Next Article in Journal
Observer-Based Exponential Stabilization for Time Delay Takagi–Sugeno–Lipschitz Models
Previous Article in Journal
An Optimal Scheduling Method for Power Grids in Extreme Scenarios Based on an Information-Fusion MADDPG Algorithm
Previous Article in Special Issue
Geometric and Structural Properties of Indefinite Kenmotsu Manifolds Admitting Eta-Ricci–Bourguignon Solitons
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Weak Nearly S- and Weak Nearly C-Manifolds

by
Vladimir Rovenski
Department of Mathematics, University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel
Mathematics 2025, 13(19), 3169; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13193169
Submission received: 9 September 2025 / Revised: 28 September 2025 / Accepted: 30 September 2025 / Published: 3 October 2025
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Trends in Differential Geometry and Geometric Analysis)

Abstract

The recent interest in geometers in the f-structures of K. Yano is motivated by the study of the dynamics of contact foliations, as well as their applications in theoretical physics. Weak metric f-structures on a smooth manifold, recently introduced by the author and R. Wolak, open a new perspective on the theory of classical structures. In this paper, we define structures of this kind, called weak nearly S - and weak nearly C -structures, study their geometry, e.g., their relations to Killing vector fields, and characterize weak nearly S - and weak nearly C -submanifolds in a weak nearly Kähler manifold.

1. Introduction

The f-structure introduced by K. Yano [1] on a smooth manifold M 2 n + s serves as a higher-dimensional analog of almost complex structures ( s = 0 ) and almost contact structures ( s = 1 ). This structure is defined by a (1,1)-tensor f of rank 2 n such that f 3 + f = 0 . The tangent bundle splits into two complementary subbundles: T M = f ( T M ) ker f . The restriction of f to the 2 n -dimensional distribution f ( T M ) defines a complex structure. The existence of the f-structure on M 2 n + s is equivalent to a reduction of the structure group to U ( n ) × O ( s ) ; see [2]. A submanifold M of an almost complex manifold ( M ¯ , J ) that satisfies the condition dim ( T x M J ( T x M ) ) = c o n s t > 0 naturally possesses an f-structure; see [3]. An f-structure is a special case of an almost product structure, defined by two complementary orthogonal distributions of a Riemannian manifold ( M , g ) . Foliations appear when one or both distributions are involutive. An interesting case occurs when the sub-bundle ker f is parallelizable, leading to a framed f-structure for which the reduced structure group is U ( n ) × Id s . In this scenario, there exist vector fields { ξ i } 1 i s (called Reeb vector fields) spanning ker f with dual 1-forms { η i } 1 i s , satisfying f 2 = Id + i = 1 s η i ξ i . Compatible Riemannian metrics, i.e.,
g ( f X , f Y ) = g ( X , Y ) i = 1 s η i ( X ) η i ( Y ) ,
exist on any framed f-manifold, and we obtain the metric f-structure; see [2,4,5,6].
To generalize concepts and results from almost contact geometry to metric f-manifolds, geometers have introduced and studied various broad classes of metric f-structures. A metric f-manifold is termed a K -manifold if it is normal and d Φ = 0 , where Φ ( X , Y ) : = g ( X , f Y ) . Two important subclasses of K -manifolds are C -manifolds if d η i = 0 and S -manifolds if d η i = Φ for any i; see [2]. Omitting the normality condition, we obtain almost K -manifolds, almost S -manifolds and almost C -manifolds, e.g., [7,8,9]. The distribution ker f of a K -manifold is tangent to a g -foliation with flat totally geodesic leaves. An f-K-contact manifold is an almost S -manifold, whose Reeb vector fields are Killing vector fields; the structure is intermediate between almost S -structure and S-structure; see [6,10]. Nearly S - and nearly C -manifolds ( M 2 n + s , f , ξ i , η i , g ) are defined in the same spirit as the nearly Kähler manifolds of A. Gray [11] by a constraint only on the symmetric part of f – starting from S - and C -manifolds (e.g., [12,13,14,15]):
( X f ) X = g ( f X , f X ) ξ ¯ + η ¯ ( X ) f 2 X , nearly S manifolds . 0 , nearly C manifolds .
Here, η ¯ = i = 1 s η i and ξ ¯ = i = 1 s ξ i . These counterparts of nearly Kähler manifolds play a key role in the classification of metric f-manifolds; see [2]. The Reeb vector fields ξ i of nearly S - and nearly C -structures are unit Killing vector fields. The influence of constant-length Killing vector fields on Riemannian geometry has been studied by many authors, e.g., [16]. The interest of geometers in f-structures is also motivated by the study of the dynamics of contact foliations. Contact foliations generalize to higher dimensions the flow of the Reeb vector field on contact manifolds, and K -structures are a particular case of uniform s-contact structures; see [17,18]. Dynamics and integration on s-cosymplectic manifolds are studied in [19]; they investigate the Lie integrability of s-evolution systems in this setting, and develop a Hamilton–Jacobi theory tailored to multi-time Hamiltonian systems, both via symplectification techniques.
In [20,21,22], we introduced and studied metric structures on a smooth manifold, see Definition 1, which generalize almost Hermitian, almost contact (e.g., Sasakian and cosymplectic) and f-structures. Such so-called “weak” structures (the complex structure on the contact distribution is replaced by a nonsingular skew-symmetric tensor) allow us a new look at the theory of classical structures and find new applications. A. Einstein worked on various variants of Unified Field Theory, more recently known as Non-symmetric Gravitational Theory (NGT), see [23]. In this theory, the symmetric part g of the basic tensor G = g + F is associated with gravity, and the skew-symmetric one F is associated with electromagnetism. The theory of weak metric structures is fully consistent with the skew-symmetric part of G; thus, it provides new tools for studying NGT. S. Ivanov and M. Zlatanović developed NGT with linear connections of totally skew-symmetric torsion and gave examples with the skew-symmetric part F of the tensor G obtained using an almost contact metric structure; see [24]. In [25], the author and M. Zlatanović were the first to apply weak metric structures to NGT of totally skew-symmetric torsion with tensor F ( X , Y ) = g ( X , f Y ) of constant rank.
In this paper, we define and study new structures of this kind, generalizing nearly S - and nearly C -structures. Section 2, following the Introduction, recalls some results regarding weak nearly Kähler manifolds (generalizing nearly Kähler manifolds) and weak metric f-manifolds. Section 3 introduces weak nearly S - and weak nearly C -structures and studies their geometry. Section 4 characterizes weak nearly C - and weak nearly S -submanifolds in weak nearly Kähler manifolds and proves that a weak nearly C -manifold with parallel Reeb vector fields is locally the Riemannian product of a Euclidean space and a weak nearly Kähler manifold. The proofs use the properties of new tensors, as well as classical constructions.

