1. Introduction
A hypersurface 
M in 
 or 
 is said to be 
Dupin if along each curvature surface, the corresponding principal curvature is constant. A Dupin hypersurface is said to be 
proper Dupin if each principal curvature has constant multiplicity on 
M, i.e., the number of distinct principal curvatures is constant on 
M (see Pinkall [
1]).
The notions of Dupin and proper Dupin hypersurfaces in  or  can be generalized to the setting of Lie sphere geometry, and these properties are easily seen to be invariant under Lie sphere transformations (see Theorem 5). This makes Lie sphere geometry an effective setting for the study of Dupin hypersurfaces, and many classifications of proper Dupin hypersurfaces have been obtained up to Lie sphere transformations.
In these notes, we give a detailed introduction to the method for studying Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 or 
 using Lie sphere geometry, including necessary and sufficient conditions for a Dupin hypersurface in 
 to be equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in 
 by a Lie sphere transformation (Theorem 8). As an application, we give a classification based on Pinkall [
1] of the cyclides of Dupin in 
 up to Lie sphere transformations (Theorem 9). We also give a survey of results concerning compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces and their relationship to isoparametric hypersurfaces (see 
Section 12).
In 1872, Lie [
2] introduced his geometry of oriented hyperspheres in Euclidean space 
 in the context of their work on contact transformations (see [
3]). Lie established a bijective correspondence between the set of all 
Lie spheres, i.e., oriented hyperspheres, oriented hyperplanes, and point spheres, in 
, and the set of all points on the quadric hypersurface 
 in real projective space 
 given by the equation 
, where 
 is an indefinite scalar product with signature 
 on 
 given by
      
      for 
, 
.
Using linear algebra, one can show that this 
Lie quadric  contains projective lines but no linear subspaces of 
 of higher dimension, since the metric in Equation (
1) has signature 
 (see [
4] (p. 21)). The one-parameter family of Lie spheres in 
 corresponding to the points on a line on 
 is called a 
parabolic pencil of spheres. It consists of all Lie spheres in oriented contact at a certain contact element 
 on 
, where 
p is a point in 
 and 
N is a unit tangent vector to 
 at 
p. That is, 
 is an element of the unit tangent bundle of 
. In this way, Lie also established a bijective correspondence between the manifold of contact elements on 
 and the manifold 
 of projective lines on the Lie quadric 
.
A Lie sphere transformation is a projective transformation of  which maps the Lie quadric  to itself. In terms of the geometry of , a Lie sphere transformation maps Lie spheres to Lie spheres. Furthermore, since a projective transformation maps lines to lines, a Lie sphere transformation preserves oriented contact of Lie spheres in .
Let 
 denote 
 endowed with the metric 
 in Equation (
1), and let 
 denote the group of orthogonal transformations of 
. One can show that every Lie sphere transformation is the projective transformation induced by an orthogonal transformation, and thus, the group 
G of Lie sphere transformations is isomorphic to the quotient group 
 (see [
4] (pp. 26–27)). Furthermore, any Möbius (conformal) transformation of 
 induces a Lie sphere transformation, and the Möbius group is precisely the subgroup of 
G consisting of all Lie sphere transformations that map point spheres to point spheres.
The manifold  of projective lines on the quadric  has a contact structure, i.e., a 1-form  such that  does not vanish on . The condition  defines a codimension one distribution D on , which has integral submanifolds of dimension  but none of higher dimension. Such an integral submanifold  of D of maximal dimension is called a Legendre submanifold. If  is a Lie sphere transformation, then  maps lines on  to lines on , and the map  is also a Legendre submanifold. The submanifolds  and  are said to be Lie equivalent.
Let  be an oriented hypersurface in . Then  naturally induces a Legendre submanifold , called the Legendre lift of , as we show in these notes. More generally, an immersed submanifold V of a codimension greater than one in  induces a Legendre lift whose domain is the unit normal bundle  of V in . Similarly, any submanifold of the unit sphere  has a Legendre lift. We can relate properties of a submanifold of  or  to Lie geometric properties of its Legendre lift and attempt to classify certain types of Legendre submanifolds up to Lie sphere transformations. This, in turn, gives classification results for the corresponding classes of Euclidean submanifolds of  or .
We next recall some basic ideas from Euclidean submanifold theory that are necessary for the study of Dupin hypersurfaces. For an oriented hypersurface 
 with a field of unit normal vectors 
, the eigenvalues of the shape operator (second fundamental form) 
A of 
M are called 
principal curvatures, and their corresponding eigenspaces are called 
principal spaces. A submanifold 
S of 
M is called a 
curvature surface of 
M if at each point 
x of 
S, the tangent space 
 is a principal space at 
x. This generalizes the classical notion of a line of curvature of a surface in 
. If 
 is a nonzero principal curvature of 
M at 
x, the point
      
      is called the 
focal point of 
M at 
x determined by 
. The hypersphere in the space 
 tangent to 
M at 
 and centered at the focal point 
 is called the 
curvature sphere at 
x determined by 
.
It is well-known that there always exists an open dense subset 
 of 
M on which the multiplicities of the principal curvatures are locally constant (see, for example, Singley [
5]). If a principal curvature 
 has constant multiplicity 
m in some open set 
, then the corresponding 
m-dimensional distribution of principal spaces is integrable, i.e., it is an 
m-dimensional foliation, and the leaves of this 
principal foliation are curvature surfaces. Furthermore, if the multiplicity 
m of 
 is greater than one, then by using the Codazzi equation, one can show that 
 is constant along each leaf of this principal foliation (see, for example, [
6] (p. 24)). This is not true, in general, if the multiplicity 
. Analogues of these results hold for oriented hypersurfaces in the sphere 
 or in real hyperbolic space 
 (see, for example, [
6] (pp. 9–35)).
As mentioned earlier, a hypersurface 
M in 
 or 
 is said to be Dupin if along each curvature surface, the corresponding principal curvature is constant. A Dupin hypersurface is said to be proper Dupin if each principal curvature has constant multiplicity on 
M, i.e., the number of distinct principal curvatures is constant on 
M (see Pinkall [
1]).
The notions of Dupin and proper Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 or 
 can be generalized to a class of Legendre submanifolds in Lie sphere geometry known as Dupin submanifolds (see 
Section 8). In particular, the Legendre lifts of Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 or 
 are Dupin submanifolds in this generalized sense. The Dupin and proper Dupin properties of such submanifolds are easily seen to be invariant under Lie sphere transformations (see Theorem 5).
A well-known class of proper Dupin hypersurfaces consists of the cyclides of Dupin in 
, introduced by Dupin [
7] in 1822 (see 
Section 10). Dupin defined a cyclide to be a surface 
M in 
 that is the envelope of the family of spheres tangent to three fixed spheres in 
. This is equivalent to requiring that 
M have two distinct principal curvatures at each point and that both focal maps of 
M degenerate into curves (instead of surfaces). Then 
M is the envelope of the family of curvature spheres centered along each of the focal curves. The three fixed spheres in Dupin’s definition can be chosen to be three spheres from either family of curvature spheres.
The most basic examples of cyclides of Dupin in 
 are a torus of revolution, a circular cylinder, and a circular cone. The proper Dupin property is easily shown to be invariant under Möbius transformations of 
, and it turns out that all cyclides of Dupin in 
 can be obtained from these three types of examples by inversion in a sphere in 
 (see, for example, [
8] (pp. 151–166)).
Pinkall’s paper [
1] describing higher dimensional cyclides of Dupin in the context of Lie sphere geometry was particularly influential. Pinkall defined a 
cyclide of Dupin of characteristic  to be a proper Dupin submanifold 
 with two distinct curvature spheres of respective multiplicities 
p and 
q at each point. In 
Section 10 of these notes, we present Pinkall’s [
1] classification of the cyclides of Dupin of arbitrary dimension in 
 or 
 (Theorem 9), which is obtained by using the methods of Lie sphere geometry.
Specifically, we show in Theorem 9 that any connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
 is contained in a unique compact, connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
. Furthermore, every compact, connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
 is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of a standard product of two spheres,
      
A standard product of two spheres in  is an isoparametric hypersurface in , i.e., it has constant principal curvatures in . The images of isoparametric hypersurfaces in  under stereographic projection from  to  form a particularly important class of proper Dupin hypersurfaces in .
Many results in the field deal with relationships between compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces and isoparametric hypersurfaces in spheres, including the question of which compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces are Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in a sphere. An important result in proving such classifications is Theorem 8 of these notes, which gives necessary and sufficient conditions for a Legendre submanifold to be Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface in .
Local examples of proper Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 or 
 are known to be plentiful, since Pinkall [
1] introduced four constructions for obtaining a proper Dupin hypersurface 
W in 
 from a proper Dupin hypersurface 
M in 
. These constructions involve building tubes, cylinders, cones, and surfaces of revolution from 
M, and they are discussed in 
Section 11. Using these constructions, Pinkall was able to construct a proper Dupin hypersurface in Euclidean space with an arbitrary number of distinct principal curvatures with any given multiplicities (see Theorem 11). In general, these proper Dupin hypersurfaces obtained by using Pinkall’s constructions cannot be extended to compact Dupin hypersurfaces without losing the property that the number of distinct principal curvatures is constant, as we discuss in 
Section 11.
Proper Dupin hypersurfaces that are locally Lie equivalent to the end product of one of Pinkall’s constructions are said to be 
reducible. Pinkall [
1] found a useful characterization of reducibility in the context of Lie sphere geometry, which we state and prove in Theorem 12. This theorem is important in proving several classifications of irreducible proper Dupin hypersurfaces that are described in 
Section 12.
In 
Section 12, we give a survey of results concerning compact and irreducible proper Dupin hypersurfaces and their relationship to isoparametric hypersurfaces. Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
9] showed that every compact proper Dupin hypersurface with more than two principal curvatures is irreducible (Theorem 13). In fact, several classifications of compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces with 
 principal curvatures have been obtained by assuming that the hypersurface is irreducible and working locally in the context of Lie sphere geometry using the method of moving frames (see, for example, the papers of Pinkall [
1,
10,
11], Cecil and Chern [
12], Cecil and Jensen [
13,
14], Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
9], and Niebergall [
15,
16]).
These notes are based primarily on the author’s book [
4], and several passages in these notes are taken directly from that book.
  2. Notation and Preliminary Results
In the next few sections, we review the basic setup for the sphere geometries of Möbius and Lie and the method for studying submanifolds of  and  in this context.
Let 
 be the indefinite scalar product on the Lorentz space 
 defined by
      
      where 
 and 
. We will call this scalar product the 
Lorentz metric. A vector 
x is said to be 
spacelike, 
timelike, or 
lightlike, respectively, depending on whether 
 is positive, negative, or zero. We will use this terminology even when we are using an indefinite metric of a different signature.
In Lorentz space, the set of all lightlike vectors, given by the equation,
      
