1. Introduction
Recall that a Riemannian manifold
of dimension
is called
locally conformally flat if and only if the Weyl curvature tensor on
vanishes identically, of which the study has always been an important subject in Riemannian geometry, and especially from the point of view of submanifold theory. On the latter, the locally conformally flat hypersurfaces of dimension greater than three in space forms were classified completely by do Carmo et al. [
1]. It is worth pointing out that it admits no real hypersurfaces even with harmonic Weyl curvature tensor when the ambient space is complex space form
of constant holomorphic sectional curvature
and complex dimension
, which was proven by Ki et al. in [
2]. Thus, it follows that there are no locally conformally flat real hypersurfaces in such complex space form
.
In recent decades, the study of Riemannian submanifolds has been extended to the ambient spaces, which are symmetric spaces other than real space forms and complex space forms. In particular, related to the study of real hypersurfaces in both complex two-plane Grassmannian
and complex hyperbolic two-plane Grassmannian
, there are many interesting results that have been established in the last few decades; for details, see, e.g., [
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12] and the references therein.
The compact complex two-plane Grassmannian
consists of all the complex two-dimensional linear subspaces in
, whereas the complex hyperbolic two-plane Grassmannian
of all complex two-dimensional linear subspaces in indefinite complex Euclidean space
is noncompact. By a unified notation, we denote by
the one of the compact type (resp. noncompact type) for
(resp.
), where
is a scaling factor for its Riemannian metric
g and sectional curvature
K (see [
11,
12]). These are Hermitian symmetric spaces of rank two and complex dimension
equipped with a Kähler structure
J and a quaternionic Kähler structure
not containing
J.
Let
M be a connected and orientable real hypersurface in
with
N its normal vector field, whose induced metric is still denoted by
g. Then, the Reeb vector field
on
M is defined by
. Moreover, besides the almost contact metric structure
induced from
g and
J, there exists a local almost contact metric three-structure
induced from
g and
, where
for
and
is a canonical local basis of
(for details, see
Section 2). In particular, we denote by
the distribution on
M spanned by
.
For the shape operator
A, a real hypersurface in
is said to be
Hopf if it satisfies
for
. The study of Hopf hypersurfaces in
was initiated by Berndt and Suh in [
13] for
and [
14] for
, respectively. More precisely, we have the following two well-known classification theorems.
Theorem 1 ([
13]).
Let M be a connected real hypersurface in , . Then, both and are invariant under the shape operator of M if and only if M is an open part of one of the following spaces: - (A)
A tube around a totally geodesic in ;
- (B)
A tube around a totally geodesic in , where is even.
Theorem 2 ([
14]).
Let M be a connected real hypersurface in , . Then, both and are invariant under the shape operator of M if and only if one of the following holds: - (A)
M is an open part of a tube around a totally geodesic in ;
- (B)
M is an open part of a tube around a totally geodesic in , where is even;
- (C1)
M is an open part of a horosphere in whose center at infinity is singular and of type ;
- (C2)
M is an open part of a horosphere in whose center at infinity is singular and of type ;
- (D)
The normal bundle of M consists of singular tangent vectors of type . Moreover, M has at least four distinct principal curvatures, which are given by (c is a negative constant): with corresponding principal curvature spaces: If μ is another (possibly nonconstant) principal curvature function, then , , and .
Since then, a number of interesting results on Hopf hypersurfaces in
have been obtained continuously. One of the best known results is that it admits no Hopf hypersurfaces with a parallel Ricci tensor in
, by which we easily see that there does not exist any Einstein–Hopf hypersurface (see [
15,
16]). From this, it is clear that all of these canonical real hypersurfaces of
given in Theorem 1 and Theorem 2 are not of a constant sectional curvature.
Meanwhile, such non-existence results have also been established by geometers without the Hopf condition. When
, Suh in [
17] proved that there are no real hypersurfaces with a parallel shape operator, and later, this was generalized to the ones with a semi-parallel shape operator by Loo [
18]. Moreover, for real hypersurfaces in
, an immediate consequence of the Codazzi equation states that the totally umbilicity is too strong to be satisfied (see also [
11]). It should be pointed out that all the results mentioned above are related to real hypersurfaces in
for
.
