Riccati PDEs That Imply Curvature-Flatness

In this paper the following three goals are addressed. The first goal is to study some strong partial differential equations (PDEs) that imply curvature-flatness, in the cases of both symmetric and non-symmetric connection. Although the curvature-flatness idea is classic for symmetric connection, our main theorems about flatness solutions are completely new, leaving for a while the point of view of differential geometry and entering that of PDEs. The second goal is to introduce and study some strong partial differential relations associated to curvature-flatness. The third goal is to introduce and analyze some vector spaces of exotic objects that change the meaning of a generalized Kronecker delta projection operator, in order to discover new PDEs implying curvature-flatness. Significant examples clarify some ideas.


Introduction and Contributions
Differential geometry is often considered "the art of manipulating partial differential equations (PDEs)". This point of view can be found in the papers [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12], which develop the following topics: general theory of PDEs, symmetries and overdetermined systems of PDEs, fully nonlinear equations on Riemannian manifolds with negative curvature, basic evolution PDEs in Riemannian geometry, foundations of differential geometry, affine differential geometry, overdetermined systems of linear PDEs, geometric dynamics on Riemannian manifolds, the role of PDEs in differential geometry, the Dirichlet problem for first-order PDEs, and differential inclusions.
Specific aims in this paper are as follows: (i) introducing and analyzing those PDEs or partial differential relations to define and study curvature-flatness; (ii) developing techniques to find intrinsic properties of some diagnostic PDEs; (iii) discussing explicit examples to illustrate the importance of the choice of an appropriate research technique.
To underline our original point of view, we try to impose the following direction of research: instead of looking for a coordinate system in which the connection Γ i jk is a solution of the tensor PDEs R l ijk = 0, we are looking just for connections that are solutions of these PDEs, and we then analyze whether the solutions are linked by variable changes.
In this paper we analyze the PDEs required to determine whether a geometric manifold (endowed either with a metric or with a linear connection) is flat or curved. The method presented is to find a diagnostic PDE system whose solutions indicate that the manifold is flat. The diagnostic that we are looking for is a Riccati PDE system. Although the PDEs of curvature-flatness are tensor equations (obviously coordinate-independent), some of the associated Riccati PDEs are not. The nonlinear PDEs in this paper are called Riccati-like because they arise in a similar way as Riccati ordinary differential equations (ODEs).
It is our hope that this paper, taken as a whole, will provide a broad overview of geometry and its relationship to PDEs. The subjects of the constructive Sections are as follows: (2) curvature-flatness connections (symmetric connection case, vector spaces of exotic objects, strong Riccati PDEs, non-symmetric connection case), (3) curvature-flat Riemannian manifolds (properties of a projection operator; strong Riccati PDE system; giving the curvature tensor field, finding the Riemannian metric), (4) invariant version for curvature-flatness (symmetric connection case, non-symmetric connection case), (5) conclusions. The linearization of the curvature-flatness PDE system and some examples created with the software package Maple suggest reasons for future research. The invariant technique used in Section 4 hides the curvature-flatness PDE system in differentiable identities readable only by geometers. The vector spaces of exotic objects introduced by us to give another meaning to the generalized Kronecker-type projector are a novelty worthy of use in the future.

Curvature-Flatness Connections
Curvature-flatness was discussed in the papers [13][14][15] (compact flat Riemannian manifolds), Ref. [16] (some regularity theorems in Riemannian geometry), Ref. [17] (local existence of smooth metrics with prescribed curvature), Ref. [18] (least squares approximation of flatness on Riemannian manifolds), and [19] (flat Riemannian manifolds), based on the idea of finding an adapted coordinate system wherein the components of the curvature tensor field and the torsion tensor field are zero. We bring up another point of view: based on some associated strong PDEs whose solutions are suitable connections and metrics, we ensure the cancellation of the curvature tensor field.
The concept of connections that determine representations of zero curvature as solutions of a given PDE system has seen renewed interest recently (see also, Ref. [20]connections defining representations of zero curvature and their Lax and Bäcklund mappings, Ref. [21]-normal forms of two-dimensional metrics admitting two projective vector fields, Ref. [22]-conformally flat submanifolds in spheres and integrable systems).