      forms a cone of revolution, called the 
light cone. Timelike vectors are “inside the cone” and spacelike vectors are “outside the cone”.
If x is a nonzero vector in , let  denote the orthogonal complement of x with respect to the Lorentz metric. If x is timelike, then the metric restricts to a positive definite form on , and  intersects the light cone only at the origin. If x is spacelike, then the metric has signature  on , and  intersects the cone in a cone of one less dimension. If x is lightlike, then  is tangent to the cone along the line through the origin determined by x. The metric has the signature  on this n-dimensional plane.
Lie sphere geometry is defined in the context of real projective space , so we now briefly review some basic concepts from projective geometry. We define an equivalence relation on  by setting  if  for some nonzero real number t. We denote the equivalence class determined by a vector x by . Projective space  is the set of such equivalence classes, and it can naturally be identified with the space of all lines through the origin in . The rectangular coordinates  are called homogeneous coordinates of the point , and they are only determined up to a nonzero scalar multiple. The affine space  can be embedded in  as the complement of the hyperplane  at infinity by the map  given by . A scalar product on , such as the Lorentz metric, determines a polar relationship between points and hyperplanes in . We will also use the notation  to denote the polar hyperplane of  in , and we will call  the pole of .
If x is a nonzero lightlike vector in , then  can be represented by a vector of the form  for . Then the equation  for the light cone becomes  (Euclidean dot product), i.e., the equation for the unit sphere in . Hence, the set of points in  determined by lightlike vectors in  is naturally diffeomorphic to the sphere .
  3. Möbius Geometry of Unoriented Spheres
As a first step toward Lie’s geometry of oriented spheres, we recall the geometry of unoriented spheres in 
 known as “Möbius” or “conformal” geometry. We will always assume that 
 In this section, we only consider spheres and planes of codimension one, and we often omit the prefix “hyper-” from the words “hypersphere” and “hyperplane” (see [
4] (pp. 11–14) for more detail).
We denote the Euclidean dot product of two vectors 
u and 
v in 
 by 
. We first consider the stereographic projection 
, where 
 is the unit sphere in 
 given by 
, and 
 is the south pole of 
. The well-known formula for 
 is
      
Note that  is sometimes referred to as “inverse stereographic projection”, in which case its inverse map from  to  is called “stereographic projection”.
We next embed 
 into 
 by the embedding 
 mentioned in the previous section. Thus, we have the map 
 given by
      
Let  be homogeneous coordinates on  and  be the Lorentz metric on the space . Then  is just the set of points in  lying on the n-sphere  given by the equation , with the exception of the improper point  corresponding to the south pole P. We will refer to the points in  other than  as proper points, and will call  the Möbius sphere or Möbius space. At times, it is easier to simply begin with  rather than  and thus avoid the need for the map  and the special point P. However, there are also advantages for beginning in .
The basic framework for the Möbius geometry of unoriented spheres is as follows. Suppose that  is a spacelike vector in . Then the polar hyperplane  to  in  intersects the sphere  in an -sphere . The sphere  is the image under  of an -sphere in  unless it contains the improper point , in which case it is the image under  of a hyperplane in . Hence, we have a bijective correspondence between the set of all spacelike points in  and the set of all hyperspheres and hyperplanes in .
It is often useful to have specific formulas for this correspondence. Consider the sphere in 
 with center 
p and radius 
 given by the equation
      
We wish to translate this into an equation involving the Lorentz metric and the corresponding polarity relationship on 
. A direct calculation shows that Equation (
7) is equivalent to the equation
      
      where 
 is the spacelike vector,
      
      and 
 is given by Equation (
6). Thus, the point 
u is on the sphere given by Equation (
7) if and only if 
 lies on the polar hyperplane of 
. Note that the first two coordinates of 
 satisfy 
 and that 
. Although 
 is only determined up to a nonzero scalar multiple, we can conclude that 
 is not zero for any 
.
Conversely, given a spacelike point 
 with 
 being nonzero, we can determine the corresponding sphere in 
 as follows. Let 
 so that 
. Then from Equation (
9), the center of the corresponding sphere is the point 
, and the radius is the square root of 
.
Next, suppose that 
 is a spacelike vector with 
. Then
      
Thus, the improper point 
 lies on the polar hyperplane of 
, and the point 
 corresponds to a hyperplane in 
. Again, we can find an explicit correspondence. Consider the hyperplane in 
 given by the equation
      
A direct calculation shows that (
10) is equivalent to the equation
      
Thus, the hyperplane (
10) is represented in the polarity relationship by 
.
Conversely, let 
z be a spacelike point with 
. Then 
, where 
. Let 
. Then 
 has the form (
11) and 
 corresponds to the hyperplane (
10). Thus, we have explicit formulas for the bijective correspondence between the set of spacelike points in 
 and the set of hyperspheres and hyperplanes in 
.
Similarly, we can construct a bijective correspondence between the space of all hyperspheres in the unit sphere 
 and the manifold of all spacelike points in 
 as follows. The hypersphere 
S in 
 with center 
 and (spherical) radius 
, is given by the equation
      
      for 
. If we take 
, then
      
      where 
. Thus, Equation (
12) is equivalent to the equation
      
      in homogeneous coordinates in 
. Therefore, 
y lies on the hypersphere 
S given by Equation (
12) if and only if 
 lies on the polar hyperplane in 
 of the spacelike point
      
Remark 1. In these notes, we focus on spheres in  or . See [4] (pp. 16–18) for a treatment of the geometry of hyperspheres in real hyperbolic space .  Of course, the fundamental invariant of Möbius geometry is the angle. The study of angles in this setting is quite natural, since orthogonality between spheres and planes in 
 can be expressed in terms of the Lorentz metric. Let 
 and 
 denote the spheres in 
 with respective centers 
 and 
 and respective radii 
 and 
. By the Pythagorean theorem, the two spheres intersect orthogonally if and only if
      
If these spheres correspond by Equation (
9) to the projective points 
 and 
, respectively, then a calculation shows that Equation (
15) is equivalent to the condition
      
A hyperplane 
 in 
 is orthogonal to a hypersphere 
S precisely when 
 passes through the center of 
S. If 
S has center 
p and radius 
r, and 
 is given by the equation 
, then the condition for orthogonality is just 
. If 
S corresponds to 
 as in (
9) and 
 corresponds to 
 as in (
11), then this equation for orthogonality is equivalent to 
. Finally, if two planes 
 and 
 are represented by 
 and 
 as in (
11), then the orthogonality condition 
 is equivalent to the equation 
. Thus, in all cases of hyperspheres or hyperplanes in 
, the orthogonal intersection corresponds to a polar relationship in 
 given by Equations (
8) or (
11).
We conclude this section with a discussion of Möbius transformations. Recall that a linear transformation  induces a projective transformation  on  defined by . The map P is a homomorphism of  onto the group  of projective transformations of , and its kernel is the group of nonzero multiples of the identity transformation .
A 
Möbius transformation is a projective transformation 
 of 
 that preserves the condition 
 for 
, that is, 
, where 
 maps lightlike vectors in 
 to lightlike vectors. It can be shown (see, for example, [
4] (pp. 26–27)) that such a linear transformation 
A is a nonzero scalar multiple of a linear transformation 
, the orthogonal group for the Lorentz inner product space 
. Thus, 
.
The Möbius transformation 
 induced by an orthogonal transformation 
 maps spacelike points to spacelike points in 
, and it preserves the polarity condition 
 for any two points 
 and 
 in 
. Therefore, by the correspondence given in Equations (
8) and (
11) above, 
 maps the set of hyperspheres and hyperplanes in 
 to itself, and it preserves orthogonality and hence angles between hyperspheres and hyperplanes. A similar statement holds for the set of all hyperspheres in 
.
Let 
H denote the group of Möbius transformations and let
      
      be the restriction of the map 
P to 
. The discussion above shows that 
 is onto, and the kernel of 
 is 
, the intersection of 
 with the kernel of 
P. Therefore, 
H is isomorphic to the quotient group 
.
One can show that the group 
H is generated by Möbius transformations induced by inversions in spheres in 
. This follows from the fact that the corresponding orthogonal groups are generated by reflections in hyperplanes. In fact, every orthogonal transformation on an indefinite inner product space 
 is a product of at most 
n reflections, a based on a theorem dueto Cartan and Dieudonné (see Cartan [
17] (pp. 10–12), Chapter 3 of Artin’s book [
18], or [
4] (pp. 30–34)).
Since a Möbius transformation  for  maps lightlike points to lightlike points in  in a bijective way, it induces a diffeomorphism of the n-sphere  which is conformal by the considerations given above. It is well-known that the group of conformal diffeomorphisms of the n-sphere is precisely the Möbius group.
  4. Lie Geometry of Oriented Spheres
We now turn to the construction of Lie’s geometry of oriented spheres in 
. Let 
 be the set of vectors in 
 satisfying 
 This is a hyperboloid of revolution of one sheet in 
. If 
 is a spacelike point in 
, then there are precisely two vectors 
 in 
 with 
. These two vectors can be taken to correspond to the two orientations of the oriented sphere or plane represented by 
, as we now describe. We first introduce one more coordinate. We embed 
 into 
 by the embedding 
. If 
, then
      
      so the point 
 in 
 lies on the quadric 
 in 
 given in homogeneous coordinates by the equation
      
The manifold 
 is called the 
Lie quadric, and the scalar product determined by the quadratic form in (
18) is called the 
Lie metric or 
Lie scalar product. We let 
 denote the standard orthonormal basis for the scalar product space 
 with metric 
. Here 
 and 
 are timelike, and the rest are spacelike.
We shall now see how points on 
 correspond to the set of oriented hyperspheres, oriented hyperplanes, and point spheres in 
. Suppose that 
x is any point on the quadric with homogeneous coordinate 
. Then 
x can be represented by a vector of the form 
, where the Lorentz scalar product 
. Suppose first that 
. Then in Möbius geometry, 
 represents a sphere in 
. If as in Equation (
9), we represent 
 by a vector of the form
      
      then 
. Thus, 
 must be one of the vectors 
. In 
, we have
      
We can interpret the last coordinate as a signed radius of the sphere with center 
p and unsigned radius 
. In order to interpret this geometrically, we adopt the convention that a positive signed radius corresponds to the orientation of the sphere represented by the inward field of unit normals, and a negative signed radius corresponds to the orientation given by the outward field of unit normals. Hence, the two orientations of the sphere in 
 with center 
p and unsigned radius 
 are represented by the two projective points
      
      in 
. Next, if 
, then 
 represents a hyperplane in 
, as in Equation (
11). For 
, with 
, we have 
. Then the two projective points on 
 induced by 
 and 
 are
      
These represent the two orientations of the plane with equation . We make the convention that  corresponds to the orientation given by the field of unit normals N, while the orientation given by  corresponds to the point .
Thus far, we have determined a bijective correspondence between the set of points 
x in 
 with 
 and the set of all oriented spheres and planes in 
. Suppose now that 
, i.e., consider a point 
, for 
. Then 
, and 
 is simply a point of the Möbius sphere 
. Thus, we have the following bijective correspondence between objects in Euclidean space and points on the Lie quadric:
In Lie sphere geometry, points are considered to be spheres of radius zero, or “point spheres”. Point spheres do not have an orientation.
From now on, we will use the term 
Lie sphere or simply “sphere” to denote an oriented sphere, an oriented plane, or a point sphere in 
. We will refer to the coordinates on the right side of Equation (
21) as the 
Lie coordinates of the corresponding point, sphere, or plane. In the cases of 
 and 
, respectively, these coordinates were classically called 
pentaspherical and 
hexaspherical coordinates (see Blaschke [
19]).
At times, it is useful to have formulas to convert Lie coordinates back into Cartesian equations for the corresponding Euclidean object. Suppose first that 
 is a point on the Lie quadric with 
. Then 
, for some 
, where 
y is one of the standard forms on the right side of the table above. From the table, we see that 
 for all proper points and all spheres. Hence, if we divide 
x by 
, the new vector will be in standard form, and we can read off the corresponding Euclidean object from the table. In particular, if 
, then 
 represents the point sphere 
 where
      