2. Preliminaries

Here, we review some results; see [20,21,22]. Nearly Kähler manifolds ( M , J , g ) were defined by A. Gray [11] using the condition that only the symmetric part of J vanishes, where ∇ is the Levi-Civita connection, in contrast to the Kähler case, where J = 0 . Several authors studied the problem of finding and classifying parallel skew-symmetric 2-tensors (other than almost-complex structures) on a Riemannian manifold, e.g., [26].
Definition 1.
A Riemannian manifold ( M , g ) of even dimension equipped with a skew-symmetric (1,1)-tensor f such that the tensor f 2 is negative-definite is called a weak Hermitian manifold. Such ( M , f , g ) is called a weak Kähler manifold if f = 0 . A weak Hermitian manifold is called a weak nearly Kähler manifold if
( X f ) Y + ( Y f ) X = 0 ( X , Y X M ) .
A weak metric f-structure on a smooth manifold M 2 n + s ( n , s > 0 ) is a set ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) , where f is a skew-symmetric ( 1 , 1 ) -tensor of rank 2 n , Q is a self-adjoint nonsingular ( 1 , 1 ) -tensor, ξ i ( 1 i s ) are orthonormal vector fields, η i are dual 1-forms, and g is a Riemannian metric on M, satisfying
f 2 = Q + i = 1 s η i ξ i ,     η i ( ξ j ) = δ j i ,     Q ξ i = ξ i ,
g ( f X , f Y ) = g ( X , Q Y ) i = 1 s η i ( X ) η i ( Y )     ( X , Y X M ) .
In this case, ( M 2 n + s , f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) is called a weak metric f-manifold.
The geometric meaning of (1) is the same as in the classical case: geodesics are f-planar curves. A curve γ is f-planar if the section γ ˙ f γ ˙ is parallel along the curve. A framed weak f-manifold (i.e., only (2) holds) admits a compatible metric (i.e., also (3) holds) if f in (2) has a skew-symmetric representation, i.e., for any x M there exists a frame { e i } on a neighborhood U x M , for which f has a skew-symmetric matrix.
Example 1.
Take k > 1 almost Hermitian manifolds ( M j , f j , g j ) . The Riemannian product j = 1 k ( M j , λ j 1 / 2 f j , g j ) , where λ j > 0 are different constants, is a weak almost Hermitian manifold with Q = j λ j Id j . We call j ( M j , λ j 1 / 2 f j , g j ) a ( λ 1 , , λ k ) -weighed product of almost Hermitian manifolds ( M j , f j , g j ) ; see [27]. The ( λ 1 , , λ k ) -weighed product of (nearly) Kähler manifolds is a weak (nearly) Kähler manifold. A nearly Kähler manifold of dimension 4 is a Kähler manifold; see [11]. The unit sphere S 6 in the set of purely imaginary Cayley numbers admits a strictly nearly Kähler structure. The classification of weak nearly Kähler manifolds in dimensions 4 is an open problem. The ( λ 1 , λ 2 ) -weighed products of 2-dimensional Kähler manifolds are 4-dimensional weak nearly Kähler manifolds. The ( λ 1 , λ 2 , λ 3 ) -weighed products of 2-dimensional Kähler manifolds and ( λ 1 , λ 2 ) -weighed products of 2- and 4-dimensional Kähler manifolds are 6-dimensional weak nearly Kähler manifolds, and similarly for dimensions > 6 .
Putting Y = ξ j in (3), and using η i ( ξ j ) = δ j i , we get
η j ( X ) = g ( X , ξ j ) ;
thus, ξ j is orthogonal to the distribution D = i = 1 s ker η i . For a more intuitive understanding of the role of Q in the f-structure, we explain the following properties:
f ξ i = 0 ,     η i f = 0 ,     η i Q = η i ,     [ Q , f ] = 0 .
By (2), f 2 ξ i = 0 is true. From this and (2), we get f 3 + f Q = 0 . By this, Q ξ i = ξ i and f 2 ξ i = 0 we get 0 = f 3 ξ i = f Q ξ i = f ξ i . By f ξ i = 0 , (4), and the skew-symmetry of f, we get η i ( f X ) = g ( f X , ξ i ) = g ( X , f ξ i ) = 0 . From this and condition rank f = 2 n , we conclude that f the distribution D of a weak metric f-structure is f-invariant, D = f ( T M ) and dim D = 2 n . By this and f 3 + f Q = 0 , we get f 3 X = f 2 ( f X ) = Q f X ; hence, f 3 + Q f = 0 . This and f 3 + f Q = 0 yield f Q = Q f . By symmetry of Q and Q ξ i = ξ i , we get η i ( Q X ) = g ( Q X , ξ i ) = g ( X , Q ξ i ) = g ( X , ξ i ) = η i ( X ) .
Therefore, T M splits as complementary orthogonal sum of D and ker f . A weak metric f-structure ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) is said to be normal if the following tensor is zero:
N ( 1 ) ( X , Y ) = [ f , f ] ( X , Y ) + 2 i = 1 s d η i ( X , Y ) ξ i ( X , Y X M ) .
The Nijenhuis torsion of a (1,1)-tensor S and the derivative of a 1-form ω are given by
[ S , S ] ( X , Y ) = S 2 [ X , Y ] + [ S X , S Y ] S [ S X , Y ] S [ X , S Y ]     ( X , Y X M ) , d ω ( X , Y ) = ( 1 / 2 ) { X ( ω ( Y ) ) Y ( ω ( X ) ) ω ( [ X , Y ] ) }     ( X , Y X M ) .
Using the Levi-Civita connection ∇ of g, one can rewrite [ S , S ] as
[ S , S ] ( X , Y ) = ( S Y S S Y S ) X ( S X S S X S ) Y .
The fundamental 2-form Φ on ( M 2 n + s , f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) is defined by
Φ ( X , Y ) = g ( X , f Y ) ( X , Y X M ) .
Proposition 1.
A weak metric f-structure with condition N ( 1 ) = 0 satisfies
£ ξ i f = d η j ( ξ i , · ) = 0 , d η i ( f X , Y ) d η i ( f Y , X ) = 1 2 η i ( [ Q ˜ X , f Y ] ) , ξ i ξ j D , [ X , ξ i ] D ( 1 i , j s , X D ) .
Moreover, ξ i ξ j + ξ j ξ i = 0 , that is, ker f defines a totally geodesic distribution.
These tensors on a weak metric f-manifold are well known in the classical theory:
N i ( 2 ) ( X , Y ) : = ( £ f X η i ) ( Y ) ( £ f Y η i ) ( X ) = 2 d η i ( f X , Y ) 2 d η i ( f Y , X ) , N i ( 3 ) ( X ) : = ( £ ξ i f ) X = [ ξ i , f X ] f [ ξ i , X ] , N i j ( 4 ) ( X ) : = ( £ ξ i η j ) ( X ) = ξ i ( η j ( X ) ) η j ( [ ξ i , X ] ) = 2 d η j ( ξ i , X ) .
Example 2.
Let M 2 n + s ( f , Q , ξ i , η i ) be a weak framed f-manifold. Consider the product manifold M ¯ = M 2 n + s × R s , where R s is a Euclidean space with a basis 𝜕 1 , , 𝜕 s , and define tensors J and Q ¯ on M ¯ putting J ( X , i = 1 s a i 𝜕 i ) = ( f X i = 1 s a i ξ i , j η j ( X ) 𝜕 j ) and Q ¯ ( X , i = 1 s a i 𝜕 i ) = ( Q X , i = 1 s a i 𝜕 i ) for a i C ( M ) . It can be shown that J 2 = Q ¯ . The tensors N i ( 2 ) , N i ( 3 ) , N i j ( 4 ) appear when we derive the integrability condition [ J , J ] = 0 and express the normality condition N ( 1 ) = 0 for ( f , Q , ξ i , η i ) .
Define a “small” (1, 1)-tensor Q ˜ : = Q Id and note that [ Q ˜ , f ] = 0 and η i Q ˜ = 0 . The following new tensor (vanishing at Q ˜ = 0 )
N ( 5 ) ( X , Y , Z ) : = f Z ( g ( X , Q ˜ Y ) ) f Y ( g ( X , Q ˜ Z ) ) + g ( [ X , f Z ] , Q ˜ Y ) g ( [ X , f Y ] , Q ˜ Z ) + g ( [ Y , f Z ] [ Z , f Y ] f [ Y , Z ] , Q ˜ X ) ,
which supplements the sequence N ( 1 ) , N i ( 2 ) , N i ( 3 ) , N i j ( 4 ) , is needed to study the weak metric f-structure. We express the covariant derivative of f using a new tensor N ( 5 ) :
2 g ( ( X f ) Y , Z ) = 3 d Φ ( X , f Y , f Z ) 3 d Φ ( X , Y , Z ) + g ( N ( 1 ) ( Y , Z ) , f X )   + i = 1 s N i ( 2 ) ( Y , Z ) η i ( X ) + 2 d η i ( f Y , X ) η i ( Z ) 2 d η i ( f Z , X ) η i ( Y ) + N ( 5 ) ( X , Y , Z ) ,
where the derivative of a 2-form Φ is given by
3 d Φ ( X , Y , Z ) = X Φ ( Y , Z ) + Y Φ ( Z , X ) + Z Φ ( X , Y ) Φ ( [ X , Y ] , Z ) Φ ( [ Z , X ] , Y ) Φ ( [ Y , Z ] , X ) .
Note that the above equality yields
3 d Φ ( X , Y , Z ) = ( X Φ ) ( Y , Z ) + ( Y Φ ) ( Z , X ) + ( Z Φ ) ( X , Y ) .
For particular values of N ( 5 ) , we get N ( 5 ) ( ξ i , ξ j , Z ) = N ( 5 ) ( ξ i , Y , ξ j ) = 0 and
N ( 5 ) ( X , ξ i , Z ) = N ( 5 ) ( X , Z , ξ i ) = g ( N i ( 3 ) ( Z ) , Q ˜ X ) , N ( 5 ) ( ξ i , Y , Z ) = g ( [ ξ i , f Z ] , Q ˜ Y ) g ( [ ξ i , f Y ] , Q ˜ Z ) .
Definition 2.
A weak metric f-structure is called a weak almost K -structure if d Φ = 0 . We define its two subclasses as follows:
(i)
A weak almost C -structure if Φ and η i ( 1 i s ) are closed forms;
(ii)
A weak almost S -structure
if the following is valid:
Φ = d η 1 = = d η s ( hence , d Φ = 0 ) .
Adding the normality condition, we get weak K -, weak C -, and weak S -structures, respectively. A weak f-K-contact structure is a weak almost S -structure, whose structure vector fields ξ i are Killing, i.e., the tensor ( £ ξ i g ) ( X , Y ) = g ( Y ξ i , X ) + g ( X ξ i , Y ) vanishes. For s = 1 , weak (almost) C - and weak (almost) S -manifolds reduce to weak (almost) cosymplectic manifolds and weak (almost) Sasakian manifolds, respectively.
Remark 1.
The almost S -structure is also called an f-contact structure, e.g., [21]; then, the S -structure can be regarded as a normal f-contact structure.
Example 3.
(i) To construct a weak metric f-structure ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) on the Riemannian product M = M ¯ × R s of a weak almost Hermitian manifold ( M ¯ , f ¯ , g ¯ ) with Ω ( X , Y ) = g ¯ ( X , f ¯ Y ) and a Euclidean space ( R s , d y 2 ) , we take any point ( x , y ) of M and set
ξ i = ( 0 , 𝜕 y i ) , η i = ( 0 , d y i ) , f ( X , 𝜕 y i ) = ( f ¯ X , 0 ) , Q ( X , 𝜕 y i ) = ( f ¯ 2 X , 𝜕 y i ) ,
where X T x M ¯ . Note that f = 0 if and only if ¯ f ¯ = 0 . On the other hand, ¯ f ¯ = 0 if and only if d Ω = 0 , see (6) with Φ = Ω , i.e., ( M , Ω ) is a symplectic manifold.
(ii) For a weak C -structure, we obtain g ( ( X f ) Y , Z ) = 1 2 N ( 5 ) ( X , Y , Z ) . A weak metric f-structure with conditions f = 0 and g ( [ ξ i , ξ j ] , ξ k ) = 0 is a weak C -structure with the property N ( 5 ) = 0 . For a weak S -structure, we get
g ( ( X f ) Y , Z ) = g ( f X , f Y ) η ¯ ( Z ) g ( f X , f Z ) η ¯ ( Y ) + 1 2 N ( 5 ) ( X , Y , Z ) ;
ξ i are Killing vector fields and ker f defines a Riemannian totally geodesic foliation. In particular, for an S -structure, we have
( X f ) Y = g ( f X , f Y ) ξ ¯ + η ¯ ( Y ) f 2 X .
For a weak almost K -structure (and its special cases, a weak almost S -structure and a weak almost C -structure), the distribution ker f is involutive (tangent to a foliation). Moreover, weak almost S - and weak almost C -structures satisfy the following conditions (trivial for s = 1 ):
[ ξ i , ξ j ] = 0 ,
g ( X ξ i , ξ j ) = 0 ( X X M )
for 1 i , j s . The following condition is a corollary of (10):
η k ( ξ i ξ j ) = 0 ( 1 i , j , k s ) .
By (9), the distribution ker f of weak almost S - and a weak almost C -manifolds is tangent to a g -foliation with an abelian Lie algebra.
Remark 2
([28]). Let g be a Lie algebra of dimension s. A foliation of dimension s on a smooth connected manifold M is called a g -foliation if there exist complete vector fields ξ 1 , , ξ s on M which, when restricted to each leaf, form a parallelism of this submanifold with a Lie algebra isomorphic to g .

