Linear connection: Difference between revisions

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The torsion of a linear connection <math>\nabla</math> is denoted as <math>\tau(\nabla)</math>. It is a <math.(1,2)</math>-tensor defined as:
The torsion of a linear connection <math>\nabla</math> is denoted as <math>\tau(\nabla)</math>. It is a <math.(1,2)</math>-tensor defined as:


<math>\tau(\nabla)(X,Y)= \nabla_XY - -nabla_YX - [X,Y]</math>.
<math>\tau(\nabla)(X,Y)= \nabla_XY - \nabla_YX - [X,Y]</math>.


A connection whose torsion is zero is termed a [[torsion-free linear connection]].
A connection whose torsion is zero is termed a [[torsion-free linear connection]].

Revision as of 17:00, 7 March 2007

This lives as an element of: the space of -bilinear maps

Definition

Given data

  • A connected differential manifold with tangent bundle denoted by

Definition part (pointwise form)

A linear connection is a smooth choice of the following: at each point , there is a map , satisfying some conditions. The map is written as where and .

  • It is -linear in (that is, in the coordinate).
  • It is -linear in (viz the space of sections on ).
  • It satisfies the following relation called the Leibniz rule:

Definition part (global form)

A connection is a map , satisfying the following:

  • It is -linear in the first
  • it is -linear in the second
  • It satisfies the following relation called the Leibniz rule:

where is a scalar function on the manifold and denotes scalar multiplication of by .

Generalizations

The notion of linear connection can be generalized to the more general notion of a connection.

Operations on a linear connection

Torsion of a linear connection

The torsion of a linear connection is denoted as . It is a <math.(1,2)</math>-tensor defined as:

.

A connection whose torsion is zero is termed a torsion-free linear connection.

Curvature of a linear connection

The curvature of a linear connection is denoted as . It is defined as:

The notion of curvature actually makes sense for any connection. In the case of a linear connection, it is tensorial, with lots of nice properties. It is in fact a (1,3)-tensor called the Riemann curvature tensor.