108 19. GEOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF 1;;-SOLUTIONS
PROOF. We follow the aforementioned references. Let '"Ya be a minimal
£-geodesic whose graph (ra (r) ,r) joins (po,O) to (qa,f) for a= 1,2. The
distance between q1 and q2 at time 7 may be expressed as
dg('F) (q1,q2) = 1
7
d~ (d 9 ( 7 ) (11 (r) ,/2 (r))) dr
(19.47) = 1
7
(:
7
d 9 ( 7 )) (ri(r) ,/2 (r)) dr
2 r7 I d )
+~Jo \V'adg( 7 )(ri(r),12(r)), dr;(r) dr,
where \7 adg(T) ( ·, ·) denotes the gradient of dg(T) ( ·, ·) with respect to the
a-th variable. Recall from Riemannian geometry
(19.48)
and by (7.54) in Part I (space-time Gauss lemma)
~r; (r) = \7/l, (ra (r), r).
Furthermore, the second inequality in Lemma 7.64 of Part I (see also
the original (7.16) in Perelman [152]) says that for an ancient solution with
bounded nonnegative curvature operator^27
(19.49) IV'el^2 (q, r) + R (q, r) :::; -e^3 (q, r).
T
Therefore
I
d'"'( dra I (r) = IV'el (ra (r), r) :S ( ~e (^3) (ra (r), r) ) 1/2
On the other hand, again using R ;:::: 0, we have
(19.50)
(recall that /a (7) = qa)· Thus, for a= 1, 2 and T E (0, 7],
Id /a T 1/2 · -
I
-1/4
dr (r):SJ373/4e (qa,r).
(^27) Note that for Euclidean space, IV£1 (^2) (q, T) = lq~:gl^2 = ~£ (q, T).