3. Main Results

In this section, weak nearly S - and weak nearly C -structures are defined and studied; some of the statements generalize the results in [13,14,15].
The restriction on the symmetric part of (8) gives the following.
Definition 3.
A weak metric f-manifold is called a weak nearly S -manifold if
( X f ) Y + ( Y f ) X = 2 g ( f X , f Y ) ξ ¯ + η ¯ ( X ) f 2 Y + η ¯ ( Y ) f 2 X
for all X , Y X M . A weak metric f-manifold is called a weak nearly C -manifold if
( X f ) Y + ( Y f ) X = 0 .
Example 4.
Let a Riemannian manifold ( M 2 n + s , g ) admit two nearly S -structures (or, nearly C -structures) M 2 n + s ( f k , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) ( k = 1 , 2 ) with common Reeb vector fields ξ i and one-forms η i = g ( ξ i , · ) . Suppose that f 1 f 2 are such that ψ : = f 1 f 2 + f 2 f 1 0 . Then, f : = ( cos t ) f 1 + ( sin t ) f 2 for small t > 0 satisfies (12) (and (13), respectively) and
f 2 = Id + ( sin t cos t ) ψ + i = 1 s η i ξ i .
Thus, ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) is a weak nearly S -structure (and weak nearly C -structure, respectively) on M 2 n + s with Q = Id ( sin t cos t ) ψ .
The following condition is trivial when Q = Id T M :
( X Q ) Y = 0 ( X , Y X M , Y ker f ) .
Using (14), we have
( X Q ) Y = i = 1 s η i ( Y ) ( X Q ) ξ i = i = 1 s η i ( Y ) Q ˜ X ξ i ( X , Y X M ) .
Example 5.
To construct a weak (nearly) C -structure ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) on the Riemannian product M = M ¯ × R s of a weak (nearly) Kähler manifold ( M ¯ , f ¯ , g ¯ ) and a Euclidean space ( R s , d y 2 ) , we take any point ( x , y ) of M and set
ξ i = ( 0 , 𝜕 y i ) , η i = ( 0 , d y i ) , f ( X , 𝜕 y i ) = ( f ¯ X , 0 ) , Q ( X , 𝜕 y i ) = ( f ¯ 2 X , 𝜕 y i ) ,
as in Example 3(i). Note that if ¯ X ( f ¯ 2 ) = 0 ( X T M ¯ ) , then (14) holds.
The following result opens new applications to Killing vector fields.
Proposition 2.
Both on a weak nearly S -manifold and a weak nearly C -manifold satisfying (9) and (11), the distribution ker f defines a flat totally geodesic foliation; moreover, if conditions (10) and (14) hold, then the vector fields ξ i are Killing.
Proof. 
Putting X = ξ j and Y = ξ k in (12) or (13), we find ( ξ j f ) ξ k + ( ξ k f ) ξ j = 0 ; hence, f ξ j ξ k + ξ k ξ j = 0 . Applying f to this and using (2), we obtain
0 = f 2 ξ j ξ k + ξ k ξ j = Q ξ j ξ k + ξ k ξ j + i = 1 s η i ξ j ξ k + ξ k ξ j ξ i .
Since the (1,1)-tensor Q is nonsingular and (11) is true, we get ξ j ξ k + ξ k ξ j = 0 . Combining this with ξ j ξ k ξ k ξ j = 0 , see (9), yields
ξ j ξ k = 0 ( 1 j , k s ) ;
hence, ker f defines a flat totally geodesic foliation. Next, using (15) we calculate
ξ i η j = g ( ξ i ξ j , · ) = 0 .
Using (10) and (15), we obtain
( £ ξ j g ) ( ξ k , · ) = g ( ξ j ξ k , · ) = 0 .
Taking the ξ j -derivative of (3) and using (14) and ξ j η i = 0 , we find (for Y ker f )
g ( ( ξ j f ) X , f Y ) + g ( f X , ( ξ j f ) Y ) = ξ j g ( f X , f Y ) = g ( X , ( ξ j Q ) Y ) + i = 1 s ( ξ j η i ) ( X ) η i ( Y ) + η i ( X ) ( ξ j η i ) ( Y ) = 0 .
For a weak nearly S -manifold, using (12), (10), and η Q ˜ = 0 yields
g ( ( ξ j f ) X , f Y ) + g ( f X , ( ξ j f ) Y ) = g ( ( X f ) ξ j , f Y ) g ( f X , ( Y f ) ξ j ) + g ( f 2 X , f Y ) + g ( f 2 Y , f X ) = g ( X ξ j , f 2 Y ) g ( f 2 X , Y ξ j ) = g ( X ξ j , Q Y ) + g ( Q X , Y ξ j ) = g ( X ξ j , Y ) + g ( X , Y ξ j ) + g ( X ξ j , Q ˜ Y ) + g ( Q ˜ X , Y ξ j ) = ( £ ξ j g ) ( X , Y ) g ( ξ j , ( X Q ˜ ) Y ) g ( ( Y Q ˜ ) X , ξ j ) = ( £ ξ j g ) ( X , Y ) .
Here, we used g ( ξ j , ( X Q ˜ ) Y ) = 0 . For a weak nearly C -manifold, using (13) yields
( £ ξ j g ) ( X , Y ) = g ( ( ξ j f ) X , f Y ) + g ( f X , ( ξ j f ) Y ) = 0 .
From (17), for both cases we obtain £ ξ j g = 0 , i.e., ξ j is a Killing vector field. □
Remark 3.
Note that even for a nearly S -manifold without conditions (9) and (10), the vector fields ξ i ( 1 i s ) are not Killing; see Corollary 1 in [13].
