In differential geometry, the cut locus of a point on a manifold is the closure of the set of all other points on the manifold that are connected to by two or more distinct shortest geodesics.[1] More generally, the cut locus of a closed set on the manifold is the closure of the set of all other points on the manifold connected to by two or more distinct shortest geodesics.
In the Euclidean plane, a point p has an empty cut locus, because every other point is connected to p by a unique geodesic (the line segment between the points).
On the sphere, the cut locus of a point consists of the single antipodal point diametrically opposite to it.
On an infinitely long cylinder, the cut locus of a point consists of the line opposite the point.
Let X be the boundary of a simple polygon in the Euclidean plane. Then the cut locus of X in the interior of the polygon is the polygon's medial axis. Points on the medial axis are centers of disks that touch the polygon boundary at two or more points, corresponding to two or more shortest paths to the disk center.
Let x be a point on the surface of a convex polyhedron P. Then the cut locus of x on the polyhedron's surface is known as the ridge tree of P with respect to x. This ridge tree has the property that cutting the surface along its edges unfolds P to a simple planar polygon. This polygon can be viewed as a net for the polyhedron.
Fix a point
p
(M,g)
TpM
v
TpM
\gamma(t)=\expp(tv)
t
[0,1]
\expp
p
p
v
TpM
\gamma(t)=\expp(tv)
t\in[0,1]
t=1+\varepsilon
\varepsilon>0
d
M
\| ⋅ \|
TpM
p
M
p
p
p
M
p
The least distance from p to the cut locus is the injectivity radius at p. On the open ball of this radius, the exponential map at p is a diffeomorphism from the tangent space to the manifold, and this is the largest such radius. The global injectivity radius is defined to be the infimum of the injectivity radius at p, over all points of the manifold.
Suppose
q
p
M
p
q
p
q
The significance of the cut locus is that the distance function from a point
p
p
p
p
For the metric space of surface distances on a convex polyhedron, cutting the polyhedron along the cut locus produces a shape that can be unfolded flat into a plane, the source unfolding.[4] The unfolding process can be performed continuously, as a blooming of the polyhedron.[5] Analogous methods of cutting along the cut locus can be used to unfold higher-dimensional convex polyhedra as well.[6]
One can similarly define the cut locus of a submanifold of the Riemannian manifold, in terms of its normal exponential map.