If 
, then 
 represents the sphere with center 
 and signed radius 
r given by
      
Finally, suppose that 
. If 
, then the equation 
 forces 
 to be zero for 
. Thus, 
, the improper point. If 
, we divide 
x by 
 to make the last coordinate 1. Then if we set 
 and 
h according to
      
      the conditions 
 and 
 force 
N to have unit length. Thus, 
 corresponds to the hyperplane 
, with unit normal 
N and 
h as in Equation (
24).
If we wish to consider oriented hyperspheres and point spheres in the unit sphere 
 in 
, then the table (
21) above can be simplified. First, we have shown that in Möbius geometry, the unoriented hypersphere 
S in 
 with center 
 and spherical radius 
, 
, corresponds to the point 
 in 
. To make the two orientations of this sphere correspond to points on the Lie quadric, we first note that
      
Since 
 for 
, we can divide 
 by 
 and consider the two vectors 
 that satisfy 
. We then map these two points into the Lie quadric to obtain the points
      
      in 
. We can incorporate the sign of the last coordinate into the radius and thereby arrange that the oriented sphere 
S with signed radius 
, where 
, and center 
p corresponds to the point
      
      in 
. This formula still makes sense if the radius 
, in which case it yields the point sphere 
.
We adopt the convention that the positive radius 
 in (
25) corresponds to the orientation of the sphere given by the field of unit normals which are tangent vectors to geodesics in 
 from 
 to 
p, and a negative radius corresponds to the opposite orientation. Each oriented sphere can be considered in two ways, with center 
p and signed radius 
, or with center 
 and the appropriate signed radius 
.
For a given point 
 in the quadric 
, we can determine the corresponding oriented hypersphere or point sphere in 
 as follows. Multiplying by 
, if necessary, we can arrange that the first coordinate 
 of 
x is nonnegative. If 
 is positive, then it follows from Equation (
25) that the center 
p and signed radius 
, are given by
      
If , then  is nonzero, and we can divide by  to obtain a point with coordinates . This corresponds to the oriented hypersphere in  with center p and signed radius , which is a great sphere in .
Remark 2. In a similar way, one can develop the Lie sphere geometry of oriented spheres in real hyperbolic space  (see, for example, [4] (p. 18)).    5. Oriented Contact of Spheres
As we saw in 
Section 3, the angle between two spheres is the fundamental geometric quantity in Möbius geometry, and it is the quantity that is preserved by Möbius transformations. In Lie’s geometry of oriented spheres, the corresponding fundamental notion is that of the oriented contact of spheres (see [
4] (pp. 19–23) for more detail).
By definition, two oriented spheres 
 and 
 in 
 are in 
oriented contact if they are tangent to each other and have the same orientation at the point of contact. There are two geometric possibilities depending on whether the signed radii of 
 and 
 have the same sign or opposite signs. In either case, if 
 and 
 are the respective centers of 
 and 
 and 
 and 
 are their respective signed radii, then the analytic condition for oriented contact is
      
Similarly, we say that an oriented hypersphere 
S with center 
p and signed radius 
r and an oriented hyperplane 
 with unit normal 
N and equation 
 are in oriented contact if 
 is tangent to 
S and their orientations agree at the point of contact. This condition is given by the equation
      
Next we say that two oriented planes  and  are in oriented contact if their unit normals  and  are the same. These planes can be considered to be two oriented spheres in oriented contact at the improper point. Finally, a proper point u in  is in oriented contact with a sphere or a plane if it lies on the sphere or plane, and the improper point is in oriented contact with each plane, since it lies on each plane.
An important fact in Lie sphere geometry is that if 
 and 
 are two Lie spheres, which are represented as in Equation (
21) by 
 and 
, then the analytic condition for oriented contact is equivalent to the equation
      
This can be checked easily by a direct calculation.
By standard linear algebrain indefinite inner product spaces (see, for example, [
4] (p. 21)), the fact that the signature of 
 is 
 implies that the Lie quadric contains projective lines in 
 but no linear subspaces of 
 of higher dimension. These projective lines on 
 play a crucial role in the theory of submanifolds in the context of Lie sphere geometry.
One can show further (see [
4] (pp. 21–23)), that if 
 and 
 are two points of 
, then the line 
 in 
 lies on 
 if and only if the spheres corresponding to 
 and 
 are in oriented contact, i.e., 
. Moreover, if the line 
 lies on 
, then the set of spheres in 
 corresponding to points on the line 
 is precisely the set of all spheres in oriented contact with both of these spheres. Such a one-parameter family of spheres is called a 
parabolic pencil of spheres in 
.
Each parabolic pencil contains exactly one point sphere, and if that point sphere is a proper point, then the parabolic pencil contains exactly one hyperplane  in , and the pencil consists of all spheres in oriented contact with the oriented plane  at p. Thus, we can associate the parabolic pencil with the point  in the unit tangent bundle of , where N is the unit normal to the oriented plane .
If the point sphere in the pencil is the improper point, then the parabolic pencil is a family of parallel hyperplanes in oriented contact at the improper point. If N is the common unit normal to all of these planes, then we can associate the pencil with the point  in the unit tangent bundle of .
Similarly, we can establish a correspondence between parabolic pencils and elements of the unit tangent bundle 
 that is expressed in terms of the spherical metric on 
. If 
ℓ is a line on the quadric, then 
ℓ intersects both 
 and 
 at exactly one point, where 
 and 
. So the parabolic pencil corresponding to 
ℓ contains exactly one point sphere (orthogonal to 
) and one great sphere (orthogonal to 
) given, respectively, by the points,
      
Since 
ℓ lies on the quadric, we know that 
, and this condition is equivalent to the condition 
, i.e., 
 is tangent to 
 at 
p. Thus, the parabolic pencil of spheres corresponding to the line 
ℓ can be associated with the point 
 in 
. More specifically, the line 
ℓ can be parametrized as
      
From Equation (
25) above, we see that 
 corresponds to the oriented sphere in 
 with center
      
      and signed radius 
t. The pencil consists of all oriented spheres in 
 in oriented contact with the great sphere corresponding to 
 at the point 
 in 
. Their centers 
 lie along the geodesic in 
 with initial point 
p and initial velocity vector 
. Detailed proofs of all these facts are given in [
4] (pp. 21–23).
We conclude this section with a discussion of Lie sphere transformations. By definition, a 
Lie sphere transformation is a projective transformation of 
 which maps the Lie quadric 
 to itself. In terms of the geometry of 
 or 
, a Lie sphere transformation maps Lie spheres to Lie spheres, and since it is a projective transformation, it maps lines on 
 to lines on 
. Thus, it preserves oriented contact of spheres in 
 or 
. Conversely, Pinkall [
1] (see also [
4] (pp. 28–30)) proved the so-called “Fundamental Theorem of Lie sphere geometry”, which states that any line preserving diffeomorphism of 
 is the restriction to 
 of a projective transformation, that is, a transformation of the space of oriented spheres which preserves oriented contact is a Lie sphere transformation.
By the same type of reasoning as given in 
Section 3 for Möbius transformations, one can show that the group 
G of Lie sphere transformations is isomorphic to the group 
, where 
 is the group of orthogonal transformations of 
. As with the Möbius group, it follows from the theorem of Cartan and Dieudonné (see [
4] (pp. 30–34)) that the Lie sphere group 
G is generated by Lie inversions, that is, projective transformations that are induced by reflections in 
.
The Möbius group 
H can be considered to be a subgroup of 
G in the following manner. Each Möbius transformation on the space of unoriented spheres naturally induces two Lie sphere transformations on the space 
 of oriented spheres as follows. If 
A is in 
, then we can extend 
A to a transformation 
B in 
 by setting 
 on 
 and 
. In terms of the standard orthonormal basis in 
, the transformation 
B has the matrix representation,
      
Although 
A and 
 induce the same Möbius transformation in 
H, the Lie transformation 
 is not the same as the Lie transformation 
 induced by the matrix
      
      where ≃ denotes equivalence as projective transformations. Note that 
, where 
 is the Lie transformation represented in matrix form by
      
From Equation (
21), we see that 
 has the effect of changing the orientation of every oriented sphere or plane. The transformation 
 is called the 
change of orientation transformation or “Richtungswechsel” in German. Hence, the two Lie sphere transformations induced by the Möbius transformation 
 differ by this change of orientation factor.
Thus, the group of Lie sphere transformations induced from Möbius transformations is isomorphic to . This group consists of those Lie transformations that map  to itself, and it is a double covering of the Möbius group H. Since these transformations are induced from orthogonal transformations of , they also map  to itself and thereby map point spheres to point spheres. When working in the context of Lie sphere geometry, we will refer to these transformations as “Möbius transformations”.
  6. Legendre Submanifolds
The goal of this section is to define a contact structure on the unit tangent bundle 
 and on the 
-dimensional manifold 
 of projective lines on the Lie quadric 
 and to describe its associated Legendre submanifolds. This will enable us to study submanifolds of 
 or 
 within the context of Lie sphere geometry in a natural way. This theory was first developed extensively in a modern setting by Pinkall [
1] (see also Cecil-Chern [
12,
20] or the books [
4] (pp. 51–60), [
6] (pp. 202–212)).
We consider 
 to be the 
-dimensional submanifold of
      
      given by
      
As shown in the previous section, the points on a line 
ℓ lying on 
 correspond to the spheres in a parabolic pencil of spheres in 
. In particular, as in Equation (
30), 
ℓ contains one point 
 corresponding to a point sphere in 
 and one point 
 corresponding to a great sphere in 
, where the coordinates are with respect to the standard orthonormal basis 
 of 
. Thus, we obtain a bijective correspondence between the points 
 of 
 and the space 
 of lines on 
 given by the map:
      where
      
We use this correspondence to place a natural differentiable structure on 
 in such a way as to make the map in Equation (
35) a diffeomorphism.
We now show how to define a contact structure on the manifold 
. By the diffeomorphism in Equation (
35), this also determines a contact structure on 
. Recall that a 
-dimensional manifold 
 is said to be a 
contact manifold if it carries a globally defined 1-form 
 such that
      
      at all points of 
. Such a form 
 is called a 
contact form. A contact form 
 determines a codimension one distribution (the 
contact distribution) 
D on 
 defined by
      
      for 
. This distribution is as far from being integrable as possible, in that there exist integral submanifolds of 
D of dimension 
 but none of higher dimension (see, for example, [
4] (p. 57)). The distribution 
D determines the corresponding contact form 
 up to multiplication by a nonvanishing smooth function.
A tangent vector to 
 at a point 
 can be written in the form 
 where
      
