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Showing papers on "Distribution (differential geometry) published in 1973"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the orbits of D are C' submanifolds of M, and moreover that they are the maximal integral submansions of a certain C9? distribution PD.
Abstract: Let D be an arbitrary set of Cc vector fields on the Cc manifold M. It is shown that the orbits of D are C' submanifolds of M, and that, moreover, they are the maximal integral submanifolds of a certain C9? distribution PD. (In general, the dimension of PD(m) will not be the same for all m EM.) The second main result gives necessary and sufficient conditions for a distribution to be integrable. These two results imply as easy corollaries the theorem of Chow about the points attainable by broken integral curves of a family of vector fields, and all the known results about integrability of distributions (i.e. the classical theorem of Frobenius for the case of constant dimension and the more recent work of Hermann, Nagano, Lobry and Matsuda). Hermann and Lobry studied orbits in connection with their work on the accessibility problem in control theory. Their method was to apply Chow's theorem to the maximal integral submanifolds of the smallest distribution A such that every vector field X in the Lie algebra generated by D belongs to A (i.e. X(m) e A(m) for every m EM). Their work therefore requires the additional assumption that A be integrable. Here the opposite approach is taken. The orbits are studied directly, and the integrability of A is not assumed in proving the first main result. It turns out that A is integrable if and only if A = PD' and this fact makes it possible to derive a characterization of integrability and Chow's theorem. Therefore, the approach presented here generalizes and unifies the work of the authors quoted above.

851 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the asymptotic statistical distribution of tensile strength of a bundle of parallel fibers is determined in terms of the statistical characteristics of the individual fibers as the number of fibers in the bundle grows indefinitely large.
Abstract: The asymptotic statistical distribution of tensile strength of a bundle of parallel fibers is determined in terms of the statistical characteristics of the individual fibers as the number of fibers in the bundle grows indefinitely large.

126 citations