Symmetric Connection Case
Let us consider the pair (M, ∇), where M is a smooth real n-dimensional manifold and ∇ is an affine symmetric connection, with the components Γ i jk , i, j, k = 1, n, in F (M) (see also, [6,7]).
The connection ∇ determines the curvature tensor field Riem ∇ whose components are (in Einstein notation of summation) where i, j, k, l = 1, n. The basic properties of curvature tensor field include R l ijk,m + R l ikm,j + R l imj,k = 0 (Bianchi); R l ijk,m + R l kim,j + R l mkj,i + R l jmi,k = 0 (Veblen).
The generalized Kronecker delta P ps jk = 1 2 (δ p j δ s k − δ p k δ s j ) is a projection P, i.e., P 2 = P, and is covariant constant (see also [23]). The natural domain of definition of the operator P is the vector space of the tensor fields T p q (M), where (p, q) = fixed, p ≥ 2, or q ≥ 2. The set of eigenvalues of a projector contains the eigenvalues 0 and 1. Explicitly: (i) on T 0 2 (M), all eigentensors, respectively eigenvalues, are ω ps -symmetric in (p, s), with λ = 0; ω psantisymmetric in (p, s) with λ = 1; particularly, the electromagnetic tensor field F ps = ∂ p A s − ∂ s A p ; (ii) on T 0 4 (M), the elasticity tensor field E ijkl (E ijkl = E jikl , E ijkl = E ijlk , E ijkl = E klij ) is an eigentensor corresponding to the eigenvalue 0; (iii) on T 1 3 (M), the curvature tensor field is an eigentensor corresponding to the eigenvalue 1, etc. (for an eigentensor, see also [24]). As can be seen from the previous formulas, the operator P also acts on exotic objects of type ∂ ∂x p Γ l is + Γ l pm Γ m is , a situation that will be explained further. Mathematical concepts with real intrinsic geometric significance, other than connections and tensors, are called exotic objects.
The following Definition and Theorem are well-known [13][14][15]19]. According to this Theorem, a curvature-flat manifold is one that "locally looks like a Euclidean space". The question of whether a geometric manifold is curvature-flat depends on its connection structure and only indirectly on its topology. A topological space equipped with one connection may be flat, but equipped with another it may not be.
, is nonlinear. The linearization around a solution Γ i jk (x) can be obtained in the following way: consider a variation Γ i jk (x, t) of the solution Γ i jk (x, 0) = Γ i jk (x); applying the differential operator ∂ t to PDEs R l ijk (x, t) = 0, denoting ∂ t Γ i jk (x, t)| t=0 = ξ i jk (x) (symmetric tensor field), we find the linear PDE system whose unknown is the symmetric tensor field ξ i jk (x). The motivation of linearization of a nonlinear PDE is based on the fact that in modern problems we are obliged to organize the set of solutions of a PDE as an infinite dimensional differentiable manifold, and at one point to find the tangent manifold.
Due to the fact that the curvature tensor field of components R i jkl is zero everywhere, it can be considered as a first order tensor Riccati PDE system written in the form (see [25]) 2P Since the curvature tensor field is antisymmetric in the last two indices and satisfies the first Bianchi identity, each of the previous PDE systems consists of n 2 (n 2 −1) 3 distinct first-order non-linear quadratic PDEs whose unknowns are n 2 (n+1) 2 functions Γ i jk ; for n = 2, an undetermined system; for n ≥ 3, an overdetermined system. (ii) For n = 2, we have a system of four PDEs having the solution where (x, y) ∈ R 2 , ax + by + c = 0. Case 2: Ad-hoc solution: . Case 3: Constant connection solution: Let Γ 1 11 = a, Γ 1 12 = b, Γ 1 22 = c, Γ 2 11 = e, Γ 2 12 = f , and Γ 2 22 = g be constant functions. We find an algebraic system bg (iii) Generally, a constant symmetric connection of components Γ i jk (x) = C i jk is a curvatureflat solution if C l km C m ij is symmetric in the pair (k, j). In addition, a symmetric connection The tensor Riccati PDE system R i jkl = 0 is equivalent to each of the two first-order Riccati PDE systems: P ps jk There is no general algorithm for finding exact solutions of the previous PDE systems but some methods used in other areas can be useful. For example, finding solutions with a specified type.