Differentiation of the condition 
 implies that 
 also satisfies
      
Using the method of moving frames, one can show that the form 
 defined by
      
      is a contact form on 
 (see, for example, Cecil–Chern [
20] or the book [
4] (pp. 52–56)), and we omit the proof here.
At a point 
, the distribution 
D is the 
-dimensional space of vectors 
, satisfying 
, as well as Equations (
39) and (
40). The equation 
 together with Equation (
40) implies that
      
      for vectors 
 in 
D.
Returning to the general theory of contact structures, we let 
 be a contact manifold with contact form 
 and corresponding contact distribution 
D, as in Equation (
38). An immersion 
 of a smooth 
k-dimensional manifold 
 into 
 is called an 
integral submanifold of the distribution 
D if 
 on 
, i.e., for each tangent vector 
Y at each point 
, the vector 
 is in the distribution 
D at the point 
 (see Blair [
21] (p. 36)). It is well-known (see, for example, [
4] (p. 57)) that the contact distribution 
D has integral submanifolds of dimension 
 but none of higher dimension. These integral submanifolds of maximal dimension are called 
Legendre submanifolds of the contact structure.
In our specific case, we now formulate conditions for a smooth map 
 to be a Legendre submanifold. We consider 
 as a submanifold of 
 as in Equation (
34), and so we can write 
, where 
f and 
 are both smooth maps from 
 to 
. We have the following theorem (see [
4] (p. 58)) giving necessary and sufficient conditions for 
 to be a Legendre submanifold.
Theorem 1. A smooth map  from an -dimensional manifold  into  is a Legendre submanifold if and only if the following three conditions are satisfied:
- (1)
- Scalar product conditions: . 
- (2)
- Immersion condition: there is no nonzero tangent vector X at any point  such that  and  are both equal to zero. 
- (3)
- Contact condition: . 
 Note that by Equation (
34), the scalar product conditions are precisely the conditions necessary for the image of the map 
 to be contained in 
. Next, since 
, Condition 
 is necessary and sufficient for 
 to be an immersion. Finally, from Equation (
41), we see that 
, for each 
. Hence, Condition 
 is equivalent to the requirement that 
 on 
.
We now want to translate these conditions into the projective setting and find necessary and sufficient conditions for a smooth map 
 to be a Legendre submanifold. We again make use of the diffeomorphism defined in Equation (
35) between 
 and 
.
For each , we know that  is a line on the quadric . This line contains exactly one point  corresponding to a point sphere in  and one point  corresponding to a great sphere in . These two formulas define maps f and  from  to , which depend on the choice of orthonormal basis  for the orthogonal complement of .
The map  from  to  is called the Möbius projection or point sphere map of , and the map  from  to  is called the great sphere map. The maps f and  are called the spherical projection of  and the spherical field of unit normals of , respectively.
In this way, 
 determines a map 
 from 
 to 
, and because of the diffeomorphism (
35), 
 is a Legendre submanifold if and only if 
 satisfies the conditions of Theorem 1.
It is often useful to have conditions for when  determines a Legendre submanifold that do not depend on the special parametrization of  in terms of the point sphere and great sphere maps  and . In fact, in many applications of Lie sphere geometry to submanifolds of  or , it is better to consider , where  and  are not the point sphere and great sphere maps.
Pinkall [
1] gave the following projective formulation of the conditions needed for a Legendre submanifold. In their paper, Pinkall referred to a Legendre submanifold as a “Lie geometric hypersurface”. The proof that the three conditions of the theorem below are equivalent to the three conditions of Theorem 1 can be found in [
4] (pp. 59–60).
Theorem 2. Let  be a smooth map with , where  and  are smooth maps from  into . Then λ determines a Legendre submanifold if and only if  and  satisfy the following conditions:
- (1)
- Scalar product conditions: for each , the vectors  and  are linearly independent and 
- (2)
- Immersion condition: there is no nonzero tangent vector X at any point  such that  and  are both in 
- (3)
- Contact condition:.  
- These conditions are invariant under a reparametrization, where  and , for smooth functions  on  with  
 Every oriented hypersurface in  or  naturally induces a Legendre submanifold of , as does every submanifold of codimension  in these spaces. Conversely, a Legendre submanifold naturally induces a smooth map into  or , which may have singularities. We now study the details of these maps.
Let 
 be an immersed oriented hypersurface with field of unit normals 
. The induced Legendre submanifold is given by the map 
 defined by 
, where
      
The map  is called the Legendre lift of the immersion f with field of unit normals .
To show that 
 is a Legendre submanifold, we check the conditions of Theorem 2. Condition (1) is satisfied since both 
f and 
 are maps into 
, and 
 is tangent to 
 at 
 for each 
x in 
. Since 
f is an immersion, 
 is not in Span 
 for any nonzero vector 
, and so Condition 
 is satisfied. Finally, Condition (3) is satisfied since
      
      because 
 is a field of unit normals to 
f.
In the case of a submanifold 
 of codimension 
 greater than one, the domain of the Legendre lift is the unit normal bundle 
 of the submanifold 
. We consider 
 to be the submanifold of 
 given by
      
The 
Legendre lift of 
 is the map 
 defined by
      
      where
      
Geometrically, 
 is the line on the quadric 
 corresponding to the parabolic pencil of spheres in 
 in oriented contact at the contact element 
. In [
4] (pp. 61–62), we show that 
 satisfies the conditions of Theorem 2, and we omit the proof here.
Similarly, suppose that 
 is an oriented hypersurface with field of unit normals 
, where we identify 
 with the subspace of 
 spanned by 
. The Legendre lift of 
 is the map 
 defined by 
, where
      
By Equation (
21), 
 corresponds to the point sphere and 
 corresponds to the hyperplane in the parabolic pencil determined by the line 
 for each 
. One can easily verify that Conditions (1)–(3) of Theorem 2 are satisfied in a manner similar to the spherical case. In the case of a submanifold 
 of codimension greater than one, the Legendre lift of 
 is the map 
 from the unit normal bundle 
 to 
 defined by 
, where
      
The verification that the pair  satisfies Conditions (1)–(3) of Theorem 2 is similar to that for submanifolds of  of codimension greater than one, and we omit that proof here also.
Conversely, suppose that 
 is an arbitrary Legendre submanifold. We saw above that we can parametrize 
 as 
, where
      
      for the spherical projection 
f and spherical field of unit normals 
. Both 
f and 
 are smooth maps, but neither need be an immersion or even have constant rank (see [
4] (pp. 63–64)).
The Legendre lift of an oriented hypersurface in  is the special case where the spherical projection f is an immersion, i.e., f has constant rank  on . In the case of the Legendre lift of a submanifold , the spherical projection  defined by  has constant rank k.
If the range of the point sphere map 
 does not contain the improper point 
, then 
 also determines a 
Euclidean projectionF, where 
, and a 
Euclidean field of unit normals , where 
. These are defined by the equation 
, where
      
Here,  corresponds to the unique point sphere in the parabolic pencil determined by , and  corresponds to the unique plane in this pencil. As in the spherical case, the smooth maps F and  need not have constant rank.
  7. Curvature Spheres
To motivate the definition of a curvature sphere, we consider the case of an oriented hypersurface  with field of unit normals . (We could consider an oriented hypersurface in , but the calculations are simpler in the spherical case).
The shape operator of 
f at a point 
 is the symmetric linear transformation 
 defined on the tangent space 
 by the equation
      
The eigenvalues of 
A are called the 
principal curvatures, and the corresponding eigenvectors are called the 
principal vectors. We next recall the notion of a focal point of an immersion. For each real number 
t, define a map
      
      by
      
For each 
, the point 
 lies an oriented distance 
t along the normal geodesic to 
 at 
. A point 
 is called a 
focal point of multiplicity  of fatx if the nullity of 
 is equal to 
m at 
x. Geometrically, one thinks of focal points as points where nearby normal geodesics intersect. It is well-known that the location of focal points is related to the principal curvatures. Specifically, if 
, then by Equation (
50) we have
      
Thus, 
 equals zero for 
 if and only if 
 is a principal curvature of 
f at 
x, and 
X is a corresponding principal vector. Hence, 
 is a focal point of 
f at 
x of multiplicity 
m if and only if 
 is a principal curvature of multiplicity 
m at 
x. Note that each principal curvature
      
      produces two distinct antipodal focal points on the normal geodesic with parameter values 
t and 
. The oriented hypersphere centered at a focal point 
p and in oriented contact with 
 at 
 is called a 
curvature sphere of 
f at 
x. The two antipodal focal points determined by 
 are the two centers of the corresponding curvature sphere. Thus, the correspondence between principal curvatures and curvature spheres is bijective. The multiplicity of the curvature sphere is by definition equal to the multiplicity of the corresponding principal curvature.
We now formulate the notion of a curvature sphere in the context of Lie sphere geometry. As in Equation (
43), the Legendre lift 
 of the oriented hypersurface 
 is given by 
, where
      
For each 
, the points on the line 
 can be parametrized as
      
      where 
 is given in Equation (
51) above. By Equation (
25), the point 
 in 
 corresponds to the oriented sphere in 
 with center 
 and signed radius 
t. This sphere is in oriented contact with the oriented hypersurface 
 at 
. Given a tangent vector 
, we have
      
Thus,  for a nonzero vector  if and only if , i.e.,  is a focal point of f at x corresponding to the principal curvature . The vector X is a principal vector corresponding to the principal curvature , and it is also called a principal vector corresponding to the curvature sphere .
This characterization of curvature spheres depends on the parametrization of  given by the point sphere and great sphere maps  and , respectively, and it has only been defined in the case where the spherical projection f is an immersion. We now give a projective formulation of the definition of a curvature sphere that is independent of the parametrization of  and is valid for an arbitrary Legendre submanifold.
Let 
 be a Legendre submanifold parametrized by the pair 
, as in Theorem 2. Let 
 and 
 with at least one of 
r and 
s not equal to zero. The sphere,
      
      is called a 
curvature sphere of 
 at 
x if there exists a nonzero vector 
X in 
 such that
      
The vector 
X is called a 
principal vector corresponding to the curvature sphere 
. This definition is invariant under a change in parametrization of the form considered in the statement of Theorem 2. Furthermore, if we take the special parametrization 
, 
 given in Equation (
53), then condition (
56) holds if and only if 
 actually equals 
.
From Equation (
56), it is clear that the set of principal vectors corresponding to a given curvature sphere 
 at 
x is a subspace of 
. This set is called the 
principal space corresponding to the curvature sphere 
. Its dimension is the 
multiplicity of 
. The reader is referred to Cecil–Chern [
12,
20] for a development of the notion of a curvature sphere in the context of Lie sphere geometry without beginning with submanifolds of 
 or 
.
We next show that a Lie sphere transformation maps curvature spheres to curvature spheres. We first need to discuss the notion of Lie equivalent Legendre submanifolds. Let  be a Legendre submanifold parametrized by . Suppose  is the Lie sphere transformation induced by an orthogonal transformation B in the group . Since B is orthogonal, the maps ,  satisfy Conditions (1)–(3) of Theorem 2, and thus  is a Legendre submanifold, which we denote by . We say that the Legendre submanifolds  and  are Lie equivalent. In terms of submanifolds of real space forms, we say that two immersed submanifolds of  or  are Lie equivalent if their Legendre lifts are Lie equivalent.
Theorem 3. Let  be a Legendre submanifold and β be a Lie sphere transformation. The point  on the line  is a curvature sphere of λ at x if and only if the point  is a curvature sphere of the Legendre submanifold  at x. Furthermore, the principal spaces corresponding to  and  are identical.
 Proof.  Let 
 and 
 as above. For a tangent vector 
 and real numbers 
r and 
s, at least one of which is not zero, we have
        
        since 
B is a constant linear transformation. Thus, we see that
        
        if and only if
        
□
 We next consider the case when the Lie sphere transformation 
 is a spherical parallel transformation 
 defined in terms of the standard basis of 
 by
      