Motivated by the above statements, the next important problem associated with real hypersurfaces in becomes natural and interesting:
Problem. Does there exist any locally conformally flat real hypersurface in for ?
In this paper, we focus on studying the problem above, and as the main result, the following non-existence theorem is proven.
Theorem 3. There does not exist any locally conformally flat real hypersurface in for .
Remark 1. It was recently proven in [19] that there does not exist any locally conformally flat real hypersurface in both the complex quadric and its dual space for , which are viewed as another kind of Hermitian symmetric spaces with rank two. As a direct consequence of Theorem 3, we have the following result.
Corollary 1. There does not exist any real hypersurface with constant sectional curvature in for .
Finally, it should be noted that the new method used to prove Theorem 3 is now called the
Tsinghua principle due to H. Li, L. Vrancken and X. Wang (cf. [
20]), by which one can combine the Codazzi equation with the Ricci identity in a new way to obtain some nice linear equations involving the components of the second fundamental form. Recently, this remarkable principle has been widely applied and proven to be very useful for various purposes; see, e.g., [
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25].
3. Key Lemmas and Important Classification Results
In this section, following the idea of Tsinghua principle, we first prove the next two lemmas, which are related to the general real hypersurfaces and the locally conformally flat real hypersurfaces, respectively, in for .
Lemma 2. Let M be a real hypersurface in , . Then, in terms of these two almost contact metric structures and with the index , for any tangent vector fields , we have:where is the cyclic summation over and is given by: Proof. Then, this lemma shall be proven by calculating
through two different ways. From the Codazzi equation in (
15), we calculate:
This, combined with the equations in Lemma 1, gives:
On the other hand, by using the Ricci identity (
17), we obtain:
Hence, this assertion immediately follows from (
20) and (
21). □
Further, for a locally conformally flat real hypersurface M in , by Lemma 2, we derive the following lemma, which is of great significance for the later proof.
Lemma 3. Let M be a locally conformally flat real hypersurface in for . Then, in terms of these two almost contact metric structures and with , for any tangent vector fields , we have:where is defined as in Lemma 2 and: Proof. We first recall that the curvature tensor of a locally conformally flat real hypersurface
M in
, where the Weyl curvature tensor vanishes, is given by:
where
r denotes the scalar curvature of
M.
This, together with (
21), yields:
Thus, from (
19) and (
20), the assertion follows immediately, where by the expression of Ricci tensor in (
16), we can rewrite
as:
□
Remark 2. As the key to apply the Tsinghua principle successfully, we find it by calculation that all the terms, involving for and , are canceled out by each other, and this greatly simplifies the calculation on the linear relationship described in .
At the end of this section, two important classification theorems of the real hypersurfaces with isometric Reeb flow in () are stated for later use. Here, for a real hypersurface M in , its Reeb flow is isometric if and only if it holds with the Lie derivative along the direction of , which is also equivalent to .
Theorem 4 ([
28]).
Let M be a connected orientable real hypersurface in the complex two-plane Grassmannian , . Then, the Reeb flow on M is isometric if and only if M is an open part of a tube around a totally geodesic in . Theorem 5 ([
29]).
Let M be a connected orientable real hypersurface in the complex hyperbolic two-plane Grassmannian , . Then, the Reeb flow on M is isometric if and only if M is an open part of a tube around some totally geodesic in or a horosphere whose center at infinity is singular. Remark 3. It should be pointed out that these real hypersurfaces with isometric Reeb flow have at least three distinct constant principle curvatures (see [28,29] or [11]). This implies that it admits no totally umbilical real hypersurfaces in for . Otherwise, for such a real hypersurface in with , it has isometric Reeb flow, and this is a contradiction. 4. Proof of Main Theorem
Throughout this section, we always assume that M is a locally conformally flat real hypersurface in , . For the Reeb vector field on M, we prove that it belongs either to the distribution or to its orthonormal complement .
Proposition 1. Let M be a locally conformally flat real hypersurface in , . Then, the Reeb vector field ξ belongs to the distribution or .