Vector Spaces of Exotic Objects
Let us consider again the projector P of components P ps jk = 1 2 (δ p j δ s k − δ p k δ s j ). Instead of its natural domain of definition T p q (M), where (p, q) = fixed, p ≥ 2 or q ≥ 2, we create a non-trivial vector space of exotic objects. First we define four exotic objects as with four-indexed components, where l, i, p, s ∈ 1, n. Then we build the vector space (linear covering) V = aA + bB + cC + dD (a, b, c, d) ∈ R 4 , whose four-indexed elements are The projector P acts on V, but it is more interesting acting either on Sp{A, C} or on Sp{B, D}. The curvature tensor field R l ips , i.e., (a, b, c, d) = (1, −1, 1, −1), belongs to the set V. The set of all elements having the same symmetries as a curvature tensor field is a vector subspace The element W l ijk ∈ W is just the curvature tensor field iff a = c = 1; if a = c = 1, then W l ijk is collinear to the curvature tensor field. Otherwise, W l ijk is an exotic object (non-tensor).
The kernel and the image of the projector P : V → V are Equivalently, ker(P) : The curvature tensor field belongs to im(P).

Strong Riccati PDEs
For zero-curvature equations having unknown connection components it is very difficult to highlight and find non-trivial solutions. Consequently we look for strong PDEs that give indirect solutions of the curvature-flatness PDEs.
Let us now discuss some Riccati PDEs that imply curvature-flatness.
Theorem 2. Let ∇ be a symmetric connection of coefficients Γ i jk . The first-order Riccati PDE system R l ijk = 0, with the unknowns Γ i jk , is equivalent to either (i) two first-order PDE relations: Symmetric in (ps) is equivalent to "the antisymmetric part is zero".
Proof. This result comes from the relations To the previous tensor curvature-flatness PDE system we attach two non-tensor firstorder strong Riccati PDE systems: and each having as unknown the connection of components Γ i jk .

Theorem 3. Each of the Riccati PDE systems (1) and (2) is completely integrable.
Proof. The Riccati PDE system (1) is completely integrable since ∂ 2 qp Γ l is = ∂ 2 pq Γ l is . For the Riccati PDE system (2) we use the Frobenius Theorem for the Pfaff system i.e., we prove that there exists an integrant factor. Indeed, the 1-forms on the space R r , r = n 2 (n+1) 2 + n, of coordinates (Γ n pq (x), x i ), are smooth and pointwise linearly independent forms (since the matrix of the components has the rank ).
Furthermore, there exist the smooth 1-forms a l αβ The existence is related to the fact that the number of unknown 1-form components is quite large. Complete integrability means conditions for the global existence of connection solutions, via Cauchy problems with initial data The previous Riccati PDEs (1) and (2) are not tensor equations. That is, they do not have tensor behavior with respect to the changing of the system of coordinates.
If the PDE systems (1) and (2) have a common solution Γ i jk , then we get a divergence conservation law (1) and (2).
is called the flux of the conservation law.

Remark 2. Given initial conditions
., x n ), the Cauchy problem has a unique solution Γ i jk (x) in a neighborhood of the point a = (a 1 , a 2 , ..., a n ) = (0, 0, ..., 0). An analytic solution can be written like a Taylor series  (1) and (2) is a solution of the curvature-flatness PDE system.