The transformation 
 has the effect of adding 
t to the signed radius of each oriented sphere in 
 while keeping the center fixed (see, for example, [
4] (pp. 48–49)).
If 
 is a Legendre submanifold parametrized by the point sphere map 
 and the great sphere map 
, then 
, where
      
Note that 
 and 
 are not the point sphere and great sphere maps for 
. Solving for the point sphere map 
 and the great sphere map 
 of 
, we find
      
From this, we see that 
 has a spherical projection and spherical unit normal field given, respectively, by
      
The minus sign occurs because 
 takes a sphere with center 
 and radius 
 to the point sphere 
. We call 
 a 
parallel submanifold of 
. Formula (
61) shows the close correspondence between these parallel submanifolds and the parallel hypersurfaces 
 to 
f in the case where 
f is an immersed hypersurface.
In the case where the spherical projection 
f is an immersion at a point 
, we know that the number of values of 
t in the interval 
 for which 
 is not an immersion is at most 
, the maximum number of distinct principal curvatures of 
f at 
x. Pinkall [
1] (p. 428) proved that this statement is also true for an arbitrary Legendre submanifold, even if the spherical projection 
f is not an immersion at 
x, by proving the following theorem (see also [
4] (pp. 68–72) for a proof).
Theorem 4. Let  be a Legendre submanifold with spherical projection f and spherical unit normal field ξ. Then for each , the parallel map,fails to be an immersion at x for at most  values of .  As a consequence of Pinkall’s theorem, one can pass to a parallel submanifold, if necessary, to obtain the following important corollary by using well-known results concerning immersed hypersurfaces in . Note that parts (a)–(c) of the corollary are pointwise statements, while (d)–(e) hold on an open set U if they can be shown to hold in a neighborhood of each point of U.
Corollary 1. Let  be a Legendre submanifold. Then,
- (a)
- At each point , there are at most  distinct curvature spheres , where ; 
- (b)
- The principal vectors corresponding to a curvature sphere  form a subspace  of the tangent space ; 
- (c)
- The tangent space ; 
- (d)
- If the dimension of a given  is constant on an open subset U of , then the principal distribution  is integrable on U; 
- (e)
- If  on an open subset U of , then the curvature sphere map  is constant along the leaves of the principal foliation . 
   8. Dupin Submanifolds
We now recall some basic concepts from the theory of Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 (see, for example, [
6] (pp. 9–35) for more detail) and then generalize the notion of Dupin to Legendre submanifolds in Lie sphere geometry.
Let  be an immersed hypersurface, and let  be a locally defined field of unit normals to . A curvature surface of M is a smooth submanifold  such that for each point , the tangent space  is equal to a principal space (i.e., an eigenspace) of the shape operator A of M at x. This generalizes the classical notion of a line of curvature for a principal curvature of multiplicity one. The hypersurface M is said to be Dupin if the following holds:
- (a)
- Along each curvature surface, the corresponding principal curvature is constant. 
Furthermore, a Dupin hypersurface M is called proper Dupin if, in addition to Condition (a), the following condition is satisfied:
- (b)
- The number g of distinct principal curvatures is constant on M. 
Clearly, isoparametric hypersurfaces in 
 are proper Dupin, and so are those hypersurfaces in 
 obtained from isoparametric hypersurfaces in 
 via stereographic projection (see, for example, [
6] (pp. 28–30)). In particular, the well-known ring cyclides of Dupin in 
 are obtained in this way from a standard product torus 
 in 
, where 
.
Using the Codazzi equation, one can show that if a curvature surface S has a dimension greater than one, then the corresponding principal curvature is constant on S. This is not necessarily true on a curvature surface of a dimension equal to one (i.e., a line of curvature).
Second, Condition (b) is equivalent to requiring that each continuous principal curvature function has constant multiplicity on 
M. Further, for any hypersurface 
M in 
, there exists a dense open subset of 
M on which the number of distinct principal curvatures is locally constant (see, for example, Singley [
5]).
It also follows from the Codazzi equation that if a continuous principal curvature function 
 has constant multiplicity 
m on a connected open subset 
, then 
 is a smooth function on 
U, and the distribution 
 of principal spaces corresponding to 
 is a smooth foliation whose leaves are the curvature surfaces corresponding to 
 on 
U. This principal curvature function 
 is constant along each of its curvature surfaces in 
U if and only if these curvature surfaces are open subsets of 
m-dimensional great or small spheres in 
 (see [
6] (pp. 24–32)).
We can generalize the notion of a curvature surface for hypersurfaces in real space forms to Legendre submanifolds. Specifically, let  be a Legendre submanifold. A connected submanifold S of  is called a curvature surface if at each , the tangent space  is equal to some principal space , as in Corollary 1. For example, if  is constant on an open subset U of , then each leaf of the principal foliation  is a curvature surface on U.
There exist many examples of Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 or 
 that are not proper Dupin, because the number of distinct principal curvatures is not constant on the hypersurface. This also results in curvature surfaces that are not leaves of a principal foliation. An example from Pinkall [
1] is a tube 
 in 
 of constant radius over a torus of revolution 
 (see also [
4] (p. 69) for a description of Pinkall’s example).
One consequence of the results mentioned above is that proper Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 or 
 are algebraic, as is the case with isoparametric hypersurfaces, as shown by Münzner [
22,
23]. This result is most easily formulated for hypersurfaces in 
. It states that a connected proper Dupin hypersurface 
 must be contained in a connected component of an irreducible algebraic subset of 
 of dimension 
. Pinkall [
24] sent the author a letter in 1984 that contained a sketch of a proof of this result, but he did not publish a proof. In 2008, Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
25] used methods of real algebraic geometry to give a proof of this result based on Pinkall’s sketch. The proof makes use of the various principal foliations whose leaves are open subsets of spheres to construct an analytic algebraic parametrization of a neighborhood of 
 for each point 
. In contrast to the situation for isoparametric hypersurfaces, however, a connected proper Dupin hypersurface does not necessarily lie in a compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface, as Pinkall’s example mentioned above of a tube 
 in 
 of constant radius over a torus of revolution 
 shows.
Next we generalize the definition of a Dupin hypersurface in a real space form to the setting of Legendre submanifolds in Lie sphere geometry. We say that a Legendre submanifold  is a Dupin submanifold if the following holds:
- (a)
- Along each curvature surface, the corresponding curvature sphere map is constant. 
The Dupin submanifold  is called proper Dupin if, in addition to Condition (a), the following condition is satisfied:
- (b)
- The number g of distinct curvature spheres is constant on M. 
In the case of the Legendre lift  of an immersed Dupin hypersurface , the submanifold  is a Dupin submanifold, since a curvature sphere map of  is constant along a curvature surface if and only if the corresponding principal curvature map of f is constant along that curvature surface. Similarly,  is proper Dupin if and only if f is proper Dupin, since the number of distinct curvatures spheres of  at a point  equals the number of distinct principal curvatures of f at x. Particularly important examples of proper Dupin submanifolds are the Legendre lifts of isoparametric hypersurfaces in .
We now show that Theorem 3 implies that both the Dupin and proper Dupin conditions are invariant under Lie sphere transformations. Many important classification results for Dupin submanifolds have been obtained in the setting of Lie sphere geometry (see Chapter 5 of [
4]).
Theorem 5. Let  be a Legendre submanifold and β a Lie sphere transformation.
- (a)
- If λ is Dupin, then  is Dupin. 
- (b)
- If λ is proper Dupin, then  is proper Dupin. 
 Proof.  By Theorem 3, a point  on the line  is a curvature sphere of  at  if and only if the point  is a curvature sphere of  at x, and furthermore the principal spaces corresponding to  and  are identical. Since these principal spaces are the same, if S is a curvature surface of  corresponding to a curvature sphere map , then S is also a curvature surface of  corresponding to a curvature sphere map , and clearly  is constant along S if and only if  is constant along S. This proves part (a) of the theorem. Part (b) also follows immediately from Theorem 3, since for each , the number g of distinct curvature spheres of  at x equals the number of distinct curvatures spheres of  at x. So if this number g is constant on M for , then it is constant on M for .    □
   9. Lifts of Isoparametric Hypersurfaces
In this section, we give a Lie sphere geometric characterization of the Legendre lifts of isoparametric hypersurfaces in the sphere  (Theorem 8). This result has been used in several papers to prove that under certain conditions, a proper Dupin submanifold is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface.
Let 
 be an arbitrary Legendre submanifold. As before, we can write 
, where
      
      where 
f and 
 are the spherical projection and spherical field of unit normals, respectively.
For 
, the points on the line 
 can be written in the form
      
      that is, we take 
 as an inhomogeneous coordinate along the projective line 
. Then the point sphere 
 corresponds to 
. The next two theorems give the relationship between the coordinates of the curvature spheres of 
 and the principal curvatures of 
f, in the case where 
f has constant rank. In the first theorem, we assume that the spherical projection 
f is an immersion on 
. By Theorem 4, we know that this can always be achieved locally by passing to a parallel submanifold.
Theorem 6. Let  be a Legendre submanifold whose spherical projection  is an immersion. Let  and  be the point sphere and great sphere maps of λ as in Equation (62). Then the curvature spheres of λ at a point  arewhere  are the distinct principal curvatures at x of the oriented hypersurface f with field of unit normals ξ. The multiplicity of the curvature sphere  equals the multiplicity of the principal curvature .  Proof.  Let 
X be a nonzero vector in 
. Then for any real number 
,
        
This vector is in Span 
 if and only if
        
        i.e., 
 is a principal curvature of 
f with corresponding principal vector 
X.    □
 We next consider the case where the point sphere map 
 is a curvature sphere of constant multiplicity 
m on 
. By Corollary 1, the corresponding principal distribution is a foliation and the curvature sphere map 
 is constant along the leaves of this foliation. Thus, the map 
 factors through an immersion 
 from the space of leaves 
V of this foliation into 
. We can write 
, where 
 is an immersed submanifold of codimension 
. The manifold 
 is locally diffeomorphic to an open subset of the unit normal bundle 
 of the submanifold 
, and 
 is essentially the Legendre lift of 
, as defined in 
Section 6. The following theorem relates the curvature spheres of 
 to the principal curvatures of 
. Recall that the point sphere and great sphere maps for 
 are given as in Equation (
45) by
      