Theorem 1.
There are no weak nearly C -manifolds with conditions (9), (10), and (14) which satisfy Φ = d η 1 = = d η s ; see (7).
Proof. 
Suppose that our weak nearly C -manifold satisfies (7). Since also ξ i are Killing vector fields (see Proposition 2), M is a weak f-K-contact manifold. By Theorem 1 in [22], the following holds:
ξ i = f ( 1 i s ) .
By Proposition 6 in [22], the ξ -sectional curvature of a weak f-K-contact manifold is positive, i.e., K ( ξ i , X ) > 0 ( X ker f ) . Thus, for any nonzero vector X ker f , using (13) and (18), we get
0 < K ( ξ i , X ) = g ( ξ i X ξ i X ξ i ξ i [ ξ i , X ] ξ i , X )   = g ( ( ξ i f ) X + f 2 X , X ) = g ( ( X f ) ξ i , X ) g ( f X , f X )   = g ( f X ξ i , X ) + g ( f 2 X , X ) = 2 g ( f 2 X , X ) .
This contradicts the following equality: g ( f 2 X , X ) = g ( f X , f X ) 0 . □
Corollary 1.
There are no nearly C -manifolds with conditions (9) and (10) which satisfy (7).
Theorem 2.
A weak nearly C -manifold ( M 2 n + s , f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) satisfies
ξ i = 0 ( 1 i s )
if and only if the manifold is locally isometric to the Riemannian product of a Euclidean s-space and a weak nearly Kähler manifold.
Proof. 
For all vector fields X , Y orthogonal to ker f , we have
2 d η i ( X , Y ) = g ( X ξ i , Y ) g ( Y ξ i , X ) .
Thus, if the condition ξ i = 0 holds, then the contact distribution D is integrable. Moreover, any integral submanifold of D is a totally geodesic submanifold. Indeed, for X , Y ker f , we have g ( X Y , ξ i ) = g ( Y , X ξ i ) = 0 . Since ξ i ξ j = 0 , by de Rham Decomposition Theorem, the manifold is locally the Riemannian product M ¯ × R s . The metric weak f-structure induces on M ¯ a weak almost-Hermitian structure, which, by these conditions, is weak nearly Kähler.
Conversely, if a weak nearly C -manifold is locally the Riemannian product M ¯ × R s , where M ¯ is a weak nearly Kähler manifold and ξ i = ( 0 , 𝜕 y i ) (see also Example 5), then d η j ( X , Y ) = 0 ( X , Y ker f ) . By (20) and ξ i ξ j = 0 , we obtain ξ i = 0 . □
Corollary 2.
A nearly C -manifold ( M 2 n + s , f , ξ i , η i , g ) satisfies (19) if and only if the manifold is locally isometric to the Riemannian product of R s and a nearly Kähler manifold.
Theorem 3.
Let a weak nearly S -structure satisfy (9), (10), and (14); then, the following is true:
(i) 
The condition η j N ( 1 ) = 0 ( 1 j s ) yields d η j ( X , Y ) = Φ ( Q X , Y ) for all j.
(ii) 
The condition (7) yields N ( 1 ) ( X , Y ) = 2 Φ ( Q ˜ X , Y ) ξ ¯ .
Proof. 
( i ) We calculate, using (5), (12), and η j f = 0 ,
η j ( N ( 1 ) ( X , Y ) ) 2 d η j ( X , Y ) = η j ( [ f , f ] ( X , Y ) ) = ( 5 ) η j ( f X f ) Y ( f Y f ) X = ( 12 ) η j ( X f ) f Y ( Y f ) f X + 4 g ( f 2 X , f Y ) = g ( X f 2 ) Y ( Y f 2 ) X , ξ j 4 g ( Q X , f Y ) = ( X η j ) ( Y ) ( Y η j ) ( X ) 4 g ( Q X , f Y ) = 2 d η j ( X , Y ) 4 g ( Q X , f Y ) .
Here, we used the identity 2 d η j ( X , Y ) = ( X η j ) ( Y ) ( Y η j ) ( X ) .
Thus, if η i ( N ( 1 ) ( X , Y ) ) = 0 , then d η j ( X , Y ) = g ( Q X , f Y ) = Φ ( Q X , Y ) for all j.
( i i ) Using d Φ = 0 , (2), (6), and (12), where η ¯ = i = 1 s η i and ξ ¯ = i = 1 s ξ i , we get
3 d Φ ( X , Y , Z ) = g ( ( X f ) Y , Z ) + g ( ( Y f ) X , Z ) g ( ( Z f ) X , Y ) = g ( ( X f ) Y , Z ) + g ( X f ) Y + 2 g ( f X , f Y ) ξ ¯ + η ¯ ( X ) f 2 Y + η ¯ ( Y ) f 2 X , Z + g ( X f ) Z 2 g ( f X , f Z ) ξ ¯ η ¯ ( X ) f 2 Z η ¯ ( Z ) f 2 X , Y = 3 g ( ( X f ) Y , Z ) 3 g ( f 2 X , Y ) η ¯ ( Z ) + 3 g ( f 2 X , Z ) η ¯ ( Y ) .
Thus, (8) holds. Using (8) in (5) gives
[ f , f ] = 2 g ( f 2 X , f Y ) ξ ¯ = 2 g ( Q X , f Y ) ξ ¯ = 2 Φ ( Q X , Y ) ξ ¯ ,
hence, N ( 1 ) ( X , Y ) = 2 Φ ( Q ˜ X , Y ) ξ ¯ . □
A consequence of Theorem 3 is a rigidity result for S -manifolds; see Theorem 1 of [13].
Corollary 3.
A normal nearly S -structure is an S -structure.