Proof. This result comes from the relations
which is a solution of one of the Riccati PDE systems (1) and (2), is the image through a diffeomorphism of the connection Γ i jk (x) = 0.
Example 3. For the PDE system (1), there are also nonvanishing solutions such as for exam- given the constants C i jk , we obtain C l is d f x n ) a n ; (iv) "soliton connection" solutions (see also [26]) All these connection solutions of the PDE system (1) are solutions for curvature-flatness.

Example 4.
Let us consider again the Riccati PDE system (1). In order to obtain a new solution, we use the associated anti-trace PDE system (obtained by applying the anti-summation convention to a pair of dummy indices) If we start with the anti-trace Riccati PDE system, by executing the contraction of m with k, we obtain again the Riccati PDE system (1). Consequently, any solution of the anti-trace PDE system is solution of the initial PDE system (1).
A solution of the anti-trace system is obtained in the following way. If m = k, then either For n = 2, we obtain a constant connection solution, with certain zero coefficients. Generally, we find that Γ l is (x) must be constant, with certain zero coefficients.

Let us consider the matrix
If there exists p such that rank A p = 2, then The property (vi) is quite strange, as it is not derived (like (iv)) from a double covariant derivative (like (v)). It deserves a deeper investigation on its own.

Remark 4. If a symmetric connection Γ i
jk is a solution of curvature-flatness PDEs, i.e., R i jkl = 0, then the connection Γ i j k obtained by an arbitrary changing of coordinates x i = x i (x i ) (diffeomorphism) is a solution of R i j k l = 0, since R i jkl = 0 is a tensorial equation with the unknown Γ i jk . According to Theorem 1, for a solution Γ i jk of curvature-flatness, there exists a coordinate system where Γ i j k = 0.
Maple offers software that can perform tensor algebra and tensor analysis. If we have a symmetric connection, we can compute the curvature tensor field and then test whether the curvature tensor is zero everywhere. If the curvature tensor is zero everywhere (that is, all its components are zero everywhere), then the manifold is flat. By definition, the manifold is flat if there exists a set of coordinates in which the symmetric connection is everywhere equal to zero.

Non-Symmetric Connection Case
In this subsection, we use the pair (M, ∇), where M is a smooth real n-dimensional (n ≥ 2) manifold and ∇ is an affine connection of components L i jk , i, j, k = 1, n, in F (M), with non-zero torsion T i jk = L i jk − L i kj . Although the theory developed here regarding non-symmetric connections is formally similar to that of symmetrical connections, we point out that the nature of the exotic objects used now is totally different.

Curvature Tensor Field
The curvature tensor field belongs to the vector space The generalized Kronecker delta P : , is a projector on V, i.e., P 2 = P, and is covariant constant.

3
PDEs, since the curvature tensor field is antisymmetric in the last two indices and satisfies the first Bianchi identity; and n 3 unknown functions L i jk ) is equivalent to either a first-order tensor Riccati PDE system written in the form In addition, a connection L i jk (x), which satisfies L l , with a suitable matrix of elements F l i (x).

Remark 5.
For n = 2, we have a system of 4 PDEs with 8 unknown functions L i jk , i, j, k = 1, 2. This system has an infinity of solutions.

Remark 6.
Let Ω x 0 x 1 ⊂ R n be the hyper-parallelepiped fixed by the opposite diagonal points x 0 , x 1 ∈ R n . Let dv = dx 1 ∧ ... ∧ dx n be the volume element in R n . (i) Open problem. Let us interpret the curvature tensor field L l ips as a Lagrangian L l ips = ∂ x p L l is − ∂ x s L l ip + L l pm L m is − L l sm L m ip . Then, we introduce the functionals (total curvature) Write explicitly the Euler-Lagrange PDEs (ii) By the Euclidean divergence formula, we evaluate the numbers where n q is the unit vector field normal to the boundary ∂Ω x 0 x 1 . If L l ik | ∂Ω x 0 x 1 = 0, then I l kij = 0. (iii) Approximate solutions in the sense of the least squares [18]. To find such solutions for the curvature-flatness PDEs L l ips = 0 we need a Riemannian metric g ij to create the least squares Lagrangian L = 1 2 g la g ib g pc g sd L l ips L a bcd = 1 2 L 2 , a compact manifold M to introduce the functional I(L u vw (·)) = M L det(g ij ) dx 1 ...dx n , and the Euler-Lagrange PDEs of L with respect to L u vw .
To the curvature-flatness Riccati PDE system L l ips = 0, we attach two strong Riccati PDE systems: and whose unknown is the non-symmetric connection L i jk . These Riccati PDEs (3) and (4) are not tensor equations and refer to completely different unknowns than PDEs (1) and (2). They are not recoverable with respect to the changing of the system of coordinates.

