In pointwise differential
geometry, i.e., linear algebra, we prove two theorems about the curvature
operator of isometrically immersed submanifolds. We restrict our attention to
Euclidean immersions because here the results are most easily stated and the
curvature operator can be simply expressed as the sum of wedges of second
fundamental form matrices. First, we reprove and extend a 1970 result of
Weinstein to show that for n-manifolds in Rn+2 the conditions of positive,
nonnegative, nonpositive, and negative sectional curvature imply that the curvature
operator is positive definite, positive semidefinite, negative semidefinite, and
negative definite, respectively. We provide a simple example to show that this
equivalence is no longer true even in codimension 3. Second, we introduce the
concept of measuring the amount of curvature at a point x by the rank
of the curvature operator at x and prove that surprisingly the rank of a
negative semidefinite curvature operator is bounded as a function of only the
codimension. Specifically, for an n-manifold in Rn+p this rank is at most (p+12)
, and
this bound is sharp. Under the weaker assumption of nonpositive sectional
curvature we prove the rank is at most p3+ p2− p, and by the proof of
the previous theorem this bound can be sharpened to (p+12)
for p = 1 and
2.