Rigidity (mathematics)
Property of mathematical objects
title: "Rigidity (mathematics)" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["mathematical-terminology"] description: "Property of mathematical objects" topic_path: "general/mathematical-terminology" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigidity_(mathematics)" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Property of mathematical objects ::
In mathematics, a rigid collection C of mathematical objects (for instance sets or functions) is one in which every c ∈ C is uniquely determined by less information about c than one would expect. The above statement does not define a mathematical property; instead, it describes in what sense the adjective "rigid" is typically used in mathematics, by mathematicians. FORCETOC
Examples
Some examples include:
- Harmonic functions on the unit disk are rigid in the sense that they are uniquely determined by their boundary values.
- Holomorphic functions are determined by the set of all derivatives at a single point. A smooth function from the real line to the complex plane is not, in general, determined by all its derivatives at a single point, but it is if we require additionally that it be possible to extend the function to one on a neighbourhood of the real line in the complex plane. The Schwarz lemma is an example of such a rigidity theorem.
- By the fundamental theorem of algebra, polynomials in C are rigid in the sense that any polynomial is completely determined by its values on any infinite set, say N, or the unit disk. By the previous example, a polynomial is also determined within the set of holomorphic functions by the finite set of its non-zero derivatives at any single point.
- Linear maps L(X, Y) between vector spaces X, Y are rigid in the sense that any L ∈ L(X, Y) is completely determined by its values on any set of basis vectors of X.
- Mostow's rigidity theorem, which states that the geometric structure of negatively curved manifolds is determined by their topological structure.
- A well-ordered set is rigid in the sense that the only (order-preserving) automorphism on it is the identity function. Consequently, an isomorphism between two given well-ordered sets will be unique.
- Cauchy's theorem on geometry of convex polytopes states that a convex polytope is uniquely determined by the geometry of its faces and combinatorial adjacency rules.
- Alexandrov's uniqueness theorem states that a convex polyhedron in three dimensions is uniquely determined by the metric space of geodesics on its surface.
- Rigidity results in K-theory show isomorphisms between various algebraic K-theory groups.
- Rigid groups in the inverse Galois problem.
Combinatorial use
In combinatorics, the term rigid is also used to define the notion of a rigid surjection, which is a surjection f: n \to m for which the following equivalent conditions hold:
- For every i, j \in m, i ;
- Considering f as an n-tuple \big( f(0), f(1), \ldots, f(n-1) \big), the first occurrences of the elements in m are in increasing order;
- f maps initial segments of n to initial segments of m.
This relates to the above definition of rigid, in that each rigid surjection f uniquely defines, and is uniquely defined by, a partition of n into m pieces. Given a rigid surjection f, the partition is defined by n = f^{-1}(0) \sqcup \cdots \sqcup f^{-1}(m-1). Conversely, given a partition of n = A_0 \sqcup \cdots \sqcup A_{m-1}, order the A_i by letting A_i \prec A_j \iff \min A_i . If n = B_0 \sqcup \cdots \sqcup B_{m-1} is now the \prec-ordered partition, the function f: n \to m defined by f(i) = j \iff i \in B_j is a rigid surjection.
References
References
- Prömel, Hans Jürgen. (April 1986). "Hereditary attributes of surjections and parameter sets". European Journal of Combinatorics.
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