Theorem 6. Each of the Riccati PDE systems (3) and (4) is completely integrable.
Proof. It is almost identical to that of Theorem 3, although the objects involved are totally different. The space used for reasoning has the dimension n 3 + n.
Complete integrability means conditions for the global existence of connections, via Cauchy problems with initial data L i jk (x 1 , x 2 , ..., x n )| x 1 =0 = B i jk (x 2 , ..., x n ). (3) and (4) is a solution of the curvature-flatness PDE system.

Proof. The result is a consequence of the formulas
If the PDE systems (3) and (4) have a common solution L i jk , then we get a divergence conservation law (3) and (4).
The exotic object δ q p L l is + δ q s L l ip is called the flux of the conservation law.

Remark 7.
If a non-symmetric connection L i jk is a solution of curvature-flatness PDEs, i.e., L i jkl = 0, then the connection L i j k obtained by an arbitrary changing of coordinates On the other hand there exist always connection solutions that do not come from the changing of coordinates.

Torsion Tensor Field
The torsion tensor field T i jk = L i jk − L i kj belongs to the vector space We look for the affine connections satisfying ∇ E i ∇ E j E k = 0, for all i, j, k = 1, n. Obviously, ∇ (−) is such a connection. We derive that ∇ satisfies the previous relations if and only if its components with respect to the given basis verify E i (Γ l jk ) + Γ m jk Γ l im = 0, for any i, j, k, l = 1, n. This last relation extends the property (iv) from Theorem 5.
(ii) Let G be an n-dimensional Lie group and E 1 , ..., E n be a basis of left invariant vector fields in the Lie algebra L(G). Suppose moreover that the connections are left invariant. Then Γ m jk Γ l im = 0, for any i, j, k, l = 1, n. This shows that the set of all such (left invariant) connections is a "universal" generalized cone in R n 3 , whose vertex is ∇ (−) . In this particular case, the last relation corresponds to the properties (iii) and (iv) from Theorem 5 (it is neither more general nor particular, it is similar).

Curvature-Flat Riemannian Manifolds
Let us consider an n-dimensional Riemannian manifold (M, g = (g ij )). The Riemannian metric (g ij ) determines the Levi-Civita connection ∂g rs ∂x t and the Riemannian curvature tensor field Riem g of components In the Riemannian case the connection comes from the metric g. Therefore, the previous theory of the zero-curvature connection should go back to the determination of the metric. We prefer to study the zero-curvature equations having as unknown the components of the metric.
In this case Riemannian curvature-flatness is described by the second-order tensor Riccati PDE system This PDE system has n 2 (n 2 −1) 12 distinct second-order linear non-homogeneous PDEs whose unknowns are n(n+1) 2 functions g ij (positive definite tensor). Details: for n = 2, undetermined system; for n > 3, overdetermined system; for n = 3, determined system. This PDE system is parabolic since the set of eigenvalues of the coefficient tensor (tensor product of an operator by itself) contains the eigenvalue 0. Judging on the vector space T 4 0 (M), all eigentensors, respectively eigenvalues are: X ijlksymmetric in (i, j) or in (l, k), with λ = 0; X ijlk -antisymmetric in (i, j) and in (l, k) with λ = 2. Of course, the previous PDE system has all the properties of a curvature tensor field.
Consequently, the partial differential relation is equivalent to PDEs The following Cartan-Ambrose-Hicks theorem [17,27] is well known.
Theorem 8. The curvature tensor field R ijkl vanishes if and only if the Riemannian metric g ij is locally Euclidean, i.e., around each point of M there exists a chart such that g ij = δ ij .
Remark 8. Every one-dimensional Riemannian manifold is flat. If (M, g) is a smooth twodimensional connected complete flat Riemannian manifold, then M must be diffeomorphic to R 2 , R × S 1 , S 1 × S 1 , the Möbius strip, or the Klein bottle.