4. Submanifolds of Weak Nearly Kähler Manifolds

Here, we study weak nearly S - and weak nearly C - submanifolds in a weak nearly Kähler manifold. The second fundamental form h of a submanifold M ( M ¯ , g ¯ ) is related with ¯ (the Levi-Civita connection of g ¯ restricted to M) and ∇ (the Levi-Civita connection of metric g induced on M via the Gauss equation) by
¯ X Y = X Y + h ( X , Y ) ( X , Y X M ) .
A submanifold is said to be totally geodesic if h = 0 . The shape operator A N : X ¯ X N with respect to a unit normal N is related with h via the equalities
h N ( X , Y ) = g ¯ ( h ( X , Y ) , N ) = g ( A N ( X ) , Y ) ( X , Y X M ) .
Lemma 1.
Let ( M ¯ , f ¯ , g ¯ ) be a weak Hermitian manifold and M 2 n + s a submanifold of codimension s equipped with mutually orthogonal unit normals N i ( i = 1 , , s ) satisfying the condition
g ¯ ( f ¯ N i , N j ) = 0 ( 1 i , j s )
(trivial for s = 1 ). Then, M inherits a metric weak f-structure ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) given by
ξ i = f ¯ N i , η i = g ¯ ( f ¯ N i , · ) ( i = 1 , , s ) , g = g ¯ | M , f = f ¯ + i = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ N i , · ) N i , Q = f ¯ 2 + i = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ 2 N i , · ) N i .
Moreover, (14) holds on M if f ¯ 2 N i T M ( 1 i s ) and
( ( ¯ X f ¯ 2 ) Y ) = 0 ( X , Y X M , Y ker f ) .
Proof. 
Using the skew-symmetry of f ¯ and (23), we verify (2):
f 2 X = f ( f ¯ X i = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ X , N i ) N i ) = f ¯ f ¯ X i = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ X , N i ) N i g ¯ ( f ¯ ( f ¯ X i , j = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ X , N i ) N i ) , N j ) N j = f ¯ 2 X j g ¯ ( f ¯ 2 N j , X ) N j i = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ N i , X ) f ¯ N i + i , j = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ X , N i ) g ¯ ( f ¯ N i , N j ) N j = Q X + i = 1 s η i ( X ) ξ i ( X X M ) .
Since f ¯ 2 is negative-definite, for nonzero X X M we obtain g ¯ ( N i , X ) = 0 and
g ( Q X , X ) = g ¯ ( f ¯ 2 X + i = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ 2 N i , X ) N i , X ) = g ¯ ( f ¯ 2 X , X ) > 0 ,
hence, the tensor Q is positive-definite on T M . Then, we calculate ( X Q ) Y for X , Y X M and Y ker f , using (21) and (24) and the condition f ¯ 2 N i T M ( 1 i s ) :
  ( X Q ) Y = X ( Q Y ) Q ( X Y ) = { ¯ X f ¯ 2 Y + i = 1 s g ( f ¯ 2 N i , Y ) N i h ( X , Q Y ) + f ¯ 2 ¯ X Y h ( X , Y ) i = 1 s g f ¯ 2 N i , ¯ X Y h ( X , Y ) N i } = ( ( ¯ X ( f ¯ 2 Y ) ) + f ¯ 2 ( ¯ X Y ) ) i = 1 s g ( f ¯ 2 N i , Y ) A N i X = ( ( ¯ X f ¯ 2 ) Y ) ,
where  is the T M -component of a vector. This completes the proof. □
The following theorem characterizes weak nearly C - and weak nearly S -submanifolds of a nearly Kähler manifold, using the property of the second fundamental form.
Theorem 4.
Let ( M ¯ , f ¯ , g ¯ ) be a weak nearly Kähler manifold and M 2 n + s a submanifold of codimension s equipped with mutually orthogonal unit normals N i ( i = 1 , , s ) satisfying (23). If the second fundamental form of M and the induced metric weak f-structure ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) on M, given by (24), satisfy
( i ) h N i ( X , Y ) = g ( Q X , Y ) + j , k = 1 s h N i ( ξ j , ξ k ) δ j , k η j ( X ) η k ( Y ) , ( i i ) h N i ( X , Y ) = j , k = 1 s h N i ( ξ j , ξ k ) η j ( X ) η k ( Y ) ,
and
h N i ( ξ j , ξ k ) = h N j ( ξ i , ξ k ) ( 1 i , j s ) ,
