ry can have. Namely, in Proposition 18.8 below
we shall obtain an upper bound for f 7 Rc (ry' (s) ,ry' (s)) ds. An application
to Ricci flow of this bound is given in Lemma 8.3(b) of Perelman [152],
which discusses the change in the distance function under the Ricci flow
(see Theorem 18.7(2) below). The precursors for this result are Theorems
17.2 and 17.4 of Hamilton [92]. See also Proposition 1.94 as well as Lemma
8.33 and Remark 8.34, all in [45].

1.1. The time derivative of the distance function.


First we recall the formula for the time derivative of the distance function
using the lim inf of forward difference quotients. Our presentation follows
the proof of Lemma 3.5 in Hamilton [89] (see also Lemma 10.29 in Part II).
For a function f (x, t), let

{)-;:;i f ( x, t) -;--'--l" 1n11n. f f ( x' t + h) h - f ( x' t)
ut h-tO+
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