Example 8.
The trivial solution of the PDE system R ijkl = 0 is g ij (x) = δ ij . If a solution g ij is not equal to δ ij , that does not mean the space is not flat. It just means one may be in the wrong coordinates. In other words, if g ij is a solution of the Riccati PDEs system R ijkl = 0, then the space (M, g) is flat and there exist coordinates such that g ij = δ ij . In addition, there are "self-similar metric" solutions of the form "soliton metric" solutions g ij (x) = Ψ ij (u), u = a k x k , etc., all for curvature-flatness.
Remark 9. The Riccati PDE system R ijkl = 0 is a tensor system with the unknown g ij . If g ij is a solution, then the metric g i j obtained by an arbitrary changing of coordinates x i = x i (x i ) (diffeomorphism) is a solution of R i j k l = 0.
Theorem 9. For a Riemannian metric g ij (x), the solution of the previous strong Riccati PDEs system is the image through a diffeomorphism of the metric g ij (x) = δ ij .
If we have a Riemannian metric, we can compute the curvature tensor field via Maple and then test whether the curvature tensor is zero everywhere. If the curvature tensor is zero everywhere (that is, all its components are zero everywhere), then the space is flat. By definition, it is flat if there exists a set of coordinates in which the metric tensor is everywhere equal to the Kronecker delta tensor.
Any diagonal metric on R n is flat.

Properties of Projection Operator B = P ⊗ P
We discuss some properties of the operator B = P ⊗ P of components B Proposition 2. We consider the differential 1-form ω i (x)dx i that determines the four-indexed object and hence the differential 1-form ω i (x)dx i is completely integrable. This means that there exists a function f such that  i.e., ∧ ijlk − ∧ ijkl − ∧ jilk + ∧ jikl = 0.

Strong Riccati PDE System
Any solution g (positive definite tensor), with the components g ij , of the strong Riccati PDE system is a solution of the curvature-flatness PDE system. This second order PDE system is parabolic since the set of eigenvalues of the projection P pq ij = 1 2 δ p [i δ q j] contains 0. Indeed, on T 2 0 (M), all the eigentensors and eigenvalues are X ij -symmetric with λ = 0 and X ijantisymmetric with λ = 1.
Thus even though the two surfaces of revolution (catenoid and exponential horn) share the same Gauss curvature they admit no isometrically mapped correspondence at (u, v). Result: the Riemannian metric g has zero curvature on R 3 .

Giving the Curvature Tensor Field, Find the Riemannian Metric
We judge in normal coordinates associated to the Levi-Civita connection.
Giving the curvature tensor R ijkl , we look to solve the non-homogeneous second-order Riccati PDEs with respect to g ij , trying for series solution At the center of normal coordinates, the components of curvature tensor field Riem g are Now we observe that the Cauchy problem (strong normal second-order PDE system with initial data) determines a solution g jl (x) for our initial problem. Indeed, given R ijkl , any smooth metric of the form has curvature tensor R ijkl at x = 0.
Let us introduce a product structure diagram It follows that p 2 = id. The curvature tensor field R ∇ and the product structure p determine the diagram For any exotic object E, we call p • E as E permuted by p. The product structure p determines a projector Q. To show that, we use an exotic geometrical object E(X, Y, Z). By definition Since p is a product structure, the object Although in the invariant version the PDEs are hidden by the way of expression (sense of formulas), this version still offers new points of view on the problems of curvatureflatness. This point of view is not very accessible for those who are specialists in PDEs.