Proof. We argue by contradiction. Assume that at some point
, it satisfies that
and
. Then, there exist a neighborhood
U of
x in
M, on which we can write:
for unit vector fields
and
such that:
Put
,
,
,
,
,
, and
. From
Section 2, it follows that
for
and
. Choosing some fixed unit vector field
, we can take
,
and
. Further, if we define
, it can be seen that
has also two eigenvalues
, of which the corresponding eigenspace is denoted by
. Then,
. Next, we proceed to choose a fixed unit vector field
and take
,
, and
. Repeating this way, a local orthonormal frame field
along
M can be chosen as:
where
and
for
.
For the shape operator A of M, we set for . Obviously, for .
In order to apply Lemma 3, we first calculate
and
directly, by choosing appropriate
,
,
,
,
. Moreover, making use of (
22), we shall obtain a system of linear equations of the components
, by means of which we will complete the proof of Proposition 1. For the convenience of calculation, the following agreement is presented:
From (
28), it is obvious that
and
.
Firstly, we choose for .
We begin with the calculation by taking in (
22):
respectively. Then, we have the equations:
which implies that
.
Similarly, in (
22), we consider the following:
and further obtain that
.
By summarizing the conclusion above, for
, we have:
Next, if we take in (
22), respectively,
then a system of equations can be obtained as:
This gives
.
Moreover, we can take
in (
22) such that
if
to obtain the recurrence relation:
Consider for .
Repeating the calculation by taking in (
22) for
:
respectively, we derive, for
,
For
, taking in (
22), respectively,
from (
28) and (
32), we conclude, for
,
Further, for
, we take
in (
22) for
if
, and later, it holds between the cross terms:
Finally, we calculate by choosing .
For
and
, taking in (
22)
and:
respectively, from the combination of (
28), (
30), and (
31), we obtain:
In particular, by taking in (
22), respectively,
with the use of (
28), (
31), and (
35), we have:
From the equations of (
30)–(
36), we easily see that
M is totally umbilical, and by Remark 3, it is obviously a contradiction.
Hence, we complete the proof by this contradiction. □
In order to complete the proof of Theorem 3, by Proposition 1, we only need to consider the following two cases:
In the following, we first prove that Case I will not happen, as is shown in Proposition 2.
Proposition 2. Let M be a locally conformally flat real hypersurface in , . Then, the Reeb vector field ξ belongs to the distribution .
Proof. Suppose that
. Without loss of generality, we can also take
for such unit vector field
. Choosing the local orthonormal frame field
the same as in (
29), we repeat the calculations of Proposition 1 step by step and conclude that
M is still totally umbilical, which combined with Remark 3 appears as a contradiction. By Proposition 1, we see that for a locally conformally flat real hypersurface
M in
(
), its Reeb vector field
must belong to the distribution
. □
To complete the proof of Theorem 3, we are left just to consider
Case II, which states that
M is a locally conformally flat real hypersurface in
(
) with
. In this case, by
Section 2, we know that dim
. Noting that
for
and
, we choose some fixed unit vector field
such that
,
, and
, respectively. If we define
, the same as
,
also has two eigenvalues
. We denote by
the corresponding eigenspace and further obtain that
for
. Later, another fixed unit vector field
can be chosen such that
,
, and
. Repeating this way, there exist a local orthogonal frame field
given by:
where
and
for
.
By choosing appropriate
,
,
,
,
, we proceed to calculate
and
in (
22).
Put
for
with
for
. Similarly, by taking different values in
, we still apply the relation in (
22) of Lemma 3 to obtain a system of linear equations of the components
.
We start with the calculation by taking in (
22), for
and
,
respectively, and it follows that:
For
, by further taking in (
22), respectively,
we conclude that:
For
, taking
in (
22), we obtain these cross terms, for
if
,
Repeating the calculation and taking in (
22), for
and
,
respectively, we obtain:
Moreover, if in (
22), we proceed to take, respectively,
by virtue of (
38) and (
39), we obtain:
Summarizing all the results of (
38)–(
42), we immediately obtain:
which implies that
M is still totally umbilical, a contradiction to the statement in Remark 3. For this reason, exactly it admits no locally conformally flat real hypersurfaces in
,
.
In conclusion, we have completed the proof of Theorem 3.