Theorem 7. Let  be the Legendre lift of an immersed submanifold  in  of codimension . Let  and  be the point sphere and great sphere maps of λ as in Equation (64). Then the curvature spheres of λ at a point  arewhere  are the distinct principal curvatures of the shape operator , and . For , the multiplicity of the curvature sphere  equals the multiplicity of the principal curvature , while the multiplicity of  is m.  The proof of this theorem is similar to that of Theorem 6, but one must introduce local coordinates on the unit normal bundle to obtain a complete proof (see [
4] (p. 74)).
We close this section with a local Lie geometric characterization of Legendre submanifolds that are Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface in 
 (see [
4] (p. 77)). Here, a line in 
 is called 
timelike if it contains only timelike points. This means that an orthonormal basis for the 2-plane in 
 determined by the timelike line consists of two timelike vectors. An example is the line 
. This theorem has been useful in obtaining several classification results for proper Dupin hypersurfaces.
Theorem 8. Let  be a Legendre submanifold with g distinct curvature spheres  at each point. Then λ is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface in  if and only if there exist g points  on a timelike line in  such that  Proof.  If 
 is the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface in 
, then all the spheres in a family 
 have the same radius 
, where 
. By Formula (
25), this is equivalent to the condition 
, where
        
        are 
g points on the timelike line 
 (see [
4] (pp. 17–18)). Since a Lie sphere transformation preserves curvature spheres, timelike lines, and the polarity relationship, the same is true for any image of 
 under a Lie sphere transformation.
Conversely, suppose that there exist 
g points 
 on a timelike line 
ℓ such that 
, for 
. Let 
 be a Lie sphere transformation that maps 
ℓ to the line 
. Then the curvature spheres 
 of 
 are orthogonal to the points 
 on the line 
. By (
25), this means that the spheres corresponding to 
 have constant radius on 
. By applying a parallel transformation 
, if necessary, we can arrange that none of these curvature spheres has radius zero. Then 
 is the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface in 
.    □
   10. Cyclides of Dupin
The classical cyclides of Dupin in 
 were studied intensively by many leading mathematicians in the nineteenth century, including Liouville [
26], Cayley [
27], and Maxwell [
28], whose paper contains stereoscopic figures of the various types of cyclides. A good account of the history of the cyclides in the nineteenth century is given by Lilienthal [
29] (see also Klein [
30] (pp. 56–58), Darboux [
31] (vol. 2, pp. 267–269), Blaschke [
19] (p. 238), Eisenhart [
32] (pp. 312–314), Hilbert and Cohn-Vossen [
33] (pp. 217–219), Fladt and Baur [
34] (pp. 354–379), Banchoff [
35], and Cecil and Ryan [
8] (pp. 151–166)).
We now turn our attention to Pinkall’s classification of the cyclides of Dupin of arbitrary dimension, which is obtained by using the methods of Lie sphere geometry. Our presentation here is based on the accounts of this subject given in [
4] (pp. 148–159) and [
6] (pp. 263–283). A proper Dupin submanifold 
 with two distinct curvature spheres of respective multiplicities 
p and 
q at each point is called a 
cyclide of Dupin of characteristic .
We prove that any connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
 is contained in a unique compact, connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
. Furthermore, every compact, connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
 is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of a standard product of two spheres,
      
      where 
p and 
q are positive integers such that 
. Thus, any two compact, connected cyclides of Dupin of the same characteristic are Lie equivalent.
It is well-known that the product 
 is an isoparametric hypersurface in 
 with two distinct principal curvatures having multiplicities 
 and 
 (see, for example, [
6] (pp. 110–111)). Furthermore, every compact isoparametric hypersurface in 
 with two principal curvatures of multiplicities 
p and 
q is Lie equivalent to 
, since it is congruent to a parallel hypersurface of 
.
Although  is a good model for the cyclides, it is often easier to work with the two focal submanifolds  and  in proving classification results. The Legendre lifts of these two focal submanifolds are Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of , since they are parallel submanifolds of the Legendre lift of . In fact, the hypersurface  is a tube of spherical radius  in  over either of its two focal submanifolds.
We now describe our standard model of a cyclide of characteristic 
 in the context of Lie sphere geometry, as in Pinkall’s paper [
1] (see also [
4] (p. 149)). Let 
 be the standard orthonormal basis for 
, with 
 and 
 unit timelike vectors and 
 unit spacelike vectors. Then 
 is the unit sphere in the Euclidean space 
 spanned by 
. Let
      
These spaces have signatures 
 and 
, respectively. The intersection 
 is the quadric given in homogeneous coordinates by
      
This set is diffeomorphic to the unit sphere 
 in
      
      by the diffeomorphism 
, defined by 
.
Similarly, the quadric 
 is diffeomorphic to the unit sphere 
 in
      
      by the diffeomorphism 
 defined by 
.
The model that we will use for the cyclides in Lie sphere geometry is the Legendre submanifold 
 defined by
      
It is easy to check that the Legendre Conditions 
–
 of Theorem 2 are satisfied by the pair 
. To find the curvature spheres of 
, we decompose the tangent space to 
 at a point 
 as
      
Then  for all , and  for all Y in . Thus,  and  are curvature spheres of  with respective multiplicities p and q. Furthermore, the image of  lies in the quadric , and the image of  is contained in the quadric . The point sphere map of  is , and thus  is the Legendre lift of the focal submanifold , considered as a submanifold of codimension  in . As noted above, this Legendre lift  of the focal submanifold is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of the standard product of spheres by means of a parallel transformation.
We now prove Pinkall’s [
1] classification of proper Dupin submanifolds with two distinct curvature spheres at each point. Pinkall’s proof depends on establishing the existence of a local principal coordinate system. This can always be achieved in the case of 
 curvature spheres, because the sum of the dimensions of the two principal spaces is 
, the dimension of 
 (see, for example, [
6] (p. 249)). Such a coordinate system might not exist in the case 
. In fact, if 
M is an isoparametric hypersurface in 
 with more than two distinct principal curvatures, then there cannot exist a local principal coordinate system on 
M (see, for example, [
8] (pp. 180–184) or [
6] (pp. 248–252)).
For a different proof of Pinkall’s theorem (Theorem 10.1 below) using the method of moving frames, see the paper of Cecil-Chern [
12] or [
6] (pp. 266–273). That approach generalizes to the study of proper Dupin hypersurfaces with 
 curvature spheres (see, for example, Cecil and Jensen [
13,
14]).
Note that before Pinkall’s paper, Cecil and Ryan [
36] (see also [
8] (pp. 166–179)) proved a classification of complete cyclides in 
 using techniques of Euclidean submanifold theory. However, the proof used the assumption of completeness in an essential way, and that theorem did not contain part (a) of Pinkall’s Theorem 10.1 below.
Theorem 9. - (a)
- Every connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic  is contained in a unique compact, connected cyclide of Dupin characteristic . 
- (b)
- Every compact, connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic  is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of a standard product of two sphereswhere . Thus, any two compact, connected cyclides of Dupin of characteristic  are Lie equivalent. 
 Proof.  Suppose that 
 is a connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
 with 
. We may take 
, where 
 and 
 are the curvature spheres with respective multiplicities 
p and 
q. Each curvature sphere map factors through an immersion of the space of leaves of its principal foliation 
 for 
. Since the sum of the dimensions of 
 and 
 equals the dimension of 
, locally we can take a principal coordinate system 
 (see, for example, [
6] (p. 249)) defined on an open set
        
        such that
- (i)
-  depends only on v, and  depends only on u, for all . 
- (ii)
-  and  are submanifolds of  of dimensions q and p, respectively. 
Now, let 
 and 
 be any two points in 
W. From (i), we have the following key equation,
        
        since 
 and 
 are orthogonal at every point 
, in particular 
.
Let 
E be the smallest linear subspace of 
 containing the 
q-dimensional submanifold 
. By Equation (
71), we have
        
The dimensions of 
E and 
 as subspaces of 
 satisfy
        
We claim that  and .
To see this, suppose first that 
. Then 
, and 
 cannot contain the 
p-dimensional submanifold 
, contradicting Equation (
72). Similarly, assuming that 
 leads to a contradiction, since then 
, and 
 cannot contain the 
q-dimensional submanifold 
.
This and Equation (
73) imply that 
 and 
. Furthermore, from the fact that 
 and 
 contain submanifolds of dimensions 
q and 
p, respectively, it is easy to deduce that the Lie inner product 
 has signature 
 on 
E and 
 on 
.
Take an orthornormal basis 
 of 
 with 
 and 
 being timelike such that
        
Then 
 is given in homogeneous coordinates 
 with respect to this basis by
        
This quadric is diffeomorphic to the unit sphere 
 in the span 
 of the spacelike vectors 
 with the diffeomorphism 
 given by
        
Similarly, 
 is the quadric given in homogeneous coordinates by
        
This space 
 is diffeomorphic to the unit sphere 
 in the span 
 of the spacelike vectors 
 with the diffeomorphism
        
        given by
        
The image of the curvature sphere map 
 of multiplicity 
p is contained in the 
q-dimensional quadric 
 given by Equation (
75), which is diffeomorphic to 
. The map 
 is constant on each leaf of its principal foliation 
, and so 
 factors through an immersion of the 
q-dimensional space of leaves 
 into the 
q-dimensional quadric 
. Hence, the image of 
 is an open subset of this quadric, and each leaf of 
 corresponds to a point 
 of the quadric.
Similarly, the curvature sphere map 
 of multiplicity 
q factors through an immersion of its 
p-dimensional space of leaves 
 onto an open subset of the 
p-dimensional quadric 
 given by Equation (
77), and each leaf of 
 corresponds to a point of 
 of that quadric.
From this, it is clear that the restriction of the Legendre map 
 to the neighborhood 
 is contained in the compact, connected cyclide
        
        defined by
        
        where
        
        for the maps 
 and 
 defined above. By a standard connectedness argument, the Legendre map 
 is also the restriction of the compact, connected cyclide 
 to an open subset of 
. This proves part (a) of the theorem.
In projective space 
, the image of 
 consists of all lines joining a point on the quadric 
 in Equation (
75) to a point on the quadric 
 in Equation (
77). Thus, any choice of a 
-plane 
E in 
 with signature 
 and corresponding orthogonal complement 
 with signature 
 determines a unique compact, connected cyclide of characteristic 
 and vice versa.
The Lie equivalence of any two compact, connected cyclides of the same characteristic stated in part (b) of the theorem is then clear, since given any two choices E and F of -planes in  with signature , there is a Lie sphere transformation that maps E to F and  to .
In particular, if we take 
F to be the space 
 in Equation (
67), then the corresponding cyclide is our standard model. So our given compact, connected cyclide 
 in Equation (
79) is Lie equivalent to our standard model. As noted before the statement of Theorem 9, our standard model is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of the standard product of two spheres,
        