Symmetric Connection Case
In this subsection, we use the pair (M, ∇), where M is a smooth real n-dimensional (n ≥ 2) manifold and ∇ is a symmetric affine connection.
The torsion tensor field is T ∇ (X, Y) = ∇ X Y − ∇ Y X − [X, Y] = 0. We use the vector space of all linear combinations of given vector functions (linear covering). An element (exotic object) V(X, Y, Z) is identified to (a, b, c, d) ∈ R 4 . The curvature tensor field belongs to the set V, corresponding to (1, −1, 1, −1) ∈ R 4 . The set of all elements having symmetries like the curvature tensor field is a vector subspace W. In addition, Q • R ∇ = R ∇ (eigentensor = R ∇ , eigenvalue = 1). Theorem 10. The following statements are equivalent.
(i) The diagram (ii) The curvature tensor field R ∇ is an eigentensor of projector field Q, with the eigenvalue 1.
Proof. The curvature tensor field R ∇ and the projector Q determine the commutative diagram in the proposition. Since Q • R ∇ = R ∇ , the curvature tensor field R ∇ is an eigentensor of the projector Q, with eigenvalue 1.
Theorem 11. Let ∇ be a symmetric connection of components Γ i jk as an unknown. Denote A(X, Y, Z) = ∇ X ∇ Y Z + ∇ ∇ Y X Z and B(X, Y, Z) = ∇ X ∇ Y Z − ∇ ∇ X Y Z. The following firstorder PDEs in the unknown Γ i jk are equivalent to each other, and equivalent to partial differential relations:

Proof. The exotic terms
from the curvature tensor field, are not F (M)-linear, i.e., are not tensor fields. For Remark 10. The Riccati PDEs in Theorems 2 and 11 are not the same. Indeed, the components of the curvature tensor field are The end terms in parentheses are reduced by the symmetry of the connection.

Non-Symmetric Connection Case
In this subsection, we use the pair (M, ∇), where M is a smooth real n-dimensional (n ≥ 2) manifold and ∇ is an affine connection with non-zero torsion.

Curvature Tensor Field
The curvature tensor field It belongs to the vector space of all linear combinations of given vector functions (linear covering). Here an element (exotic object) V(X, Y, Z) is identified to (a, b, c, d, e) ∈ R 5 . The curvature tensor field corresponds to (1, −1, 1, −1, 1) ∈ R 5 . The set of all elements having symmetries like the curvature tensor field is a vector subspace W of the vector space V.
(ii) The curvature tensor field R ∇ is an eigentensor of projector field Q, with the eigenvalue 1.

Conclusions
The curvature-flatness problem is an important geometric problem in Riemannian geometry and differential geometry based on Riemannian metrics or on affine connections. In this paper we studied strong Riccati PDEs and partial differential relations, which imply the flatness Riccati PDEs. The index form technique facilitates the understanding of the significance of the geometric PDEs correlated with curvature-flatness.
We put all components of the PDEs together into "tensor notation" and so forth. Now if anyone is interested in performing the computations in differential geometry and related PDEs, there are Maple packages.
For all the above geometric PDEs, only the existence and uniqueness of solutions have been discussed. Particularly, we have referred to tensor and non-tensor PDEs of the Riccati type, whose unknowns are the components of an affine connection or a Riemannian metric. The Riccati PDEs play a very important role in differential geometry and dynamical systems.
Our paper treats geometric approaches to specific partial differential equations. Geometry in this context means that certain results do not depend on the coordinate choices made to write down a PDE, and also that structures like connections or metrics are unknowns in PDEs. The examples are significant.
Our aim was to contribute to the debate on curvature-flatness, proposing original ideas carried out from different approaches and perspectives, and linked to other relevant topics within differential geometry and PDEs. As is usual in differential geometry, our paper is calculation intensive: symbols, indices, awe-inspiring PDEs, suggested solutions, etc.