then ( f , Q , ξ i , η i , g ) is
( i ) a   w e a k   n e a r l y   S - s t r u c t u r e ; ( i i ) a   w e a k   n e a r l y   C - s t r u c t u r e .
Proof. 
Substituting
f ¯ Y = f Y i = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ N i , Y ) N i = f Y i = 1 s η i ( Y ) N i
in ( ¯ X f ¯ ) Y , where X , Y X M , and using (21) and Lemma 1, we obtain
( ¯ X f ¯ ) Y = ¯ X ( f ¯ Y ) f ¯ ( ¯ X Y ) = ( X f ) Y + i = 1 s η i ( Y ) A N i X h N i ( X , Y ) ξ i + i = 1 s X ( η i ( Y ) ) η i ( X Y ) + h N i ( X , f Y ) N i .
Thus, the T M -component of the weak nearly Kähler condition (1), using (21) and (22), takes the form
( ¯ X f ¯ ) Y + ( ¯ Y f ¯ ) X = ( X f ) Y + ( Y f ) X + i = 1 s η i ( X ) A N i Y + η i ( Y ) A N i X 2 h N i ( X , Y ) ξ i = 0 .
Using (22), one can show that (25) is equivalent to the following:
( i ) A N i X = f 2 X + j , k = 1 s h N i ( ξ j , ξ k ) η j ( X ) ξ k , ( i i ) A N i X = j , k = 1 s h N i ( ξ j , ξ k ) η j ( X ) ξ k .
(i) If we have a weak nearly S -structure, see (12), then from (28) we get
2 g ( f X , f Y ) ξ ¯ + η ¯ ( Y ) f 2 X + η ¯ ( X ) f 2 Y     + i = 1 s η i ( X ) A N i Y + η i ( Y ) A N i X 2 h N i ( X , Y ) ξ i = 0 ,
Substituting the expressions of h N i ( X , Y ) and A N i , see (25)(i) and (29)(i), in (30) and using (26) gives identity; thus, we obtain a weak nearly S -structure on M.
(ii) If we have a weak nearly C -structure, see (13), then from (28) we get
i = 1 s η i ( X ) A N i Y + η i ( Y ) A N i X 2 h N i ( X , Y ) ξ i = 0 .
Substituting the expressions of h N i ( X , Y ) and A N i , see (25)(ii) and (29)(ii), in (31) and using (26) gives identity; thus, we obtain a weak nearly C -structure on M. □
For Q = Id , the properties of (25) lead us to the following.
Definition 4.
A codimension s submanifold M 2 n + s of a Hermitian manifold ( M ¯ , f ¯ , g ¯ ) , equipped with mutually orthogonal unit normals N i ( i = 1 , , s ) satisfying
h N i ( X , Y ) = a i g ( X , Y ) + j , k = 1 s b i , j , k η j ( X ) η k ( Y ) ,
where a i , b i , j , k C ( M ) and η i ( 1 i s ) are linear independent one-forms on M, will be called an s-quasi-umbilical submanifold. For s = 1 , condition (32) reads as follows, see [15]:
h N ( X , Y ) = a 1 g ( X , Y ) + b 1 η ( X ) η ( Y ) .
The geometric meaning of (32) is that the restriction of h N i on the distribution i = 1 s ker η i looks similar to h for totally umbilical submanifolds: h = ( trace g h / dim M ) g .
The following consequence of Theorem 4 extends the fact (see Theorem 4.1 in [14]) that a hypersurface of a nearly Kähler manifold is nearly Sasakian or nearly cosymplectic if and only if it is quasi-umbilical with respect to the almost contact form.
Corollary 4.
Let ( M ¯ , f ¯ , g ¯ ) be a nearly Kähler manifold and M 2 n + s a submanifold of codimension s equipped with mutually orthogonal unit normals N i ( i = 1 , , s ) satisfying (23), and ( f , ξ i , η i , g = g ¯ | M ) the induced metric f-structure on M, given by
ξ i = f ¯ N i , η i = g ¯ ( f ¯ N i , · ) ( i = 1 , , s ) , f = f ¯ + j = 1 s g ¯ ( f ¯ N j , · ) N j .
If M 2 n + s is an s-quasi-umbilical submanifold (with respect to the 1-forms η i ),
( i ) h N i ( X , Y ) = g ( X , Y ) + j , k = 1 s h N i ( ξ j , ξ k ) δ j , k η j ( X ) η k ( Y ) , ( i i ) h N i ( X , Y ) = j , k = 1 s h N i ( ξ j , ξ k ) η j ( X ) η k ( Y ) ,
and (26) are true, then ( f , ξ i , η i , g ) is (i) a nearly S -structure; (ii) a nearly C -structure.