        where 
, via parallel transformation. Thus, any compact, connected cyclide of Dupin of characteristic 
 is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of a standard product of two spheres given in Equation (
81).    □
 Remark 3. We can also see that the submanifold λ in Theorem 9 is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface in  with two principal curvatures by invoking Theorem 8, because the two curvature sphere maps  and  are orthogonal to the two points  and , respectively, on the timelike line  in .
 Theorem 9 is a classification of the cyclides of Dupin in the context of Lie sphere geometry. It is also useful to have a Möbius geometric classification of the cyclides of Dupin 
. This is analogous to the classical characterizations of the cyclides of Dupin in 
 obtained in the nineteenth century (see, for example, [
8] (pp. 151–166)). K. Voss [
37] announced the classification in Theorem 10 below for the higher-dimensional cyclides, but he did not publish a proof. The theorem follows quite directly from Theorem 9 and known results on surfaces of revolution.
The theorem is phrased in terms of embedded hypersurfaces in 
. Thus, we are excluding the standard model given in Equation (
69), where the spherical projection (and thus the Euclidean projection) is not an immersion. Of course, the spherical projections of all parallel submanifolds of the standard model in the sphere are embedded isoparametric hypersurfaces in the sphere 
 except for the Legendre lift of the other focal submanifold. The proof of the following theorem using techniques of Lie and Möbius geometry together with computer graphic illustrations of the cyclides is given in [
4] (pp. 151–159) and [
6] (pp. 273–281). These proofs use the same notation that we use in this section. We omit the proof here and refer the reader to these two references.
Theorem 10. - (a)
- Every connected cyclide of Dupin  of characteristic  is Möbius equivalent to an open subset of a hypersurface of revolution obtained by revolving a q-sphere  about an axis  or a p-sphere  about an axis . 
- (b)
- Two hypersurfaces obtained by revolving a q-sphere  about an axis of revolution  are Möbius equivalent if and only if they have the same value of , where r is the signed radius of the profile sphere  and  is the distance from the center of  to the axis of revolution. 
 Remark 4. Note that in this theorem, the profile sphere  is allowed to intersect the axis of revolution , in which case the hypersurface of revolution has singularities in . Under Möbius transformation, this leads to cyclides which have Euclidean singularities, such as the classical horn cyclides and spindle cyclides (see, for example, [4] (pp. 151–159) for more detail). In such cases, however, the corresponding Legendre map  is still an immersion.    11. Local Constructions
Pinkall [
1] introduced four constructions for obtaining a Dupin hypersurface 
W in 
 from a Dupin hypersurface 
M in 
. We first describe these constructions in the case 
 as follows.
Begin with a Dupin hypersurface  in  and then consider  as the linear subspace  in . The following constructions yield a Dupin hypersurface  in :
- (1)
- Let  be the cylinder  in . 
- (2)
- Let  be the hypersurface in  obtained by rotating  around an axis (a linear subspace) . 
- (3)
- Let  be a tube of constant radius in  around . 
- (4)
- Project  stereographically onto a hypersurface . Let  be the cone over  in . 
In general, these constructions introduce a new principal curvature having multiplicity one, which is constant along its lines of curvature. The other principal curvatures are determined by the principal curvatures of 
, and the Dupin property is preserved for these principal curvatures. These constructions can be generalized to produce a new principal curvature of multiplicity 
m by considering 
 as a subset of 
 rather than 
 (see [
4] (pp. 125–148) for a detailed description of these constructions in full generality in the context of Lie sphere geometry).
Although Pinkall gave these four constructions, their Theorem 4 [
1] (p. 438) showed that the cone construction is redundant since it is Lie equivalent to a tube (see the proof of Theorem 12 and Remark 5 below). For this reason, we will only study three standard constructions: tubes, cylinders, and surfaces of revolution.
A Dupin submanifold obtained from a lower-dimensional Dupin submanifold via one of these standard constructions is said to be reducible. More generally, a Dupin submanifold which is locally Lie equivalent to such a Dupin submanifold is called reducible.
Using these constructions, Pinkall was able to produce a proper Dupin hypersurface in Euclidean space with an arbitrary number of distinct principal curvatures, each with any given multiplicity (see Theorem 11 below). In general, these proper Dupin hypersurfaces cannot be extended to compact Dupin hypersurfaces without losing the property that the number of distinct principal curvatures is constant, as we will discuss after the proof of the theorem.
Theorem 11. Given positive integers  withthere exists a proper Dupin hypersurface in  with g distinct principal curvatures having respective multiplicities .  Proof.  The proof is by an inductive construction, which will be clear once the first few examples are constructed. To begin, note that a usual torus of revolution in  is a proper Dupin hypersurface with two principal curvatures. To construct a proper Dupin hypersurface  in  with three principal curvatures, each of multiplicity one, begin with an open subset U of a torus of revolution in  on which neither principal curvature vanishes. Take  to be the cylinder  in . Then  has three distinct principal curvatures at each point, one of which is zero. These are clearly constant along their corresponding one-dimensional curvature surfaces (lines of curvature).
To obtain a proper Dupin hypersurface in 
 with three principal curvatures having respective multiplicities 
, 
, one simply takes
        
        for the set 
U above. To obtain a proper Dupin hypersurface 
 in 
 with four principal curvatures, first invert the hypersurface 
 above in a 3-sphere in 
, chosen so that the image of 
 contains an open subset 
 on which no principal curvature vanishes. The hypersurface 
 is proper Dupin, since the proper Dupin property is preserved by Möbius transformations. Now take 
 to be the cylinder 
 in 
.    □
 In general, there are problems in trying to produce compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces by using these constructions. We now examine some of the problems involved with the the cylinder, surface of revolution, and tube constructions individually (see [
4] (pp. 127–141) for more details).
For the cylinder construction, the new principal curvature of  is identically zero, while the other principal curvatures of  are equal to those of . Thus, if one of the principal curvatures  of  is zero at some points but not identically zero, then the number of distinct principal curvatures is not constant on , and so  is Dupin but not proper Dupin.
For the surface of revolution construction, if the focal point corresponding to a principal curvature  at a point x of the profile submanifold  lies on the axis of revolution , then the principal curvature of  at x determined by  is equal to the new principal curvature of  resulting from the surface of revolution construction. Thus, if the focal point of  corresponding to  lies on the axis of revolution for some but not all points of , then  is not proper Dupin.
If  is a tube in  of radius  over , then there are exactly two distinct principal curvatures at the points in the set  in , regardless of the number of distinct principal curvatures on . Thus,  is not a proper Dupin hypersurface unless the original hypersurface  is totally umbilic, i.e., it has only one distinct principal curvature at each point.
Another problem with these constructions is that they may not yield an immersed hypersurface in . In the tube construction, if the radius of the tube is the reciprocal of one of the principal curvatures of  at some point, then the constructed object has a singularity. For the surface of revolution construction, a singularity occurs if the profile submanifold  intersects the axis of revolution.
Many of the issues mentioned in the preceding paragraphs can be resolved by working in the context of Lie sphere geometry and considering Legendre lifts of hypersurfaces in Euclidean space (see [
4] (pp. 127–148)). In that context, a proper Dupin submanifold 
 is said to be 
reducible if it is locally Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of a hypersurface in 
 obtained by one of Pinkall’s constructions.
Pinkall [
1] found the following useful characterization of reducibility in the context of Lie sphere geometry. For simplicity, we deal with the constructions as they are written at the beginning of this section, i.e., we take the case where the multiplicity of the new principal curvature is 
. Here, we give Pinkall’s proof [
1] (p. 438) (see also [
4] (pp. 143–144)).
Theorem 12. A connected proper Dupin submanifold  is reducible if and only if there exists a curvature sphere  of λ that lies in a linear subspace of  of codimension two.
 Proof.  We first note that the following manifolds of spheres are hyperplane sections of the Lie quadric :
- (a)
- The hyperplanes in ; 
- (b)
- The spheres with a fixed signed radius r; 
- (c)
- The spheres that are orthogonal to a fixed sphere. 
To see this, we use the Lie coordinates given in Equation (
21). In Case (a), the hyperplanes are characterized by the equation 
, which clearly determines a hyperplane section of 
. In Case (b), the spheres with signed radius 
r are determined by the linear equation
        
In Case (c), it can be assumed that the fixed sphere is a hyperplane 
H through the origin in 
. A sphere is orthogonal to 
H if and only if its center lies in 
H. This clearly imposes a linear condition on the vector in Equation (
21) representing the sphere.
The sets (a), (b), (c) are each of the form
        
        with 
 in Cases (a), (b), (c), respectively.
We can now see that every reducible Dupin hypersurface has a family of curvature spheres that is contained in two hyperplane sections of the Lie quadric as follows.
For the cylinder construction, the tangent hyperplanes of the cylinder are curvature spheres that are orthogonal to a fixed hyperplane in . Thus, that family of curvature spheres is contained in an n-dimensional linear subspace E of  such that the signature of  on the polar subspace  of E is .
For the surface of revolution construction, the new family of curvature spheres all have their centers in the axis of revolution, which is a linear subspace of codimension 2 in . Thus, that family of curvature spheres is contained in an n-dimensional linear subspace E of  such that the signature of  on the polar subspace  of E is .
For the tube construction, the new family of curvature spheres all have the same radius, and their centers all lie in the hyperplane of  containing the manifold over which the tube is constructed. Thus, that family of curvature spheres is contained in an n-dimensional linear subspace E of  such that the signature of  on the polar subspace  of E is .
Conversely, suppose that  is a family of curvature spheres that is contained in an n-dimensional linear subspace E of . Then  must have signature , , or  on the polar subspace , because otherwise  would be empty or would consist of a single point.
If the signature of 
 is 
, then there exists a Lie sphere transformation 
A which takes 
E to a space 
 such that 
 consists of all spheres that have their centers in a fixed 
-dimensional linear subspace 
 of 
. Since one family of curvature spheres of this Dupin submanifold 
 lies in 
 and the Dupin submanifold 
 is the envelope of these spheres, 
 must be a surface of revolution with the axis 
 (see [
4] (pp. 142–143) for more detail on envelopes of families of spheres in this situation), and so 
 is reducible.
If the signature of  is , then there exists a Lie sphere transformation A which takes E to a space  such that  consists of hyperplanes orthogonal to a fixed hyperplane in . Since one family of curvature spheres of this Dupin submanifold  lies in , and the Dupin submanifold  is the envelope of these spheres,  is obtained as a result of the cylinder construction, and so  is reducible.
If the signature of  is , then there exists a Lie sphere transformation A which takes E to a space  such that  consists of spheres that all have the same radius and whose centers lie in a hyperplane  of . Since one family of curvature spheres of this Dupin submanifold  lies in  and the Dupin submanifold  is the envelope of these spheres,  is obtained as a result of the tube construction, and so  is reducible.    □
 Remark 5. Note that for the cone construction  at the beginning of this section, the new family  of curvature spheres consists of hyperplanes through the origin that are tangent to the cone along the rulings. In the Lie coordinates (21), the origin corresponds to the point , while the hyperplanes are orthogonal to the improper point . Thus, the hyperplanes through the origin correspond by Equation (21) to points in the linear subspace E whose orthogonal complement  is spanned . This space  is also spanned by , and so the signature of  is , the same as for the tube construction. Therefore, the cone construction and the tube construction are Lie equivalent (see Remark 5.13 of [4] (p. 144) for more detail). Finally, there is one more geometric interpretation of the tube construction. Note that a family  of curvature spheres that lies in a linear subspace whose orthogonal complement has signature  can also be considered to consist of spheres in  of constant radius in the spherical metric whose centers lie in a hyperplane. The corresponding proper Dupin submanifold can thus be considered to be a tube in the spherical metric over a lower-dimensional submanifold that lies in a hyperplane section of .  As we noted after the proof of Theorem 11, there are difficulties in constructing compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces by using Pinkall’s constructions. We can construct a reducible compact proper Dupin hypersurface with two principal curvatures by revolving a circle C in  about an axis  that is disjoint from C to obtain a torus of revolution. Of course, this can be generalized to higher dimensions, as in Theorem 10, by revolving a q-sphere  about an axis  to obtain a compact cyclide of Dupin of characteristic , where . Such a cyclide has two principal curvatures at each point having respective multiplicities p and q.
However, Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
9] (see also [
4] (pp. 146–147)) showed that every compact proper Dupin hypersurface with more than two principal curvatures is irreducible, as stated in the following theorem.
Theorem 13. (Cecil-Chi-Jensen, 2007) If  is a compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface with  principal curvatures, then  is irreducible.
 The proof uses known facts about the topology of a compact proper Dupin hypersurface and the topology of a compact hypersurface obtained by one of Pinkall’s constructions (see [
9] or [
4] (pp. 146–148) for a complete proof).
  12. Classifications of Dupin Hypersurfaces
In this section, we discuss classification results concerning proper Dupin hypersurfaces in 
 or 
 that have been obtained using the techniques of Lie sphere geometry. These primarily concern two important classes: compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces and irreducible proper Dupin hypersurfaces. Of course, Theorem 13 shows that there is a strong connection between these two classes of hypersurfaces, and many classifications of compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces with 
 principal curvatures have been obtained by assuming that the hypersurface is irreducible and working locally in the context of Lie sphere geometry using the method of moving frames. (See, for example, the papers of Pinkall [
1,
10,
11], Cecil and Chern [
12], Cecil and Jensen [
13,
14], and Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
9]). Two key tools in many of these classifications are as follows:
- (1)
- The Lie sphere geometric characterization of Legendre lifts of isoparametric hypersurfaces given in Theorem 8; 
- (2)
- Pinkall’s characterization of reducible proper Dupin hypersurfaces given in Theorem 12. 
We now summarize these classifications and give references to their proofs.
We begin by recalling some important facts about compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces embedded in 
. Following Münzner’s work [
22,
23] on isoparametric hypersurfaces, Thorbergsson [
38] proved the following theorem which shows that Münzner’s restriction on the number 
g of distinct principal curvatures of an isoparametric hypersurface also holds for compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces embedded in 
. This is in stark contrast to Pinkall’s Theorem 11 which states that there are no restrictions on the number of distinct principal curvatures or their multiplicities for noncompact proper Dupin hypersurfaces.
Theorem 14. (Thorbergsson, 1983) The number g of distinct principal curvatures of a compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface  must be , or 6.
 In proving this theorem, Thorbergsson first shows that a compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface 
 must be tautly embedded, that is, every nondegenerate spherical distance function 
, for 
, has the minimum number of critical points required by the Morse inequalities on 
M. Thorbergsson then uses the fact that 
M is tautly embedded in 
 to show that 
M divides 
 into two ball bundles over the first focal submanifolds, 
 and 
, on either side of 
M in 
. This gives the same topological situation as in the isoparametric case, and the theorem then follows from Münzner’s [
23] proof of the restriction on 
g for isoparametric hypersurfaces.
The topological situation that 
M divides 
 into two ball bundles over the first focal submanifolds, 
 and 
, on either side of 
M in 
 also leads to important restrictions on the multiplicities of the principal curvatures of compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces, as shown by Stolz [
39] for 
 and by Grove and Halperin [
40] for 
. These restrictions were obtained by using advanced topological considerations in each case, and they show that the multiplicities of the principal curvatures of a compact proper Dupin hypersurface embedded in 
 must be the same as the multiplicities of the principal curvatures of some isoparametric hypersurface in 
.
Grove and Halperin [
40] also gave a list of the integral homology of all compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces, and Fang [
41] found results on the topology of compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces with 
 principal curvatures.
In 1985, it was known that every compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface 
 (or 
) with 
, or 3 principal curvatures is Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in 
. At that time, every other known example of a compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface in 
 was also Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in 
. This together with Thorbergsson’s Theorem 14 above led to the following conjecture by Cecil and Ryan [
8] (p. 184) (which we have rephrased slightly).
Conjecture 1. (Cecil-Ryan, 1985) Every compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface (or is Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in .
 We now discuss the state of the conjecture for each of the values of 
g. The case 
 is simply the case of totally umbilic hypersurfaces, and 
M is a great or small hypersphere in 
. In the case 
, Cecil and Ryan [
36] showed that 
M is a cyclide of Dupin (see 
Section 10), and thus it is Möbius equivalent to a standard product of spheres
      
      which is an isoparametric hypersurface.
In the case 
, Miyaoka [
42] proved that 
M is Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface (see also Cecil-Chi-Jensen [
9] for a different proof using the fact that compactness implies irreducibility, i.e., Theorem 13). Earlier, Cartan [
43] showed that an isoparametric hypersurface with 
 principal curvatures is a tube over a standard embedding of a projective plane 
 for 
 (quaternions) or 
 (Cayley numbers) in 
, and 
, respectively. For 
, a standard embedding is a spherical Veronese surface (see also [
6] (pp. 151–155) and Cartan’s other important papers on isoparametric hypersurfaces [
44,
45,
46]). See Thorbergsson [
47] for a survey.
In a related work, Di Scala and De Freitas [
48] define a notion of spherical 2-Dupin submanifolds, and they show that every spherical 2-Dupin submanifold that is not a hypersurface is conformally congruent to the standard embedding of the real, complex, quaternionic or Cayley projective plane.
All attempts to verify Conjecture 1 in the cases 
 and 6 were unsuccessful, however. Finally, in 1988, Pinkall and Thorbergsson [
49] and Miyaoka and Ozawa [
50] gave two different methods for producing counterexamples to Conjecture 1 with 
 principal curvatures. The method of Miyaoka and Ozawa also yields counterexamples to the conjecture in the case 
.
These examples were shown to be counterexamples to the conjecture by a consideration of their Lie curvatures, which were introduced by Miyaoka [
51]. Lie curvatures are cross ratios of the principal curvatures taken four at a time, and they are equal to the cross ratios of the corresponding curvature spheres along a projective line by Theorems 6 and 7. Since Lie sphere transformations map curvature spheres to curvature spheres by Theorem 3 and they preserve cross ratios of four points along a projective line (since they are projective transformations), Lie curvatures are invariant under Lie sphere transformations. Obviously, the Lie curvatures must be constant for a Legendre submanifold that is Lie equivalent to the Legendre lift of an isoparametric hypersurface in a sphere.
The examples of Pinkall and Thorbergsson are obtained by taking certain deformations of the isoparametric hypersurfaces of the FKM type constructed by Ferus, Karcher, and Münzner [
52] using representations of Clifford algebras. Pinkall and Thorbergsson proved that their examples are not Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface by showing that the Lie curvature does not have the constant value 
, as required for a hypersurface with 
 that is Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface (if the principal curvatures are appropriately ordered). Using their methods, one can also show directly that the Lie curvature is not constant for their examples (see [
6] (pp. 309–314)).
The construction of counterexamples to Conjecture 1 due to Miyaoka and Ozawa [
50] (see also [
4] (pp. 117–123)) is based on the Hopf fibration 
. Miyaoka and Ozawa show that if 
 is a proper Dupin hypersurface in 
 with 
g distinct principal curvatures, then 
 is a proper Dupin hypersurface in 
 with 
 principal curvatures. Next they show that if a compact, connected hypersurface 
 is proper Dupin but not isoparametric, then the Lie curvatures of 
 are not constant, and therefore 
 is not Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in 
. For 
 or 3, this gives a compact proper Dupin hypersurface 
 in 
 with 
 or 6, respectively, that is not Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface.
As noted above, all of these hypersurfaces are shown to be counterexamples to Conjecture 1 by proving that they do not have constant Lie curvatures. This led to a revision of Conjecture 1 by Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
53] (p. 52) in 2007 that contains the additional assumption of constant Lie curvatures. This revised conjecture is still an open problem, although it has been shown to be true in some cases, which we describe after stating the conjecture.
Conjecture 2. (Cecil-Chi-Jensen, 2007) Every compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface in  with four or six principal curvatures and constant Lie curvatures is Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in .
 We first note that in 1989, Miyaoka [
51,
54] showed that if some additional assumptions are made regarding the intersections of the leaves of the various principal foliations, then this revised conjecture is true in both cases 
 and 6. Thus far, however, it has not been proven that Miyaoka’s additional assumptions are satisfied in general.
Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
9] made progress on the revised conjecture in the case 
 by using the fact that compactness implies irreducibility for a proper Dupin hypersurface with 
 (see Theorem 13) and then working locally with irreducible proper hypersurfaces in the context of Lie sphere geometry.
If we fix the order of the principal curvatures of 
M to be
      
      then there is only one Lie curvature,
      
For an isoparametric hypersurface with four principal curvatures ordered as in Equation (
82), Münzner’s results [
22,
23] imply that the Lie curvature 
, and the multiplicities satisfy 
, 
. Furthermore, if 
 is a compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface with 
, then the multiplicities of the principal curvatures must be the same as those of an isoparametric hypersurface by the work of Stolz [
39], so they satisfy 
, 
.
Cecil-Chi-Jensen [
9] proved the following local classification of irreducible proper Dupin hypersurfaces with four principal curvatures and constant Lie curvature 
. In the case where all the multiplicities equal one, this theorem was first proven by Cecil and Jensen [
14].
Theorem 15. (Cecil-Chi-Jensen, 2007) Let  be a connected irreducible proper Dupin hypersurface with four principal curvatures ordered as in Equation (82) having multiplicities,and constant Lie curvature . 
Then M is Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in.
  Key elements in the proof of Theorem 15 are the Lie geometric criteria for reducibility (Theorem 12) due to Pinkall [
1] and the criterion for Lie equivalence to an isoparametric hypersurface (Theorem 8).
By Theorem 13 above, we know that compactness implies irreducibility for proper Dupin hypersurfaces with more than two principal curvatures. Furthermore, Miyaoka [
51] proved that if 
 is constant on a compact proper Dupin hypersurface 
 with 
, then 
 on 
M, when the principal curvatures are ordered as in Equation (
82). As a consequence, we obtain the following corollary of Theorem 15.
Corollary 2. Let  be a compact, connected proper Dupin hypersurface with four principal curvatures having multiplicities  and constant Lie curvature ψ. Then M is Lie equivalent to an isoparametric hypersurface in .  The remaining open question is what happens if 
 is also allowed to be greater than one, i.e.,
      
      and constant Lie curvature 
.
Regarding this question, we note that the local proof of Theorem 15 of Cecil, Chi, and Jensen [
9] uses the method of moving frames, and it involves a large system of equations that contains certain sums if some 
 is greater than one but no corresponding sums if all 
 equal one. These sums make the calculations significantly more difficult, and so far this method has not led to a proof in the general case (
85). Even so, this approach to proving Conjecture 2 in the case 
 could possibly be successful with some additional insight regarding the structure of the calculations involved.
Finally, Grove and Halperin [
40] proved in 1987 that if 
 is a compact proper Dupin hypersurface with 
 principal curvatures, then all the principal curvatures must have the same multiplicity 
m, and 
 or 2. This was shown earlier for isoparametric hypersurfaces with 
 by Abresch [
55]. Grove and Halperin also proved other topological results about compact proper Dupin hypersurfaces that support Conjecture 2 in the case 
.
As mentioned above, Miyaoka [
54] showed that if some additional assumptions are made regarding the intersections of the leaves of the various principal foliations, then Conjecture 2 is true in the case 
. However, it has not been proven that Miyaoka’s additional assumptions are satisfied in general, and so Conjecture 2 remains as an open problem in the case 
.