5. Conclusions

We have shown that weak nearly S - and weak nearly C -structures are useful for studying metric f-structures, e.g., totally geodesic foliations, Killing vector fields, and s-quasi-umbilical submanifolds. Some classical results have been extended in this paper to weak nearly S - and weak nearly C -manifolds with additional conditions. Based on the numerous applications of nearly Kähler, nearly Sasakian, and nearly cosymplectic structures, we expect that weak nearly Kähler, S - and C -structures will be useful for geometry and theoretical physics, e.g., for NGT, the theory of s-cosymplectic structures and s-contact structures, multi-time Hamiltonian systems, and s-evolution systems.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

No new data were created or analyzed in this study.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflicts of interest.

References

  1. Yano, K. On a Structure f Satisfying f3 + f = 0; Technical Report No. 12; University of Washington: Washington, DC, USA, 1961. [Google Scholar]
  2. Blair, D.E. Geometry of manifolds with structural group U(n) × O(s). J. Differ. Geom. 1970, 4, 155–167. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Ludden, G.D. Submanifolds of manifolds with an f-structure. Kodai Math. Semin. Rep. 1969, 21, 160–166. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Cabrerizo, J.L.; Fernández, L.M.; Fernández, M. The curvature tensor fields on f-manifolds with complemented frames. An. Stiint. Univ. Al. I. Cuza Iasi 1990, 36, 151–161. [Google Scholar]
  5. Di Terlizzi, L.; Pastore, A.M.; Wolak, R. Harmonic and holomorphic vector fields on an f-manifold with parallelizable kernel. An. Stiint. Univ. Al. I. Cuza Iausi Ser. Noua Mat. 2014, 60, 125–144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Di Terlizzi, L. On the curvature of a generalization of contact metric manifolds. Acta Math. Hung. 2006, 110, 225–239. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Cappelletti Montano, B.; Di Terlizzi, L. D-homothetic transformations for a generalization of contact metric manifolds. Bull. Belg. Math. Soc. Simon Stevin 2007, 14, 277–289. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Carriazo, A.; Fernández, L.M.; Loiudice, E. Metric f-contact manifolds satisfying the (k, μ)-nullity condition. Mathematics 2020, 8, 891. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Fitzpatrick, S. On the geometry of almost S-manifolds. ISRN Geom. 2011, 2011, 879042. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Goertsches, O.; Loiudice, E. On the topology of metric f-K-contact manifolds. Monatshefte Math. 2020, 192, 355–370. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Gray, A. Nearly Kähler manifolds. J. Differ. Geom. 1970, 4, 283–309. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Balkan, Y.S.; Aktan, N. Deformations of Nearly C-manifolds. Palest. J. Math. 2019, 8, 209–216. [Google Scholar]
  13. Aktan, N.; Tekin, P. An introduction to the new type of globally framed manifold. AIP Conf. Proc. 2017, 1833, 020051. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Blair, D.E.; Showers, D.K.; Yano, K. Nearly Sasakian structures. Kodai Math. Sem. Rep. 1976, 27, 175–180. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Rovenski, V. Weak nearly Sasakian and weak nearly cosymplectic manifolds. Mathematics 2023, 11, 4377. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Berestovskij, V.N.; Nikonorov, Y.G. Killing vector fields of constant length on Riemannian manifolds. Sib. Math. J. 2008, 49, 395–407. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. de Almeida, U.N.M. Generalized K-contact structures. J. Lie Theory 2024, 34, 113–136. [Google Scholar]
  18. Finamore, D. Contact foliations and generalised Weinstein conjectures. Ann. Glob. Anal. Geom. 2024, 65, 27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Leok, M.; Sardón, C.; Zhao, X. Integration on q-Cosymplectic Manifolds. arXiv 2025, arXiv:2509.16587. [Google Scholar]
  20. Rovenski, V.; Wolak, R. New metric structures on g-foliations. Indag. Math. 2022, 33, 518–532. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Rovenski, V. Metric structures that admit totally geodesic foliations. J. Geom. 2023, 114, 32. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Rovenski, V. Einstein-type metrics and Ricci-type solitons on weak f-K-contact manifolds. In Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Differential Geometry, Haifa, Israel, 10–13 May 2023; Differential Geometric Structures and Applications. Rovenski, V., Walczak, P., Wolak, R., Eds.; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2023; pp. 29–51. [Google Scholar]
  23. Moffat, J.W. A new nonsymmetric gravitational theory. Phys. Lett. B 1995, 355, 447–452. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Ivanov, S.; Zlatanović, M. Connection on Non-Symmetric (Generalized) Riemannian Manifold and Gravity. Class. Quantum Gravity 2016, 33, 075016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Zlatanović, M.; Rovenski, V. Applications of weak metric structures to non-symmetrical gravitational theory. arXiv 2025, arXiv:2508.08021. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Herrera, A.C. Parallel skew-symmetric tensors on 4-dimensional metric Lie algebras. Rev. Union Mat. Argent. 2023, 65, 295–311. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Rovenski, V.; Zlatanović, M. Weak metric structures on generalized Riemannian manifolds. arXiv 2025, arXiv:2506.23019. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Alekseevsky, D.; Michor, P. Differential geometry of g-manifolds. Differ. Geom. Appl. 1995, 5, 371–403. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Rovenski, V. Weak Nearly S- and Weak Nearly C-Manifolds. Mathematics 2025, 13, 3169. https://doi.org/10.3390/math13193169

AMA Style

Rovenski V. Weak Nearly S- and Weak Nearly C-Manifolds. Mathematics. 2025; 13(19):3169. https://doi.org/10.3390/math13193169

Chicago/Turabian Style

Rovenski, Vladimir. 2025. "Weak Nearly S- and Weak Nearly C-Manifolds" Mathematics 13, no. 19: 3169. https://doi.org/10.3390/math13193169

APA Style

Rovenski, V. (2025). Weak Nearly S- and Weak Nearly C-Manifolds. Mathematics, 13(19), 3169. https://doi.org/10.3390/math13193169

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop